Roadbeer, on 05 November 2013 - 12:33 PM, said:
There are 6 weapon groups, and a wide variety of energy weapons.
You don't have to have them all on one button firing at once. Expand your game experience.
Good luck with the guy running AC/5s & PPCs then, you'll need it.
Sandpit, on 05 November 2013 - 12:51 PM, said:
Soooooooooooo my 5LL Stalker that has all 5 LLs in weapon group one doesn't work how? Oh, wait, it DOES work. I just don't fire off every single one of them at one time in an alpha strike every time I hit the trigger. It's called chain fire. Just because you can't alpha strike (which in ANY reference to ANY Btech scenario is ALWAYS referred to a LAST-DITCH EFFORT) doesn't make any of those weapons useless.
What people fail to understand is while you can limp along and make this sort of work, any properly design 'mech will utterly
obliterate it. This is key. Because you can do well in pugs chaining through 5 lasers doesn't mean that it's a good thing or will last against a good 'mech.
And here is why:
OK, say you fire in groups of 2, 2 and 1. OK. Now each set of lasers takes 1 full second to discharge.
Now say you are PERFECT with your timing sans Macro, so not to lose ANY DPS, and nail it precisely at 0.50 seconds.
This means you have to keep the target - and the location you are aiming at - in direct LOS under your crosshairs for
2.5 full seconds. Realistically however you WON'T be timing perfectly, expanding that number to
3+ seconds.
Meanwhile a guy with AC/5 and PPC needs to keep you in sight for heavy damage for
0.1 seconds.
The 1 second discharge is an acceptable trade-off for hitscan
if they can fire together. Otherwise all you are doing by "learning to pilot" that mech is learning to pilot a dead end weapon system. You're like people clinging to arrows in the age of gunpowder, because it kinda sorta still works.
EDIT: Remember, spread out damage is no good either. So that's 3+ seconds
on a single component. There is no way someone competent will stand around and let you have that long of a shot at any given area.
Edited by Victor Morson, 05 November 2013 - 12:59 PM.