You ARE your favorite character from your favorite space tv show. "This is Star Trek through the Rock Band filter. You are playing together as if you were on a ship." In other words, the game works best when you gather a group of 6 friends, pretend to be a Starfleet officer, and save the galaxy from the comfort of your computer. To assemble a full bridge crew, you need people to fill these roles: The Captain The Captain
is simultaneously the most important member of the crew and the least
involved in terms of physical game play. In an ideal setup with a full
crew, the Captain doesn't manage any of the bridge
stations, instead focusing his/her efforts on monitoring the main
screen, prioritizing targets, and timing the interactions of the crew. The Captain needs to maintain order among the crew members
so the whole affair doesn't become a shouty mess where you go warping
into some bad-guys grill just to immediately eat a dozen photon
torpedoes. Helms Officer The helms officer flies the ship, maneuvering
in battle for optimal positioning, going to warp/jump when its time to
haul ass, and managing the displays for the main screen. Careful helms
play is essential for successful battle, helping to get the drop on
enemies, avoid fire, and gain target lock. Helms officers also share
control of the main screen display and shields. Weapons Officer The weapons officer manages the beams, torpedoes, nukes, mines, and shields for the ship, locking onto targets and blowing them to heck when the Captain
commands it. Weapons officers have to prioritize which sort of
torpedoes to load into the tubes, with a selection of Mines, Homing
Torpedoes, Nukes, and ECM. Weapons requires a good deal of coordination
with Helms and Engineering to be successful, setting up the shot and
then giving the Weapons systems the power necessary to make it count.
Engineering Engineering controls the very beating heart of the Artemis, managing the power systems and usage for the entire ship.
If a given system has no power dedicated to it, it doesn't work.
Engineering can add more power to something to make it work better, e.g.
make the ship turn faster, beams fire faster, etc. Doing this will
cause that system to overheat, so engineering manages cooling systems.
Engineering also manages the damage control systems, prioritizing ship's
repairs when damage is taken in battle. Interaction between
engineering, helms, and weapons will make or break any given combat, as a
sudden loss of power to steering, weapons, or shields can have drastic
consequences, and an extra boost can give you a big advantage over a
more powerful ship. Communications Officer The Comms officer can transmit orders to friendly vessels, request a space
station build a type of ordnance, and snoop on enemy communications.
Comms can also taunt enemy ships, getting them to attack your ship instead of a space
station or friendly vessel. Comms can also order them to surrender.
Finally, comms can signal RED ALERT! (which doesn't do much aside from
blasting a really annoying sound from everyone's console, and making the
radar retical turn red) Comms should hit RED ALERT a lot. Science Officer The science officer runs the advanced sensors of the Artemis, detecting and assessing enemy ships as well as finding space
anomalies for the Artemis to investigate. Science's ability to scan the
shields of enemy ships provides Weapons with vital information need to
prioritize targeting, and its ability to find anomalies can grant your ship a much needed power-up when you don't have time to dock with a space station. How many people can play? Each ship has 5 bridge stations and a captain, the server allows for 6 ships. Multiple stations can be controlled per player, but each ship NEEDS at least 2 players (helm and weapons).
What's New (Updated 16 December 2013)
- users with super-hi-res screens have some relief from tiny buttons now.
- the back button on Android phones now works.
- a pernicious bug that troubled the science console has been fixed.
Requires Android: 2.3 and up
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