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Stellaris Dev Diary #239 - AI++

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Hello and welcome back to another update on the Stellaris AI. This is Guido again. Today I’m here with my fellow human Offe who also enjoys doing organic things. Like generating energy through processing photosynthesised light in the form of matter via ingestion. I like bacon and ice cream. Everybody likes bacon and ice cream. So Offe, please, take it from here.

Hello, it is me, Offe!
I’m a 28 cycles old Human manufactured and operated up here in the north. I’ve worked here at the Arctic office for two years and recently joined the Custodian team as a junior programmer. Guido and I have previously worked on other projects together and he has taught me a lot about game development, but most importantly I learned some tips on how to improve my diplomatic interaction protocols. Where I would often use phrases like “it’s an absolute disaster”, he would instead prefer “This is pretty good, but it can be even better!”. This may prove to be important later on.

I would like to say Thank You to all the people out there who took time playing on the open beta and provided us with feedback and bug reports. If you ever find the AI in a situation where it is doing something strange, please bug report and most importantly attach save games, it helps tremendously! For example, two separate issues were found and addressed with the new job changes.

And lastly, this dev diary will contain older changes and screenshots that were made long before the beta, but also new changes which were not part of the beta, meaning that you still have some new changes waiting for you in the 3.3 release.

Changes to pop job system​

I will start with this change since it will also directly affect players and not only AI!

How it used to work:

Each time something important would happen on a planet, such as a pop is grown, a district/building gets constructed or an upgrade finishes, every single pop would update their desire (also known as weight) to work each job. Then all pops would be unassigned of their jobs, and all of them would be put back on a (potentially) new job.

Now there are some pros and cons with this approach. The good thing is that we are not doing any calculations when we don’t have to, since if nothing changes then we don’t update any of the jobs. However, the downside is that if you have scripted conditional job weights, for example, based on how many amenities there are on a planet, it will cause mass migrations of pops between jobs when the system eventually does update because all pops move at the same time.

In the current 3.2 system the most obvious problem is for hive mind empires where pops will mass move to the maintenance drone job when the planet amenity level is low, and then during the next update, all of them will leave due to having way too many amenities causing a perpetual ping pong effect.

This also affected non hive mind AI empires because in 3.2 the AI would prioritize a job producing a resource during a shortage across all its planets. For example, during an energy credit shortage it would prioritize the technician job on all its planets, causing every single job to be instantly filled. This would likely cause a shortage of some other resource such as minerals, resulting in most types of AI empires to get stuck in a ping pong behaviour once they had entered a resource deficit. This also had the unfortunate side effect of AI starting constructions that were not really needed, but the sudden shift of pop jobs made it appear so.

How it works in 3.3:
- During each monthly update, update the jobs on all planets
- Only remove or add maximum of one pop per job during the update

Many of you are now probably immediately clenching your fist in anger while picturing your poor CPU melting, as scripted calculations based on number of pops in stellaris can be very CPU demanding. But I have some good news for you, first of all in 3.2 there were some redundant calls to the job weight calculation. By removing them where possible, we could already reduce the amount of job weight calculations by about 75%.

Furthermore, we are now reusing job weights between pops that are of the same species and share the same job. Meaning if you have 40 pops working as miners on a planet, and they are all of the same species, the scripted job weight calculation will only be performed once instead of 40 times as in 3.2. This comes with some limitations though, as it is no longer safe to base job weight on individual pop data, such as which faction they are in or their happiness. In the end the vast majority of all job weight calculations were removed while still updating jobs every month.

With the new system it allows you to write a scripted job weight calculation that depends on itself without causing ping pong behaviour. For example, jobs that produce amenities can now base their job weight on the planet’s amenity level, or the enforcer job can now base its job weight on the crime level.

The intention is that you will not notice any difference from the system in 3.2 other than some jobs like enforcers and maintenance drones having a more reasonable amount of pops working that job.
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Jobs for your pops​


In 3.2 AI would look at the number of free jobs on a planet when deciding if it needs to build new jobs. So if there were for example 3 free jobs then the AI would clap its hands together and call it a job well done and move on. At the same time the planet could have huge numbers of unemployed pops rioting on the streets.

This scenario comes from the fact that not all pops can work all jobs, so while there are technically free jobs on the planet, that doesn’t mean that the unemployed pops can actually work those jobs.

In 3.3 we are changing the way that the AI is looking at planets when it is deciding what jobs to create. Instead of looking at the number of free jobs on the planet and then creating more when this number is low, the AI will now look at actual unemployed pops and make sure to create a job that the specific pop is actually able to work.

This solves a variety of issues present in 3.2 where AI doesn’t make good decisions for pops such as slaves or robots, this is something we will continue looking at but it is a big first step in the right direction.

AI scaling economic subplans​


Scaling subplans was something we mentioned earlier as a planned feature for the future, well the future is now so strap yourself in!

In 3.2 we got rid of the old economic plans which had a predefined early/mid/late game strategy and introduced the shared base plan which doesn’t look at what year it is, but rather looks at what state the empire is in.

Now when I first saw Guido’s new economical plans I immediately thought wow this is pretty good, but it can be even better! So I started working on the scaling sub plans which aims to remove all upper limits of production (previously mentioned 500 alloy per month cap in 3.2) but still provide the AI with a responsive plan that adapts to the current state of the AI economy.

How the system works as for 3.3:
The base economic plan is now very small, it sets a minimum target for all types of strictly needed resources such as minerals, energy and food (such as +20 monthly income). Once these targets are met, then a small amount of CGs, alloys and science targets are added.

Once all of the above base plans are satisfied we then enable the scaling sub plan, which is just like any other economic plan except that it will add itself each time it is fulfilled, an unlimited amount of times. The scaling plan contains a small amount of energy/minerals but primarily contains alloys and science. This means that the more mature the AI economy becomes, the focus on base resources becomes smaller and the primary focus will shift to military and science production.

Additionally we have added 3 separate conditional scaling sub plans which we enable for materialist, militarist(and total war empires) and spiritualist empires that add additional science, alloy or unity targets to their economic plan as a first step to making AI economy more distinct from each other.

Grand Admiral hive mind reaching a monthly income of 3k alloys and 22k science in one test run by year 2422. (Screenshot from before the unity rework)

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AI district/building specialization​

One of the big advantages that fellow Humans like you and I have over the AI is that we can easily make long term strategies which are based on assumptions and goals. So we may have a long term strategy to turn a planet that we have not yet colonized into a factory world. As mentioned in answers to the last AI dev diary questions, the economic AI is stateless which means that it has no notion of past nor the future, it only looks at what it has right now and what it can do to satisfy it’s economic plan. This makes it very good at adapting to the situation it is in, it will keep a close eye at the current economic situation and immediately react to any shortages but lack some of the long term planning capabilities that we have.

So how can the AI make specialized worlds without planning for the future? Well one straightforward way of doing it is simply by switching places of districts that we have already built in the past. So if we compare two planets where both of them have 5 mining and 5 energy districts each, we can gradually specialize the planets by replacing the districts one pair at a time until we end up with one planet with 10 energy districts and another with 10 mining districts.

This approach works quite well in practice and is also very dynamic in the sense that it allows the AI to make hybrid planets in the early game which becomes more specialized over time as the empire expands.

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AI consumer goods vs alloy production and planet designations​

In 3.3 we are adding an AI system where the AI will manually pick a planet designation instead of using the default scripted planet designation system which is the same one as the player gets if you do not change it yourself.

The AI system looks at the available designations for each planet and calculates how many resources it would get each month from choosing the designations. It then scores each designation by judging how well the gained resources fits into the AI’s economic plan, giving extra score to designations that align with its economic goals.

Normally it is very easy to pick the designation, for example, a planet with only mining districts on it will clearly have the mining designation. However, other designations such as Factory/Forge world are more complicated and the AI needs to carefully assign these designations in a way that keeps the economy balanced.

For non hive mind empires consumer goods and alloy production is the biggest AI economy challenge we have faced so far, since the AI needs to produce both resources independently of each other to meet their economy plan targets even though they are produced from the same district in three different possible ways. The current system is a step in the right direction but this is definitely a tricky problem that will require additional fine tuning in the future.

AI alloy spenditure​

Now that AI adjusts its alloy and consumer good production separately it was time to tackle how AI spends its alloys.

In 3.2 the AI really liked defense platforms, and keeping them up to date by upgrading them any time it was possible. Not only is this a massive drain of alloys, it would also more or less permanently fill the production queue in the shipyards with upgrades which meant that in some cases it wasn’t able to build any new ships even if it wanted to.

Further there was an issue where the AI would get blocked from building any modules or upgrading any starbases if there was an open module slot in which it wasn’t possible to build anything according to the AIs starbase templates. For example, the AI has dedicated shipyard starbase templates and if it has open slots in it then it would really like to build the titan assembly module on it. But if it wasn’t researched yet then the AI would get blocked here, preventing construction of new starbases.

In 3.3 the AI alloy spending priority goes something like this:
- Build new ships until we reach fleet cap
- Build starbase modules
- Build new starbases
- Upgrade starbases
- Upgrade ships (and defense platforms) if it gives a +30% fleet power bonus, and upgrade the entire fleet this ship is in while we are at a shipyard anyway. Saving both alloys and time!
- Build defense platforms as a last resort

AI tech picking​

The AI has scripted weights for each tech in the game, this gives it some direction as to what technology to pick next every time a research is completed. Both in terms of which technologies are more powerful but also taking into account AI personalities, militarist empires are for example more inclined to research weapon tech.

In 3.2 the majority of techs had some modifier on it which increased the chance of it being selected by the AI, but when you prioritize everything, well then you prioritize nothing. For 3.3 we went through all the techs in the game and remade the AI priorities from scratch, emphasizing techs that will help the AI scale into the mid and late game. For example, resource production boosting techs, pop growth techs and resource producing building chains are now more encouraged.

Additionally AI will now look much more favourably on techs that are cheaper compared to the other options, this allows the AI to more quickly cycle through the available options and find the techs that it really likes.



AI superfluous destruction​

This one is short and simple. AI will now delete stuff if it gives jobs, housing or building slots that we do not need. Meaning, if we for example have more free jobs and housing than provided by an energy district we will simply delete it to avoid paying the upkeep cost and freeing up this slot for something else in the future.

This scenario most often happens when an AI empire invades another planet and purges their pops, so determined exterminators will now be able to repurpose the conquered planets into something that aligns with their economy!

AI rogue servitor and bio trophies​

While there has been a lot of focus on the AI’s ability to compete economically with the player in this dev diary, one of the primary objectives of the AI initiative is also to enhance the role playing capabilities of the AI.

In 3.3 we are adding additional AI support for the rogue servitor civic and how they handle their bio trophy pops. The AI should now build an organic sanctuary on each planet that has an upgraded capital structure causing their bio trophies to spread to other planets. And they should build additional sanctuaries on planets with a lot of complex drones.

Additionally we have addressed a group of related bugs where the AI was unable to build special types of buildings like gaia seeders, spawning pools and chambers of elevation.

AI comparison​

As a final note we would like to share some comparison graphs between the 3.2 and the 3.3 AI. Please note that what you are about to see is based on one single test run on ensign and one test run on grand admiral. This comparison is not meant to be interpreted as evidence but as an indication of what has changed between 3.2 and 3.3.

In any AI playthrough there is a huge variance in the AI performance due to random factors such as how they pick techs, traditions and ascension perks. The experiment setup is also used for internal AI testing only and not representative of an actual playthrough.

Experiment setup:
  • Tiny galaxy
  • 1 AI empire
  • All test using the United Nations of Earth empire
  • Mid and late game years set to 2575/2600 so they don’t trigger
  • The map is the same between the 3.2 vs 3.3 comparison, but NOT the same between the ensign and the grand admiral test.

Let’s first look at the comparison between the 3.2 and 3.3 ensign difficulty:

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Up until year 100 the military power is roughly the same, but from that point on the results of the work we put into mid and late game AI scaling starts to really show. This allows the AI to act and react in a lot more interesting ways in the late game than before.


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1) Around year 150 the 3.3 (“develop”) AI reaches the 32/32 starbase capacity due to having researched all techs in the game, resulting in the slowdown of the military power development.

2) 3.2 AI gets stuck in an economic death spiral for about 30 years shortly after year 100, AI eventually manages to escape the death spiral and then has massive economic growth and is able to build up to the 32/32 starbase cap quickly due to having saved up alloys for 30~ years.

At year 200 the gap between both AI military strength gets smaller since neither AI is really building that many more ships due to having maxxed out starbase capacity and already way above their fleet cap resulting in very expensive fleets. The power gap at year 200 is mainly due to 3.3 AI having superior technology.
However, it turned out that for GA difficulty the AI wouldn’t correctly apply the increased buff from trade value. Now, when it does, the AI takes a good step in the direction of making it more challenging for players.

Overall the GA and ensign test show a similar pattern where the first 100 years are roughly the same and then the difference becomes substantial. However, in the GA test the upper limit of 3.3 AI scaling can be seen around year 150-200 as the military growth curve tends to flatten out at this point when reaching the starbase cap.

And that’s it for today's dev diary, if you have any questions related to AI economy feel free to post them below and I will do my best to answer them!
 
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With regards to job filling, is there anything to be done to help pops fill the jobs that their traits maximize? I'm thinking in particular of things like having different species who are thrifty, industrious, ingenious, agrarian filling clerk, miner, technician, and farmer jobs respectively. There's currently some slight frustration over the lost output efficiency when species don't select their best output jobs
 
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Regarding the buff from trade value. Does thus mean that hive mind and machine ai empires, which do not get trade value never will be able to go above the 3.3 GA military power curve? While normal empires which will get the trade buff will be more challenging?
Hive minds are the strongest AI empires. With the grand admiral buff to trade value, bio empires will become stronger, but will likely still be eclipsed by hive minds at the end of the day. It helps reduce the difference in their power level but it will probably make the game siginificantly harder by itself
 
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With regards to job filling, is there anything to be done to help pops fill the jobs that their traits maximize? I'm thinking in particular of things like having different species who are thrifty, industrious, ingenious, agrarian filling clerk, miner, technician, and farmer jobs respectively. There's currently some slight frustration over the lost output efficiency when species don't select their best output jobs

While I haven't done much of this myself there is a lot of work put into the job weight script to try and make sure each pop works the most optimal job. There are a huge number of jobs and it won't always work perfectly, but the intention is that they should pick according to their traits, and if they dont then upload save games on the bug forum :)
 
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In 3.3 the AI alloy spending priority goes something like this:
- Build new ships until we reach fleet cap
- Build starbase modules
Are there any special conditions to encourage the AI to exceed fleet cap when all starbases built? (E.g. militarists target exceeding fleet cap if they have spare energy credits income and it won't bankrupt them).

This isn't going to just touch AI, and would probably mean retuning ship components, but do you plan to have any plans to 'flavour up' fleet compositions more?
  • Like, AI personalities have a dedicated preference for energy/kinetics/missiles (not sure how this really works with Gslots tbh) and strike craft, as well as shields and armor (I don't think there's a preference for evasion/picking small ships over big ones).
  • But in practice this is at best nuanced, at worst totally unnoticeable when fighting most AIs.
  • It would be really nice if the AIs could lean harder in to this.
    • Like (for example) 75% of their fleets follow their preferences sharply, whilst the remaining 25% will dynamically refit to counter whoever they're fighting.
  • So facing a single empire would lead to fighting kinetic and armor-heavy fleets (for example), whilst federal fleets (or vassal swarms) would be a mix of specialised forces.
Lastly with the sprawl changes in 3.3. will AIs make more effort to vassalise other empires? (Or even snap off their own sectors as vassals, if they're excessively over sprawl)
 
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The scaling plan contains a small amount of energy/minerals
This immediately caught my attention and the screenshot below just confirms my doubt. In a perfect game your aim for monthly net energy income is +10~+100 throughout the whole game (for less versed player up to 1k near end game is ok). mineral need is more or less specific to your empire size, but usually 30 times your underdeveloped planet count is a good start. no sane person runs a +3k energy surplus if his sole aim is to win the game (i.e. not roleplaying, doesn't have the sheer laziness to micro the economy etc). The pops working technician jobs should probably be reassigned to make more alloy, be soldier to boost naval cap, or get more science somehow.
 
nice blog, and I'm happy to see the wide variety of AI improvements that have been implemented for 3.3!

to other players, I'll note that @Offe has been very responsive in the bug report forum to clearly formatted bug reports that also have SAVE GAMES attached (unmodded of course) so that he can investigate. very helpful!
 
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Are there any special conditions to encourage the AI to exceed fleet cap when all starbases built? (E.g. militarists target exceeding fleet cap if they have spare energy credits income and it won't bankrupt them).

This isn't going to just touch AI, and would probably mean retuning ship components, but do you plan to have any plans to 'flavour up' fleet compositions more?
  • Like, AI personalities have a dedicated preference for energy/kinetics/missiles (not sure how this really works with Gslots tbh) and strike craft, as well as shields and armor (I don't think there's a preference for evasion/picking small ships over big ones).
  • But in practice this is at best nuanced, at worst totally unnoticeable when fighting most AIs.
  • It would be really nice if the AIs could lean harder in to this.
    • Like (for example) 75% of their fleets follow their preferences sharply, whilst the remaining 25% will dynamically refit to counter whoever they're fighting.
  • So facing a single empire would lead to fighting kinetic and armor-heavy fleets (for example), whilst federal fleets (or vassal swarms) would be a mix of specialised forces.
Lastly with the sprawl changes in 3.3. will AIs make more effort to vassalise other empires? (Or even snap off their own sectors as vassals, if they're excessively over sprawl)

Most of our efforts have been about building up the AI economy, exactly how they will put it to use in the best way is mostly still on the TODO list. I would like to make a better general AI solution for going over starbase and fleet cap.

There has been some work on making different AI empires go for specific ship designs such as missile focus, I don't know how far we got on that topic because I was not directly involved in it, something for a future DD perhaps
 
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This immediately caught my attention and the screenshot below just confirms my doubt. In a perfect game your aim for monthly net energy income is +10~+100 throughout the whole game (for less versed player up to 1k near end game is ok). mineral need is more or less specific to your empire size, but usually 30 times your underdeveloped planet count is a good start. no sane person runs a +3k energy surplus if his sole aim is to win the game (i.e. not roleplaying, doesn't have the sheer laziness to micro the economy etc). The pops working technician jobs should probably be reassigned to make more alloy, be soldier to boost naval cap, or get more science somehow.
Yes and no, once you go ultra late game you need insane amounts of energy credits to sustain a fleet way over your fleet cap. Current GA AI can reach about 1.3M fleet power but it starts to struggle in the ultra lategame empire management where production focus needs to start shifting away from science and back into energy credits.

AI also needs to have a solid energy income in the mid game to terraform their planets and do a few other things.

But I agree something like minerals could probably have an upper cap of about 300 per month as the really only huge late game spending on this would be ecunopolis

EDIT: Also i think in the screenshot they had done something like built a dyson sphere because their economic plan wouldnt have requested them to go to +3k energy
 
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Question- how do any of these plans impact (or consider) player-initiated resource trading?

Say I'm a Void Dweller, with the typical Void Dweller mineral resource shortage. I make buddy-buddy with a neighborhood empire, who at Cordial or better relations starts being willing to trade their minerals for my CG at rates favorable for me. (Say 2 to 1, so a 6 mineral profit.) Will the new model incorporate my trade deals into their future planning in any way- say not building CG factories since I am 'locked in'- or will they build regardless, and just not be as interested in the deal when it's time to renew?
 
Question- how do any of these plans impact (or consider) player-initiated resource trading?

Say I'm a Void Dweller, with the typical Void Dweller mineral resource shortage. I make buddy-buddy with a neighborhood empire, who at Cordial or better relations starts being willing to trade their minerals for my CG at rates favorable for me. (Say 2 to 1, so a 6 mineral profit.) Will the new model incorporate my trade deals into their future planning in any way- say not building CG factories since I am 'locked in'- or will they build regardless, and just not be as interested in the deal when it's time to renew?
Good question, this isn't something I have been looking at specifically but if I had to guess I would say that the will account for this in their planning but disregarding any time limit on your trade.

So for example if you are selling them minerals they would likely stop building more mineral districts and instead build other things in the economic plan since it is based on their monthly income
 
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Well, a bit of an anecdotal report, as it were... What is present in the 3.3 beta is already pretty good, but it could be even better :p

I've played a few games with a set of force-spawned custom empires, these always outscale the random AIs. Notably, the fan.mat Mechanist Technocracy has managed to almost keep pace with me in terms of science, sitting at only Inferior instead of Pathetic by the 2350s, consistently. Most others perform worse, and I myself wasn't even playing any kind of materialist ... and was doing my usual "pacifist" (but no state pacifism) playthrough where I'd expand to fill in borders, have about 15 planets, then build habitats etc from there.

The main thing I noticed that the AI does not optimize away ... are clerks. Thereby the AI, while sitting at higher pop counts than me (yes this happened), had actually worse science and economy and fleet, because it had pops tied up in terrible jobs. There is almost no world where having clerks is a good idea for most empires - these should be prioritized to be replaced by entertainers or other amenity jobs ASAP, this is something the AI could stand to do.

... That's my main gripe, that the AI doesn't see clerks as a problem, when really they are. They're a fine job as a stopgap temporary measure, but should never be permanent.
 
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Right, makes more sense, i was thinking of CG as a intermediate for science
Would you mind going into detail how these kinds of cascades work? Like let's say I'm the AI and my base plan is met and I'm implementing my first repeating plan. I have met my (repeatable iteration 1) minerals target and want to make some alloys. I assume the AI then goes off and builds an alloy plant or industrial district in the "best" place (based on weighting).

Is checking beforehand to see how the increased mineral upkeep will impact net mineral income considered superfluous given that afterwards the AI will detect that minerals are no longer meeting targets and presumably resolve the issue afterwards?

If so I assume science and unity would just* follow the same path but with a longer cascade (want science -> increase science -> cg too low -> increase cg -> minerals too low -> increase minerals). Is there more backtalk than I am assuming or is the complexity only** due to how CG (and alloy) districts/building/specialisation interaction is more complex than say upping your motes production?

*please do not take the use of the word "just" as minimising the effort and skill required to develop and implement these AI systems in the first place.

**again please do not take the use of the word "only" as minimising the difficulty of the challenge.
 
Offe, you know my thoughts on how the AI should use the markets more when they want to build stuff but are short on a resource, and have huge excess stockpiles of some other resource.

Question semi-related to that: how effective is the AI at using resources gifted to them by the player? Like, if I'm in a federation (or have a vassal), and I give an ally 10K food and 10K energy and 10K minerals no strings attached, will they efficiently put that to work? Or just add it to their stockpile?
 
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In the beta , i noticed that nowdays ( with me not trying to minmax actively) players start to outrun the AI around battleship tech , so after 2300 midgame tick .


i played only on grand admiral, and most AI normal empires had a big dependency on the market, as they realy liked to have consumer goods planets and a big deficit in energy ... of around 18-20 AI around 3-4 were on equal standing, while 1-2 were actualy superior in tech or fleet power.

i think what keep the AI from snowballing atm is only the fleet management and the autodesign of ships that have some weird weight for lvl 0 fighters \ true dmg weapons ...


well, there is to say that when the AI is your enemy , it seems to be more competent in the use of the fleet ( more competent, not good) than friendly AI that seems to be on the tsundere side . they seems to realy like the take point, but without it will ignore you to death or stand watching when other empires invade ( and eat) evrything you have .
 
Well, a bit of an anecdotal report, as it were... What is present in the 3.3 beta is already pretty good, but it could be even better :p

I've played a few games with a set of force-spawned custom empires, these always outscale the random AIs. Notably, the fan.mat Machinist Technocracy has managed to almost keep pace with me in terms of science, sitting at only Inferior instead of Pathetic by the 2350s, consistently. Most others perform worse, and I myself wasn't even playing any kind of materialist ... and was doing my usual "pacifist" (but no state pacifism) playthrough where I'd expand to fill in borders, have about 15 planets, then build habitats etc from there.

The main thing I noticed that the AI does not optimize away ... are clerks. Thereby the AI, while sitting at higher pop counts than me (yes this happened), had actually worse science and economy and fleet, because it had pops tied up in terrible jobs. There is almost no world where having clerks is a good idea for most empires - these should be prioritized to be replaced by entertainers or other amenity jobs ASAP, this is something the AI could stand to do.

... That's my main gripe, that the AI doesn't see clerks as a problem, when really they are. They're a fine job as a stopgap temporary measure, but should never be permanent.

Forbidding all clerk jobs is something we have talked about, it would not be very hard to do it, but it doesnt feel right. With the trade buff on GA at least it will be less bad than before but yeah I agree it is not optimal. Here we are approaching the limit of where we can sacrifice immersion for minmaxing.


We are going to look into AI vs AI power levels more in the future now that the baseline AI economy is stronger, I hope there is something else we could do in regards to clerks but we will see what happens in the future
 
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Also, one more thought since I'm posting:

in my 3.3 beta playtests I noticed that some of the most successful mid/late game AI empires still only had 1 shipyard starbase. Given the increased importance of fleets in 3.3 and generally improved economic AI, it seems like the AI's should prioritize having at least one backup shipyard starbase. If their fleets get destroyed or if they lose their shipyard system to a crisis, they will have a really hard time recovering military strength (can they even convert a non-yard starbase to a shipyard?). Probably something very useful to put on the TODO list.
 
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Offe, you know my thoughts on how the AI should use the markets more when they want to build stuff but are short on a resource, and have huge excess stockpiles of some other resource.

Question semi-related to that: how effective is the AI at using resources gifted to them by the player? Like, if I'm in a federation (or have a vassal), and I give an ally 10K food and 10K energy and 10K minerals no strings attached, will they efficiently put that to work? Or just add it to their stockpile?
Time is limiting factor here unfortunately. I can only work 24 hours per day :(

Gifting them food will probably not do anything as the AI always tries to keep a +10-20~ food balance. Energy they could use to do things like terraforming if they have the tech.

If they have unemployment and you are gifting them minerals when they are lacking it they would start constructing more jobs.

Gifting them straight up alloys should make them immediately spent it in accordance to the above posted alloy priorities
 
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