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overfloater

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  1. Bind the buttons to keys in the SetPoint software. Many games have issues detecting mouse buttons beyond 3 or 4, so I find it's simpler to just bind the buttons to keys and then set the appropriate keys via keybinding options in the game.
  2. Polith is possible with Grade 3 only. (Even with grade 3 basics and no power conversion, etc. -- per my post above, I'd forgotten those even existed...) I did fail it the first time simply because I didn't know what I was looking for. Second time wasn't a problem, with grade 3 upgrades only. This should probably be in a different thread, since the topic is technically Sullust, but... Conserve missiles for the final minelayer and two bonus frigates (or warships, or whatever they are). Don't waste missiles on the minefields -- unnecessary. You get way more time in the minefields than necessary to take out the 150 mines with blasters alone, even without a PC unit. The enemy fighters on this mission are more or less irrelevant -- they do negligible damage, are quick to kill, and never come at you more than 2 or 3 at a time. (The only ones that could be remotely problematic are the heavy fighters, where you may need to use a few missiles to take them out.) That in mind, ignore everything other than the minelayer as soon as it's in range. The mission will throw fighters at you as a distraction -- but that's all they are, a distraction. They don't hurt and they don't count toward mission goals. Ignore them until the minelayer is down. As soon as the ML (or bonus frigate/warship) is in range, go crazy with missiles. That's all there is to it. I suggest cycling missiles around the 4 damage points and supplementing each with blaster fire. If you focus fire a bunch of missiles at a single damage point until it's destroyed, then move on to destroying the next, you'll inevitably end up wasting a bunch of missiles and (more importantly) time due to the significant travel lag before the missiles hit. Then you'll be trying to play catch-up on destroying the other 3 points, which you don't have time for. So cycle missiles around the points -- 1, 2, 3, 4, 1, 2, 3, 4 (approximately, at least) -- so that you're reducing their HP more or less equally. After the first pass it may feel like you're not making any headway, but eventually all four will blow up at more or less the same time. Just keep firing blasters and missiles each time a new one loads and you'll get it. If you have a power conversion unit, just make sure it's set to increase blaster power and you'll have no difficulty at all.
  3. Wow. Somehow I'd forgotten that the 4 "additional" ship upgrades (power conversion, EWP, etc.) existed since I first got my ship, and I'd been doing space missions with just the basic 6 upgrade slots you can use from early levels. So I was cursing like a sailor at Sullust until I saw this thread, because I was trying to do it "naked" with basic blasters and missiles. Doh. Throw on power conversion and EWP and it's cake. Still rough compared to all the previous missions, but on the second run through with PC/EWP I still ended with 50% toughness and regenned to full shields... rather than dead. Basic strat seems to be to use EWP during one of the two waves of head-on fighter attacks after the first pass over the warship. That's a no-brainer since it's where you lose the majority of your HP. Second is to supplement regular fighter takedowns (particularly ones that approach from the rear, since they're not an immediate threat until they turn around) with a single missile -- that way they only need half a second of blaster fire to kill and you don't waste time tracking them. I don't know about anyone else but, during earlier missions, I got into the habit of taking down fighters with blasters alone and conserving missiles for warships, bases, etc. Not necessary -- or even a good idea -- here. Once you have the grade 5 missile mag you won't be able to fire all your missiles during Sullust even if you try, so throw them at everything. Still can't believe I've spent the last 18 levels running space missions without a damn Power Conversion module... that thing is ridiculous. To the point where it would've made earlier missions completely trivial rather than just very easy. It's going to be amusing doing them on my alt with the upgrades actually on my ship.
  4. Exactly what I was about to post. It doesn't just change how viewers perceive the Force; it alters the outlook of the entire series. The Force was only one element of the original SW trilogy, certainly. But it was the defining element. It was the differentiating factor between SW and Star Trek, Alien, Battlestar Galactica, Buck Rogers, Logan's Run, Blade Runner ... a whole host of other 70s/80s IPs that were solidly grounded in sci-fi. The Force (and lightsabers) turned SW from being "just another sci-fi IP" into a sci-fi/sword-and-sorcery mashup that captured the imaginations of both audiences. Guys running around spaceships and firing laser guns while wielding swords and throwing magic spells. Then, 20+ years later, to take that concept and say, "Oh hey, by the way: that wasn't magic at all. Here's the mundane scientific explanation for it." ?? Ouch... especially when you grew up with the series. It's like finding a long lost chapter of the Bible with Jesus' notes and plans for pulling off the resurrection stunt. You just don't f*** with fanboys like that.
  5. Wait, what? First, what is a "pentium duel core 2.0"? I'll give you a hint: there's no such thing. You're either talking about a dual-core Pentium-D (in which case it's not clocked at 2.0GHz) or a Core2Duo (in which case your reference to "Pentium" is very random). 8gb RAM tells us nothing either, in the context of the rest: for all we know you could be using horribly slow single-channel RAM on 32-bit WinXP... Either way, you may be a programmer but your post gives the impression you know very little about hardware. And also either way: there's a huge disparity between (a) "people who buy new computers every 6 months" and (b) people using computers with hardware more current than 5 years old. And I'm afraid you fall into neither bracket. Your computer isn't just dated, it's practically historical: your CPU and video card are 5+ years old. You're a programmer, I'm sure you've heard of Moore's Law. Do the math. I do sympathize with the overall sentiment of your post: that people shouldn't need bleeding- or even cutting-edge hardware to play a new MMO. I think that's fair; I also don't think that's the case with SWTOR, but that's by the by. I don't sympathize with your particular case, though. It's clear that your computer isn't not-quite-brand-new, it's ancient. If you want to play new games on a platform where you don't need to make moderate upgrades more frequently than once every 5-6 years, I seriously suggest you consider investing in a console.
  6. Hah, I noticed that one too. (Though I'm a Brit living in the US, so I've adapted and it's probably not quite as obvious/grating to me.) Then again, "Keeper" can't seem to decide whether his accent is RP English or mid-Atlantic "Shakespearean theatre" American, so it's definitely not his only glitch. Definitely noticed this one because it's such a glaring difference. Many (recent generation) British pronounce it LOO-tenant anyway, through ignorance of the traditional pronunciation and/or American influence, so I could see that one slipping through even if the voice actor was British. Although an NPC with a super-formal RP accent saying "LOO-tenant" doesn't really fit. (All that said, I've always thought "LEF-tenant" was a ridiculous pronunciation and it's always made me squirm any time I've had to say it... which hasn't been very often, fortunately!)
  7. Pretty long thread going on this subject here, too. I've run into several Scottish and Welsh accents. No Northern Irish so far, though. Not all Imperials are British, though. There's a good number of formal/mid-Atlantic/theatre accents, too -- i.e. American base accent with some acquired English-isms and manner of speech. (Think James Earl Jones (as Vader), or Christopher Plummer. Or any number of Hollywood actors from the 50s and earlier with super-formal accents. They do actually have North American accents but they're so formal and carefully enunciated that they blend in nicely with the RP English.) Definitely more than a few cases of that. The occasional super-RP-English-accented Imperial officer using colloquial US phrasing ... can be a little grating. The voice actors seem to be a mix too. Some are definitely Americans putting on British accents, usually given away by their pronunciation and emphasis rather than the accent itself. (e.g. Saying "de-TAILs" instead of "DEE-tails".) But some are almost certainly English voice actors; that or they have the most convincing accents I've ever heard in games/movies/anywhere. But yeah, it's clear the Imperial accent is intentionally British/formal. It's even referenced in the dialog and storylines. The first Imperial Agent storyline quests send you undercover, and the quest giver specifically tells you to "lose the Imperial accent" to avoid blowing your cover -- and your character does indeed go from using his/her English accent in regular dialog to putting on a mid-west US accent when she's undercover.
  8. Pretty sure there was an Italian accent (Italian Italian, not Italian-American) on... ugh... the alien guy who wasn't the Hutt or the droid on the "council of three" (forget the actual name, horrible memory) in the Nar Shaddaa storyline for the Sith. Did seem to suit the character, although definitely a little stereotypical...! I also find I'm analyzing the Imperial accents even more since reading this thread. I started an Imperial Agent alt and noticed a couple of things. One, that "Keeper" (your introductory quest giver) can't seem to decide whether he's fully RP English or the mid-Atlantic, upper-class/Shakespearean actor blend. Particularly when he comes out with "de-TAIL" (rather than "DEE-tail", which would be the English emphasis) ... giveaway that the original voice actor was American. Not the only giveaway pronunciation "glitch" I've run into on otherwise-convincing accents, though. Second is that Keeper actually tells the agent to "drop the Imperial accent" for an espionage quest, going undercover with an assumed identity. Lo and behold, your character switches from RP English when speaking with Keeper to using a strained mid-west accent when she's "in character" for the undercover mission.
  9. Not that there are many ways to customize the rest of the UI anyway, let's face it... but it looks like most of the other per-character UI settings are held here: C:\Users\[uSERNAME]\AppData\Local\SWTOR\swtor\settings\xxxxxx_[charactername]_PlayerGUIState.ini Graphics, sound and certain other settings are global, obviously, but these files hold settings for your chat tabs, channels, colors, etc. along with the few other UI elements that actually have options. You should be able to simply copy the content of the file for your main to the file for your alt to transfer the settings. (Note that I say "should". Haven't tried this but see no reason why it shouldn't work, and I'll be trying it tonight to transfer my chat settings over to my new alt.)
  10. Appreciate this post because I know nothing about symbolic links, and because my boot drive is an SSD but I didn't feel like putting the full 20+gb of SWTOR on there. The game is on an HDD, so at least now I can try putting DiskCacheArena on the SSD and see if that squeezes out any additional performance. Quick question (which I might be about to answer myself...) You mention this: But you only mention DiskCacheArena specifically in the symlinks. You also move "C:\Users\USERNAME\AppData\Local\SWTOR" around with symlinks, yet that only appears to hold a handful of tiny INI files on my machine. I'm guessing DiskCacheStatic and DiskCacheStream are created in that folder after the game is launched, and only remain while it's running? (Otherwise I'm confused on both counts: why move that folder around, and where do the other two files come in?) If that's the case: great, since C: is already on the SSD and I don't need to bother fiddling with that. (Still not sure I understand the difference between the /J and /D flags for mklink but, like I said, I'm a noob to this.)
  11. +1 (Don't usually do that, but you put it so succinctly)
  12. This. Since the beginning of time. Defaulting tab to Target Nearest would go against convention as much as defaulting W to backward and S to forward. If you have no current target, tab will generally select the nearest target anyway, then cycle based on proximity. You can set a separate keybind for Target Nearest if you need a specific key to jump directly to the nearest enemy without first clearing your target. ____ Side note that this MMO convention has a basis in OS conventions too; it's not arbitrary. Tab is often used in different areas of various OSes to cycle through options. (Alt- or Command-tabbing between windows in Windows/OS X respectively; tabbing between panes in Windows Explorer; tab to move between dialog options in Windows popup dialogs.) It carries over from there.
  13. +1 I've missed quests because of this one too. Prime example of a horribly-worded feedback message. I can't quite understand how anyone with a firm grasp of the English language didn't recognize the glaring ambiguity when they came up with it. "Your quest log is full. You must delete or complete some quests before you can accept any more." There you go Bioware; I won't even charge.
  14. It astounds me how games continue to get released without the same basic, user-friendly functionality that EVERY prior game has requested. Do the Devs not play MMOs? On that note, how is it that the guild window in every single MMO is absolutely dire, lacking core functionality, or just flat-out broken at launch? True of every game I can think of, and SWTOR is no exception.
  15. Most recent MMOs seem to follow the trend of gradually expanding the quest area around a hub or within a new zone. You reach a new zone. The first quests are all very close to the first hub. As you progress, they move further out but you still end up running back to the hub. And as you get further through the quests in the zone, you get sent further and further afield for each quest, and a greater and greater proportion of your time is consumed by travelling rather than actively questing/killing. Fortunately, another general trend in MMOs is to include WAY more quest XP in a zone than is necessary to progress past its level range, and subsequently to have substantial overlap in zone level ranges. So just get to the point where you can feasibly begin questing in the next tier zone, then go there and start the quest cycle over again, beginning with the "local" quests that require little running around.
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