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This brings us neatly on to the units themselves. Each of the furies has its own tech tree, and there is a general purpose one (Sun) that any side can use to fill in the gaps in its own tree. Each tree you want to build units from needs a specific workshop built, which costs a fair amount. For any given battle, players normally stick to at most one tech tree plus the sun tech tree. Each tech tree has its own strengths and weaknesses, but in principle contains: A generator (provides 1 bit of its specific type of energy in an area around it, units require between 1 and 3 bits of energy to be supplied to build, but not to operate), A cannon-type unit (that shoots stuff), a blocker (blocks shooty things), barrier generators, an anti-air defense tower, an air-attack unit (you build a base unit that continually builds little attackers) and ground and/or air transports for capturing storm power and enemy priests. In no particular order, the tech trees are:

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This brings us neatly on to the units themselves. Each of the furies has its own tech tree, and there is a general purpose one (Sun) that any side can use to fill in the gaps in its own tree. Each tree you want to build units from needs a specific workshop built, which costs a fair amount. For any given battle, players normally stick to at most one tech tree plus the sun tech tree. Each tech tree has its own strengths and weaknesses, but in principle contains: A generator (provides 1 bit of its specific type of energy in an area around it, units require between 1 and 3 bits of energy to be supplied to build, but not to operate), operate, can 'meltdown' in multiplayer to destroy bridges in its immediate vicinity), A cannon-type unit (that shoots stuff), a blocker (blocks shooty things), barrier generators, an anti-air defense tower, an air-attack unit (you build a base unit that continually builds little attackers) and ground and/or air transports for capturing storm power and enemy priests. In no particular order, the tech trees are:
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* Sun barrier generator is the Sun Barricade. This is the notable exception to the Sun lineup and together with the Crossbow forms the bread and butter of your forces. You build two towers in a line, and a force field beam forms between them. Unlike the other barriers, this beam stops all projectiles dead without exception, making it a supreme defense and also the only defense that cannot be eventually worn down by Ice Cannons.

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* Sun barrier generator is the Sun Barricade. This is the notable exception to the Sun lineup and together with the Crossbow forms the bread and butter of your forces. You build two towers in a line, and a force field beam forms between them. Unlike the other barriers, this beam stops all projectiles dead without exception, making it a supreme defense and also the only defense that cannot be eventually worn down by Ice Cannons. The Sun Barricade and the Crossbow are your bread and butter units that everyone uses because they are just that good.
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* The Sun also has a unique barrier generator called the Sun Barricade. This is the notable exception to the Sun lineup and together with the Crossbow forms the bread and butter of your forces. You build two towers, and there is a force field between them. In this case, this is a real barrier, that defends against shooty things and lasts forever.

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* The Sun also has a unique barrier generator called is the Sun Barricade. This is the notable exception to the Sun lineup and together with the Crossbow forms the bread and butter of your forces. You build two towers, towers in a line, and there is a force field beam forms between them. In Unlike the other barriers, this case, this is beam stops all projectiles dead without exception, making it a real barrier, supreme defense and also the only defense that defends against shooty things and lasts forever.cannot be eventually worn down by Ice Cannons.
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* Sun's air attacker is the Whirligig. By far the weakest and least impressive flyer, but also the cheapest. Unlike other flyers, when Whirligigs run out of fuel they return to their spawner to refuel, as this process takes longer than just spawning a new Whirligig due to travel time, this is actually a disadvantage. Though it does look cool.

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* Sun's air attacker is the Whirligig. By far the weakest and least impressive flyer, but also the cheapest. Unlike other flyers, when Whirligigs run out of fuel they return to their spawner to refuel, as refuel. As this process takes longer than just spawning a new Whirligig due to travel time, this is actually a disadvantage. Though disadvantage, though it does look cool.
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* Rain's ground transport is the Crystal Crab, which is pretty fast, reasonably tough, will make an extremely obnoxious noise and attack other transports and steal what they are carrying when it encounters them, leaving them stunned and canceling their orders, which is very annoying.

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* Rain's ground transport is the Crystal Crab, which is pretty fast, reasonably tough, will make an extremely obnoxious noise and attack other transports and to steal what they are carrying when it encounters them, leaving them stunned and canceling their orders, which is very annoying.
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* Rain's air attacker is the Man o' War: a flying jellyfish-like creature that shoots lightning, with very long range and which does good damage and has a long 2 minute lifespan, but which is also slow-moving. The Man o' War is unique in that it prioritizing enemy transports over anything else, and should a Man o' War kill any unit its 2 minute lifespan is reset, allowing a single Man o' War to potentially last forever as long as it can keep killing.

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* Rain's air attacker is the Man o' War: a War. A flying jellyfish-like creature jellyfish that shoots lightning, with very long range and which does good damage and has a long 2 minute lifespan, but which is also slow-moving. high range and good damage. The Man o' War is unique in that it prioritizing prioritizes enemy transports over anything else, and should a Man o' War kill any unit its 2 minute lifespan is reset, allowing a single Man o' War to potentially last forever as long as it can keep killing.killing. The lifespan reset also resets the Man o War's attack range, meaning that they can sometimes end up in very strange locations due to following transports deep behind enemy lines.
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* Wind's ground transport is The Sail Skater, which is a essentially a small sailboat on wheels, which is the fastest transport.

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* Wind's ground transport is The Sail Skater, which is a essentially a small sailboat on wheels, which is the wheels. The fastest transport.moving transport in the game, though its ground restriction means that air transports are usually quicker in actually getting to and from Storm Geysers, due to not having to follow twisty bridges.
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* Wind's cannon is the Crossbow which has a comparatively short range, but is also a very flexible cannon. It doesn't turn, but can hit anything inside a sixty-degree arc in front of it. It also does double duty as an anti-air cannon. Widely regarded as the best unit in the game due to its flexibility, low cost and decent damage.

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* Wind's cannon is the Crossbow which has a comparatively short range, but is also a very flexible cannon.cannon that fires extremely rapidly. It doesn't turn, but can hit anything inside a sixty-degree arc in front of it. It also does double duty as an anti-air cannon. Widely regarded as the best unit in the game due to its flexibility, low cost and decent damage.
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* Wind's cannon is the Crossbow which has a comparatively short range, but is also a very flexible cannon. It doesn't turn, but can hit anything inside a ninety-degree arc in front of it. It also does double duty as an anti-air cannon. Widely regarded as the best unit in the game due to its flexibility, low cost and decent damage.

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* Wind's cannon is the Crossbow which has a comparatively short range, but is also a very flexible cannon. It doesn't turn, but can hit anything inside a ninety-degree sixty-degree arc in front of it. It also does double duty as an anti-air cannon. Widely regarded as the best unit in the game due to its flexibility, low cost and decent damage.
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Sun - Nothing excels, but cheap and patches up the other trees.

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Sun - Nothing excels, but cheap and patches up the other trees.Low cost, extremely average with one notable exception, can use any energy to build rather than requiring one specific type.



* Sun's blocker is the Stone Tower. Mediocre and with no special features, it just gets in the way.
* Sun's anti-air is the Sun Disc Thrower, which flings large bronze discs within a short radius. Unlike the other AA units, the sun disc thrower will attack ground units as well, and its unique 360 degree fire arc can make it useful under lots of situations.
* Sun's air attacker is the Whirligig. Again, no particular strengths, and the fliers themselves are very weak, but they get the job done.
* The Sun also has a unique barrier generator called the Sun Barricade. You build two towers, and there is a force field between them. In this case, this is a real barrier, that defends against shooty things and lasts forever.
* Sun's ground transport is the Golem and its air transport is the Balloon. Both are weak and slow, but cheaper than their counterparts of the other Furies.

So yeah, you build between islands, you shoot units with your units, you blow the other guy's temple up, knock their priest out, capture him and tear out his soul.

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* Sun's blocker is the Stone Tower. Mediocre Tougher than Wind and Ice Towers, but with no special features, it just gets in the way.
abilities. Very cheap and easily spammable due to requiring only 1 bit of energy.
* Sun's anti-air is the Sun Disc Thrower, which is dirt cheap and flings large bronze discs within a short radius. Unlike Functions exactly like the other AA units, Vander Tower except smaller, weaker, cheaper and the sun disc thrower will attack ground units as well, and its unique well. As the only ground attacker with a full 360 degree fire arc arc, it can make be it useful under lots of situations.
situations.
* Sun's air attacker is the Whirligig. Again, no particular strengths, By far the weakest and least impressive flyer, but also the fliers themselves are very weak, but cheapest. Unlike other flyers, when Whirligigs run out of fuel they get the job done.
return to their spawner to refuel, as this process takes longer than just spawning a new Whirligig due to travel time, this is actually a disadvantage. Though it does look cool.
* The Sun also has a unique barrier generator called the Sun Barricade. This is the notable exception to the Sun lineup and together with the Crossbow forms the bread and butter of your forces. You build two towers, and there is a force field between them. In this case, this is a real barrier, that defends against shooty things and lasts forever.
* Sun's ground transport is technically the Golem Golem, but literally everyone gets it by default from their Temple. The cheapest transport, and its also the most fragile, Golems form the backbone of your gathering efforts.
* Sun's
air transport is the Balloon. Both are weak and slow, but Balloon, as with all Sun units it is cheaper and weaker than their counterparts of its equivalents. Though slightly slower and much more fragile than the other Furies.

air transports, its low cost and easy availability make it very common, as generally speaking if your transports are under enemy attack you're in deep trouble regardless.

So yeah, you build between islands, you shoot units with your units, you blow the other guy's temple up, knock their priest out, capture him and tear out his soul.
throw him down a hole into the endless storm below, which pleases the Furies and grants you the knowledge of how to build a new unit.
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fixing some incorrect information\expanding missing info


This brings us neatly on to the units themselves. Each of the furies has its own tech tree, and there is a general purpose one (Sun) that any side can use to fill in the gaps in its own tree. Each tree you want to build units from needs a specific workshop built, which costs a fair amount. For any given battle, players normally stick to at most one tech tree plus the sun tech tree. Each tech tree has its own strengths and weaknesses, but in principle contains: A cannon-type unit (that shoots stuff), a blocker (blocks shooty things), barrier generators, an anti-air defense tower, an air-attack unit (you build a base unit that continually builds little attackers) and ground and/or air transports for capturing storm power. In no particular order, the tech trees are:

Thunder - Lots of damage, but not too flexible.
* The Thunder Cannon does the most damage in the game, and has the longest range, but must be built facing one way and cannot turn once its placed.
* Thunder's blocker unit, the Bulwark, has the most hp of anything and is invulnerable to air attacks, but still takes damage from ground shooters normally.
* Thunder's anti-air unit is the Vander Tower, which shoots out lightning in a small radius around it.
* The Barrier unit is the Arc Spire: You build two of them on a horizontal or vertical line, and lightning begins to course between them, killing or at least heavily damaging anything that tries to cross the barrier.
* Thunder doesn't have an air attacker.
* The thunder transport is the Bulf which is a large ox-type creature that can go collect things for you. It's very slow but also the toughest transport.

Wind - Low damage but very flexible.
* Wind's cannon is the Crossbow which has a comparatively short range, but is also a very flexible cannon. It doesn't turn, but can hit anything inside a ninety-degree arc in front of it. It also does double duty as an anti-air cannon.

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This brings us neatly on to the units themselves. Each of the furies has its own tech tree, and there is a general purpose one (Sun) that any side can use to fill in the gaps in its own tree. Each tree you want to build units from needs a specific workshop built, which costs a fair amount. For any given battle, players normally stick to at most one tech tree plus the sun tech tree. Each tech tree has its own strengths and weaknesses, but in principle contains: A generator (provides 1 bit of its specific type of energy in an area around it, units require between 1 and 3 bits of energy to be supplied to build, but not to operate), A cannon-type unit (that shoots stuff), a blocker (blocks shooty things), barrier generators, an anti-air defense tower, an air-attack unit (you build a base unit that continually builds little attackers) and ground and/or air transports for capturing storm power.power and enemy priests. In no particular order, the tech trees are:

Thunder - Lots of Most damage, but not too flexible.
most toughness, most cost, very inflexible.
* The Thunder Cannon does the most damage in the game, game and has the longest range, but must be built facing one way and cannot turn once its placed.
placed.
* Thunder's blocker unit, the Bulwark, has the most hp of anything and is invulnerable to air attacks, but still takes damage from ground shooters normally.
normally.
* Thunder's anti-air unit is the Vander Tower, which shoots out lightning in a small large radius around it.
it, only attacks air units and requires 3 bits of energy, but does a lot of damage and attacks fairly rapidly.
* The Barrier unit is the Arc Spire: You build two of them on a horizontal or vertical line, and lightning begins to course between them, killing or at least heavily damaging anything that tries to cross gets caught in the barrier.
lightning pulses.
* Thunder doesn't have an any air attacker.
units.
* The thunder transport is the Bulf which is a large ox-type creature that can go collect things for you. It's very slow but also the toughest transport.

transport.

Wind - Low damage but very flexible.
damage, high speed, variable cost, high flexibility.
* Wind's cannon is the Crossbow which has a comparatively short range, but is also a very flexible cannon. It doesn't turn, but can hit anything inside a ninety-degree arc in front of it. It also does double duty as an anti-air cannon. Widely regarded as the best unit in the game due to its flexibility, low cost and decent damage.



* Wind's air attack unit is the Dust Devil, which is invulnerable and does a lot of damage but doesn't last particularly long.
* Wind's ground transport is The Sail Skater, which is a essentially a small sailboat on wheels, which is the fastest transport, and its air transport is the Airship, which is slow but also quite tough.

Rain - Decent damage and flexibility.
* Rain's cannon is the Ice Cannon. The same as the thunder cannon, it can only fire in one direction but it does less damage and has less range. However, it is also cheaper, and it has a small blast radius where it hits. It also doesn't fire continuously, but in bursts with a break in-between.
* Rain's blocker is the Ice Tower, which has fairly low hp, but it also regrows once it's destroyed, and in fact can't be fully destroyed. Numerous layers of them can provide a permanent barrier to shooty things.
* Rain's barrier generator, which doubles as an anti-air unit, is the Acid Barrier. You set up two towers on a direct line, and this sets up some kind of force field between the two. If any flying units try to cross the barrier, they get immediately slurped up and killed. This is obviously pretty useful, but you need to take care, because the towers themselves are not protected.
* Rain's air attacker is the Man o' War: a flying jellyfish-like creature that shoots lightning, with very long range and which does good damage, but which is also slow-moving.
* Rain's ground transport is the Crystal Crab, which is pretty fast, reasonably tough, and will attack other transports and steal what they are carrying.
* Rain's air transport is the Cloud Floater, which is reasonably fast and quite hard to kill, as most shots will pass right through it.

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* Wind's air attack unit is the Dust Devil, which is invulnerable and does a lot of damage but doesn't last particularly long.
long. It also cracks bridges it passes over, making them easier to destroy.
* Wind's ground transport is The Sail Skater, which is a essentially a small sailboat on wheels, which is the fastest transport, and its transport.
* Wind's
air transport is the Airship, which is slow relatively fast and unusually tough for a Wind unit, but also quite tough.

expensive and very large, making it easy to hit.

Rain - Decent damage and flexibility.
damage, decent speed, decent cost, decent flexibility, extremely relentless.
* Rain's cannon is the Ice Cannon. The same as the thunder cannon, it can A rotary cannon that burst fires ice spikes with a short pause in between each volley. Can only fire in one a fixed direction like the Thunder Cannon, but it does is shorter ranged and deals less damage and has less range. However, it is also cheaper, and it has damage. Ice spikes 'bounce' on impact with an enemy unit, dealing a small blast radius where it hits. It also doesn't fire continuously, but in bursts with a amount of area effect damage that can eventually break in-between.
through even the invulnerable side of Wind Towers.
* Rain's blocker is the Ice Tower, which has fairly low hp, but it also regrows for free once it's destroyed, and in fact can't be fully destroyed. is almost impossible to destroy entirely. Numerous layers of them can provide a permanent an ablative barrier to shooty things.
that regenerates faster than the enemy can destroy it.
* Rain's barrier generator, which doubles as an anti-air unit, is the Acid Barrier. You set up two towers on a direct line, and this sets up some kind an invisible line of force field acidic death forms between them. Any unit that touches the two. If any flying units try to cross the barrier, they get line of death is immediately killed and slurped up and killed.by the towers. This is obviously pretty useful, but you need to take care, because the towers themselves are not protected.
* Rain's air attacker is the Man o' War: a flying jellyfish-like creature that shoots lightning, with very long range and which does good damage, damage and has a long 2 minute lifespan, but which is also slow-moving.
slow-moving. The Man o' War is unique in that it prioritizing enemy transports over anything else, and should a Man o' War kill any unit its 2 minute lifespan is reset, allowing a single Man o' War to potentially last forever as long as it can keep killing.
* Rain's ground transport is the Crystal Crab, which is pretty fast, reasonably tough, and will make an extremely obnoxious noise and attack other transports and steal what they are carrying.
carrying when it encounters them, leaving them stunned and canceling their orders, which is very annoying.
* Rain's air transport is the Cloud Floater, which is fairly expensive, reasonably fast and quite hard to kill, as most shots will pass right through it.
it.
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Added DiffLines:

* {{Bizarrchitecture}}: given the semirandom nature of bridges, every path traced between two floating masses will have a thousand little bridge stubs that lead nowhere, various unexpected deviations, wavering paths that don't seem to make sense and occasionally branches that go nowhere that were simply used as a dump for unwanted bridge segments (that will eventually collapse on their own).
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* LuckBasedMission: your success is dictated in part by what bridge shapes you get. You can't alter them, you can only choose between four, and those are completely random; if you get a particularly unlucky set, and don't get the shapes you need quickly after that, your resource gatherers might need to walk around mazelike paths to get to the geysers, significantly lengthening the time before you get resources. Also, not getting a bridge to end right where you need can mean positioning a fixed unit in a sub-optimal location, and potentially suffering consequences from that.

Changed: 490

Removed: 4

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Added image.


A RealTimeStrategy blended with a little TowerDefence to create a smoothie of intriguing possibilities and a whole lot of headaches. Combat units are stationary buildings, that you cannot control once built.

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[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/netstorm_islands_at_war.png]]
A 1997 RealTimeStrategy blended with a little TowerDefence to create a smoothie of intriguing possibilities and a whole lot of headaches. Combat units are stationary buildings, that you cannot control once built.



For some years now, Netstorm has been freeware and maintained by the people at [[http://netstormhq.com/news.php NetstormHQ]]. Additionally, a SpiritualSuccessor titled ''Disciples of the Storm'' is currently searching for funding on Kickstarter [[https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/525138512/disciples-of-the-storm-rts here]]. Jim Greer, one of the creators of the game and founder of WebGame site Kongregate, is taking part on the project.

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For some years now, Netstorm has been freeware and maintained by the people at [[http://netstormhq.com/news.php NetstormHQ]]. Additionally, a SpiritualSuccessor titled ''Disciples of the Storm'' is currently searching for funding on Kickstarter [[https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/525138512/disciples-of-the-storm-rts here]]. Jim Greer, one of the creators of the game and founder of WebGame site Kongregate, Website/{{Kongregate}}, is taking part on the project.

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project.
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This Troper dectected! Eliminating! Also, the Spiritual Successor needs as much publicity as possible.


Also, for some years now, Netstorm has been freeware and you can get it from the great guys at [[http://netstormhq.com/news.php NetstormHQ]]. This troper strongly recommends you give it a go. It's a great, if hideously frustrating game and it will absolutely test your strategy skills to the limit.

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Also, for For some years now, Netstorm has been freeware and you can get it from maintained by the great guys people at [[http://netstormhq.com/news.php NetstormHQ]]. This troper strongly recommends you give it Additionally, a go. It's a great, if hideously frustrating SpiritualSuccessor titled ''Disciples of the Storm'' is currently searching for funding on Kickstarter [[https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/525138512/disciples-of-the-storm-rts here]]. Jim Greer, one of the creators of the game and it will absolutely test your strategy skills to founder of WebGame site Kongregate, is taking part on the limit.
project.
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* RecycledSoundtrack from ShatteredSteel.

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* RecycledSoundtrack from ShatteredSteel.''VideoGame/ShatteredSteel''.
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General cleanup of spelling and grammar; also, \"quick and fast\" is redundant.


* Rain's air attacker is the Man o' War: a flying jellyfish-like creature that shoots lightning, with very long range and which does good damage, but which is also slow moving.

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* Rain's air attacker is the Man o' War: a flying jellyfish-like creature that shoots lightning, with very long range and which does good damage, but which is also slow moving.slow-moving.



* CheckPointStarvation: No check points, no saves of any kind once you get into the fighting. In the harder missions, this seriously ratchets up the difficulty. Particularly since bridge pieces are random this can effect how quickly you can get to resources or how you place towers, and that means that starting over because you screwed up later on can be tough just to get back where you were.
* ColorCodedArmies: Not a vast amount, but there are colours that tell your sides appart. Your islands and towers have an appropriate border, while your transports and priest are the right colour. You are blue, the bad guys are variously red, purple, yellow and green.
* ComMons: You start out just with the sun cannon and sun disk thrower, but as soon as you get ahold of the shiny toys they are if not forgotten, they are at least relegated to marginal use. Every element has a better cannon and a better anti-air choice, although they do cost more.

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* CheckPointStarvation: No check points, no saves of any kind once you get into the fighting. In the harder missions, this seriously ratchets up the difficulty. Particularly since bridge pieces are random this can effect affect how quickly you can get to resources or how you place towers, and that means that when starting over because you screwed up later on on, it can be tough just to get back where you were.
* ColorCodedArmies: Not a vast amount, but there are colours that tell your sides appart.apart. Your islands and towers have an appropriate border, while your transports and priest are the right colour. You are blue, the bad guys are variously red, purple, yellow and green.
* ComMons: You start out just with the sun cannon and sun disk thrower, but as soon as you get ahold a hold of the shiny toys they are are, if not forgotten, they are at least relegated to marginal use. Every element has a better cannon and a better anti-air choice, although they do cost more.



* ElementalRockPaperScissors: In theory, Wind beats Thunder (Thunder Cannons can only shoot in one of the 4 cardinal directions, and Wind Towers are invulnerable on one side), Thunder beats Rain (Ice Towers are weak but regenerate, Thunder Cannons can destroy them very quickly, and Bulwarks are invulnerable to air attacks, such as Rain's powerful Man-o-wars), Rain beats Wind (Ice Towers are never permanently destroyed, so you can use them as permanent blockades over which the short-ranged Crossbows can't shoot far. Also, Ice Cannon shots ricochet off buildings they hit, allowing them to hit Wind Towers in one of the vulnerable sides), and Sun can't take Wind, Rain or Thunder in a direct fight, but has ways to attack from safety (for example, Sun Disc Throwers can attack diagonally, unlike every cannon, and while Sun Barricades themselves are weak, the barrier between them is impervious to cannon fire).

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* ElementalRockPaperScissors: In theory, Wind beats Thunder (Thunder Cannons can only shoot in one of the 4 cardinal directions, and Wind Towers are invulnerable on one side), Thunder beats Rain (Ice Towers are weak but regenerate, Thunder Cannons can destroy them very quickly, and Bulwarks are invulnerable to air attacks, such as Rain's powerful Man-o-wars), Man-o-Wars), Rain beats Wind (Ice Towers are never permanently destroyed, so you can use them as permanent blockades over which the short-ranged Crossbows can't shoot far. Also, Ice Cannon shots ricochet off buildings they hit, allowing them to hit Wind Towers in one of the vulnerable sides), and Sun can't take Wind, Rain or Thunder in a direct fight, but has ways to attack from safety (for example, Sun Disc Throwers can attack diagonally, unlike every cannon, and while Sun Barricades themselves are weak, the barrier between them is impervious to cannon fire).



* FireIceLightning: There's four building types with different attacks. Sun is well-rounded, Air performs quick and fast attacks, Rain tends to be persistant attacks, and [[PoorPredictableRock Thunder]] tries to overpower with raw strength.

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* FireIceLightning: There's four building types with different attacks. Sun is well-rounded, Air performs short and quick and fast attacks, Rain tends to be persistant persistent attacks, and [[PoorPredictableRock Thunder]] tries to overpower with raw strength.



* InverseLawOfUtilityAndLethality: The more powerful a tower is, the more it will cost and the lower range of movement it will have. Most obviously, the thunder cannon and ice cannon have powerful long ranged attacks, but you better hope that you pointed it at something that's really worth killing, because it won't be shooting anything else. The crossbow and sun disk thrower can shoot across a much wider area, but at much less range. Oh and they can shoot aircraft too. The sun cannon is somewhere in the middle.
* LastChanceHitPoint: Slightly. If your priest is incapacitated (by being shot repeatedly in the head with a gun that shoots things about his size for example) he doesn't die, he's just in a coma or something and has a magic coma shield. If you still have a temple you will re-charge health and assuming you aren't still being shot eventually return to health.
* LevelEditor: A whole bunch of fan made maps and even campaigns and story missions have been made with such a tool.

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* InverseLawOfUtilityAndLethality: The more powerful a tower is, the more it will cost and the lower range of movement it will have. Most obviously, the thunder cannon and ice cannon have powerful long ranged attacks, but you better hope that you pointed it at something that's really worth killing, because it won't be shooting anything else. The crossbow and sun disk thrower can shoot across a much wider area, but at much less range. Oh Oh, and they can shoot aircraft too. The sun cannon is somewhere in the middle.
* LastChanceHitPoint: Slightly. If your priest is incapacitated (by being shot repeatedly in the head with a gun that shoots things about his size for example) he doesn't die, he's just in a coma or something and has a magic coma shield. If you still have a temple you will re-charge recharge health and assuming you aren't still being shot eventually return to health.
* LevelEditor: A whole bunch of fan made fan-made maps and even campaigns and story missions have been made with such a tool.



* Overheating: The ice cannon shuts down briefly between bursts before re-starting.

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* Overheating: {{Overheating}}: The ice cannon shuts down briefly between bursts before re-starting.restarting.



* Regenerating Health: The ice tower that constantly re-grows, and the priest can sometimes re-gain health too, but nothing else in the game can without specific spells.

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* Regenerating Health: RegeneratingHealth: The ice tower that constantly re-grows, regrows, and the priest can sometimes re-gain regain health too, but nothing else in the game can without specific spells.



* ShatteredWorld / FloatingContinent: Obviously, what with the floating islands. Apparently the islands have some sort of propulsion system that is only used off camera, but you can never use when it would actually be useful.
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* ShatteredWorld / FloatingContinent: Obviously, what with the floating islands. Apparently the islands have some sort of propulsion system that is only used off camera, off-camera, but you can never use when it would actually be useful.
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The landscape is scattered islands in the air, which makes up the (unimaginatively named) world of Nimbus. You control (or possible ARE) a high priest that worships the three furies of Nimbus (Thunder, Rain, Wind) and your battles somehow relate to their unending battle for dominance below the clowds. You build a temple to the furies, they give you a variety of towers to blow up the other guy's towers and temples. The aim of the game is to capture enemy priests and ceremonially toss them off the islands to be eaten by the furies.

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The landscape is scattered islands in the air, which makes up the (unimaginatively named) world of Nimbus. You control (or possible possibly ARE) a high priest that worships the three furies of Nimbus (Thunder, Rain, Wind) and your battles somehow relate to their unending battle for dominance below the clowds. You build a temple to the furies, they give you a variety of towers to blow up the other guy's towers and temples. The aim of the game is to capture enemy priests and ceremonially toss them off the islands to be eaten by the furies.
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The landscape is scattered islands in the air, which makes up the (unimaginatively named) world of Nimbus. You control (or possible ARE) a high priest that worships the three furies of Nimbus (Thunder, Rain, Wind) and your battles somehow relate to their unending battle for dominance below the clowds. You build a temple to the furies, they give you a variety of towers to blow up the other guys towers and temples. The aim of the game is to capture enemy priests and ceremonially toss them off the islands to be eaten by the furies.

Getting from one island to another is done by means of bridges that your temple makes. You get given small sections which you join together to make large bridges. First off, you need to go and gather resources which in Nimbus is Storm Power. This appears from Storm Geysers, most of which are tiny little islands spread around the map. You bridge to them and send your mooks off to collect the crystals. Secondly, you need bridges to get to the other guys island and blow his stuff up. You can place units on your island but mostly that will put you out of range of the other guy, and the only other place you can build units is attached to your own bridges, that in turn connect to your island. Bridges are very hard to destroy, and placing them correctly is one of the major skills of the game. Particularly, placing bridges very quickly and in such a way as to prevent an enemy from placing his own bridges and units is pretty challenging, and doing it fast and so you can still attack from them is an art form.

to:

The landscape is scattered islands in the air, which makes up the (unimaginatively named) world of Nimbus. You control (or possible ARE) a high priest that worships the three furies of Nimbus (Thunder, Rain, Wind) and your battles somehow relate to their unending battle for dominance below the clowds. You build a temple to the furies, they give you a variety of towers to blow up the other guys guy's towers and temples. The aim of the game is to capture enemy priests and ceremonially toss them off the islands to be eaten by the furies.

Getting from one island to another is done by means of bridges that your temple makes. You get given small sections which you join together to make large bridges. First off, you need to go and gather resources which in Nimbus is Storm Power. This appears from Storm Geysers, most of which are tiny little islands spread around the map. You bridge to them and send your mooks off to collect the crystals. Secondly, you need bridges to get to the other guys guy's island and blow his stuff up. You can place units on your island but mostly that will put you out of range of the other guy, and the only other place you can build units is attached to your own bridges, that in turn connect to your island. Bridges are very hard to destroy, and placing them correctly is one of the major skills of the game. Particularly, placing bridges very quickly and in such a way as to prevent an enemy from placing his own bridges and units is pretty challenging, and doing it fast and so you can still attack from them is an art form.



* BeatingADeadPlayer: You don't win just by blowing up all the other guys stuff, you need to shoot HIM a bunch and then sacrifice him to your gods.

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* BeatingADeadPlayer: You don't win just by blowing up all the other guys guy's stuff, you need to shoot HIM a bunch and then sacrifice him to your gods.
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This brings us neatly on to the units themselves. Each of the furies has its own tech tree, and there is a general purpose one (Sun) that any side can use to fill in the gaps in its own tree. Each tree you want to build units from needs a specific workshop built, which costs a fair amount. For any given battle, players normally stick to at most one tech tree plus the sun tech tree. Each tech tree has its own strengths and weaknesses, but in principal contains: A cannon-type unit (that shoots stuff), a blocker (blocks shooty things), barrier generators, an anti-air defense tower , an air-attack unit (you build a base unit that continually builds little attackers) and ground and air transports for capturing storm power. In no particular order, the tech trees are:

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This brings us neatly on to the units themselves. Each of the furies has its own tech tree, and there is a general purpose one (Sun) that any side can use to fill in the gaps in its own tree. Each tree you want to build units from needs a specific workshop built, which costs a fair amount. For any given battle, players normally stick to at most one tech tree plus the sun tech tree. Each tech tree has its own strengths and weaknesses, but in principal principle contains: A cannon-type unit (that shoots stuff), a blocker (blocks shooty things), barrier generators, an anti-air defense tower , tower, an air-attack unit (you build a base unit that continually builds little attackers) and ground and and/or air transports for capturing storm power. In no particular order, the tech trees are:



* Wind's ground transport is The Sail Skeet, which is a essentially a small sail-boat on wheels, which is the fastest transport, and it's air transport is the Airship, which is slow but also quite tough.

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* Wind's ground transport is The Sail Skeet, Skater, which is a essentially a small sail-boat sailboat on wheels, which is the fastest transport, and it's its air transport is the Airship, which is slow but also quite tough.



* Rain's cannon is the Ice Cannon. The same as the thunder cannon, it can only fire in one direction but it does less damage and has less range. However, it is also cheaper, and it has a small blast radius where it hits. It also doesn't fire continuously, but in bursts with a break in between.
* Rain's blocker is the Ice Tower, which has fairly low hp, but it also re-grows once it's destroyed, and in fact can't be fully destroyed. Numerous layers of them can provide a permanent barrier to shooty things.
* Rain's barrier generator, which doubles as an anti-air unit, the Acid Barrier. You set up two towers on a direct line, and this sets up some kind of force field between the two. If any flying units try to cross the barrier, they get immediately slurped up and killed. This is obviously pretty useful, but you need to take care, because the towers themselves are not protected.
* Rain's air attacker is the Man o war. A flying jellyfish like creature that shoots lighting, with very long range and which does good damage, but which is also slow moving.

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* Rain's cannon is the Ice Cannon. The same as the thunder cannon, it can only fire in one direction but it does less damage and has less range. However, it is also cheaper, and it has a small blast radius where it hits. It also doesn't fire continuously, but in bursts with a break in between.in-between.
* Rain's blocker is the Ice Tower, which has fairly low hp, but it also re-grows regrows once it's destroyed, and in fact can't be fully destroyed. Numerous layers of them can provide a permanent barrier to shooty things.
* Rain's barrier generator, which doubles as an anti-air unit, is the Acid Barrier. You set up two towers on a direct line, and this sets up some kind of force field between the two. If any flying units try to cross the barrier, they get immediately slurped up and killed. This is obviously pretty useful, but you need to take care, because the towers themselves are not protected.
* Rain's air attacker is the Man o war. A o' War: a flying jellyfish like jellyfish-like creature that shoots lighting, lightning, with very long range and which does good damage, but which is also slow moving.



* Sun's anti-air is the Sun Disc Thrower, which flings large bronze discs within a short radius. Unlike the other AA units, the sun disc thrower will attack ground units as well, and it's unique 360 degree fire arc can make it useful under lots of situations.
* Sun's air attacker is the Whirlygig. Again, no particular strengths, and the flyers themselves are very weak, but they get the job done.

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* Sun's anti-air is the Sun Disc Thrower, which flings large bronze discs within a short radius. Unlike the other AA units, the sun disc thrower will attack ground units as well, and it's its unique 360 degree fire arc can make it useful under lots of situations.
* Sun's air attacker is the Whirlygig. Whirligig. Again, no particular strengths, and the flyers fliers themselves are very weak, but they get the job done.



* Sun's ground transport is the Golem and it's air transport is the Balloon. Both are weak and slow, but cheaper than their counterparts of the other Furies.

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* Sun's ground transport is the Golem and it's its air transport is the Balloon. Both are weak and slow, but cheaper than their counterparts of the other Furies.
Furies.



Although utterly unrelated to game play, this is a game with a LOT of flavor, and for a world that you never really get to know, it takes quite a lot of pains to get you interested. EVERYTHING has an encyclopedia entry, and there is a whole lot of quotes and really good falvourful writing. It's actually kind of sad that no other games in this universe were made. We also get a glimpse of the normal people living in this horrible, war torn world, living in sunken houses and clinging to the edges of the islands. It's pretty cool.

to:

Although utterly unrelated to game play, this is a game with a LOT of flavor, and for a world that you never really get to know, it takes quite a lot of pains to get you interested. EVERYTHING has an encyclopedia entry, and there is a whole lot of quotes and really good falvourful flavourful writing. It's actually kind of sad that no other games in this universe were made. We also get a glimpse of the normal people living in this horrible, war torn war-torn world, living in sunken houses and clinging to the edges of the islands. It's pretty cool.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
The bulf has horns, not tusks and a trunk.


* The thunder transport is the Bulf which is a large woolly mamoth type creature that can go collect things for you. It's very slow but also the toughest transport.

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* The thunder transport is the Bulf which is a large woolly mamoth type ox-type creature that can go collect things for you. It's very slow but also the toughest transport.
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* Thunder's anti-air unit is the Vandor Tower, which shoots out lightning in a small radius around it.

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* Thunder's anti-air unit is the Vandor Vander Tower, which shoots out lightning in a small radius around it.
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* LightningGun: Thunder Cannons fire discrete "chunks" of lightning, and Vander Towers zap any airborne units that get too close.

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Changed: 219

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[[redirect:{{Netstorm}}]]

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[[redirect:{{Netstorm}}]]A RealTimeStrategy blended with a little TowerDefence to create a smoothie of intriguing possibilities and a whole lot of headaches. Combat units are stationary buildings, that you cannot control once built.

The landscape is scattered islands in the air, which makes up the (unimaginatively named) world of Nimbus. You control (or possible ARE) a high priest that worships the three furies of Nimbus (Thunder, Rain, Wind) and your battles somehow relate to their unending battle for dominance below the clowds. You build a temple to the furies, they give you a variety of towers to blow up the other guys towers and temples. The aim of the game is to capture enemy priests and ceremonially toss them off the islands to be eaten by the furies.

Getting from one island to another is done by means of bridges that your temple makes. You get given small sections which you join together to make large bridges. First off, you need to go and gather resources which in Nimbus is Storm Power. This appears from Storm Geysers, most of which are tiny little islands spread around the map. You bridge to them and send your mooks off to collect the crystals. Secondly, you need bridges to get to the other guys island and blow his stuff up. You can place units on your island but mostly that will put you out of range of the other guy, and the only other place you can build units is attached to your own bridges, that in turn connect to your island. Bridges are very hard to destroy, and placing them correctly is one of the major skills of the game. Particularly, placing bridges very quickly and in such a way as to prevent an enemy from placing his own bridges and units is pretty challenging, and doing it fast and so you can still attack from them is an art form.

This brings us neatly on to the units themselves. Each of the furies has its own tech tree, and there is a general purpose one (Sun) that any side can use to fill in the gaps in its own tree. Each tree you want to build units from needs a specific workshop built, which costs a fair amount. For any given battle, players normally stick to at most one tech tree plus the sun tech tree. Each tech tree has its own strengths and weaknesses, but in principal contains: A cannon-type unit (that shoots stuff), a blocker (blocks shooty things), barrier generators, an anti-air defense tower , an air-attack unit (you build a base unit that continually builds little attackers) and ground and air transports for capturing storm power. In no particular order, the tech trees are:

Thunder - Lots of damage, but not too flexible.
* The Thunder Cannon does the most damage in the game, and has the longest range, but must be built facing one way and cannot turn once its placed.
* Thunder's blocker unit, the Bulwark, has the most hp of anything and is invulnerable to air attacks, but still takes damage from ground shooters normally.
* Thunder's anti-air unit is the Vandor Tower, which shoots out lightning in a small radius around it.
* The Barrier unit is the Arc Spire: You build two of them on a horizontal or vertical line, and lightning begins to course between them, killing or at least heavily damaging anything that tries to cross the barrier.
* Thunder doesn't have an air attacker.
* The thunder transport is the Bulf which is a large woolly mamoth type creature that can go collect things for you. It's very slow but also the toughest transport.

Wind - Low damage but very flexible.
* Wind's cannon is the Crossbow which has a comparatively short range, but is also a very flexible cannon. It doesn't turn, but can hit anything inside a ninety-degree arc in front of it. It also does double duty as an anti-air cannon.
* The Wind Tower is very weak, but on one side it is invulnerable to all cannon fire. Obviously this is quite a plus.
* Wind's air attack unit is the Dust Devil, which is invulnerable and does a lot of damage but doesn't last particularly long.
* Wind's ground transport is The Sail Skeet, which is a essentially a small sail-boat on wheels, which is the fastest transport, and it's air transport is the Airship, which is slow but also quite tough.

Rain - Decent damage and flexibility.
* Rain's cannon is the Ice Cannon. The same as the thunder cannon, it can only fire in one direction but it does less damage and has less range. However, it is also cheaper, and it has a small blast radius where it hits. It also doesn't fire continuously, but in bursts with a break in between.
* Rain's blocker is the Ice Tower, which has fairly low hp, but it also re-grows once it's destroyed, and in fact can't be fully destroyed. Numerous layers of them can provide a permanent barrier to shooty things.
* Rain's barrier generator, which doubles as an anti-air unit, the Acid Barrier. You set up two towers on a direct line, and this sets up some kind of force field between the two. If any flying units try to cross the barrier, they get immediately slurped up and killed. This is obviously pretty useful, but you need to take care, because the towers themselves are not protected.
* Rain's air attacker is the Man o war. A flying jellyfish like creature that shoots lighting, with very long range and which does good damage, but which is also slow moving.
* Rain's ground transport is the Crystal Crab, which is pretty fast, reasonably tough, and will attack other transports and steal what they are carrying.
* Rain's air transport is the Cloud Floater, which is reasonably fast and quite hard to kill, as most shots will pass right through it.

Sun - Nothing excels, but cheap and patches up the other trees.
* The Sun Cannon is basic, but useful. It is the only pure cannon that can turn after you place it and can fire straight up, down, left and right. It has decent range and hitting power although nothing special. It is cheap and effective.
* Sun's blocker is the Stone Tower. Mediocre and with no special features, it just gets in the way.
* Sun's anti-air is the Sun Disc Thrower, which flings large bronze discs within a short radius. Unlike the other AA units, the sun disc thrower will attack ground units as well, and it's unique 360 degree fire arc can make it useful under lots of situations.
* Sun's air attacker is the Whirlygig. Again, no particular strengths, and the flyers themselves are very weak, but they get the job done.
* The Sun also has a unique barrier generator called the Sun Barricade. You build two towers, and there is a force field between them. In this case, this is a real barrier, that defends against shooty things and lasts forever.
* Sun's ground transport is the Golem and it's air transport is the Balloon. Both are weak and slow, but cheaper than their counterparts of the other Furies.

So yeah, you build between islands, you shoot units with your units, you blow the other guy's temple up, knock their priest out, capture him and tear out his soul.

Although utterly unrelated to game play, this is a game with a LOT of flavor, and for a world that you never really get to know, it takes quite a lot of pains to get you interested. EVERYTHING has an encyclopedia entry, and there is a whole lot of quotes and really good falvourful writing. It's actually kind of sad that no other games in this universe were made. We also get a glimpse of the normal people living in this horrible, war torn world, living in sunken houses and clinging to the edges of the islands. It's pretty cool.

Also, for some years now, Netstorm has been freeware and you can get it from the great guys at [[http://netstormhq.com/news.php NetstormHQ]]. This troper strongly recommends you give it a go. It's a great, if hideously frustrating game and it will absolutely test your strategy skills to the limit.

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!!This work contains examples of the following tropes:
* BeatingADeadPlayer: You don't win just by blowing up all the other guys stuff, you need to shoot HIM a bunch and then sacrifice him to your gods.
* CheckPointStarvation: No check points, no saves of any kind once you get into the fighting. In the harder missions, this seriously ratchets up the difficulty. Particularly since bridge pieces are random this can effect how quickly you can get to resources or how you place towers, and that means that starting over because you screwed up later on can be tough just to get back where you were.
* ColorCodedArmies: Not a vast amount, but there are colours that tell your sides appart. Your islands and towers have an appropriate border, while your transports and priest are the right colour. You are blue, the bad guys are variously red, purple, yellow and green.
* ComMons: You start out just with the sun cannon and sun disk thrower, but as soon as you get ahold of the shiny toys they are if not forgotten, they are at least relegated to marginal use. Every element has a better cannon and a better anti-air choice, although they do cost more.
* CrueltyIsTheOnlyOption: The victory through tearing out your enemies' souls. No one seems to have that much a problem with this, though...
* ElementalRockPaperScissors: In theory, Wind beats Thunder (Thunder Cannons can only shoot in one of the 4 cardinal directions, and Wind Towers are invulnerable on one side), Thunder beats Rain (Ice Towers are weak but regenerate, Thunder Cannons can destroy them very quickly, and Bulwarks are invulnerable to air attacks, such as Rain's powerful Man-o-wars), Rain beats Wind (Ice Towers are never permanently destroyed, so you can use them as permanent blockades over which the short-ranged Crossbows can't shoot far. Also, Ice Cannon shots ricochet off buildings they hit, allowing them to hit Wind Towers in one of the vulnerable sides), and Sun can't take Wind, Rain or Thunder in a direct fight, but has ways to attack from safety (for example, Sun Disc Throwers can attack diagonally, unlike every cannon, and while Sun Barricades themselves are weak, the barrier between them is impervious to cannon fire).
* ExcusePlot: Oh yes. The plot of the campaign is kind of non-existent. You get told that you are part of this big war thing, but the characters and sides aren't in any way expanded upon. You basically go and fight people. Sometimes you have to fight a few at a time because you were betrayed or something, but no-one is really paying attention.
* FireIceLightning: There's four building types with different attacks. Sun is well-rounded, Air performs quick and fast attacks, Rain tends to be persistant attacks, and [[PoorPredictableRock Thunder]] tries to overpower with raw strength.
* ImmuneToBullets: Forcefields and a few defences are invulnerable to projectile attack.
* InverseLawOfUtilityAndLethality: The more powerful a tower is, the more it will cost and the lower range of movement it will have. Most obviously, the thunder cannon and ice cannon have powerful long ranged attacks, but you better hope that you pointed it at something that's really worth killing, because it won't be shooting anything else. The crossbow and sun disk thrower can shoot across a much wider area, but at much less range. Oh and they can shoot aircraft too. The sun cannon is somewhere in the middle.
* LastChanceHitPoint: Slightly. If your priest is incapacitated (by being shot repeatedly in the head with a gun that shoots things about his size for example) he doesn't die, he's just in a coma or something and has a magic coma shield. If you still have a temple you will re-charge health and assuming you aren't still being shot eventually return to health.
* LevelEditor: A whole bunch of fan made maps and even campaigns and story missions have been made with such a tool.
* MirrorMatch: Most of the time you have a different tech tree to your enemies (so you can rock/paper/scissors him to death) but sometimes you have to beat the same tree. Also, all the priests are just pallet swaps, so in a sense every fight is a mirror match.
* Overheating: The ice cannon shuts down briefly between bursts before re-starting.
* RecycledSoundtrack from ShatteredSteel.
* Regenerating Health: The ice tower that constantly re-grows, and the priest can sometimes re-gain health too, but nothing else in the game can without specific spells.
* ReinventingTheWheel: In multiplayer, obtaining all techs and winning another game allows you to advance to the next rank for combat bonuses. The catch is that you need to re-research all of the units.
* ShatteredWorld / FloatingContinent: Obviously, what with the floating islands. Apparently the islands have some sort of propulsion system that is only used off camera, but you can never use when it would actually be useful.
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[[redirect:{{Netstorm}}]]

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