I'm not sure where else to leave IC2 Experimental feedback, so I'm leaving it here.
I've read about and tested the new wiring system in IC2 Experimental, and I have to say it seems like a huge step backwards. Rather than machines exploding when they have more voltage than they can handle, things explode when they receive more power than they can handle. So If I understand this correctly, I should expect the following problems:
- You cannot simply connect generators to power storage. You now need to calculate the power coming from your generators, separate your generators into clusters, segregating the wiring for each cluster, and have each cluster connect to its own individual power storage device.
- If you miscount your generators, miscalculate the power from your generators, or let a wire cross, your power storage will explode.
- You cannot upgrade generators on-site if they're already at the limit of their power storage device. You must tear up all your wiring, split the generator cluster into multiple clusters, recalculate the power from the new generator clusters, add new power storage devices, and re-wire the setup to connect to the additional power storage devices.
- If you want multiple machines to run at maximum power usage, you cannot simply connect them to multiple generators or multiple storage devices. If you are providing enough power for all of them to run at their respective limits simultaneously, sometimes more power will go to one of them and it will explode. Therefore you must attach a separate transformer to every single machine to throttle the power going to any single one.
- Whether a machine will explode is no longer deterministic. If there's a machine constantly drawing power, there's a good chance that your new machine might not explode...until you turn the other machine off.
- This system requires the player to perform calculations for each and every connection between each and every component.
- The system is a far less accurate model of electricity.
- The system requires players to remember far more information.
- At least right now, the system lends itself to catastrophic disasters. In the previous IC2, connecting a component with the wrong voltage would cause at most one machine or one wire to explode. One machine is not a huge loss. In this system, connecting ONE additional generator, or ONE additional power storage device, can cause ALL of your machines to explode.
In other words, it's far more complex, far more convoluted, far less intuitive, far less realistic, and far less predictable than the previous system. I cannot see any advantages whatsoever to this new system.
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The biggest question I have is "why"? Why in the world did you feel the need to change things? The previous system was incredibly simple. All you have to remember is not to plug things into voltages they can't handle.