depends on spöb vs. shďp TechLevel
In the default Nova scenario if you go to the shipyards on Dunroamin, Hearth, Kerensky, Misfire, New Ireland, or Ryll you'll notice that the price of an Asteroid Miner is 6% below what is specified in the shďp resource. At those same spöb's shipyards the price of a Viper is 3% below the shďp resource price value. I noticed this apparent anomaly quite awhile ago, but never really understood what was going on until recently. I've been using the EV-Classic TC for Nova as a testbed for some other problems I'm working on and noticed that shipyard prices were apparently varying all over the Classic universe. So I decided to end the old mystery and characterize the variances I was seeing. What I found can be summarized as follows:
If a spöb's base TechLevel is less than 6 and a shďp's TechLevel is less than that spöb's base TechLevel, then the shipyard price for that shďp is reduced by 3 percent for every unit of difference between shďp and spöb TechLevels. A more succinct formula for this is:
IF (spöb_bTL <= 5) AND (shďpTL < spöb_bTL) THEN ((spöb_bTL - shďpTL) * 3)% price reduction is applied
This price behavior is just barely noticeable in the default Nova scenario because a great majority of the shipyards depend on Special Tech Levels instead of the spöb's base Tech Level for determining what shďps are available. This price behavior doesn't occur at all in the Override TC for Nova because all ships in that scenario require Special Tech Levels for shipyard availability. The behavior is very apparent in the Classic scenario TC because virtually all purchaseable shďps make use of the spöb base Tech Level for their availability. Based on a quick perusal of shďp and spöb resources, this behavior should also be apparent in the Polycon TC-plug, but I haven't done any Polycon testing to verify it.
This behavior is totally undocumented in either the Nova Bible or the EV Classic/Override Bible. My guess is that Mr. Burch implemented it for Classic in order to provide pricing variety without resorting to a multitude of shďp variants. The behavior was then subsequently forgotten as time marched forward and other matters became more pressing.
So what good is this behavior? :huh: Got me, I dunno, but it can indeed be used to provide some variety of prices for whatever that's worth. And some mention of it should probably make its way into one or more of Zacha Pedro's template tomes.
Later ...
This post has been edited by Arturo : 09 October 2004 - 09:28 PM