Posted 07 February 2013 - 06:15 PM
"Heat management is an important part of the game. The game should warn me when I'm not paying attention to my heat so that I don't have to manage it."
What?
The new system is leagues better than the old, in terms of depth. It seems complicated because PGI decided to give more information than usual on the mechanics. They could have simply given the basic instructions and let players figure it out.
It could be improved, for sure; the manual-power-up/down is poorly implemented, which is the only significant problem.
Making the override a toggle would be a good move, and so would limiting the power queue to 1 action so that players can't queue 10 start-ups and shutdowns and then wait for their mech to execute the entire queue. Or even better, removing the queue and simply making it power up/down per key press per action.
Mech overheats, shuts down; player holds/presses P key; as soon as the shutdown animation is finished, mech will start up; mech will not shut down manually unless the P key is released and pressed again, after the mech has started up.
Also, you can't 'override' the shutdown after hitting 100% heat, because the actual shutdown is nigh-instantaneous. You hit 100% heat, you are shut down. The mech takes a couple seconds to wind down, but for all intents and purposes, it is already shut down. Meaning you have to wait for it to wind down, then restart the mech.
Here's a couple tips for those of you who cant' quite grasp how to use the mechanic:
1. Rebind the override to something close to your normal hand position. I use LShift, but anything in that area works. You need to be able to activate the override while in combat. O is a terrible default key.
2. If you do shut down, do absolutely nothing. Unless you were at 99% and fired off 4 PPCs, your heat will be below 100% by the end of the shutdown animation, and the game will automatically start your mech back up.
3. Learn how much heat your weapons produce on each map, and override any time you think firing may overheat you. The override is not there for you to just keep shooting while over 100%; it's so that if you're close, you can brush against the 100% limit without risking a deadly mid-combat shutdown.
If you shut down at all, you're probably doing something wrong though. Try to monitor your heat more.