                     Introduction : An Overview of Empire

NAME
   Overview - An Overview of the Game

Level: Basic

What is Empire?

   Empire  is  an  military/economic simulation of make-believe countries in a
   make-believe world.  The military part is emphasized.  The economic part is
   still there, but as a prerequisite to a working military.

What part do I play?

   Each player is the ruler of a country.  As leader of your country, you give
   commands that affect your country (e.g., move people  around,  re-designate
   sectors, etc).  You also handle all of your country's foreign policy.

   Empire  lets you get reports on the status of your country (``info census''
   and others), find out what's going on in other parts of the  world  (``info
   news''), and communicate with other countries (``info telegram'').

   Although  no  goal  is explicitly stated, most players rapidly derive their
   own, ranging from the mundane desire to be the biggest,  strongest  country
   in  the  game,  to the more refined goals of having the most efficient land
   use possible, or having the lowest ratio of  military  to  civilians  while
   still surviving.

The World of Empire

   Empire  is played on a hexagonal map partitioned into a rectangular grid of
   M x N sectors (where M and N are typically, but not necessarily, powers  of
   two, usually 64, 128, or 256).  The world could be made up of approximately
   50% sea, 45% habitable land and 5% mountains.

   Sectors  can  be  assigned  a specific sector type.  These types range from
   banks to nuclear fuel processing plants.   See  ``info  Sector-types''  for
   more detail.

   Your personal coordinate system is initially centered on your capital.

The Empire Time Scale

   The Empire world both does and does not match the real-time world.  To bet-
   ter explain this, let us examine the concept of an update.

   At regular intervals (usually once per day), the entire Empire world is up-
   dated.   When  the  world updates, new population is added, ores are dug up
   and added to stockpiles, food and other commodities are distributed to sec-
   tors, the educational and technological levels are updated, and so on.   It
   can be thought of as the minimum quantum for growth.

   On  this  time scale, an update could be considered to be approximately one
   generation.  Thus the difference from the time scale of the real world.

   However, certain commands are issued in real-time, such as attacks.   These
   commands  have  instantaneous  effects on the state of your country.  Dedi-
   cated (or merely experienced) Empire players will often log on  to  monitor
   their  country.   And most attackers will wait until the small hours of the
   morning to carry out their attacks, for obvious reasons.

   If you do not log in to Empire, any automatic policies you have set up will
   be carried out.  However, Empire will not try to fix any mistakes you  have
   made; unless you are very careful, it's probably not a good idea to rely on
   these automatics.

Bureaucratic Time Units (BTUs)

   To prevent the more fanatical Empire players from staying logged on all the
   time,  Empire places a limit on the amount of time you may be logged in per
   day.  This limit is settable by the deity, usually 1000  minutes.   If  you
   run  out of time, too bad!  You can't log in again until the counter resets
   itself (usually at midnight).

   The other control on the number of commands that you may issue  are  called
   ``Bureaucratic  Time  Units'' or BTUs.  A BTU is an arbitrary amount of bu-
   reaucratic bookkeeping that your government must spend to perform a certain
   function.  Most commands that are not merely informative cost BTUs.

   BTUs are generated by your country's capital.  The more efficient your cap-
   ital, the more BTUs that are generated.  The number of BTUs also depend  on
   the  game's settings.. See the output of the 'version' command for an esti-
   mate of BTU generation speeds.  However, you may have a maximum of 512 BTUs
   at any one time.  And once your BTUs reach zero, you may not issue any com-
   mands that use BTUs.

   Three things to note about BTUs:

    1)  Since commands use up BTUs, this limits the number of commands that  a
        player  may  issue over a particular time period.  This has the effect
        of preventing the Empire fanatic from overruning  other  players  with
        less free time to log on.

    2)  The  build-up  of BTUs is constant and does not depend on being logged
        in.  This allows players to participate when it is  convenient  rather
        than  at  some fixed time (such as most board games, or the stock mar-
        ket).

    3)  The BTU concept helps compensate for the fact that,  in  concept,  the
        governments of each country are always ``playing'' although the player
        representing that country may only log in periodically.

How long will a game take?

   Probably  from  one to four months.  You should expect to spend one to four
   hours a day playing.  Also expect that if you do spend this amount of  time
   playing,  your  grades or work will suffer.  You just can't spend that much
   time playing and either study or be productive.

What should I do now?

   When a new country enters the game, it starts out with an amount  of  money
   and  two sectors.  These sectors are sanctuaries and have an initial amount
   of people and commodities.  Until you "break sanctuary",  your  country  is
   effectively  in  stasis.  Nothing will change until you actually log in and
   force a change (such as designating a capital to begin accumulating BTUs).

   The absolutely minimal set of information pages you should read are: break,
   map, ann, wire, tel, read, expl, move, res, cen, dist,  thresh,  lev,  com,
   prod, budget, Sector-types.

A Comment from Peter S. Langston (the author of the original Empire game)

   It  should  be  remembered that Empire is merely an interesting pastime; in
   the vernacular, "it's just a game".  There are many amusing stories of peo-
   ple that took the game too seriously; one tells of a corporate Vice  Presi-
   dent who walked into the computer room and flipped the main circuit breaker
   in  order  to  stop  an attack on his country; another tells of the Harvard
   student that refused to go to bed until everyone logged out of  Empire  and
   of the other players who took turns staying up late....

   While  many  players take Empire very seriously, an equal number of players
   use it as a safe environment in which they can act out their fantasies.  On
   occasion the fantasies involved are remarkably aggressive or  hostile.   It
   has  been my experience that the people with the most belligerent countries
   are often the people with the kindest hearts; anti-social game play doesn't
   necessarily reflect the "true" being underneath (or else I have  some  VERY
   weird friends).

A Brief History

   The  game  "Empire" is the most recent in a series of territorial conquest,
   political/economic simulation games initially inspired by a board  game  of
   the  same name played at Reed College (Portland, Oregon).  Earlier versions
   were written at Reed by Peter Langston and at The Evergreen  State  College
   (Olympia,  Washington)  by  Chas  Douglas, Peter Langston, Ben Norton, Mike
   Rainwater and others; of particular note are the games "Galaxy"  (Langston)
   and  "Civil"  (Norton).  The previous version was written in 1985 partly on
   the HRSTS Unix system at the Harvard Science  Center,  (Cambridge,  Mass.),
   partly  on  the  Unix  system at Commercial Union Leasing Corporation, (New
   York, N. Y.)  and partly on the Unix system at Davis Polk & Wardwell,  (New
   York,  N. Y.)   by Peter Langston with invaluable goading from Joe Stetson,
   Robert Bradbury, Nat Howard, Brian Redman, Adam Buchsbaum, and a myriad  of
   others.

   Since  Langston  never  released source code for his version, Dave Pare and
   friends de-compiled it in that same year  and  have  created  this  version
   which is very different.  Since then many re-writes and fixes have been put
   in and none of the original code exists anymore.  Many people have enhanced
   the  code,  most  notably, Dave Pare added plane units in 1986, Jeff Bailey
   added many configurable options in the  KSU  distribution,  Thomas  Ruschak
   added  land  units  and  missions  in 1992-1993 and released the "Chainsaw"
   server, and Ken Stevens rewrote much of the server code  in  1995  and  re-
   leased  the "Empire 2" server.  Steve McClure and the Wolfpack made lots of
   other changes and released "Empire 4" in August of 1996.  The game is still
   maintained by the Wolfpack team.  Markus  Armbruster  serves  as  technical
   lead since 2004.

SEE ALSO
   Novice, Expert, Introduction

