Difference between revisions of "Wealth"

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(→‎Raids: I neglected to mention pawn points because i (foolishly) thought it wasn't important)
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|"Storyteller Wealth" = (Colony Wealth Items + Colony Wealth Creatures + (Colony Wealth Buildings * 0.5))
 
|"Storyteller Wealth" = (Colony Wealth Items + Colony Wealth Creatures + (Colony Wealth Buildings * 0.5))
 
|}
 
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In practice, this just means that buildings placed on the ground count as half wealth for the purposes of raids. This "Storyteller Wealth" is then linearly interpolated on a graph to create "Wealth Points".   
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In practice, this just means that buildings placed on the ground count as half wealth for the purposes of raids.  
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=== Raid points ===
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This "Storyteller Wealth" is then linearly interpolated on a graph to create "Wealth Points".   
  
 
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At 14,000 "Storyteller Wealth" there are "0 Wealth Points".  At 400,000 "Storyteller Wealth" there are "2,400 Wealth Points". Between 14k and 400k wealth, points will increase by <code>(2,400 - 0) / (400,000 - 14,000)</code> per wealth. This means that 1 raid point is worth ~ 160.83 wealth at this threshold.  
 
At 14,000 "Storyteller Wealth" there are "0 Wealth Points".  At 400,000 "Storyteller Wealth" there are "2,400 Wealth Points". Between 14k and 400k wealth, points will increase by <code>(2,400 - 0) / (400,000 - 14,000)</code> per wealth. This means that 1 raid point is worth ~ 160.83 wealth at this threshold.  
  
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Wealth also has an impact on [[Raid points#Pawn points|"pawn points"]] factor. This has a similar curve to wealth points. To cut to the chase, at or below 400k wealth, 1 raid point/colonist = 3120 wealth. At 10 colonists, 312 wealth = 1 raid point from "pawn points".
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Therefore, the true amount of wealth per raid point depends on your colonist count. At 10 colonists, 1 raid point is ''actually'' worth = 106.1 wealth. Raid points per wealth is equal to (1/160.83 + 1/312) at 10 colonists. And wealth per raid point is equal to (1 / Raid points per wealth ). This assumes wealth is <= 400k; if wealth is above 400k, then further wealth has a dimminishing impact.
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===Conversion===
 
Raid points are then multiplied by a number of other factors, the most important being [[difficulty]]. Specifically, the "[[AI_Storytellers#Threat scale|threat scale]]" setting is a multiplier to raid points. A colony at 200% threat scale will double the raid points, meaning wealth matters twice as much.
 
Raid points are then multiplied by a number of other factors, the most important being [[difficulty]]. Specifically, the "[[AI_Storytellers#Threat scale|threat scale]]" setting is a multiplier to raid points. A colony at 200% threat scale will double the raid points, meaning wealth matters twice as much.
  

Revision as of 05:24, 19 February 2023

Wealth is a sum of the Market Value from your items, buildings, and pawns. A colony's total wealth can be viewed in the History tab and going to the Statistics tab. It has a few impacts on the game.

Raids

Wealth is a key factor in determining the size of raids. Specifically, a colony's entire wealth is converted into "Storyteller Wealth", as follows:

"Storyteller Wealth" = (Colony Wealth Items + Colony Wealth Creatures + (Colony Wealth Buildings * 0.5))

In practice, this just means that buildings placed on the ground count as half wealth for the purposes of raids.

Raid points

This "Storyteller Wealth" is then linearly interpolated on a graph to create "Wealth Points".

Graph Points Storyteller Wealth
0 0
0 14,000
2,400 400,000
3,600 700,000
4,200 1,000,000

At 14,000 "Storyteller Wealth" there are "0 Wealth Points". At 400,000 "Storyteller Wealth" there are "2,400 Wealth Points". Between 14k and 400k wealth, points will increase by (2,400 - 0) / (400,000 - 14,000) per wealth. This means that 1 raid point is worth ~ 160.83 wealth at this threshold.

Wealth also has an impact on "pawn points" factor. This has a similar curve to wealth points. To cut to the chase, at or below 400k wealth, 1 raid point/colonist = 3120 wealth. At 10 colonists, 312 wealth = 1 raid point from "pawn points".

Therefore, the true amount of wealth per raid point depends on your colonist count. At 10 colonists, 1 raid point is actually worth = 106.1 wealth. Raid points per wealth is equal to (1/160.83 + 1/312) at 10 colonists. And wealth per raid point is equal to (1 / Raid points per wealth ). This assumes wealth is <= 400k; if wealth is above 400k, then further wealth has a dimminishing impact.

Conversion

Raid points are then multiplied by a number of other factors, the most important being difficulty. Specifically, the "threat scale" setting is a multiplier to raid points. A colony at 200% threat scale will double the raid points, meaning wealth matters twice as much.

Once processed, these points are converted directly into raiders. Each raider has a "Combat Points" value, where 1 raid point = 1 combat point. For example, a scyther is worth 150 combat points. At 100% threat with no other modifiers, this scyther would be worth Silver 24,125 Storyteller Wealth. For a list of what raiders the storyteller can "buy", see Raiders.

The storyteller setting, Wealth-independent progress mode will make colony wealth have no impact on the game. Instead, "Storyteller Wealth" will be separate from colony wealth, and will increase linearly over time, until reaching $1,000,000 wealth at the desired Years until maximum threat.

Expectations

Colony wealth directly impacts the mood and recreation tolerance loss of your colonists. The higher your wealth, the less innately happy a colonist will be and the more bored they will become with their recreation sources.

Name Mood Wealth Limits Recreation Tolerance
Loss/Day
Num. of Recommended
Recreation Types
Extremely low expectations +30 0 - 15,000 18% 2
Very low expectations +24 15,000 - 31,000 13% 3
Low expectations +18 31,000 - 81,000 11% 3
Moderate expectations +12 81,000 - 182,000 10% 4
High expectations +6 182,000 - 308,000 8% 5
Sky-high expectations 0 308,000 - 1,000,000,000 7% 6
Elite expectationsContent added by the Ideology DLC −6 High expectations as leader or moral guide 7% 6
Supreme expectationsContent added by the Ideology DLC −12 Sky-high expectations as leader or moral guide 7% 6

Conceited noblesContent added by the Royalty DLC will ignore this expectation moodlet at higher titles - conceited barons replace regular expectations with −6 Noble Expectations, while conceited counts and higher get −12 Royal Expectations. The Ideoligious RolesContent added by the Ideology DLC of leader and moral guide instead act as an offset to mood, acting as if they had expectations 2 levels higher.

In addition, a pawn's ideoligionContent added by the Ideology DLC may expect certain things at certain expectation levels. For example, a Transhumanist ideoligion will desire artificial body parts once expectations reach Moderate.

Room stat

Wealth is a room stat. The sum of all items, buildings, and walls in a room contributes towards wealth. Wealth has no impact on its own, but it increases Impressiveness. Certain types of rooms give positive moodlets if they are impressive, such as a +5 Very impressive dining room or +6 Extremely impressive bedroom.

Like the other room stats, wealth on its own has a diminishing impact in making a room impressive. Typically, ways of increasing wealth also increase its beauty.

Archonexus quest

A total colony wealth of $350,000 is required to accept the first part of The Archonexus quest. In exchange for your entire colony, you will get an archonexus map piece. Three map pieces are required in total, meaning you'll need 3 separate colonies at this wealth threshold. You don't need to restart again for the third colony.

Analysis

For strategies on limiting wealth, see wealth management. For strategies on increasing wealth, see money making guide.

To put it simply, you shouldn't feel the need to micromanage wealth, even in Losing in Fun. Extreme forms of wealth management are only really required when playing in an extreme custom difficulty. Wealth scaling means that, as your colony becomes stronger, raids become stronger - a simple relationship. So long as you invest reasonably into good weapons and armor, you should catch up. The expectations moodlets can be countered by placing sculptures and making rooms more beautiful.

Practical examples

In some scenarios, wealth can be helpful. For small rooms, like bedrooms, increasing wealth has a key impact on overall Impressiveness without impacting space.

  • Example 1:

In a 6x7 room, going from wood floor to carpet can turn a room from +0 Dull to +3 Slightly impressive, from both the beauty and the wealth itself. 42 tiles of carpet would be worth Silver 520, which is then halved for raid points because it is a placed building.

In Strive to Survive, the upgrade to carpet is less than 1/18th of the cheapest possible raider (per bedroom). This is almost negligible. On the flip side, wealth can matter massively at high difficulties. At 500% difficulty, upgrading just 3 bedrooms to carpet would lead to an extra raider. With 9 colonists, that's 3 tribal raiders by using carpet bedrooms. With pirates, this could potentially lead to an extra doomsday rocket launcher or so.

  • Example 2:

The effects of wealth alone, and the effect of wealth and beauty combined, is demonstrated pictures below: