Difference between revisions of "Tactics (EU2012)"

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===General Tactics===
 
===General Tactics===
  
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Muton berserkers have a handy habit of chasing down the soldier that shot them. If unprepared, or early on in the game with weak weapons and soldiers, this can be hard to deal with. Later on in the game with stronger characters and weapons it can be used to your advantage. If there are 3 or more soldiers in a line/group use the first soldier on the end to draw the Berserker to the group. Then shoot the berserker with the next closest soldier and repeat along the line. If executed properly the berserker will move from one soldier to the next each time getting closer to the soldier next in line to shoot him. This tactic is especially useful when using the alloy cannon, a weapon with great power but short range. It is also useful if you have a heavy with Bullet Swarm or a sniper with double tap because you can encourage the berserker to move into position instead of your soldier moving and only having 1 shot.  
 
Muton berserkers have a handy habit of chasing down the soldier that shot them. If unprepared, or early on in the game with weak weapons and soldiers, this can be hard to deal with. Later on in the game with stronger characters and weapons it can be used to your advantage. If there are 3 or more soldiers in a line/group use the first soldier on the end to draw the Berserker to the group. Then shoot the berserker with the next closest soldier and repeat along the line. If executed properly the berserker will move from one soldier to the next each time getting closer to the soldier next in line to shoot him. This tactic is especially useful when using the alloy cannon, a weapon with great power but short range. It is also useful if you have a heavy with Bullet Swarm or a sniper with double tap because you can encourage the berserker to move into position instead of your soldier moving and only having 1 shot.  
  
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=== Simplified and Granulized Encounter System ===
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Aliens now come in groups of 1 to 3. Some of these groups may patrol around the map by teleporting to random points around the map, but are tactically dormant (i.e. they will not open fire or take cover) until you "wake them up". Note that once awoken, aliens can act fully even when outside your visual range, including Overwatch (and in the case of Sectopods, the Cluster Bomb attack).
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Similar to massive-multiplayer online game instances, "waking-up" multiple groups of enemies is just plain stupid.  The best strategy is to wake-up and deal with one group at a time. When scouting for enemies, don't move too far ahead, especially with a 2-move dash. When a group is activated, it may be prudent to then back up and get into defensive positions to greet the enemy.
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For behind the door situations, gather your soldiers in front of the door, around the corner or in a spot across the room facing the door. Next open the door to wake up the aliens inside. If no aliens are seen, have a soldier (preferably your assault with Run&Gun) move in.  After the aliens run for cover, charge in and open fire at optimum ranges. If there are multiple entrances into the same room, split your team so that you can potentially get a flank bonus on some of the enemies. Depending on the situation, you also have the option of waking up an enemy behind a door, and then back out of sight to encourage the alien to run out and into a flurry of reaction fire.
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For most outdoor situations and in large rooms, set up your snipers in the right place before waking up the aliens with one soldier.  Use only one action point to wake them up, kill most/all the aliens with your snipers, and use one action point to pull back to completely avoid retaliation fire.
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Enemy groups that randomly teleport nearby, or amongst your team, will not immediately open fire when they strike a pose and race for cover. They will actively attack once your turn ends. If this occurs when you are not engaging the enemy, you can often use this opportunity to get in close and take them down at close range. If you are in the middle of engaging another group or more, these re-inforcements could tip the odds in the enemy's favour. You will need to adjust your tactics accordingly. Prioritize targets, take defensive measures, make a tactical retreat to safety, use area-effect weapons, etc.
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=== To be (an Angel) or not to be ===
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That is the question.  The answer may lie in your playing style but it may also lie in a game bug.  Ghost Armour is the obvious choice for all classes (maybe Psi Armour for Psi), but for snipers you may want to equip with Angel Armor.  Because of a bug in the game, Angel Armour grants you Height bonus and Damn Good Ground bonus even though the Angel Armor strictly says it shouldn't.  With these bonuses plus a scope, your chance to hit jumps to near certainty even for aliens with full cover.
 
===Plan before you commit===
 
===Plan before you commit===
  
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Because the flanking unit does not necessarily have to be the one to overwatch, you dash a unit to a good position where it has an exposed view of all enemies, and as long as a unit has any line of sight on these same enemies (not necessarily an exposed one) overwatch will lock them down, except in some cases mentioned above.
 
Because the flanking unit does not necessarily have to be the one to overwatch, you dash a unit to a good position where it has an exposed view of all enemies, and as long as a unit has any line of sight on these same enemies (not necessarily an exposed one) overwatch will lock them down, except in some cases mentioned above.
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This has been 'fixed' in Enemy Within.
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The second form of AI Panic ''is'' purposeful, and also manipulatable. What it requires is: if there is an alien squad of 3, that you need to kill two of the aliens with overwhemling force, usually in one round. You'll know it works if a soldier says something along the lines of "They're losing ground!" when the aliens have their turn. Even if there's two active squads engaging you, and you don't touch the second squad, you still might trigger this panic in the first. Exploiting this tactic can save you much stress in Impossible difficulty, in that it still takes all three aliens out of action in the next alien turn, even though that (due to the higher alien HP values) you may only be able to cause enough damage to kill two.
  
 
===Do not fear the enemy which is unknown===
 
===Do not fear the enemy which is unknown===
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===Capturing===
 
===Capturing===
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Capturing an alien allows you to recover their weapons intact, and interrogate one of each alien type for a [[Research (EU2012)|research]] credit.
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*Don't over-capture aliens carrying weapons you don't need; the corpse and weapon fragments may be more useful.
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*EXALT soldiers can't be captured; they will commit [[Achievements (EU2012)|suicide]] instead.
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*Stunned aliens can be killed by explosions; avoid stunning near explosive objects, and move away when fighting aliens with explosive weapons or death animations.
  
Capturing aliens is both incredibly useful and very difficult. Important points:
 
# If an alien has more than three HP with a basic arc thrower, shoot it until it doesn't. Don't even bother trying to stun one with more HP except as a desperation tactic.
 
# Arc Throwers are ''items'', not weapons. Run And Gun does not work with them
 
# Arc Throwers are "close range" devices, not melee, so as long as your unit has a line of sight on an enemy and is 3.162277 tiles or less away (that is, your unit can be 3 tiles away on one axis, and 1 tile on the other and still be in range, or rather, they can be one Tetris "L-piece" away.) it may stun with no penalty to aim. So try to stay in cover when stunning if you can.
 
# Stunning has an inconvenient tendency to fail at the worst possible moment.
 
  
So, you need to shoot most aliens, but very carefully or you might kill them instead. Also, your soldier will likely die unless you've cleared out the other aliens and the stun works. Furthermore, you have to spend a turn pretty close to the target alien before trying to stun it. Basically, if a soldier is intended to stun a specific target, odds are good they won't come back.
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Equipping the [[Arc Thrower (EU2012)|Arc Thrower]]
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*The Arc Thrower is an item; it can't be used after activating Run and Gun.
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*The chance to stun an enemy depends on the enemy's health, so the Arc Thrower can be given to a soldier with low aim.
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*A Rookie or low-ranking soldier can be used, to reduce the downside if the soldier is killed trying to stun an enemy. Alternately, a soldier with high health and defensive perks will have a better chance to survive.
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*It will be much easier to use the Arc Thrower with a soldier with high mobility (Sprinter, [[Skeleton Suit (EU2012)|Skeleton Suit]]). If using [[Second Wave (EU2012)|Not Created Equally]], pay attention to which soldiers have higher movement.
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*In Enemy Within, [[Foundry (EU2012)|Tactical Rigging]] will make it easier to carry several Arc Throwers without sacrificing other equipment.
  
Option one for dealing with this is to hand the arc thrower to a rookie you don't like. The upside is that you don't need to do anything all that fancy setting up for the stun, but the downside is that they might die before managing to stun anything, and you'll probably be out 20$, plus they aren't very useful aside from stunning things. Bear in mind that mind controlling enemies will usually go for the lowest Will soldier around, which is likely to be your rookie with the stunner.
 
  
Alternately, you can hand arc throwers to experienced soldiers, especially a support with sprint, in the best armor you have and use whichever is closest to a priority target. This makes a successful capture more likely, and if you distribute them you can stun targets of opportunity, such as Mutons, for their guns. Unfortunately, it also requires parking valuable soldiers near an alien to be shot at.
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Getting close enough to stun
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*Your soldier will need to be close enough to get within stunning range in a single move, so keep them as near as possible to where enemies will appear, and save both movement points if you think there will be an opportunity to capture an enemy.
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*The Arc Thrower doesn't need to be used from an adjacent tile, but does need to be within a few tiles (3 tiles, or 2 tiles directly on the diagonal).
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*The Arc Thrower is not affected by cover, although it does require normal line of sight. It can also be used with some height variation (for example, against an alien standing on a truck).
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*Being on top of a UFO or building may allow soldiers to approach much more closely without being seen.
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*The command pod of a UFO will usually appear in predictable locations; set up a capture by getting as close as possible with the Arc Thrower before waking them up.
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**[[Outsider (EU2012)|Outsiders]] will tend to move into cover and toward your squad when waking up.
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**[[Sectoid Commander (EU2012)|Sectoid Commanders]] will usually try to use Mind Control on their first turn. You can move your Arc Thrower near them but out of sight, and give them another soldier to Mind Control. Be careful using a soldier with Close Combat Specialist in this way, as they will have a free reaction shot within 4 tiles.
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*Try to kill all the other enemies before trying to capture.
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*Smoke Grenades and Telekinetic Field can be used to give some protection to an exposed soldier.
  
Fortunately, the most valuable targets, commanders, are frequently in areas with plenty of cover and if you're lucky a door. With careful positioning, you may be able to stun them the turn you kick down the door. Unfortunately, if you fail, both Ethereals and Sectoid Commanders may mind control your troops. Also, you'll need a plan for dealing with the Ethereal's bodyguard. It is highly likely you will suffer at least one fatality capturing an Ethereal. Happily there is no reason whatsoever to do so twice.
 
  
There are some (mostly common sense) tricks to make captures easier:
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The chance to stun is better if the enemy has 3 health or less; try to reduce an enemy's health as much as possible without killing it before trying to stun.
* Capture the last enemy. Going for a stun while being shot at by 3 more aliens is obviously not a good idea.
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*Use weapons that won't do enough damage to kill the enemy, and don't increase critical chance if a critical hit is likely to kill.
* If things look bad, just shoot it. Capturing an enemy is rarely worth losing an experienced soldier for. There will always be another.
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*Pistols are a good option for doing 1-2 damage.
* Disabling Shot will shut down most enemies for one turn. It will also do a little damage to prepare them for the stun.
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*Disabling Shot will prevent the enemy from attacking next turn, and does reduced damage.
* Smoke grenades and Telekinetic Field are obvious ways to keep a soldier in a vulnerable position safer.
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*Explosives do a fixed amount of damage and grenades won't miss, but remember to use them before moving into position if there would be a chance to hit your own soldier.
* A Lightning Reflexes Assault can draw out and negate overwatch fire to allow your other soldiers to advance safely.
 
* You can pretty much bank on Sectoid Commanders using mind control on their first turn. This is good and bad, because it means you're essentially safe for the first turn approaching them because they'll use MC and the controlled soldier can't act until the next turn. Ethereals may also use mind control, but not reliably.
 
  
Besides commanders, you want to capture enemies who have guns you want. Thin Men carry light plasma rifles to arm your early recruits, Mutons carry an upgraded version, and Muton Elites have heavy plasmas. Those three are the enemies you'll probably want to capture most often.
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==See Also==
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* [[Squads (EU2012)|Squads]]
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* [[Class Builds (EU2012)|Class Builds]]
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* [[Abilities (EU2012)|Abilities]]
  
 
[[Category: Enemy Unknown (2012)]]
 
[[Category: Enemy Unknown (2012)]]
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[[Category: Guides (EU2012)]]
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[[Category: Tactical Guide (EU2012)]]

Latest revision as of 14:34, 1 September 2020

Rewrite Needed
Pistol

The contents of this article are outdated, missing key info, confusing or constructed in a discussion format. Possibly due to EXALT sabotage. Please help fight the alien menace by updating or correcting the information on this page.

General Tactics

Leap frog your way forward on maps while also rotating through your squad's first move before deciding to perform a second move.
Overwatch, or fire if you encounter something along the way.
This helps you maintain battlefield awareness including map size, squad spacing, and flank openings.

It will also help make sure you have someone with a move left to take action should you encounter aliens.

Save putting your soldiers on overwatch until the end of the turn. This tactic is important for 2 reasons. 1. Aliens get a free move when they are seen and if the alien moves into view of a soldier that has already been put on overwatch they cannot use that turn to fire. You have to rely on them having a reaction shot during the alien's turn. 2. If you want to move them somewhere else you can't because they are locked once on overwatch.

Alternatively, put several secure units (like snipers) into overwatch before revealing enemies. Your soldiers will open fire on aliens as they scramble for cover and the penalty to reaction fire will be more than compensated by the absence of a cover penalty. If you follow this up with careful Run & Gun tactics you can clean up weaker groups before they have a chance to fire at you.

Also, with all the other equipment such as medkits and nano fiber vests and such, the grenade is often overlooked. It is a good idea to have at least one grenade on hand, because a grenade is guaranteed damage, regardless of cover. Better yet, it destroys cover, making a poor shot into an easy shot. Early on when accuracy is poor and weapons are weak a grenade is a great way to dispatch Sectoids.

Muton berserkers have a handy habit of chasing down the soldier that shot them. If unprepared, or early on in the game with weak weapons and soldiers, this can be hard to deal with. Later on in the game with stronger characters and weapons it can be used to your advantage. If there are 3 or more soldiers in a line/group use the first soldier on the end to draw the Berserker to the group. Then shoot the berserker with the next closest soldier and repeat along the line. If executed properly the berserker will move from one soldier to the next each time getting closer to the soldier next in line to shoot him. This tactic is especially useful when using the alloy cannon, a weapon with great power but short range. It is also useful if you have a heavy with Bullet Swarm or a sniper with double tap because you can encourage the berserker to move into position instead of your soldier moving and only having 1 shot.

Simplified and Granulized Encounter System

Aliens now come in groups of 1 to 3. Some of these groups may patrol around the map by teleporting to random points around the map, but are tactically dormant (i.e. they will not open fire or take cover) until you "wake them up". Note that once awoken, aliens can act fully even when outside your visual range, including Overwatch (and in the case of Sectopods, the Cluster Bomb attack).

Similar to massive-multiplayer online game instances, "waking-up" multiple groups of enemies is just plain stupid. The best strategy is to wake-up and deal with one group at a time. When scouting for enemies, don't move too far ahead, especially with a 2-move dash. When a group is activated, it may be prudent to then back up and get into defensive positions to greet the enemy.

For behind the door situations, gather your soldiers in front of the door, around the corner or in a spot across the room facing the door. Next open the door to wake up the aliens inside. If no aliens are seen, have a soldier (preferably your assault with Run&Gun) move in. After the aliens run for cover, charge in and open fire at optimum ranges. If there are multiple entrances into the same room, split your team so that you can potentially get a flank bonus on some of the enemies. Depending on the situation, you also have the option of waking up an enemy behind a door, and then back out of sight to encourage the alien to run out and into a flurry of reaction fire.

For most outdoor situations and in large rooms, set up your snipers in the right place before waking up the aliens with one soldier. Use only one action point to wake them up, kill most/all the aliens with your snipers, and use one action point to pull back to completely avoid retaliation fire.

Enemy groups that randomly teleport nearby, or amongst your team, will not immediately open fire when they strike a pose and race for cover. They will actively attack once your turn ends. If this occurs when you are not engaging the enemy, you can often use this opportunity to get in close and take them down at close range. If you are in the middle of engaging another group or more, these re-inforcements could tip the odds in the enemy's favour. You will need to adjust your tactics accordingly. Prioritize targets, take defensive measures, make a tactical retreat to safety, use area-effect weapons, etc.

To be (an Angel) or not to be

That is the question. The answer may lie in your playing style but it may also lie in a game bug. Ghost Armour is the obvious choice for all classes (maybe Psi Armour for Psi), but for snipers you may want to equip with Angel Armor. Because of a bug in the game, Angel Armour grants you Height bonus and Damn Good Ground bonus even though the Angel Armor strictly says it shouldn't. With these bonuses plus a scope, your chance to hit jumps to near certainty even for aliens with full cover.

Plan before you commit

Do not use your soldier's turns separately, like, select unit 1, do something, select next unit, do something... First plan the movement and actions of all the soldiers, and only then commit to actually doing it. Instead of taking best shot possible with each soldier, one after another, it might be a good idea to first check which soldier sees which enemy, and has which chance to hit - for example, one of your squad sight snipers could only see one target with 100% CTH on it, and your other squad sight can see that target with 100% CTH on it, and another with 80% CTH on it - while it could seem as a better move to fire on the first target with the second sniper when you select him and look at available targets, doing so will mean you cannot do any reasonable damage with your first sniper this turn. Also, consider what opportunities indirect use of explosives may provide - you may first remove cover of several aliens, then shoot, to maximise your chance to hit, consider how you can move to improve your sight or chance to hit, etc. It is also a good idea to plan for the worst case scenario, having backup plans - for example, leaving Heavy's turn for last, so that he can blow enemies up in case you miss them, or, commit to firing first with your soldiers that are least in danger (snipers, or those behind good cover) so, in case enemies live, you can retreat your soldiers in low cover or in danger of being flanked, instead of having them already spent their turn and locked in a danger zone.

High Cover vs Low Cover

Low Cover not nearly as useful enough as High Cover. While in High Cover you can count on most likely not being hit, and Hunker Down behind it means in most cases that enemy will have 1% chance to hit you, Low Cover means you will most likely be hit than not, and Hunker Down will not save you from being hit as well. Generally, consider using Low Cover only when there is absolutely no way to use High Cover, and always place and advance your soldiers around the map by moving from high cover to high cover. You should never have exchange of shots with aliens with one of your front soldiers being behind Low Cover, except when you have no other choice (like, pinned down in a corner of a map, or all nearby high cover blown by explosives). Having even one unit behind low cover means aliens will focus their fire on that unit and very probably kill or damage it.

Cover vs Firing and Hunker Down

While shooting at enemies is always better than nothing, if you miss or don't kill the target, said shooter is exposed to return fire. Unless you are confident in the shot, or have a second shooter, it may be a good idea to hunker down.

Hunkering down in full cover gives -80 acc to enemy aliens, making it highly likely that nearly all alien shots will miss, or in the worst case scenario, non critical damage. This is especially useful for scouts, as they can mark targets for snipers and live to spot the next turn. Be sure to hunker down as the last move, so the scout spots for all your shooters.

A viable tactic using hunker down is putting snipers in the back (out of enemy LOS) and other units in enemy LOS but behind high cover and in Hunker Down. Enemies will either try to shoot with a very miniscule chance ot hit, relocate (sometimes flanking themselves or making themselves easier targets on subsequent turn) or just go overwatch. This effectively gives your sniper team extra turns to shoot at the aliens (and lower their numbers). However, watch out for enemies with AOE attacks like Thin Men or Mutons, since AI will use it without hesitation in such case.

Also remember that Heavy soldier can go into Hunker Down after he already fired once, if he has the Bullet Swarm perk.

AI "Panic"

If AI unit has no AOE attack, has no enemy in LOS which is exposed/flanked, is himself exposed/flanked, and sees a unit which is on overwatch, it will completely skip its turn. AI seems to run out of options and "panics". Therefore, you can "lock down" units like sectoids and floaters (on the ground), or Mutons if they already used their grenades, or Thin Men if you carry medkits, by simply flanking them with one of your units and putting one of your soldiers that is visible to them on overwatch (can be the flanker, can be different unit).

This can allow you to advance your Arc Thrower carrying soldier, or take free shots on the enemy until it dies, or just save yourself from harm. Using this is way superior to just taking the shot with your flanking unit, because in case you do not kill it, AI will move to cover on its turn and fire back, plus, in a situation when your unit flanks 2 or more enemies, he can only theoretically kill one of them (except using grenades, but then flanking was probably unnessecary), plus flanking does not always guarantee a hit, etc. However, by going overwatch, you can single-handedly keep all flanked enemies at bay while giving yourself freedom to deal with them in whichever way you prefer.

Notice, however, that you must have no units exposed/flanked by an alien locked that way, or alien will fire. Also watch out for aliens with grenades or other AOE attacks.

The panic also seems not to trigger a good amount of the time if the alien unit has not yet moved away from it's starting position. (the cover it moves to after its introductory cinematic) To be completely sure that overwatch will lock down an enemy, make sure it has moved at least once, unless you have no other options.

Because the flanking unit does not necessarily have to be the one to overwatch, you dash a unit to a good position where it has an exposed view of all enemies, and as long as a unit has any line of sight on these same enemies (not necessarily an exposed one) overwatch will lock them down, except in some cases mentioned above.

This has been 'fixed' in Enemy Within.

The second form of AI Panic is purposeful, and also manipulatable. What it requires is: if there is an alien squad of 3, that you need to kill two of the aliens with overwhemling force, usually in one round. You'll know it works if a soldier says something along the lines of "They're losing ground!" when the aliens have their turn. Even if there's two active squads engaging you, and you don't touch the second squad, you still might trigger this panic in the first. Exploiting this tactic can save you much stress in Impossible difficulty, in that it still takes all three aliens out of action in the next alien turn, even though that (due to the higher alien HP values) you may only be able to cause enough damage to kill two.

Do not fear the enemy which is unknown

Enemies can be in two states: activated or not. When you start a map, all aliens are not in activated state, and are bunched up in packs of up to 3. They roam the map (actually, teleport around the map until next teleport will put them inside your LOS, thats when they make a movement animation) or even stay in place until discovered. When spotted on your turn, or coming into your LOS on their turn, a small cutscene will play, and aliens will always make a move, usually into cover. They will never take an offensive action at the turn (yours or theirs) at which you met them. Only once activated, starting from their next turn, aliens start to act as individual units, taking turns in the same manner as player does. (two actions per turn, move/move or move/shoot, overwatch, etc.)

This means that as long as you have no activated aliens on the map, you are completely 100% safe from any kind of harm. You can have every enemy carry a grenade and yet bunch up your soldiers next to each other and never be in danger, as long as those enemies are not active yet. You can be in the open and never be in any danger as long as there are no active enemies on the map. You never have to fear an enemy that is not activated. In a situation when you have no active aliens on the map, you can play a completely different game, and to a big advantage.

While usually you'd try to stay mostly in high cover, spread up if enemy is carrying grenades, doing so when there are no active aliens can actually hurt you, because when they pop on their turn, only one or two of your soldiers will get a chance to react, since others will not yet have LOS on the enemy. Or, aliens may appear from the side of your line formation, meaning it takes you more than one move to get your soldiers into position to fire on spotted aliens. And so on. If you start thinking about situations when there are aliens on the map that are active and when there are not as separate situations, in case there aren't any active aliens it may be optimal not to stay in cover and spread out, but have cover reachable in 1 move, while staying bunched together, thus still being safe in case you cannot take down spotted aliens in one turn, but at the same time giving you benefit of having all your soldiers fire an overwatch shot against spotted aliens. Also, as long as you kill the spotted aliens in the turn you spotted them on (or in the turn that goes after the turn they came into your LOS, if it happened on their turn), you do not have to worry about going into cover, because you will again have no active aliens present on the map.

Also, notice that firing on an alien that you have spotted but that has not spotted you (this can rarely happen when you're behind cover, or easilly happen with battlescanner) will activate the pack, but only if you hit. If you miss, you will not activate them.

Do note that, sometimes, these wandering packs may 'teleport' into the middle of your squad, and that if savescumming, unactivated packs might be in a different location (even from the same savestate).

Mind Wall

If you are tired of mind controlling aliens after you got Psionics and if you have lucky to have 5/6 Psionic soldiers you can set your psi squad to be permanently in a Telekinetic Field that gives all units (including the aliens) inside +40 Defense. The ability has a 4 turn cooldown so you need 5 soldiers equipped with it to always have 1 unit activating it at the end of your turn. This tactic works ideally on open areas like smaller UFO maps and most abduction and Council missions. Even if the aliens are protected within the field you just need not to set your soldiers on Overwatch so that they'll not fire at the aliens, and if you combine it with Dense Smoke and/or terrain cover you'll get +80 Defense stats. The only vulnerability of the field is to grenades, so take out first any aliens with explosive weapons.

Capturing

Capturing an alien allows you to recover their weapons intact, and interrogate one of each alien type for a research credit.

  • Don't over-capture aliens carrying weapons you don't need; the corpse and weapon fragments may be more useful.
  • EXALT soldiers can't be captured; they will commit suicide instead.
  • Stunned aliens can be killed by explosions; avoid stunning near explosive objects, and move away when fighting aliens with explosive weapons or death animations.


Equipping the Arc Thrower

  • The Arc Thrower is an item; it can't be used after activating Run and Gun.
  • The chance to stun an enemy depends on the enemy's health, so the Arc Thrower can be given to a soldier with low aim.
  • A Rookie or low-ranking soldier can be used, to reduce the downside if the soldier is killed trying to stun an enemy. Alternately, a soldier with high health and defensive perks will have a better chance to survive.
  • It will be much easier to use the Arc Thrower with a soldier with high mobility (Sprinter, Skeleton Suit). If using Not Created Equally, pay attention to which soldiers have higher movement.
  • In Enemy Within, Tactical Rigging will make it easier to carry several Arc Throwers without sacrificing other equipment.


Getting close enough to stun

  • Your soldier will need to be close enough to get within stunning range in a single move, so keep them as near as possible to where enemies will appear, and save both movement points if you think there will be an opportunity to capture an enemy.
  • The Arc Thrower doesn't need to be used from an adjacent tile, but does need to be within a few tiles (3 tiles, or 2 tiles directly on the diagonal).
  • The Arc Thrower is not affected by cover, although it does require normal line of sight. It can also be used with some height variation (for example, against an alien standing on a truck).
  • Being on top of a UFO or building may allow soldiers to approach much more closely without being seen.
  • The command pod of a UFO will usually appear in predictable locations; set up a capture by getting as close as possible with the Arc Thrower before waking them up.
    • Outsiders will tend to move into cover and toward your squad when waking up.
    • Sectoid Commanders will usually try to use Mind Control on their first turn. You can move your Arc Thrower near them but out of sight, and give them another soldier to Mind Control. Be careful using a soldier with Close Combat Specialist in this way, as they will have a free reaction shot within 4 tiles.
  • Try to kill all the other enemies before trying to capture.
  • Smoke Grenades and Telekinetic Field can be used to give some protection to an exposed soldier.


The chance to stun is better if the enemy has 3 health or less; try to reduce an enemy's health as much as possible without killing it before trying to stun.

  • Use weapons that won't do enough damage to kill the enemy, and don't increase critical chance if a critical hit is likely to kill.
  • Pistols are a good option for doing 1-2 damage.
  • Disabling Shot will prevent the enemy from attacking next turn, and does reduced damage.
  • Explosives do a fixed amount of damage and grenades won't miss, but remember to use them before moving into position if there would be a chance to hit your own soldier.

See Also