System
From Supremacy Wiki
A system (or also colony called) is the summary with a sector.
Colonies
At F5, option Colonies there's an overview about your colonies (and your homesystem).
Symbols
Content | Example | Description | Custom1 | |
---|---|---|---|---|
System Race |
Sol Humans |
|||
Population | 93 / 120 (5,3%) | current/maximum (growth rate) | ||
Morale | "Content" | see Morale | ||
Food | 181 | food amount | ||
Deuterium | 12 | Deuterium amount | ||
Dilithium | 0 | Dilithium amount | ||
Raw Materials | 40 | Raw Materials amount | ||
Industry | 335 | Industry yield | ||
Shipyard | 1500x3 | Shipyards: Industry yield + amount of shipyards | ||
Energy | 20 | Energy |
| |
Research | 55 | Research yield | ||
---- | ---- | other symbols following, not used in Colonies overview | ---- | |
Combat strength | Combat strength | |||
Shield | Shield | |||
Trade route | Trade route | |||
Energy | another energy symbol | |||
Credits | 10334 | Credits doesn't have a symbol |
Screenshot Colonies
Stars
Images of stars are in \Resources\Images\Stars\Map. According to http://oneminuteastronomer.com/708/star-colors-explained/ there are
- blue
- white
- yellow
- orange
- red
---
- green is/was ingame, but is not color of a real star.
Compare with Memory-Beta
Sectors can also contain (Names + Descriptions hardcoded in SupremacyUI/StarSystemPanel.cs)
- Black Hole
- The gravity well caused by the Black Hole makes sensor readings of this sector unreliable. Starships in this sector may be destroyed if they drift too close to the event horizon.
- Nebula
- Neutron Star
- Radiative emissions from the Neutron Star make sensor readings unreliable. Ships which enter the sector may be damaged or destroyed by the Neutron Star's magnetic field.
- Quasar
- (none yet #058)
- Radio Pulsar
- Radiative emissions from the Radio Pulsar disrupt sensors in this sector and adjacent sectors. As the Radio Pulsar rotates, its effects move clockwise through the eight adjacent sectors.
- X-Ray Pulsar
- Radiative emissions from the X-Ray Pulsar disrupt sensors in this sector. Radiative pulses also obscure sensor readings in a ring of sectors which expands and contracts around the pulsar.