Lightfoot, on 22 January 2013 - 09:35 AM, said:
My very tough Catphract with just a ST 275 engine, never overheats, does 67 damage on the mechlab scale while my best Awesome does 56 and overheats all the time. Cataphract also manuvers better. Move up to the Stalker and the loadouts are extremely better with more options. No stupid 4 hardpoints in the CT here, no that's reserved for the 11.5 million CBill AWS-9M, no hardpoint in the Head either. Stalker even gets extra critical slots and it is a monster to take down, better hope you outrange it or can stay behind it.
So there is your balance point, somewhere between the Cataphract and the Stalker who are both tougher and weild more punch than the Awesome. Basically we are saying make the Awesome tougher I think, if possible give it special cooling ability. Although more hardpoints in usable locations is an option, I don't think they will do that.
Cataphract:
Well, your best Phract has a 67 damage rating in the mechlab; my 8T has a damage rating of 66 and my 8R has 78, so by that measure the Phract is neither tougher nor does it wield more punch. As far as toughness goes, it makes more sense to look at the armor though: AWS has 494 vs. CTF's 434, 13% more armor. From my perspective, the CTF is neither tougher nor does it wield more punch. Speed is one difference, depending on chassis: The top speed for the 4X matches the 8-series AWS; the 9M matches the rest of the Phracts. Not enough to make one decisively better than the other in all cases, though I'll give you that the CTF has a better ability to turn. As for the overheating, I'd say the issue lies between the keyboard and the chair, or at worst, in your design choices. There's nothing inherent in the AWS causing it to overheat more than a CTF.
For me, there are two key differences that might lead someone to choose CTF over AWS: the size/hitboxes, and the use of ballistics. I can understand both of these choices, but I think of the increased toughness as a tradeoff for being forced to cover my massive frame a bit more, and I prefer lasers and missiles to ballistics, so that side of things is a no-brainer.
Stalker:
I'll concede that the Stalker has both more firepower available and more armor (but not by much; only 6% more); however, that firepower needs to be brought to bear, and that extra armor isn't going to help when the 9M gets behind it. While its speed matches the other chassis of AWS, it's nowhere near as maneuverable, it's got virtually no torso twist and can't move its arms. Again, all that extra firepower needs to be brought to bear; the AWS can hit the STK at angles at which the STK simply doesn't have the ability to fire effectively, thanks to its superior torso twist and excellent arm-mounted firing ability.
I will admit that I can't stand the STK for the reason I mention above. I thought the Atlas was like walking through mud until I tried a STK. No thanks.
I'm not trying to say that the AWS is objectively better than the CTF or the STK. I'm trying to say that with each mech there are a series of pros and cons.I see these three mechs as the closest comparisons to each other, and I see valid reasons, when compared to each other, to choose either one, based on personal preference and which pros and which cons we prefer.
Except the Stalker.
Edited by FerretGR, 22 January 2013 - 10:23 AM.