Priority Intercept: Difference between revisions

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A cloaking ship on the intercept mission will ignore regular combat order and attack its intercept target first.
A ship equipped with a cloaking device and on the intercept mission will ignore the regular combat order and attack its intercept target first. During its intercept mission the ship is not cloaked and will not cloak after combat, although the name of this operation may suggest this.
After the ship has successfully intercepted it's target (and either has set it's primary enemy to the target's race or is being attacked by the target), it will first engange it's target and then (if it survives) fight in the regular battle order.


The most common use of this tactic is to remove ships from enemy fleets, sacrificing your ship to destroy the enemy's ship.  For instance, destroying a Cobol or Fuel Refinery in an enemy fleet can cripple an entire offensive, buying you critical time to mount a counterattack, or by forcing the enemy to send fewer ships.
The most common use of this mechanism is to remove ships from enemy fleets, sacrificing your ship to destroy the enemy's ship.  For instance, destroying a Cobol or Fuel Refinery in an enemy fleet can cripple an entire offensive, buying you critical time to mount a counterattack, or by forcing the enemy to send fewer ships.  


=See Also=
=See Also=
[[Cloaking]]<br>
[[Cloaking]]<br>
[[Combat Order]]
[[Combat Order]]

Revision as of 01:46, 19 September 2011

A ship equipped with a cloaking device and on the intercept mission will ignore the regular combat order and attack its intercept target first. During its intercept mission the ship is not cloaked and will not cloak after combat, although the name of this operation may suggest this. After the ship has successfully intercepted it's target (and either has set it's primary enemy to the target's race or is being attacked by the target), it will first engange it's target and then (if it survives) fight in the regular battle order.

The most common use of this mechanism is to remove ships from enemy fleets, sacrificing your ship to destroy the enemy's ship. For instance, destroying a Cobol or Fuel Refinery in an enemy fleet can cripple an entire offensive, buying you critical time to mount a counterattack, or by forcing the enemy to send fewer ships.

See Also

Cloaking
Combat Order