Chris Lowrey, on 08 August 2018 - 11:27 AM, said:
Nothing is final yet, so feel free to continue the discussion with your own opinions on the matter. On my side, I am pushing for it.
Dissipation affects lasers, but it also affects a number of other weapons that can be leaned on for DPS. Like we said in the podcast, global changes don't affect all things equally, and as much as lasers are quickly pointed to as being the most affected by a change like this, this would be something that affects all builds. PPC's, Mass MRM and SRM, and many other builds rely on those heat reserves just as much as lasers do and will be as much under the microscope as lasers are, everything will need to be tested in these cases.
I'm glad touching the heat capacity and dissipation is at least being considered after being suggested something like 3 years ago and being shot down for no particular reason.
If you want it to not have a huge effect on most builds, just raise dissipation in proportion with the lowering of the heat cap. If you halve the heat cap, double the dissipation, for example. This keeps sustained DPS the same (except for builds that are either so cool that heat isn't a thing for them, or so hot that they can no longer fire all of their weapons before some of their cooldowns are up - which are generally the problem builds that needs to be solved anyways).
I'd suggest starting with heat capacity cut in half and dissipation doubled (approximately); a smaller change simply wouldn't have a significant effect on alphas. Even halving the heat cap only affects mechs that hit 50+% heat in one shot.
Somewhat unrelated, please consider reducing the simultaneous charging of gauss rifles to 1 for at least standard and heavy gauss.
Other suggestion for mitigating high-alpha issues: get rid of torso weapon convergence. The issue with high alphas is when they're all dealt to one component. If every torso/head mounted weapon shot straight forward, many of these builds would spread damage more, or be forced to mount their weapons in their more vulnerable arms.