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New game idea - Dissolution of Empire. Sun, 01 January 2006 06:11 Go to next message
Madman is currently offline Madman

 
Officer Cadet 1st Year

Messages: 228
Registered: November 2003
Location: New Zealand
I'm interested in exploring a game idea that would bring politics a little more to the fore, and would like feedback or expressions of interest in playing on the following rules, to work out whether to continue the idea. If there is enough interest, I'll run a game.

The basic idea is that one of the races (this would almost certainly be the host, I'd be willing to do this) is an old established but low tech empire that lets the other players (the new 'client' races) do all the work, and taxes this work to sustain itself. As the new races get more powerful, they may (or may not) challenge this regime. The Empire's role would be to try and keep the peace by persuasion, sustainable tax rates, threats, bribery, military action, etc., and the new races try and determine whether or when it is in their best interest to stay with the Empire or rebel. I kind of expect things to eventually go very badly for the Empire, but you never know ...

The game is set up so that normal players have very few special 'rules' they have to follow. The Empire starts very powerful, but has lots of rules.

Short version of rules:
==================

Normal non AccBBS Stars! game, except for the presence of a powerful neighbour who demands mineral taxes. Over time, the power difference disappears ...

Longer version of rules (this is only an outline, I can flesh them out later):
============

There are three classes of race - the Empire, the Spacer Guild (tax collectors), and the client races. The Empire and the Guild would be played by the host. The Empire and the Guild would have a 100 year 'jump start' - every other race would start exactly as if the 100 years hadn't happened (i.e. population, minerals, defenses, and ships will be 'put back' to their 2400 values, and no research will occur).

The Empire would be a wide hab CA race that would start with several rules it had to follow:
(1) The Empire starts (after the 100 years) with no mines built, and also performs no remote mining or mineral alchemy. All minerals must come from taxes. (Actually, the Empire would preform MA (at the slow rate) after getting bio 26).
(2) The Empire may research bio freely, however for other techs, it must be presented with an item of a particular tech level before it may research to that tech. For example, the first time the empire is gifted a large freighter, it may research con to 8. It may also research to 26 once given the highest component that can be given in each field (such as the Trans-Star 10).
(3) The Empire starts somewhere near the middle of the map, and does not colonize planets beyond a predefined area.
(4) The Empire starts with a large but low-tech fleet of ships (enough to enforce it's will at the start of the game), except that it might also have some quite high tech scanners provided by the guild.
... and maybe some more restrictions in here, designed to make the Empire a race that can only be played with the help of taxes.
All these restrictions are lifted the moment that the Empire takes more than a certain amount of damage - it can then research tech and mine minerals freely.

The Guild would be a collection of races (possibly 5 IT, or 4 IT and one SS) who's only purpose is to smooth out the MM hell that the empire might have in revenue gathering. It has no restrictions on the amount of mining or research it can do (although if won't do any research during the 100 year 'start-up' - either that or SS would have to be banned as a player race), but the only minerals of gives to the Empire are collected taxes, and doesn't give the Empire any techs (unless both the Empire and Guild are attacked by the same player in which case they will co-operate). It's job is simply to collect taxes and transport any ships between the Empire and the client races (it will charge minerals from the Empire or anyone else for any other services). The rules for it are:
(1) They do not own any worlds except the ones it starts on, plus any worlds given by players. Even the secondary IT worlds are removed before play.
(2) They are very neutral
...



[Updated on: Thu, 05 January 2006 21:16]

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Re: New game idea - Dissolution of Empire. Tue, 03 January 2006 14:04 Go to previous messageGo to next message
paco1600 is currently offline paco1600

 
Crewman 3rd Class

Messages: 8
Registered: November 2005
Location: Italy
Hi,
I red your idea, it is interesting and I am thinking about some aspects of Guild and Empire.
Soon my questions.

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Re: New game idea - Dissolution of Empire. Thu, 05 January 2006 14:11 Go to previous messageGo to next message
paco1600 is currently offline paco1600

 
Crewman 3rd Class

Messages: 8
Registered: November 2005
Location: Italy
Hi,
some questions:
if I pay taxes I want something: what I receive from Empire?
is it possible to buy tech or ships from Empire?
what is the amount of taxes?
in what way Empire calculates the value of components and projects?
when payment is not possible (low amount, war, etc.) what happen to client?
is there on year 2500 only one HW for each player of guild and empire?
"worlds given by players" to guild: in what way? and what is the value?

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Re: New game idea - Dissolution of Empire. Thu, 05 January 2006 21:08 Go to previous message
Madman is currently offline Madman

 
Officer Cadet 1st Year

Messages: 228
Registered: November 2003
Location: New Zealand
paco1600 wrote on Fri, 06 January 2006 08:11

if I pay taxes I want something: what I receive from Empire?
is it possible to buy tech or ships from Empire?
Well, you don't necessarily pay taxes for what you receive - you pay taxes because they are (at the start) a lot bigger than you are (think the United States pre-1776). They don't grow though - you do, so it is anticipated that at some point people want to stop paying taxes.

However, the Empire does have a couple of things to offer - they are the only ones with Orbital Adjusters, and they do get to distribute points to add to the score. They also may also get involved in military action, but would be careful about this as they are so limited by minerals.

The Empire would not give/sell tech (perhaps that that should be a game rule), and probably not give/sell ships either. There's a bit of a careful balance for the Empire - it wants to reward it's friends and punish defaulters, but its also wants to try and stay in power, so isn't about to give away any advantages it has.

paco1600 wrote on Fri, 06 January 2006 08:11

what is the amount of taxes?
That is dependant on the Empire - it wants as many minerals as it can get, but of course the higher the tax rate, the higher the chance of rebellion. I'd guess around 10-15% of mineral income though (which would of course have to be estimated from score).

paco1600 wrote on Fri, 06 January 2006 08:11

in what way Empire calculates the value of components and projects?
Whatever minerals are in the ships (at full value) would be credited as part of taxes, the technology or components on the ships would not be considered for this.

The idea of giving components with new tech is a mechanism to make the Empire have the same tech (or slightly behind that of the players). If the Empire was just allowed to research, it would have tech much higher than everyone else, and there would be no chance of taking it on until the Nubian era. I'm open to any other suggestions for keeping the Empire tech close to that of the other races.

The Empire will get annoyed if if detects someone using a tech level that it hasn't told the Empire about (would regard it as similar to non-payment of taxes).

The idea of giving the Empire useful ships is to try and buy favour with the Empire - you give the Empire some sort of stealthed ship, new minefield or other useful ship that it can't make itself (and in sufficent numbers to be useful given the 16 ship slot limit), you get the minerals for those ships considered as part of taxes, _and_ and extra Orbital Adjustor or two might turn up around your planets.

paco1600 wrote on Fri, 06 January 2006 08:11

when payment is not possible (low amount, war, etc.) what happen to client?
There is no game rule saying that you have to pay taxes - just early on, the Empire might chose to make an example of defaulters (later, this will become much harder).

However, the Empire will be willing to negotiate - it's goal is to keep things peaceful and keep it's tax base so it has enough fleets to depend itself. Under some cirmstances it might allow delayed payment, or may even write some taxes off (if for instance you were fighting a rebel). Or it just might just consider that client to be in rebellion.

paco1600 wrote on Fri, 06 January 2006 08:11

is there on year 2500 only one HW for each player of guild and empire?
"worlds given by players" to guild: in what way? and what is the value?
At 2500, the Empire has about 30 or so worlds - however it has _no_ minerals, is not allowed to mine, research tech (except bio or to keep up with clients) or expand, so it will gradually lose this initial advantage.

At 2500, the Guild will have just the homeworld, plus there will be a small colony with an orbital fort with a gate on it somewhere near each player's homeworld (to make taxation easier). This whole "worlds given by players" thing is just a way to make having a path to send taxes too a permanent arrangement. The value would be that taxes are dropped a little from then on. This is probably a conf
...

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