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'''Charge:''' Charging does the most damage of any of the physical attacks, by a wide margin, but also deal the attacker significant recoil damage and instability. Charges can be done at any range as long as you can physically reach them (so you can sprint to a charge). Charges deal damage according to the following formulas: | '''Charge:''' Charging does the most damage of any of the physical attacks, by a wide margin, but also deal the attacker significant recoil damage and instability. Charges can be done at any range as long as you can physically reach them (so you can sprint to a charge). Charges deal damage according to the following formulas: | ||
− | *Damage to Target: (attacker tonnage x 0. | + | *Damage to Target: (attacker tonnage x 0.5) x number of hexes moved; Instability to Target: (attacker tonnage x 0.25) x number of hexes moved. |
− | *Damage to Attacker: target tonnage x 2; Instability to Attacker: (target tonnage x 0. | + | *Damage to Attacker: target tonnage x 2; Instability to Attacker: (target tonnage x 0.25) x number of hexes moved. |
Charges deal damage in a cluster, not a single hit. The damage is divided into 25 point clusters and can hit any location on the mech (this applies for both attacker and target). You, generally, cannot charge a tank (but see below for details). Charges gain an attack bonus or penalty based on the difference between your piloting skill and the target's piloting skill. If yours is higher, you get the difference, or delta, as a bonus to the attack. If yours is lower, you get the delta as a penalty to the attack. Charges always make both the attacker and the target unsteady on a hit and make the attacker unsteady anyway on a missed charge. No weapons (even support) will fire during a charge attack. | Charges deal damage in a cluster, not a single hit. The damage is divided into 25 point clusters and can hit any location on the mech (this applies for both attacker and target). You, generally, cannot charge a tank (but see below for details). Charges gain an attack bonus or penalty based on the difference between your piloting skill and the target's piloting skill. If yours is higher, you get the difference, or delta, as a bonus to the attack. If yours is lower, you get the delta as a penalty to the attack. Charges always make both the attacker and the target unsteady on a hit and make the attacker unsteady anyway on a missed charge. No weapons (even support) will fire during a charge attack. |
Revision as of 06:33, 20 August 2021
Installation, Configuration and Troubleshooting
How do I install BTA, the CAB and all that?
There are also written instructions on the wiki in our Installation Guide page and also on the Nexus mod page. Community member MangaMaD has also produced a tutorial video as seen here: (Note: the video is now somewhat dated and includes options like enabling Clan content which no longer exist, but the majority of it is still valid.)
What is the BTA Pre-Cache? Do I need it?
The pre-cache is a tool for helping to install BTA for users who have issues with the full installer. You only need the pre-cache if your internet is too unstable to use the installer completely. Note that the installer is still necessary to use the pre-cache. To use the pre-cache, follow these steps:
- Download both the installer and the pre-cache.
- Run the installer. At the bottom is a button, Import Pre-Cache, click on that. It will warn you that this will wipe out the existing installer cache, this is fine, say yes.
- Let the installer run. From here, it is a normal BTA installation, follow the prompts accordingly.
My game has a problem, how do I find the Logs to get help in tech-support?
- Open the BTAdvancedLauncher and press the Gather Logs button in the bottom right and save the zip file of the logs somewhere.
- Go to the BTA3062 Discord server.
- Navigate to the #ticketbot channel and follow the instructions in there to open a ticket which will take you to a new channel.
- Drag and drop your zipped logs into the new channel. If the logs are too big, host the logs on a file sharing platform such as Google Drive. Make sure you enable sharing permissions for others to view the files.
How do I activate the Debug Console?
How to Activate Debug:
1. Navigate to your Steam BATTLETECH folder.
2. Open BattleTech_Data\StreamingAssets\data\debug\Settings.Json.
3. Locate the code line: "disableLoggingOnLoad": true,
4. beneath the above line add the following: "testToolsEnabled": true, - Ensure both qoutation marks and the comma are correctly copied.
5. Save Settings.json and launch BATTLETECH
6. To enable Debug in game Press "Control+Shift+Minus ( - )
Can I add another modpack to BTA?
The short answer is no. The large modpacks can not be played together, so do not add BEX, RT, etc to BTA and expect it to work. If you ignore the popup telling you that some mods didnt load and load a save/start a game you will bork that save and have to start over.
Melee
How does melee work in BTA now?
Melee has been totally overhauled as of BTA v6.0. Now, instead of simply walking up and hitting them and doing your "melee" damage, you have a choice of various kinds of melee attacks: charge, kick, physical weapon, punch, or death from above. Each one does different damage and has different attack rules. This post will detail them all in depth. If you prefer, you can watch an explanation of these changes here.
Melee has further changed as of BTA v7.3. Some ranged weapons will now fire when performing certain melee attacks. Please see the section below What weapons do and do not fire in melee? for a complete list.
Charge: Charging does the most damage of any of the physical attacks, by a wide margin, but also deal the attacker significant recoil damage and instability. Charges can be done at any range as long as you can physically reach them (so you can sprint to a charge). Charges deal damage according to the following formulas:
- Damage to Target: (attacker tonnage x 0.5) x number of hexes moved; Instability to Target: (attacker tonnage x 0.25) x number of hexes moved.
- Damage to Attacker: target tonnage x 2; Instability to Attacker: (target tonnage x 0.25) x number of hexes moved.
Charges deal damage in a cluster, not a single hit. The damage is divided into 25 point clusters and can hit any location on the mech (this applies for both attacker and target). You, generally, cannot charge a tank (but see below for details). Charges gain an attack bonus or penalty based on the difference between your piloting skill and the target's piloting skill. If yours is higher, you get the difference, or delta, as a bonus to the attack. If yours is lower, you get the delta as a penalty to the attack. Charges always make both the attacker and the target unsteady on a hit and make the attacker unsteady anyway on a missed charge. No weapons (even support) will fire during a charge attack.
Kick: Kicks deal damage equal to the attacker's tonnage to the target and deal half that amount as stability damage. Kicking does consistent damage to a specific set of locations. Kicks can only be done if you can walk to the target, you cannot sprint to a kick. Kick damage is done as a single batch of damage and does not spread out like a charge. Kicks only hit legs and cannot hit any other body part. Kicks are specifically easy to perform and have an inherent +2 accuracy bonus. Kicks always make their target unsteady on a hit but also make the attacker unsteady if the kick misses. Any weapons not mounted on legs will fire during a kick melee attack.
Punch: Punches deal damage equal to half the attacker's tonnage and do the same amount in stability damage. Although punches are low damage but have some special perks to them that other attacks do not have. Punches can only be done if you can walk to the target, you cannot sprint to a punch. Punch damage is done as a single batch and does not spread out like a charge. Punches have a special hit table and have a 1/6 chance to hit either arm, any torso, or the head. Punches can be performed with any combination of arm actuators but for each lower/upper arm or hand actuator the attacker is missing (or has had destroyed) takes a penalty. Hands are a -1 penalty, lower and upper arm actuators are a -2 penalty. Punches always assume the attacker is using their "best" arm (meaning their least damaged one). Punches do not make targets or attackers unsteady unless the stability damage would already do so. Any weapons not mounted on an arm will fire during a punch melee attack.
Death From Above: DFAs are similar to charges in several ways, including damage distribution and suffering return damage. A DFA can only be performed if you can reach the target with your jumpjets. DFAs deal damage according to the following formulas:
- Damage to Target: attacker tonnage x 1.5; Instability to Target: attacker tonnage x 1
- Damage to Attacker: target tonnage x 2; Instability to Attacker: target tonnage x 1
DFAs deal damage in a cluster, not a single hit. The damage is divided into 25 point clusters and dealt to the target according to the Punch table (that is, the damage clusters are distributed across the arms, torsos, and head). The attacker takes their return damage in 25 point clusters that deal damage directly to the attacker's legs. DFAs are affected by the piloting delta between the attacker and target's piloting skills, the same way Charges are. DFAs always make the attacker and target unsteady on a successful attack, but do not make the attacker unsteady on a miss (as that's essentially just a normal jump). No weapons (even support) will fire during a DFA.
Physical Weapon: There are three physical weapons in BTA 3062, the hatchet, sword, and mace. All three are configured to work with these new melee changes and all three have slightly different sets of rules, which follow. All physical weapons in BTA are hard-welded to their carrying mechs and cannot be repurposed elsewhere. All three do share two qualities though: they all make the target unsteady on a successful hit and they all can only be performed within walking distance (you cannot sprint to a Hatchet attack). Any weapons not mounted on an arm will fire during a weapon melee attack.
- Hatchet: Hatchets deal damage equal to the attacker's tonnage and stability damage equal to half that amount. Hatchets hit on the full body table like normal weapons and have a +1 accuracy bonus when attacking.
- Sword: Swords deal damage and stability damage equal to the attacker's tonnage x 0.75. Swords hit on the punch table (that is, the damage is dealt as a single cluster and has a 1/6 chance of hitting the arms, torsos, or head).
- Mace: Maces deal damage equal to the attacker's tonnage x 1.25 and stability damage equal to the attacker's tonnage x 1.5. Maces hit on the full body table like normal weapons.
Special Notes (in no specific order):
- When pilots reach Rank 9 of Guts, they will gain the ability to make 2 punches or kicks at once. They will only have one animation but damage will be dealt twice. Similarly, there is a selectable skill at Guts Rank 8 called Juggernaut which, if taken, will enable a pilot to make two melee weapon attacks in the same way as they would a punch or kick if they have Guts Rank 9.
- Melee attacks like this are actually fairly complicated under the hood and that can lead to some weirdness. You'll notice that sometimes you won't be able to make certain attacks despite being in normal range. This is because the attacks are partially tied to their animations and HBS BT will not allow certain animations sometimes. This mostly comes up when at a higher or lower elevation than the target. If you are too high above them, you cannot hit them with a physical weapon or punch. If you are too far below them, you cannot kick or charge them. Nothing we can do, just gotta roll with it.
- Normally, you can only kick a tank. You cannot do anything else to one due to their location on the ground lower than most mechs can realistically reach. However, this system can be a little buggy and sometimes the game will let you use other melee attacks on them. It's unintended but if it happens, cool, you got something lucky. Enjoy it.
- PLEASE NOTE: When you click on a mech to melee them, the system will automatically select the "best" melee attack from your available options. This is often a Charge due to its high damage and often good hit chance due to the piloting delta. If you want something else, you must manually select it from your options (this will become clear when you use the system or when you watch the attached video about melee). Be certain not to click too fast or you might find yourself charging in without wanting to.
What weapons do and do not fire in melee?
If a weapon has minimum range or does AoE damage, it does not fire in melee. Anything else is fair game.
The following weapons do not fire in melee:
- The Arrow IV
- The Thumper
- The Sniper
- The Long Tom
- The Mortar family
- The HVAC family
- The LB-2X/LB-5X (IS and Clan)
- The RAC family
- The UAC2/UAC5 (IS and Clan)
- The standard AC2/AC5
- The AoE AC10 and AC20
- The AoE Heavy Flamer
- Most of the Gauss family: standard, improved, heavy, light, and hyper-assault gausses. Exceptions: The magshot and Silver Bullet Gauss do fire in melee.
- The Thunderbolt family
- The Heavy, Light, and Standard PPC. Note: The ER PPC and Snubnose PPC do fire in melee.
- The Mech Grenade Launcher
- Inner Sphere LRMs. Note: Clan LRMs do fire in melee
- The ATM family
Note that what melee option you choose affects what weapons can fire:
- Charges and DFAs do not permit any weapons to fire (including support).
- Punches and physical weapons permit all non-arm mounted weapons to fire.
- Kicks permit all non-leg mounted weapons to fire.
My mech has a physical weapon, but the choice to use it remains grayed out, what gives?
For physical weapons to work the 'mech must have the appropriate lower arm and hand actuators, the 'mech also must be close enough that more than charge is available as a choice for melee attack.
NOTE: The hatchet for the Hatchetman/Axman/Berserker count as hand actuators.
Vehicles
How do playable combat vehicles like tanks and zeppelins work in BTA?
Combat vehicles, such as tanks and zeppelins, work a little differently than mechs do. This post will outline their quirkiness and differences as well as how to deploy them, how to get vehicle pilots, and what does and doesn't work with the vehicles.
How do I get combat vehicles?
You buy them from system stores and you can salvage them from missions. There will be generic vehicle lists and faction specific vehicle lists. Some vehicles, such as the zeppelins cannot be bought in system stores and are only available in faction stores.
How do I get vehicle pilots?
Vehicle pilots can be hired in the hiring hall like any other pilot. Vehicle pilots are marked with a (V) tag next to their pilot role (where it says Recruit, Outrider, Defender, etc). Mech pilots say (M), vehicle pilots have (V), and pilots that can drive both have (MV). Of note, the Commander is always able to pilot both mechs and vehicles (MV). Additionally, there are several ronin that can pilot vehicles: Axle, Blaze, Commando, Doctor, Optio, Shade and Zed. There is also now a Tank Crew background option at career start that will start you with Axle, Optio, Shade and Zed in your roster to ensure you have enough pilots to field a lance of vehicles. Shade is also available from the Pioneering Comrades background starter option.
How do I deploy vehicles?
Vehicles can be deployed one of two ways, but only one of those ways is the right way (you'll understand what I mean shortly). Vehicles can be deployed either in mech slots or vehicle slots. To get vehicle slots, there are two new Argo upgrades that unlock vehicle slots. However, if you deploy a vehicle in a mech slot, it is controlled by an allied AI as your employer's faction using your vehicle and pilot. If you deploy via a vehicle slot, it is under your control like the rest of your units. Stick to vehicle slots, do not deploy in mech slots unless you're ok with it being AI driven.
What pilot abilities work for vehicles?
As far as I am aware, almost all of them. The major thing that does not work for vehicles is Bulwark, which doesn't do much because vehicles cannot use the brace action, and Stone Cold, which doesn't matter because vehicles don't have heat as a concept. All other pilot abilities seem to function fine for vehicles.
What random stuff do I need to know about vehicles?
- Vehicle pilots do take injuries now. Huzzah!
- When a player vehicle is destroyed, I believe it is repairable on the Argo and you don't lose it permanently, though it's hard to test so I'm not 100% sure of that.
- Vehicles cannot be modified, you get what you get and you better like it.
The zeppelins seem weird, what's their deal?
The zeppelins are considered VTOLs, which means they float and behave a little weirdly. Zeppelins ignore terrain penalties and bonuses of all kinds. They do not suffer movement penalties for terrain, except on Martian and Lunar biomes, where they are heavily slowed down. Zeppelins are floating but they are considered on the ground for targeting purposes (i.e. they don't have absurd high ground benefits).
The zeppelins have this glowing white thing under their model, the hell is it?
Because of how the VTOL code works, that glowing white thing is a fact of life for floating units like the zeppelins. It is a combination of the "unknown enemy" and "unknown vehicle" sensor blip icons and cannot be removed. It's something we just have to live with.
General Questions
I need some advice about BTA's Fundamentals, preferably in video form! Can you help me?
Sure can, person-I-made-up-for-this-post! A community member, @MangaMaD, has been putting together a series of videos about BTA's basics and will continue to make them over time. He has the backing of the team, you can consider these fairly official (I sign off on them as he makes them). Here's the playlist:
MangaMaD's BTA Bitesize Tips
I need some early-game advice to get used to BTA! Help!
See our Beginner's Guide for a list of tips and suggestions to help make the game a little easier.
What starting options do you recommend?
See our Beginner's Guide for more thoughts on this, but since you're here - Tips from BTA 3062 creator BloodyDoves:
Ironman: Don't select this unless you're brave. Modded games can be unstable.
Friendly Fire: I don't use it but it can be fun
Starting Planet and Mech: This defines where you start and what you start with. I won't spoil it, but they're all quite fluffy and have appropriate mechs for the faction.
Parts for Assembly: I suggest 3-5 parts.
Mech Recovery: I like the default of 50%
Contract Payment/Salvage: Normal is the intended experience.
Commander Experience: 7000 is the intended baseline
Advanced Mechwarrior: this controls how often you see better random mechwarriors. Any option is good.
Pilots per system: I like 5-7.
Mechwarrior Progression/Exponent/Multiplier: Normal is my recommendation.
Lethality: Controls how deadly the game is. I like normal myself.
Starting Money: This is the biggest factor in how hard the early game is. I recommend 1.25 mil for an easier start and 600k for a harder start.
Mechbay C-Bills: I stick to normal.
Shop Selling Prices/Scrap Return: These also are a big economy impact. I like 15% to keep it a little tricky.
E-Cooling and how to add more
E-cooling are the additional heatsinks that can be added to an engines internal structure, with the engine size directly correlating to the range of e-cooling that can be installed.
Any suitably sized fusion core can mount any e-cooling in its size bracket or any e-cooling that fit in smaller brackets, but can't exceed it's allowed size (e.g. the 300 core can mount an e-cooling +1 or e-cooling +2, but can't mount a +3 because the engine lacks the space for the extra heat sink).
Anything smaller than a 275 engine cannot mount e-cooling and any core smaller than 250 needs additional heat sinks to be mounted in the body of the mech (this will be covered in the next section). The minimum core that can mount e-cooling is the 275, which has the space for one additional heatsink.
E-cooling scales in with the size of a fusion core, in increments of 25. E.g:
275 rated engine: 10 heatsinks + space for e-cooling +1
300 rated engine: 10 heatsinks + space for e-cooling +2
325 rated engine: 10 heatsinks + space for e-cooling +3
Fusion Cores and heatsinks
All fusion cores must have a minimum of 10 heatsinks internally or externally, with extra heatsinks permitted in a mechs internal structure or potentially in the core itself (see E-Cooling above). The 250 core is the minimum sized core that can mount 10 heatsinks internally. Below this size bracket, the core size can't fit the minimum number of sinks and requires additional heatsinks to be added to the mech to top it up to the 10 (though these extra sinks don't cost any weight, until you go above 10).
Engines scale up or down in increments of 25 that permit additional heat sinks to be added the core. E.g:
200 rated engine: 8 heatsinks + 2 extra needed
225 rated engine: 9 heatsinks + 1 extra needed
250 rated engine: 10 heatsinks
275 rated engine: 10 heatsinks with the space for an e-cooling +1
How do I handle enemy evasion?
You'll want to use a combination of unsteady and sensor lock, combined with high ground advantage, to deal with enemy evasion. Making them unsteady strips their evasion, so use melee and missiles to batter them into the unsteady state, then hit them with the big guns.
Sensor lock strips some evasion too, stack that if you need to. High ground gives you bonuses to shoot at things below you and things below you get penalties to shoot you back (these apply to the enemies too, so if they're above you, they're more accurate and harder to hit).
The early game economy is hard, what do?
I recommend you take mostly salvage out of the gate, only taking cash if you have nothing to sell and you're about to go broke. Take engine cores and mech parts early, you can scrap parts for cash and mechs come fully assembled so you can get good gear that way.
What do the colors mean for targeting?
Red is front arc
Light blue is side arc (+ to shots, only hits locations on that side of the mech)
Green is rear arc (+ to shots, ignores damage reductions, hits rear armor)
When the change colors part way to the target, the shot is obstructed.
Purple is when the shot is obstructed both to and from the target.
I upgraded the Argo to give me more drop slots and now the drop screen is super messed up, what's wrong?
This is a known bug. Just save your game, then reload the save, and it'll be fixed right up. It's an unavoidable glitch with how we unlock the next drop slot. Don't worry, your game is safe.
I dropped on a Flashpoint with 5/6/7/8 mechs but I only got the first four! What gives?
Flashpoints are intentionally limited to 4 mechs only to help preserve balance in them since they were not designed with multiple lances in mind. This is intentional by BTA design.
Does my career end after the 1200 day timer runs out?
No. Career in BTA is infinite. You get a score and a small reward at the end of career's timer but the mode doesn't end. You can play forever if you'd like to.
What do the different colors of Mech parts in storage mean?
The striped color of the background represents the tonnage class of the Mech:
Gray stripes is Assault
Brown stripes is Heavy
Cyan stripes is Medium
Blue stripes is Light
The solid color of the Mech itself shows whether or not the Mech can be assembled:
Cyan mech means it is a completed Mech placed in storage. Unlike assembling from parts, it will not enter the Mech Bay with all stock parts installed. These mechs are also the ones which can be sold in the store.
Green mech means you have enough parts to assemble the Mech entirely with its own parts. Unlike vanilla, these completed sets will not assemble automatically as soon as you have a full set.
Yellow mech means that the Mech doesn't have a full set of its own parts, but you have compatible parts from other variants of the same chassis and can assemble the Mech by using up parts from other variants.
Gray mech means you do not have enough parts to assemble this Mech.
Purple mech means the Mech is a special variant that cannot use parts from other variants of the same chassis. These are typically unique Mechs that show up as assassination targets in Flashpoint missions, or as Flashpoint rewards.
How do I assemble a Mech using parts from other variants?
Clicking "Ready" with a yellow set of parts selected will open a dialogue box where you can select which other variants to take parts from, as well as displaying the additional credit costs of this "improvised" assembly. The dialogue box will allow you to abort at the final step of assembly, if you change your mind about assembly. The exact number of parts needed for a set to become yellow varies depending on the "Parts for 'Mech assembly" difficulty setting, but you will need at least half the parts to come from the Mech you intend to assemble. A set will only become yellow if you also have the spare parts of other variants needed to complete it in storage.
Where does BTA save your savegames?
BTA moves the save games to a somewhat more convenient location: BATTLETECH\BTASaves\cloud\C0\SGS1
How does C3 work?
The C3 Slave and the C3 Master do NOT need to be used together to work. They both work independently.
The C3 Slave is a 1 ton upgrade item that provides the carrying mech with some sensor/sight upgrades and provides an aura around the carrying mech that provides your lance +1 on attacks against enemies within that aura. Multiple C3 slaves on one mech do not stack.
The C3 Master is a support-slot weapon that serves as a super-powered TAG, as well as providing your entire lance a passive accuracy boost, +2 resolve per turn, and gives the equipped unit +20% sensors/sight range. Multiple C3 Masters do not stack. The C3 Master TAG effect does not stack with TAG or Narc. You cannot use a C3 Master and C3 Slave on the same mech.
My leg actuators/head components/upper arm actuators are destroyed and I can't find new ones, what do I do?
A lot of these do not need to be manually replaced, though the mechbay will yell at you. Just click Repair All then click Confirm and it'll fix them automatically. Anything shaded in light green like those components auto-repairs (also, fixed gear on mechs like the Avatar auto-repairs too), even though the mech bay will yell at you.
My mech is invalid but I don't know why, what's wrong?
Just click Confirm anyway. It'll give you a box telling you exactly what's wrong then you can find and fix it.
Why is my pilot still alive and the mech has been cored on 100% lethality?
Lethality settings is for being head capped not your mech being cored.
Performance Aides for BTA and BT in general
Check Performance Tips for ways to improve game stability and speed.
Why is my drop screen acting glitchy?
If you buy the upgrades that increase drop size, you need to save and reload to fix the drop screen glitches. Its just something that has to be dealt with to increase the number of mechs to be dropped
I want to find out who fields specific (canon) mechs or vehicles. Where should I look?
Check their individual 'mech pages. Each one lists what factions it appears with.
Alternatively, check the Master Unit List here
The new faction tags are based on the official CGL data sourced from their Master Unit list.
To find out who fields a mech, either search for it on the MUL and check the civil war era factions or navigate to the factions page and check that factions civil war era entry. The vast majority of the BTA units use the Civil War faction tags, but there are some exceptions where no tags were present (like with Primitive mechs or extinct units), in these cases, the nearest equivalent set of tags are used (e.g. if a unit went extinct in the Second Succession War, it'll use the available tags from that era).
The only exceptions to this rule are Royal mechs - which deviate from the MUL in that they are used by ComStar and the Great Houses in BTA rather than ComStar and the Clans- and LAM's which use the 4th succession war tags to ensure they are spread around somewhat rather than solely fielded by ComStar.
How do you change ammo types and fire modes?
To shift ammo types being used by a weapon (and assuming you have the variant ammo equipped on the mech), click on the ammo box of that weapon's HUD entry, just to the left of the ammo count and to the right of the mode boxes. Weapons now say what ammo they are using so if it changes, you did it correctly.
To shift weapon modes (for weapons like Machine Guns or Ultra Autocannons), click on the weapon's mode box in the HUD. Weapons now say what mode they are in if they have multiple modes so if it changes, you did it right.
To eject ammo, hold down CTRL and click on that weapon's ammo box on the HUD. It will say something like Ammo Ejected above your mech. This is useful if the weapon is destroyed and you don't want to risk an ammo explosion. Note: the ammo bin will be refilled automatically after the mission is finished.
How does expanded initiative work?
It is just like the vanilla system of initiative, except expanded. The initiative system now runs from 10 to 1, instead of the old system of 5 to 1. Where light mechs used to go on 4, they now go on 9 and 8, based on their tonnage. A break down follows:
- Sub-20 tonners go on 10
- 20-25 tonners go on 9
- 30-35 tonners go on 8
- 40-45 go on 7
- 50-55 go on 6
- 60-65 go on 5
- 70-75 go on 4
- 80-90 go on 3
- 95-100 go on 2
The initiative boosting skill, Master Tactician, and the initiative boosting equipment (Cyclops Battle Computer, Command Console, and Command Mech quirks) all work normally. They increase your initiative by 1 stage (and the Cyclops increases your whole team by 1 like normal).
Can I add HotD, GentlePayloads, Colo's or any other mech assets to BTA?
In short, no. Many of those are already part of the CAB which the cab installer will install to one folder or have become vanilla/DLC mech models. They will conflict and will cause BTA to not work if you add them and start to border on piracy for those that are already included in BT since the various DLC or free updates added them.
The mechbay preview doesn't seem to recognize heat banks or exchangers, what's the deal? Are they broken?
No, they're not broken, they work just fine. The mechbay display doesn't show the right info for those, they work fine in-mission.
Why am I seeing Clan mechs survive huge numbers of engine crits?
Clan engines will not die from critting a side torso, but stacking crits there will still display.
Why is Clan balance the way it is?
I thought very hard about how Clan balancing should work. It is a well-known and widely agreed upon fact that Clans on table are brokenly overpowered when you look at the pure numbers. The Clan Large Pulse is very likely the best weapon in the game and it's not particularly close, nothing the IS ever gets comes anywhere near the best Clans can offer. Now, on table we have other balancing mechanisms (BV, scenario setups, etc) that we do not have here. Because we don't have those other balancing tools here and because it would be massively unfun to play against the Clan technology advantage (trust me I tried this, it was not enjoyable) since you have no tools to counterbalance them, I had to take a different tack to making Clans challenging but fair and still fun. To do this, I looked to lore and to history to see how Clans should have been to begin with.
BTA Clan balance looks heavily to lore, which my reading of indicates that the Clans generally value speed and short, sharp engagements that are won with overwhelming firepower and personal piloting prowess and not won with endurance or range advantage. Clans focus on dueling culture which, according to the laws of zellbringen, require that you always be facing your opponent and clearly within visual range. That to me says that Clan technology should be hotter, higher damage, and shorter range to encourage that kind of playstyle. It's why Clan LRMs have no min-range: they would be used to close distance and still need to be useful at point blank, where the Clans mostly fight. Clan technology in BTA was thus balanced accordingly to encourage Clan players to engage at closer range and to rely on overwhelming firepower (which Clan weapons easily provide) and personal skill (which the player provides with their greater skill than the AI has). Some Clan technology couldn't change (engines, endo/ferro) since it's too integral to stock loadouts, but weapons could be changed.
I understand that this isn't everyone's cup of tea but I did give this serious thought. In my and others experience the gameplay is still challenging and rewarding and Clan technology is still powerful and interesting. There are a few weapons I've definitely missed the mark on (the damned Clan Small Lasers are a recurring bugbear of mine) but that's why I'm still making tweaks here and there as necessary. While I appreciate that there are differing opinions, I really do encourage people to play with Clan tech in BTA as it stands before making too many judgments, to consider it in the wider balance of BTA, and to trust that I didn't do this out of some anti-Clan sentiment but out of a desire to produce a balanced yet still fun and challenging gameplay experience that was reasonably true to my understanding of what the Clans are and how they behave while also not repeating the mistakes FASA made back in the 80s (which multiple developers for the TT game have acknowledged over the years was a mistake and should have been done differently).
ComStar and the Clans are really hard, what gives?
ComStar and the Clans are considered late-game enemy factions. Missions against either ComStar or the Clans should be considered to be 1-1.5 skulls harder than displayed. We can't display higher skulls dynamically, so just keep it in mind as you play against those factions.
What are all these new abilities?! How work, what do?
We have added a new framework mod to BTA called Abilifier which allows heavy modification of the ability trees. With this in mind, BTA 7.0 contains our first pass at additional abilities. All the abilities you're used to are still there. However, when you go to select a new ability at rank 5 or 8, you will be greeted with a pop-up window that has you select from one of several options. You only get one of them, so read the options closely. The new abilities are detailed below:
BATTLELORD (Gunnery 5): Activated ability, grants the activating unit +15% damage and +2 weapon accuracy for the turn. Generates 30 bonus heat this turn. Has a 4 turn cooldown.
BALLISTIC/ENERGY/MISSILE MASTER (Gunnery 8): Technically three abilities but all do the same thing. Passive ability, grants +10% damage and +1 accuracy permanently for the selected weapon type (ballistics/energy/missiles).
PHANTOM (Piloting 5): Activated ability, grants the activating unit +2 evasion from movement for two turns. Has a 4 turn cooldown. Does not end the turn, must be used before movement or there is no effect.
INVISIBLE TARGET (Piloting 8): Passive ability, grants +2 hit defense at all times as well as makes the pilot immune to having evasive charges removed by sensor lock effects.
SHIELDED STANCE (Guts 5): Activated ability, grants +50% damage reduction as well as +1 initiative. The DR lasts for two turns, the initiative only applies to the following turn. Has a 4 turn cooldown.
BRAWLER (Guts 8): Passive ability, grants a +20% damage bonus to kicks,punches, and DFAs. Also, reduces self-damage from DFAs by 50%.
TARGET PREDICTION (Tactics 5): Activated ability, provides lancemates with +2 weapon accuracy for the remainder of the turn. Does not affect the unit that uses the ability. Has a 4 turn cooldown.
KNIFE FIGHTER (Tactics 8): Passive ability, grants support weapons a 33% boost to short and medium range brackets as well as +10% more damage. Does not affect heat damage.
What are the level 10 abilities?
There are four level 10 abilities, one for each skill. Their descriptions follow:
STONE COLD (Gunnery 10): Activated ability, grants +60 heat dissipation for the current turn but also reduces your initiative by 2 for two turns. 4 turn cooldown. Costs 20 Resolve to use.
Lightfoot (Piloting 10): Passive ability, Lightfoot lets you use waypoint movement to plot a perfect path during a sprint and run over minefields without triggering them.
DEFENSIVE FORMATION (Guts 10): Activated ability, grants a flat 20% damage reduction regardless of cover or positioning for all friendly units (only affects the player, not allies). The DR lasts for 2 turns. 6 turn cooldown. Costs 20 Resolve to use.
EAGLE EYE (Tactics 10): Passive ability, grants a +33% bonus to sensors and sight ranges, as well as to the unit's long and max weapon ranges. Also grants a minor (roughly 2.5%) bonus to Called Shots. (Explanation: weapons have four ranges, short, medium, long, and max. Eagle Eye boosts the latter two range brackets by 33%, but short/medium are unaffected.)
How do I activate the Retrainer?
Shift-click on a pilot's skills tab in the barracks. If you have training module 2 and some cash, you can refund all their spent XP.
How do CASE and Inner Sphere XL engines interact? Doesn't the mech still die, making CASE pointless?
Yes and no. Even with CASE, an ammo explosion will still destroy the side torso of a mech with an XL. Losing the IS XL will cause the mech to be a mission kill. However, CASE will prevent the ammo explosion from transferring further into the mech, destroying the center torso. If you lose the CT on a mech in a contract, the odds of permanently losing the entire chassis go way, way up. CASE thus circumvents this loss chance by restraining the explosion. It's still a mission kill, but not a permanent loss.
How do sprint increases from skills and equipment like MASC work? The math doesn't seem right!
Sprint Distance is calculated by [Walk Distance] X [Sprint Multiplier]. By default, [Sprint Multiplier] = 1.5.
Certain skills, equipment, and chassis quirks provide a bonus to [Sprint Multiplier], and all such bonuses stack. For example, IS MASC adds 0.4 to [Sprint Multiplier] and Piloting 4 adds 0.1. A mech with IS MASC and pilot with Piloting Level 4 would then have a sprint distance of [Walk Distance] X 2.
Supercharger boosts [Walk Distance] only, and does not affect [Sprint Distance]. In contrast, the Easy to Pilot chassis quirks and TSM boost both [Walk Distance] and [Sprint Multiplier].
Where do I get a Monster?
You can only acquire a Monster from the mission named Monster Mash. Monster Mash is a contract that only spawns with Steiner as the enemy. It spawns anywhere that Steiner can be fought against and is a 4-5 skull assassination contract.
If you have Community Content enabled, the Monster LAM is also available however it is not found in the Monster Mash mission. It can spawn as an enemy unit in high skull missions against ComStar and the Lyran Commonwealth.
Enemy mechs aren't gaining heat damage from fire weapons and neither am I! What's the deal?!?
In the old system, before BTA v7.3, if a mech had 60 dissipation but only used 40 on its turn, that remaining 20 was simply unused that turn. If he was then hit with a flamer dealing 10 heat damage, the flamer's heat was added the the mech as if it was at neutral 0 heat, meaning the mech would go up to 10 heat from the flamer.
In the new system, starting with BTA v7.3, if a mech has 60 dissipation but only used 40 on its turn, then instead of being considered at 0 dissipation for the rest of the round, it is considered to be at -20 as the remaining 20 dissipation acts like a buffer for incoming heat damage. If that mech was then hit with a flamer dealing 10 heat damage, it would go to -10 heat as the "left-over" 20 heat would absorb the flamer's heat damage.
This applies to both the player's and the AI's units. If you want to overheat someone, you need to target someone who has already fired weapons and used some of their dissipation. Otherwise, if they haven't used any dissipation on their turn, then they have all of their dissipation ready to absorb heat damage, which will make your flamers ineffective against them.
We have a handy diagram, attached below, so you can see this concept in action.
What status effects generate XP for my pilots? How is that XP calculated?
See below for a short list of XP-generating status effects. The math is a little complicated, but here is a short explanation that hopefully clarifies things for you.
The math essentially goes like this: ContractXP * 0.025 * (EffectXP/20) ContractXP is based on the contract and is not obvious, but it's the bulk of your XP and is not affected by these changes. It just provides a base number to work on here. EffectXP is filled in by the status applied below. The rest of the math is simple to follow. Examples will be given below after a list of all the effects is provided.
There are three kinds of XP-generating effects: Sensor Lock/Active Probe, restricted effects, and bonus effects.
SL/AP is the easiest category to understand: sensor locking people or activating an active probe and hitting enemies with it both give XP. Sensor lock gives a flat 20 XP on every use. Active probes give 25 XP per unit hit. These effects do not use the above formula and just give you a flat number for doing them.
Restricted effects are effects that only apply once per source-target pair for the duration of the effect. Basically, your pilot can apply the status to a target and then cannot get XP from applying that status to that target again until the status wears off, at which point it can be applied to that target again. The restricted effects are as follows:
- C3 Master TAG: 25 EffectXP
- Standard TAG: 20 EffectXP
- Plasma status: 20 EffectXP
- PPC status: 25 EffectXP
- Narc Painter status: 50 EffectXP
- Narc Haywire status: 50 EffectXP
Bonus effects are effects that provide XP whenever applied, at any time to anyone regardless of who did it or if it has been applied before. These effects give very little EffectXP but you can apply the effects constantly so it usually works out. The bonus effects as follows:
- C3 Target status (getting an enemy inside of C3): 5 EffectXP
- C3i Target status (getting an enemy inside of C3i): 5 EffectXP
- ECM status (getting an ally inside of ECM): 5 EffectXP
- Static ER Laser status: 10 EffectXP
- Haywire Laser status: 10 EffectXP
- Acid status: 5 EffectXP
- Bees status: 5 EffectXP
- Tracer MG status: 5 EffectXP
- Mortar Flare status: 5 EffectXP
- Mortar Suppressant status: 5 EffectXP
Example 1: Pilot Bob hits an enemy Archer with a Narc Launcher, applying the Painter status. He will gain the following amount of bonus XP at mission completion (assuming the mission has a default of 2000 XP): 2000 * 0.025 * (50/20) = 2000 * 0.025 * 2.5 = 125 XP. He cannot gain XP again by hitting that same Archer with that same status yet, as it is a restricted effect and the status has not worn off yet.
Example 2: Pilot Bob gets three team mates into his ECM field. He will gain the following amount of bonus XP at mission completion (assuming the mission has a default of 2000 XP): [2000 * 0.025 * (5/20)] * 3 = (2000 * 0.025 * 0.25) * 3 = 12.5 * 3 = 37.5 XP. If his allies then leave his ECM bubble and he covers them again with it later, he would gain more XP since ECM is a bonus effect and can be applied repeatedly without limitation.
How does pilot-mech affinity work?
Pilots can gain affinity with mechs, which grants that pilot special benefits in the mech they have affinity with. Affinity is gained by doing multiple contracts in the same chassis, each mission in that chassis adds to that pilot's affinity with that chassis. At 5 missions, 10 missions, and 15 missions, pilots gain special affinity benefits. However, if you switch that pilot out of that chassis and start using a different chassis, the affinity with chassis A will start decaying, eventually vanishing completely. The numbers for affinity and decay follow:
Missions Before Decay: 3
This value defines how many contracts a pilot can go on before prior affinities start to decay. Affinities decay only when you take a contract in a different mech. Example: Joe has 10 affinity for a Penetrator. He then does 4 missions in a Dire Wolf. He would gain 4 affinity for the Dire Wolf and lose 1 affinity for the Penetrator (because the first three missions do not cause decay).
Missions Before Total Affinity Loss: 13
After 13 missions out of a mech, a pilot loses any and all affinity for that mech, no matter what it used to be at.
Max Possible Affinity With A Mech: 18
A pilot cannot have more than 18 affinity in any specific mech. Benefits stop after 15, the extra three are padding to resist decay.
Lowest Possible Decay: 2
A pilot will not decay past 2 affinity in a mech, regardless of missions outside of that mech (as long as 13 missions are not reached, at which point all affinity is permanently lost).
Additional notes:
- Pilot affinities can be seen in several places. In the Barracks, hovering over the pilot in the pilot list will show you their affinities. Additionally, clicking on the Biography of a selected pilot and scrolling to the bottom will show their affinities as well as the benefits granted. Finally, on the contract deployment screen hovering over a pilot will also show their affinities.
- The rank 5 and 10 affinities are the same for all mechs: Comfortable (5, +1 piloting in contracts) and Attuned (10, +1 to all stats in contracts, stacks with Comfortable).
- The rank 15 affinities are all chassis-specific and are listed on that chassis's tooltip in the Mechbay (hover over that mech in the bay to see the affinity).
- Affinities are by chassis not by variant. All Shadow Hawks for example have the same affinity and you can swap a pilot between Shadow Hawks without decay setting in.
What is TisButAScratch and how do pilot hits work now anyway?
Pilot Hits
Injuries are managed by a functionality called PainTolerance. Essentially, pilot injuries have a resist chance based on the pilot's base Guts score, modified by various settings depending on how the injury was inflicted. The math goes roughly as follows (this math is under constant surveillance for balance):
Each point of Guts provides a flat 15% resistance. This stacks without limit (so Guts 10 is 150% resistance). This is then modified by various penalties depending on injury type:
- Head Hit: Each point of damage to the head will reduce Guts resistance by 3%. If the damage to the head does not break armor, then the damage is multiplied by 0.35 before calculating Guts resistance reduction.
- Ammo Explosion: The game will calculate the ratio of total rounds in the bin compared to current rounds in the bin. Guts resistance is then reduced by 1 for each percentage point in that ratio.
- Overheating: The game will calculate the ratio of overheat capacity (in other words, total possible heat, 150) to current heat value. Guts resistance is then reduced by 1 for each percentage point in that ratio.
- Knockdown: Knockdowns are considered a 6 damage hit for math and otherwise works the same way a head hit does.
- Side Torso Destruction: ST destruction is considered a 10 damage hit for math and otherwise works the same way a head hit does.
TisButAScratch Info
TisButAScratch (TBAS) is a new injury framework mod that BTA has incorporated. The remit of the mod is to make pilot injuries more interesting and to give some play to the concept of an injury. It does this by making injuries unique (so you break your left leg or get a head burn or a concussion, etc) and also allowing injured pilots to still be deployed on contracts if desired (they come with the injuries still). A full list of injuries is out of scope for this FAQ entry, there's a good number of them, but this FAQ will detail a few of the new mechanics involved in TBAS.
- Severity and Severity Threshold: Injuries have a severity to them, displayed when you mouse over the injury icon in the Barracks or deployment screen. Injuries can be severity 1 or severity 2. When a pilot accrues 6 severity worth of injuries, they die, regardless of pilot "health" remaining. This means that, if extremely unlucky, you can lose a pilot to three injuries. However, there are relatively few severity 2 injuries so this scenario is unlikely. Additionally, no injury prevents ejection and ejection does not cause injuries or increase severity. Finally, there is no way to increase severity of an existing injury, meaning your severity 1 broken arm will never escalate into a severity 2 injury.
- Debilitating Injuries: If a pilot takes 4 severity worth of injuries, they become debilitated. A debilitated pilot cannot be deployed further until fully healed, and the healing process will take an extensive amount of time. Try to not let this happen to pilots.
- Bleedout Injuries: In mission, it is possible to suffer an injury and have a pilot begin bleeding out. This is indicated by hovering over the injury icon on the pilot and is marked in red text on the popup that appears. Bleedouts take 11 turns. If the pilot is still deployed at that time (i.e. is in the mech doing things), they will die. Bleedouts can be stopped by completing the mission or ejecting the pilot and do not carry over to other contracts with that pilot, they are only in the contract where the injury occurs.
What is this "Size Delta +#" in my attack breakdowns? Where did it come from and how does it work?
The size delta is a scaling penalty or bonus to attacks based on the difference in size between the attacker and defender. For every 15 tons difference between them, the delta gains +1/-1. If the attacker weighs more than the defender, the attacker gets a penalty. If the attacker weighs less than the defender, the attacker gets a bonus.
Example 1: An Atlas is shooting at a Commando. The Atlas is 100 tons, the Commando is 25, meaning there is a 75 ton difference between them. The Atlas suffers a +5 size delta penalty (75/15 is 5) to hit the Commando. In return, the Commando has a +5 size delta bonus to hit the Atlas because of the 75 ton difference.
Example 2: A Grasshopper is shooting a Hunchback. The 'hopper is 70 tons, the Hunchback is 50, meaning there is a 20 ton difference between them. The Grasshopper suffers a +1 size delta penalty (20/15 is 1.333 and the delta rounds down) to hit the Hunchback and the Hunchback's return fire has a similar +1 size delta bonus to hit the Grasshopper.
Why did you change Called Shot?
Called shot has long been something I wanted to change. The reality is that called shot was significantly too easy to abuse, especially thanks to the existence of Inner Sphere XL engines which meant that a called shot to the side torso with any level of reasonable firepower insta-killed a mech. That's not a good place to be. The biggest issue was not the power of the effect, but the ease by which it could be accessed. Having free access to it with any and every pilot for no investment made it such that called shot was always the best possible thing to be doing with your time. I believe that powerful abilities should come with a cost, either opportunity or mechanical, so I asked for the ability to turn off the location selection popup. One of the community's many framework modders gave me that ability (name omitted to spare him frustration, take it up with me if you're not happy with this change) and I tested it for awhile. I've found that not having access to the location popup means that fights are a little riskier and that I have to purpose build a "called shot master" pilot. That's an opportunity cost that matters. I'll also note that in about 5-6 weeks of play, I never once felt like I lost a fight because I didn't have old called shot.
The old called shot functionality also has not gone away permanently. It can be had with the Gunnery 8 ability Precision Master (which replaces Breaching Shot; if you already have Breaching Shot you'll need to retrain to get the full effect of Precision Master) which solves a second problem, namely that the Breaching Shot ability has been looking a little sad and under-utilized recently. This gives it a boost, which it needed. The old called shot functionality can also be found on the FCS Adv TC cockpit mod, which is an opportunity cost of another kind (it takes a cockpit slot, it takes tonnage [the Adv TC now weighs 2 tons instead of 1 ton], and there is the hurdle of acquiring it to begin with).
I've played fairly extensively with these changes and believe them to be in the best interest of BTA and of the experience I desire the mod to have. These changes are not necessarily permanent of course and may change again in the future.
Holy shit, Battle Armor?! How do they work?! Tell me more!!
Yup, it's battle armor. How they work is a little tricky. Thanks to the work of our resident wizard AI, KMiSSioN, we have the ability to set them up in a specific way. Essentially, BA deploy in a squad of several units (Inner Sphere suits are in a squad of 4, Clan are in a squad of 5) and each unit has its own little life total. BA have a single critical location per "trooper" and when that location's armor/structure is depleted, that "trooper" dies. When every "trooper" is killed, the unit is destroyed. As you can guess, there's a lot of oddness with BA, so bear with me as I do a brief FAQ for them.
How many pilots do you need for a BA squad?: One.
Do they have their own mechbay screen?: No, they use mech slots, one slot per squad.
What gear can they use?: Anything you can fit on them, but they have very little tonnage to use. However, BA have a special raft of equipment, usually designated with "BA" in the name somewhere, that only they can use (it is restricted to BA mechs only via a tag, the ProtoMech tag [bear with me, this is necessary for behind-the-curtains reasons]). They also have their own tab in the weapon section of the mechbay (marked with a little space suit icon, at the end of the weapon section past support weapons).
How many kinds of BA are there?: There are six Inner Sphere suits: the IS Standard, Phalanx, Kanazuchi, Infiltrator Mk II, Void, and Fa Shih.
There will be one Clan suit: the Elemental. This may be delayed though, as I wait for a model for it. Gotta have the toad properlike!
Will I be fighting BA a lot?: No. BA will not be in general OpFor, because they're not super interesting to fight honestly. They're fragile and slow and lack heavy firepower. It's like fighting a Wasp except the Wasp has half the armor and a quarter the speed. Yikes.
However, BA will be attacking you in their best setting: urban ambushes. They can kool-aid man out of the buildings in urban environments in ambushes to strike you unawares. And it won't just be 1 or 2 squads. Expect 4-6+ squads, all at once.
How do I get BA?: Other than salvage in the aforementioned urban ambushes, you buy BA (they'll be fairly cheap, hopefully if the defs want to behave). BA squads will be for sale somewhat widely among the Inner Sphere. Among the normal planets, only the IS Standard will be for sale in general. The other five IS suits will be faction-specific (Infiltrator Mk II is Lyran/Davion, Phalanx is Marik, Fa Shih is Liao, Kanazuchi/Void are Kurita). BA equipment will be widely available everywhere generally, as making a BA-scale small laser isn't particularly hard.
For those of you who want to suffer, there is a Battle Armor start and any start that can start with a bug can instead roll a suit of Battle Armor. Good luck, MechWarrior.
Are they worth playing with?: Only you can answer that question, but yes, I think they're fun to use. Injuries are common and the suits are fragile, but they're neat on low-skull contracts. I wouldn't take BA to 3+ skulls though, unless you like suffering.
I've Heard Some Pilots Have Unique Abilities and Affinities. Who/What Are They?
There are a select number of pilots who have unique abilities and affinities. All of these are BTA Team pilots or someone who has contributed to the community/mod in some way. Affinities are mentioned in pilot descriptions and abilities are found in the Passive Abilities tray in-mission.
Callsign: Ability (Effect)
- bloodydoves: Designer's Insight (+1 initiative)
- Aether: Support Master (+20% damage with support weapons, -50% crit with support weapons)
- taintedloki: Sensor Ghost (immune to sensor lock, -2 weapon accuracy)
- Wulfbanes: SRM Master (+10% damage and +1 accuracy with SRMs and Streak SRMs but -1 accuracy with anything else)
- t-bone: Kentucky Windage (ballistic weapons ignore 3 evasion but -4 accuracy with indirect fire and min range on all weapons increased by 60 meters)
- Turtrus: Laser Insulator (energy weapons generate 10% less heat)
- Shade: Melee Tyrant (+10% damage with kicks, punches, and physical weapon attacks)
- Tex: Hard to Kill (+2 pilot health)
- Grampa: Old Man of the Mechs (+10% damage with all weapons but -50 unsteady threshold at all times)
- Revostae: Hold Locks Please (+4 accuracy with indirect missile, -2 accuracy with direct missile weapons.)
Callsign: Affinity (Mech; Effect)
- bloodydoves: Beats By Crab (King Crab; +10% weapon damage)
- taintedloki: Choppy Choppy (Hatchetman; +30% damage with the hatchet)
- Wulfbanes: Speed King (Commando; +15% sprint speed)
- t-bone: Warfighter (Corsair, any model; +10% ballistic damage)
- Turtrus: Radar Jammer (Crab; +2 hit defense)
- Shade: Shield of Faith (Valkyrie II; +10% damage reduction)
- Tex: Too Angry to Die (Awesome; +10% energy damage)
- Hellion: Little Purple Tank (Bushwacker; +20% damage reduction)
- LeFay: Wizard of Camelot (Merlin; 40% reduced sensor signature)
- Ridgeline: On the Wings of Angels (Wasp LAM/Stinger LAM/Phoenix Hawk LAM; +2 bonus accuracy in those LAMs)
- Pharaoh: Bring Your Pretty Face To My Axe (Berserker; +20% sprint speed)
- Raza5: Foundation's Edge (Mongoose; +10% energy damage and ignores 1 evasion with energy weapons)
- Revostae: Make it Rain (Archer; +10% missile damage)
What are Specializations?
Specializations are bonuses awarded to pilots for doing specific things. A pilot can make progress toward any number of specializations, but can only have a max of 2 Mission Specs and 2 OpFor Specs. Once specializations are earned, they are permanent; there is no "decay" mechanic. Any specializations a pilot has achieved, as well as progress towards any specializations, can be seen by hovering over the large pilot portrait in the barracks:
OpFor Specs are bonuses awarded for destroying a certain number of units belonging to a particular faction. For example, after destroying 20 Lyran units, a pilot might be given a bonus that increases damage vs Lyran units, or even a discount in stores belonging to some enemies of the Lyrans. Available OpFor Specs for a given faction can be seen in the faction tooltips, either in the Command Center or the Commanders Quarters Reputation screen. The number in brackets indicates the number of kills required for the OpFor Spec to be awarded:
Mission Specs are bonuses awarded for completing a certain number of missions of a particular type. For example, after completing 5 Convoy Ambush missions, a pilot might do extra damage to vehicles on Convoy Ambush missions. Available Mission Specs for a given contract type can be seen in the contract type tooltip in the Command Center. The number in brackets indicates the number of missions required for the Mission Spec to be awarded:
StratComs are bonuses that are always awarded to your lance for NOT dropping your commander on a contract. Currently the only StratComs are +1 increased resolve generation or +1 better accuracy when leaving the Commander in barracks. StratComs can be seen by hovering over the commander's portrait in the barracks and changed by control+clicking the commander's service record button:
What reputation do I need with a faction to access their faction store?
You need to be at 100 rep with a faction and be allied with them in order to access their faction store.
Why did the Max Armor button change from vanilla functionality?
In vanilla, the Max Armor button didn't actually truly max your armor. It used your remaining tonnage in a specific set of ratios to try and fill your armor. Now, given that vanilla's mechbay was a simpler place, this basically worked and if you just stripped your mech before hitting it, it usually maxed you out as expected. However, because of the way it worked, it was not suitable for our needs. Because the BTA mechbay is more complex and has things like Ferro-Fibrous armor which change the way armor is calculated, the Max Armor button essentially didn't work. It would try to use your tonnage but couldn't use it all because of the armor and the ratio math it used was also all out of wack.
Because of these issues, we changed the Max Armor button to now actually max your armor, regardless of your free tonnage. Now, the button just ignores everything and sets your armor to full in every location, full stop. While also not perfect, this works better because it ignores weirdness like Ferro-Fibrous armor or strange ratios, it just does what the button says and calls it a day. This is intended on our end and we have no intent of changing it back to the way it was in vanilla because that functionality fundamentally doesn't jive with how BTA functions.
Where is Galaxy at War? Why doesn't BTA have it?
GaW is absent because we don't like some of the things it does so we have chosen to not include it. We do however have a new mod called WarTech IIC which functions in a similar way but without the online component. See below for a basic explanation of how WarTech IIC works.
What is WarTech IIC and how does it work?
WarTech IIC (WIIC) is our answer to the requests for a Galaxy at War-type mod that permits planetary control changes. This is a highly-requested feature for BTA and we're glad to be able to include it for players. WIIC creates what we're calling flareups that players can go join in with if they want, with the winner of the flareup gaining (or keeping) control of the planet in question. Some details follow:
Can I start my own flareups? How do flareups happen? No, the player does not start them (you're a mercenary, not a military commander for a Great House). Factions decide to start flareups themselves based on some complex internal math that makes them more likely to start flareups near the player's ship. This ensures there's always something happening nearby.
How do I get involved in a flareup? You fly to a nearby flareup. When you arrive in that system, you'll get a popup saying "hey, these guys are fighting, we can join" and you can go to the Command Center to join in. To join a flareup, the faction must not Hate or Loathe you. If your reputation is HATED or LOATHED, they will not hire you. Also, the three main Clans will not hire you for any reason. Once you hire on with a side in the flareup, you are stuck there until the flareup ends. You can leave but you take a reasonable reputation hit, so try not to do that. Flareups have strengths, so each side comes with X amount of strength to the fight. The loser of a flareup is determined by the first side to reach zero strength. Sides will lose strength naturally over time but player involvement can swing the scales. How does a flareup work once I'm in it? Once you start a flareup, you're locked in until it completes. Every few days, you'll get a contract offer from your employer (the faction you sided with in the flareup). You can either pass on the contract (in which case the fighting factions figure it out themselves, affecting their flareup strength dynamically) or you take the contract. If you accept, you are locked into it and cannot back out, you must complete it, so be sure to read the popup clearly to see what kind of contract it is before clicking accept. You then play the mission normally. Once you complete the contract, there will be a note on the ending score screen that tells you the outcome of the battle. If you win, the enemy faction loses some amount of strength in the flareup, making it more likely that your side will win.
When a planet flips, what happens? When a planet flips control, the employers for contracts and the shop owner changes. However, to see these changes, you'll need to travel away and back to the planet since they don't instantly change. The employers on that planet will be anyone nearby (so owner, probably the guys you took it from, the pirates, and possibly other nearby factions if there are any.
Can I keep my progress on the map from campaign to campaign? You sure can! In BATTLETECH\BTASaves there is a file called WIIC_systemControl.json. When you end a career, you can take that file and copy it into Mods/WarTechIIC and then start your new career. WIIC will then read that file and update the map in your new career with your progress on the map, meaning you can, over a long long time, wipe out the hated Capellans (for example) at last!
Why are vehicles not dying to a single crew compartment crit?
Short answer: it's supposed to take three crits to kill the crew which is now fixed and is now working as intended.
Long answer: several things that were not working properly including crew compartment crits got fixed in MechEngineer for several other features to work properly.
Is there an option in the mech bay to strip only weapons and ammo from mechs?
Great Question! Yes! Yes there is!
Hold CTRL whilst clicking the "Strip Equip" button in the mechbay to strip only the weapons and ammo!
How does mech salvage actually work?
When you destroy a mech you get some number of parts from that mech as salvage. That number fluctuates and varies based on how much of the mech was left when it was destroyed. The method of destruction, other than one specific type of destruction, does not matter (the only exception is CT destruction, which will be covered below). The number of parts also is based on the number of parts you require to assemble a mech.
Generally speaking, the parts remaining depend on how much of the mech was left when it was destroyed. The more you break the mech, the less is available for salvage. This specifically refers to body parts (arms, legs, torsos, head). We'll go through some basic examples (all using 4 parts for required assembly).
Example 1: You headcap a mech, destroying the head. The rest of the mech is fully intact. How many parts do you get? You will get 4 parts (assuming 4 to assemble). Only the head was destroyed, the other body parts are all there, nothing is taken out of the salvage pool.
Example 2: You kill an Inner Sphere mech by destroying its side torso and it had an XL engine. Only that torso and that arm were destroyed. How many parts do you get? You should get 3 parts (assuming 4 to assemble). Most of the mech was intact, so you get "most" of it as salvage.
Example 3: You kill a mech by annihilating it utterly, only the head and left leg are left. How many parts do you get? You will get 1 part (assuming 4 to assemble). You left very little of it behind, so you don't get much of it.
Example 4: You kill a mech by drilling straight through its CT, leaving the rest of the mech undamaged. How many parts do you get? You will get 1 part (assuming 4 to assemble). Center Torso destruction is the only exception as to salvage rules. Destroying the CT always gives only 1 part, no matter how much was left.
Example 5: You kill a mech by dealing the pilot enough pilot hits to kill them. You've destroyed the left arm and left torso. How many parts do you get? You should get 3 parts (assuming 4 to assemble). This is an example where, despite how they died, you still didn't leave the entire mech behind so you don't get the whole thing. Most of it was left though, so you get most of it in salvage.
Example 6: You headcap a mech, destroying the head and pilot with it. The rest of the mech is brutally savaged, missing a leg, both arms, and 1 side torso. How many parts do you get? You should get 2 parts (assuming 4 to assemble). This situation is another example where, despite the mech dying by pilot death, you destroyed a lot of it, so you don't get it all.
IMPORTANT NOTE: These numbers are examples only and can vary slightly. The salvaging is percentage based and each body part has weighting, so it has a little variability. The numbers also change up or down based on how many parts you require to assemble a mech (if you need 8 parts, Example 1 will drop 8 parts for instance, not 4, etc).
Why aren't mechs showing up in stores anymore?
In order for you to see and buy mechs in stores you must be at least friendly (40 reputation or higher) with that system's faction owner and you must be on a planet with a moderate or large population. Turns out the Houses won't sell their nicest gear to just any old merc.
What mechs can I get from the Ancestral Mech background?
It differs based on another choice you make at character creation. See Ancestral Mech for the options.
How does Resolve work in BTA?
Resolve in BTA is a per-pilot statistic, not a lance-wide statistic. What this means is that pilots track their resolve independently of one another. They still benefit from base resolve gain and from resolve-increasing effects such as mech equipment or quirks, but when they spend resolve they draw from their individual pools, meaning your pilots can have wildly different resolve values at any given moment, depending on your usage. Resolve sources are a little more interesting now as are resolve uses, all of which will be defined below:
Base Resolve Info: The Resolve bar now runs from 0 to 60, not 0 to 100. The Argo morale meter provides less per-turn resolve than it used to, with each slot on the morale scale giving 0/5/10/15/20 resolve (so the max morale on the Argo gives you 20 resolve a turn in-mission, etc). Notably, buying morale on the Argo is now more expensive than it used to be.
Resolve Costs: Precision Strike and Vigilance now both cost 50 resolve, with High Spirits being 40 and Low Spirits being 60. Most activated pilot abilities (such as Target Prediction or Battlelord) cost 20 resolve, with only Multi-Target and Sensor Lock remaining free-to-play, that cost does not vary with pilot spirits like Precision Strike and Vigilance do. The activated pilot abilities have had their cooldowns reduced across the board to reflect that they now cost resolve. Note that Precision Strike and Vigilance do not have cooldowns, so every pilot in your force can use them in the same turn, if you can pay for it on everyone.
Resolve Generation: While your pilots will gain resolve normally every turn from the Argo morale values, they can also gain or lose resolve due to in-combat actions. Without giving a precise breakdown of the costs (since they're likely to change), generally, killing enemies, blowing off locations, or DFA'ing the OpFor will generate bonus resolve for your team, where having those things happen to you will cause your pilots to *lose* resolve. If you have a mech with the Improved Communication quirk or the Encouraging affinity, those resolve bonuses apply to your entire force. Additionally, there is a modifier for your pilots Tactics score in their resolve generation. The math is complicated but essentially: more Tactics = more resolve for that pilot. This tactics modifier is *by pilot*.
How do I eject a pilot?
If your pilot is about to bleed out or your mech is in an unsalvageable situation, you might want to eject the pilot. You can do this by clicking the little, reddish, upwards pointing button in the lower left part of your screen, in the mech structure overview. Please note that this will destroy the head of mech and any added equipment in it which will need to be repaired and/or replaced prior to its next deployment.
What is the starting drop tonnage and the max drop tonnage in BTA?
Starting drop tonnage: 450
Max drop tonnage after all upgrades: 950
Are there special commands for the starmap?
Yes! There's a handful of special commands you can use on the starmap for various things.
- Hitting F1 will toggle all the systems you have not visited.
- Hitting F2 will toggle the map to show you systems by difficulty (largely not necessary now that we have the skull-rating filter at the top of the map, but it exists).
- Shift-click on a system will allow you to plan a jump route perfectly, if you want to do that for whatever reason.
- Ctrl-F will bring up a search box you can use to search by certain keywords (system name, system tags, factions offering contracts there).
How do the Airdrop Beacons work? Also, what is an Airdrop Beacon?
BTA v11.0 introduces a new mechanic that permits the player to call down allied units straight into battle. This is done via the use of new mech components called beacons. Beacons come in four varieties, each of which permits the summoning of one kind of unit. The available units are Battle Armor, Tanks, 'Mechs, and Turrets. Each beacon must be equipped to a 'mech in order to provide the functionality. Using a beacon consumes that unit's entire action (including movement, you cannot do *anything* else on the same turn you use a beacon). Called in units are AI controlled and are considered allied to the player (so you're not summoning a wild card, you're getting a guaranteed ally). Each beacon has limitations on its call down in order to prevent undue spamming. There are cooldowns, per-mission use limits, resolve costs, and c-bill costs to using the beacons. Each beacon has descriptive text that will indicate these costs (the cooldown is seen after using the ability). Read closely.
The unit summoned by the beacons varies. Each beacon has a "default" unit that it can always summon, regardless of any conditions. The beacon description will also tell you what the unit is (BA: Inner Sphere Standard; Tank: Vedette; Turret: Standard Laser; Mech: UrbanMech UM-R60). However, you can acquire contracts that permit the beacons to call in different units. Contracts come in two kinds: permanent and one-use. Permanent contracts permit you to *always* call in the contract's unit if you like, as long as you have the permanent contract in storage on the ship. One-use contracts permit you to call in the contract's unit *once* after which you must purchase the contract again. All Battle Armor and Turret contracts are permanent contracts. There are a variety of permanent contracts for 'mechs and tanks, but there are also a lot of one-use contracts for 'mechs and tanks. To acquire contracts, you must visit stores. Tank, turret, and the odd permanent mech contracts can be acquired in regular stores on larger Inner Sphere worlds. All battle armor contracts are in faction stores (for the faction that sells the BA in question). Faction stores also sell one-use mech and tank contracts.
To use the beacons, select the ability from beneath the 'mech's weapon panel. You will get a bright green circle to select the location of your called unit with. After clicking to determine location, you'll then be asked to determine facing. Click again and hit "Confirm" and the unit will be spawned. If you'd like to select a non-default unit, hold Shift while selecting the location and you'll get a popup asking you to select the specific unit you want to spawn.
What is the difference between BattleMech and AirMech mode on a LAM and how do I transform into AirMech mode?
In BattleMech mode LAMs are just a normal mech. In AirMech, they transform models to their "plane" looking models and become extremely fast and ignore terrain entirely, but also are fragile and easily knocked down. Their Avionics equipment has the full details and permits them to transform on their turn (transformation can only be done before movement, if you've already moved you're stuck in that mode for the turn).
To transform between BattleMech and AirMech modes simply click the Avionics button in the weapons HUD at the bottom-right of you screen while in mission: