So I’m preface this by saying I love this game as it lets me just do things and forget about life for a while. But, I kind of suck at planning (ADHD) and so I’ll just end up watching play throughs and building what they build, where I would rather just play it on my own but I can never keep the motivation to see what I should do next.

So I’m wondering is there some kind of checklist for each step.

Like:

  • Gather resources
  • Set up electric power
  • Get 1 red science per second set up
  • etc

This is as worded hella poorly and I will delete if not well received.

  • LordWarfire
    link
    fedilink
    English
    21 year ago

    I like to play the game in phases - first phase is to automate the digging of coal, iron, and copper, (stone too if I feel energetic) into chests.

    Then comes electricity - get something like 8 iron, 4 coal, 2 copper, 1 stone mines going and smelting.

    Then start on science - I usually aim for 8 factories for red and green which will feed a few science labs.

    Personally I then get all the science I can and basically build another base around that base, stealing transport belts from the science factories and building a basic bus and expanding out to the remaining science colours.

    Another phase is probably trains which means lots of iron production.

    Another phase is robots which marks the need for oil and copper being important.

    Then with the final sciences comes true scale, my first base is usually gone by this point.

    Finally comes the rocket/spaceship and then time to start building my REAL base.

    I don’t tend to worry about number of factories or science per second but will try to increase until I’ve filled a belt with inputs.

    • @[email protected]OP
      link
      fedilink
      English
      11 year ago

      That’s a good approach and thanks for writing it out for me.

      I guess it doesn’t pay, unless that’s your goal, to focus on the production rates so much and just build. If you’re short on red science then increase production.

      Also, letting your current needs dictate what you should work on next makes sense.

      Thanks.