Thoughts on RADAR
Posted: Sat Jul 26, 2014 1:06 pm
It seems weird that in the C&C series (up to RA2 at least) radar's only action is to enable the minimap. How are the two things related? I think the minimap should be enabled by default. Playing without one is really annoying and it hinders gameplay for no good reason. I mean, even Age of Empires had a minimap, and I don't think the Sumerians were brilliant engineers.
IMO, radars should provide an approximate location of vehicles, ships and airplanes over a certain area (but not infantry, giving one more tactical reason to use them) in a similar way the Allied spysat does; more radars (if sufficiently distant from one another) could provide better estimates over enemy units' locations.
This same mechanism was implemented in Total Annihilation and it was something that really added to the game depth, as it gave meaning to long-range defensive structures (without such a mechanism, they would either be useless or incredibly OP).
Radars working in such a fashion would also give meaning to the most underrated RA unit ever, the Radar jammer; their interference might distort enemy radars' signals and throw off their distance estimates, maybe causing your artillery to shoot more inaccurately or even at open land.
IMO, radars should provide an approximate location of vehicles, ships and airplanes over a certain area (but not infantry, giving one more tactical reason to use them) in a similar way the Allied spysat does; more radars (if sufficiently distant from one another) could provide better estimates over enemy units' locations.
This same mechanism was implemented in Total Annihilation and it was something that really added to the game depth, as it gave meaning to long-range defensive structures (without such a mechanism, they would either be useless or incredibly OP).
Radars working in such a fashion would also give meaning to the most underrated RA unit ever, the Radar jammer; their interference might distort enemy radars' signals and throw off their distance estimates, maybe causing your artillery to shoot more inaccurately or even at open land.