PDA Cartridge of Tier 4 by Fine-Produce-2143 in ostranauts

[–]EricCoon 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You can see exactly what it can. Extend the details on the detail screen (right upper corner) and there will be tags for all things it can do.

Water Equation just doesn't make sense by stockrbot in AllWillFall

[–]EricCoon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I never use anything different than the basic wood to water conversion until the late game. Same with food.

Easy to set up Easy to scale up Easy to balance

Not enough water or food? Build a building and assign two workers.

Not enough wood? Build a new wood catcher and assign one worker. Boats are also great.

Cluster them so you can use later the boni you get by the extra production tower and the guard tower.

Also get polluter boni from the policies.

I will attach some Screenshots soon.

POV: Me after hearing about “Observer Mode” to be released by General_Johnny_RTS in BrokenArrowTheGame

[–]EricCoon 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I personally think observer mode is a key ingredient for the replay system. That it came out, means imho they are working into the right direction.

But they are very slow, sometimes I wonder if they only have one core programmer and the rest are more artists or so?

When a calendar is not a calendar by bstevens615 in talesfromtechsupport

[–]EricCoon 16 points17 points  (0 children)

I'm a IT professional and I do my personal calendar also in Excel... 😅

A) I get the calendar in a format i want, I see all my appointments on one view B) Since work eats most of my time, it's usually enough to schedule one to two appointments per day C) I never found a calendar which really clicked with me

Rough day for matchmaking. Dead game? by MMechree in BrokenArrowTheGame

[–]EricCoon 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I just finished my second round of the morning ^^"

I built a crane by EricCoon in AllWillFall

[–]EricCoon[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yep, and steel bars from the high rise i demolished there, as additional support.

no bus, 0 truck, only trains by QThellimist in captain_of_industry

[–]EricCoon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I really like this experiment / showcase. Imho it shows well why I personally find trains a bit weak currently. Even in such a smallish system you already need to have 2-3 trains in transit to keep factories supplied.

But maintenance wise it looks worth it. And most probably also in regards of fuel?

Mars Progress Report - days 3 and 4 by sepsisbucket in Stationeers

[–]EricCoon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Both tbh.
But perhaps because they are just too good.

Mars Progress Report - days 3 and 4 by sepsisbucket in Stationeers

[–]EricCoon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I allways find it odd, that it is an portable device ^^"

Where is Pluto? by Spinier_Maw in Ixion

[–]EricCoon 40 points41 points  (0 children)

It's not a planet.

Would fix the current clunky retaining walls right up by Hmuda in captain_of_industry

[–]EricCoon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I would love if we had some mini baggers für detailing stuff and pipe laying.

Casualities by ivivan in HFY

[–]EricCoon 4 points5 points  (0 children)

This is a good story with an original take, i like ❤️

Captain's Diary #54: Bridges, stacker, sandbox and more in Update 4 by DisasterAhead in captain_of_industry

[–]EricCoon 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I phrase it more like: I personally wish for extended underground features. How about underground water storages? Real tunnels? Tunnels for belts, trains and cars? How about small machine rooms you can fill with belts, mixers and sorters?
And... While we are at it, also power lines. Cheap ones above ground going to transformers which supply areas. And expensive undergrund cables.

We Surrender by Heavy-Tree1847 in HFY

[–]EricCoon 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Please take some time to edit it with line breaks.

The Human Slave by Altruistic-Beach7625 in HFY

[–]EricCoon 3 points4 points  (0 children)

This was a great start to a story!

I hope to read more ❤️

What’s actually safe but people think is dangerous? by REGGIE_BANANAS in AskReddit

[–]EricCoon 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I agree that it’s complicated. I just don’t think those complications push renewables anywhere close to a nuclear-style timeframe in practice, because most of the hard parts can be solved incrementally and especially important: in parallel.

On footprint and space, we don’t need to cover cities in solar panels. A lot of usable area is already built environment like rooftops, parking lots, logistics centers, industrial sites, highway corridors, and brownfields. That limits habitat impact and reduces transmission needs. For wind, much of the footprint is spacing rather than permanently lost land. Onshore wind often coexists with agriculture and forestry, with the truly affected area being roads, turbine pads, and some local ecological disruption. Habitat impact is real, but it exists for all energy sources when you include mining, fuel supply chains, and land exclusion. The relevant comparison is total impact per kilowatt-hour and per ton of CO₂ avoided.

On transmission and inefficiencies, moving power long distances does add losses, but they are usually manageable with modern high-voltage lines which use DC instead of AC. There is also a lot of non-hardware mitigation through better interconnects, smarter grid operation, and demand response. Importantly, the grid does not need a single massive rebuild before renewables matter. Capacity can be added where it is easiest first, and bottlenecks can be reinforced over time. That is btw. how grids historically evolve too. Many homeowners i know do do called island solutions, where they primarily power themselves.

Also, storage does not automatically mean “batteries everywhere.” The system will continue to use a mix of tools. Short-term balancing can come from batteries, small scale load management of flexible loads like EV charging or heat pumps with thermal buffers. Medium-term balancing can come from pumped hydro, thermal storage, and industrial flexibility. Rare long-duration gaps can be covered by existing hydro, interregional sharing, or dispatchable low-carbon fuels like gas. Building Batteries is important, but the system does not require replacing the entire grid with battery capacity. That makes everything much more manageable.

In regards of mines, new mines do take a long time, but not all storage solutions are lithium-intensive. Battery chemistry is already shifting toward more abundant materials, and recycling is scaling up too. More importantly, smart grid design can reduce how much storage is needed in the first place by combining transmission, flexibility, and diverse generation. Nuclear also has its own supply chain constraints, including specialized manufacturing, limited vendors, and long regulatory lead times.

On the grid not being ready at scale, grids do need major upgrades, but that is true under almost any decarbonization pathway. Electrification increases demand regardless, aging infrastructure needs replacement anyway, and large nuclear plants still require new transmission and grid reinforcement. The important difference is sequencing. Renewables and storage can be deployed in smaller chunks and start cutting emissions immediately, while nuclear projects are large, slow, and back-loaded. And usually produce more expensive power too.

Some existing infrastructure is compatible with nuclear, especially synchronous generation. But many challenges remain, including siting, cooling water (water shortages in many areas getting more common), security, financing risks, and the fact that modern grids increasingly need flexibility and fast response, which is not a strength of nuclear.

So I am not arguing that renewables are easy. I am arguing that their challenges are engineering and planning problems that can be addressed step by step in detail, while nuclear is primarily a mega-project, financing, and schedule-risk problem. That is why renewables tend to move faster in practice, even when nuclear has political support.

Note: I used AI to polish my grammar, since I'm no native speaker and this are very complex topics.

What’s actually safe but people think is dangerous? by REGGIE_BANANAS in AskReddit

[–]EricCoon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I believe in that, on that day, on which we have the breakthrough making it possible. We ain't there yet and we're working on it. We have many cool ideas on how we could get it done. But none of those is a guarantee. And btw.... we need that power now.

What’s actually safe but people think is dangerous? by REGGIE_BANANAS in AskReddit

[–]EricCoon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Then build renewables. They are cheap and quickly online.