Difference between revisions of "Oolite Trading"
Cholmondely (talk | contribs) (→Links: Added another) |
Cholmondely (talk | contribs) m (→Commodities: Tweaks!) |
||
Line 17: | Line 17: | ||
<nowiki>Furs 56.0₢ Includes leathers, Millennium Wompom Pelts </nowiki> |
<nowiki>Furs 56.0₢ Includes leathers, Millennium Wompom Pelts </nowiki> |
||
− | ''Produced by Rock Hermits'' |
+ | ''Produced by Rock Hermits'' (and probably also a mix of agricultural & industrial systems) |
<nowiki>Minerals 8.0₢ Unrefined rock containing trace elements </nowiki> |
<nowiki>Minerals 8.0₢ Unrefined rock containing trace elements </nowiki> |
||
<nowiki>Radioactives 21.2₢ Ores and by-products </nowiki> |
<nowiki>Radioactives 21.2₢ Ores and by-products </nowiki> |
||
− | ''Produced by Rock Hermits and of minimal volume'' |
+ | ''Produced by Rock Hermits and of minimal volume'' (and probably also a mix of agricultural & industrial systems) |
<nowiki>Gold 37.2₢/kg </nowiki> |
<nowiki>Gold 37.2₢/kg </nowiki> |
||
<nowiki>Platinum 65.2₢/kg </nowiki> |
<nowiki>Platinum 65.2₢/kg </nowiki> |
Revision as of 17:55, 12 July 2021
Contents
Trading
Trading is the primary way for the honest spacefarer to earn his, her, or its credits. Every ship sold within the GalCop has an integrated trading computer which hooks into the current systems' trading Market (F8) Screen.
Most space stations have made the process of trading very simple, in order to facilitate a fast turnover in goods and ships. Import and export tariffs - which are high on some worlds - are automatically added or deducted and this is reflected in the prices shown. The auto-trader system does not allow for more specific trading deals to be performed.
Once docked you are linked directly with the CorCom Trade System. At your request you can obtain a list of basic trade items available for purchase. Slaves are measured by the TC in galactic trading. This may seem a little strange, but it includes the cryogenic suspension system necessary to keep them alive during space travel. The slave trade, once almost eliminated by the Galactic government is now returning, despite the efforts of the Galactic Police Force to suppress it. |
(The Space Traders Flight Training Manual, p.38) |
Commodities
- Warning: these average ₢ values can be changed by various .oxp's
Produced by agricultural systems
Food 4.4₢ Simple organic products, see below Textiles 6.4₢ Unprocessed fabrics Liquor/Wines 25.2₢ Exotic spirits from unearthy flora Furs 56.0₢ Includes leathers, Millennium Wompom Pelts
Produced by Rock Hermits (and probably also a mix of agricultural & industrial systems)
Minerals 8.0₢ Unrefined rock containing trace elements Radioactives 21.2₢ Ores and by-products
Produced by Rock Hermits and of minimal volume (and probably also a mix of agricultural & industrial systems)
Gold 37.2₢/kg Platinum 65.2₢/kg Gem-stones 16.4₢/g Includes jewelry
Produced by industrial systems
Luxuries 91.2₢ Perfumes, Spices, Coffee Computers 84.0₢ Intelligent machinery Machinery 56.4₢ Factory and farm equipment Alloys 32.8₢ Industrial Metals
Sellable when you scoop up the robotic Thargons
Alien Items 27.0₢ Artifacts, Weapons, etc
These items are defined as illegal by the Galactic Government, so trading in them is risky.
Slaves 8.0₢ Usually humanoid Narcotics 114.8₢ Tobacco, Arcturan Megaweed Firearms 70.4₢ Small-scale artillery, sidearms, etc
Shown on this list are the quantities of each item available and the current market price per unit. Most CorCom Trade Systems deal exclusively under blanket categories, including Food, Machinery, Minerals and Gemstones. Almost all are sold in TC (Tonne Cannister) quantities ie come in individual cannisters (easy for Dumping Cargo if needed). Kg & g goods (ie gems, gold & platinum) are kept in the on-board safe.
The prices shown at the time of trading represent an offer to you and will be guaranteed while you are at the station.
Using the F8 Trading screen
- F8/8: summons the screen. The prices shown (anywhere in the system) are those of the main orbital station only.
- Arrows - up & down: select one of the 17 commodities
- Arrows - left & Right: buy or sell the selected commodity
- Enter: sells your entire inventory of the current item or buys as much as your hold (and Credits) will allow
- F8/8 repeated - toggles between more detail on selected commodity & main market screen (eg if you have some in your hold: purchase price records for cargo hold contents)
- ?: toggles between 6 filters for the commodities
- all 17 commodities
- only goods carried in station or in stock in cargo hold
- goods carried in station only
- goods in stock in ship's cargo hold only
- legal goods: just the 14 legal commodities
- prohibited goods: just slaves, narcotics & firearms
- /: toggles between 6 sorted orders for the listed commodities
- default order: the original order from Classic Elite
- alphabetical order
- order of price
- order of quantity in stock in station
- order of quantity in ship's cargo hold
- order of unit mass: ie TC/kg/g
- This information is also on the OoliteRS (Reference Sheets) which came as a .pdf in your original game download. Probably worth printing out!
- autoSCAM modules will immediately transfer your transaction between your cargo bay and the station. Most ships must dock with a Coriolis space station or other similarly equipped outpost before buying or selling cargo.
- The only other way of transferring cargo in and out of your hold is in flight by either dumping it or by scooping it.
Advice to Traders
From the Bulletin Boards: Money-making tips: well, buy low and sell high, so much so obvious. Raw materials and general biological produce (food, textiles, ores, furs, etc.) come from Agricultural worlds; finished goods and technological stuff (Luxuries, Computers, Machinery etc) come from Industrial worlds. The Rich/Poor overlay adjusts the buying and selling prices differently depending on whether the world in question is Agricultural or Industrial. Rich Industrial worlds provide the cheapest finished goods: they have the most efficient industrial plants and can undercut their competitors. Their industries and populations are also hungry (not to say greedy) and will pay top whack for raw materials. Poor Agricultural worlds have the lowest standards of living and produce the cheapest raw materials. They're also the most desperate for finished goods, and pay the highest prices for them. Therefore, the best trade run is between a Rich Industrial and a Poor Agricultural. The least promising is between a Poor Mostly Industrial and a Rich Mostly Agricultural (I think). Well, unless you start trying to ship Industrial goods to Industrial planets, obviously (although even here you might make a bit of money, if you're buying from a Rich Industrial and selling to a Poor Industrial). The highest profit margins, on legitimate goods anyway, tend to be on Computers, Luxuries and Machinery on the Industrial side, and on Furs and Liquor & Wines on the Agricultural side. Running precious metals and gemstones is also worthwhile as a long-term investment. If you see them cheap anywhere (mid- to high teens per gram for gemstones, 36-38 ₢/kg for gold and anything under 70 ₢/kg for platinum) buy up what you can afford and hang onto it until you find a high selling price. It doesn't take up any cargo space as you keep it in a safe in the cabin. Agricultural planets usually sell precious stones and metals slightly cheaper than Industrial ones do, but a big money payoff can happen pretty much anywhere. Government type and Tech Level don't make any difference to trade prices -- at least, not in the unmodified game. Some of the OXPs, such as Dictatorships and Your Ad here, add extra trading possibilities based on other factors, e.g. population size (which is linked to wealth), government type and so on. Government type does make a difference as to how much trouble you might run into on your way in, though, with Anarchies the worst, moving up through Feudal, Multi-Government, Dictatorship, Communist, Confederacy and Democracy, with Corporate State being the most peaceful (or cop-infested, depending on your point of view). Disembodied (2008).
More from the Bulletin Boards:
Rich Agriculturals do indeed seem rather useless from a trading point of view. They remind me of organic farms in that they can afford to sell their goods at elevated prices and aren't bothered about losing out to the lower end of the market. At the same time, they seem less prepared to pay over the odds for industrial goods. Conversely, Poor Agriculturals need all the money they can get, so will happily let their exports go at below-average prices, while they will pay handsomely for thinks like computers, luxuries and machinery. Piracy is always an option as a way to make some quick cash, but it's probably best to wait until your ship is kitted out a bit more before going down that route. |
(Ramirez (2006)) |
"No Money" problems
There are a number of options.
- Shooting asteroids at 1₢/asteroid until you have enough money to do something!
- Sell or downgrade your laser/missiles
- Sell your ship to buy a cheaper one
- See Financial Advice (2013) for more advice
Advanced Trading: Changing the Markets
... Oolite is not "just a shooter" game. But it would be very interesting someday to see what it could be like if even half of the attention and effort that has gone into the combat related functions was expended on the economic and cultural possibilities |
(Ganelon (2011)) |
Since Ganelon's comment in 2011, much has been done. While some OXPs such as BlOomberg Markets, In-System trader, Risk based economy & Risky business make trading more realistic in various ways, 3 wonderful OXPs have been written which totally rejig aspects of the Trading system. They all make trading much more complicated!
- SW Economy: introduces a much needed shot of realism to the trading side of the game! 3 new commodities (water, oxygen & medicine), a trading triad (agricultural-mining-industrial) & factors such as atmosphere, TL & GDP are now relevant in determining what each planet produces. One needs to know much more about the planets one is trading with to make better profits. The old Xexedi-Laenin milk run is such no longer, as Laenin is too small to have the atmosphere needed to grow food, wines or furs and is now merely a mining station.
- New Cargoes: Introduces 100 sub-variants of the regular commodities: mud hockey sticks! zero-gravity hockey sticks! Excellent profits only at one or two planets - but get your hockey variety right! Uses the lore and culture to generate new markets. Subscribe to a trade magazine with tips! Go on the Advanced Trading course at your alma mater, the Lave Academy!
- Smugglers introduces trade embargoes on export & import of various commodities . This leads to wide fluctuations in price and a resultant rise in black markets, bribes & smuggling compartments - all of which this OXP introduces.
- Note that Smugglers currently conflicts with New Cargoes (2021).
Links
- The role of player-traders (2008)
- Trading Aids (2008)
- What is 1 TC? Weight? Volume? Description of Cannister? (2011)
OXP's to help with or enhance trading
Information
- XenonUI: vital reminders of what the numerous keyboard options are for the F8 market GUI screen (as well as the F5/F6/F7 screens)
- Market Observer enhances the F8 market screen with vital data: average prices, % differences & what price you bought your goods at.
- Market Inquirer adds an interface screen (f4) that shows the distances in system and an interface screen that shows the markets (prices and quantities) of the main station and selected oxp stations closest to the player.
- Useful MFDs provides a free MFD with a list of your cargo and its current value in the system's main station.
- Manifest MFD lists your hold's contents.
- Your Ship's Manual (comes with the Ship's Library OXP) has valuable information on trading and understanding the various economies
- GalCop Galactic Registry gives access to chart-wide system data, allowing quick analysis of routes and regions, which can aid in plotting trade routes.
- The Trader's Almanach, a supplement for your Ship's Library
- Display Current Course adds your currently plotted course to any mission map screen, so you can tell whether the destination for the new mission is close to where you are currently heading.
Possibilities
- Bank of the Black Monks for loans at the outset of the game!
- Elite Trader OXZ rejig of Oolite, emphasising trade (see above).
- There are plenty of OXP ships that have increased cargo capacity. Check out the Largest Ships list for some examples.
Tweaking the markets
- BlOomberg Markets allows the markets to react to news events (needs GNN for the news events)
- In-System trader introduces a "living market" inside solar systems with rewards and risks for in-system trading.
- Risk based economy - by Cim. Makes trade prices depend on government as well as economy (1.77).
- Risky business - by Phkb. As above. See linked BB discussion for comparison with Cim's Risk based economy
Changing the markets
- SW Economy: Realism! 3 new commodities, a trading triad (agricultural-mining-industrial) & factors such as atmosphere, TL & GDP are now relevant.
- New Cargoes - by Cim 2014. Introduces 100 sub-variants of the regular commodities. Profits only at one or two planets!
- New Cargoes Trading Advice - transcript of the Advanced Trading course at Lave Academy.
- Smugglers - by Phkb (2019): embargoes, black markets, bribes & smuggling compartments!
Other advice pages
- How do I ... dock / succeed in trading / win a fight / configure my controller/joystick etc.
- See also the OoliteRS (Reference Sheets) and AdviceforNewCommanders which came as .pdfs in your original game download. Probably worth printing out!