Hey guys. Just checked with impulse to see if I could preorder Demi w/ paypal. Down here in Australia, the digital version is now about $75 (was $55). Boxed version is about $83. I know you can't pay with paypal until you start taking orders, but do you think you could increase the window for this so that the price isn't ludicrous? P.s: Looking forward to Beta 2, will preorder regardless, but cheaper would be nicer.
K4libr
[quote who="BulletMagnet" reply="1" id="1911754"]1. game settings will allow for creep spam, no need for custom maps. if not, simple gameplay mods will suffice. 2. yes. it's the Moho Engine (or a derivative there-of), all the awesomeness of modding in SupCom might be available in DG so long as SD gives it the go-ahead (that's the big issue, pressure StarDock for serious mod-support). last night i made a mod for SupCom that recalculates ALL the rat
Yeah, That could work. I figured the general could slap down a creep spawning building as an ability (perhaps you get more buildings or creeps spawning from them as you level up) and it would spawn creeps every now and then. The creeps would come in, say squads (dawn of war style) for lesser creeps, and you give the squad / control group an order instead on individually. This allows for some micro, but not enough to overwhelm new people. You could choose what creep type spawned from a buildin
Now I know I may be speaking out of turn here but (I don't actually *have* the beta just yet, but I searched the forum cand came up with bupkis..) anyway I need to know a few things: 1: Will there be map tools? (they don't have to exist just yet) Map tools would allow things like *very* large scale battles. (i.e. the map maker can spam the sides with creep making machines) We could have funky mazes or none at all. Imagine a nice flat battleground where the creeps just fan out int
[quote who="ManSh00ter" reply="8" id="1909309"]Stardock is not the only one. Bethesda, for example, will have only a simple disc check on Fallout 3. This is viewed negatively by some in the gaming industry, but those are just people who still do not realize that the only ones benefitting from DRM are companies which produce and sell DRM security "solutions". To this day no DRM scheme has lasted more than a week or two at the outmost. If it's a program, it can be hacked. [/quote]