Vous êtes sur la page 1sur 5

THE GLOBAL AUTHORITY ON PC GAMES

News Reviews Hardware Indie Pro Best Of Magazine Weekender More


POPULAR
Kingdom Come: Deliverance

PC Gamer Weekender

Loot Boxes

Steam sale

Path of Exile

PC Gamer Club
How a failed Kickstarter sparked EVE Online�s second largest battle ever
By Michael Bonnet April 05, 2016

COMMENTS
A still from Ostara Unleashed World War Bee embedded below

A still from Ostara Unleashed: World War Bee, embedded below.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Michael Bonnet is better known as Siaka Stevens in EVE Online. He's part of the
corporation 'I'm Fine And You' in the Goonswarm Federation alliance, and regularly
writes for EVE news site themittani.com. He offered to catch us up on EVE Online's
latest war, which exploded over the past couple weeks and continues on now.
EVE Online is famous for its colossal wars and battles, in which thousands of
players fight, destroying ships worth hundreds of thousands of dollars if converted
to real money value. And war is on everyone's mind in EVE again today. The last
truly huge battle I reported on was the battle in Y-MPWL in which two rival Russian
groups duked it out over a moon. That war is long over, Red Menace Coalition having
been defeated. Since then, much has changed. Here�s how one of Eve�s biggest
wars�still raging on right now�got started.

At EVE Vegas, the largest EVE event outside of the main convention in Iceland, CCP
announced that there would be a Kickstarter campaign to support Jeff Edwards, a
sci-fi/military fiction writer, in his endeavor to write a fictionalized account of
the Fountain War, in which the iconic Battle of 6VDT-H took place. One catch,
though�the Kickstarter would be managed by and the book published by The Mittani
Media, run by Alexander Gianturco (The Mittani in EVE), leader of the old CFC (now
rebranded as the Imperium), the winning side in that war.

The losing side in the war was headed by Test Alliance Please Ignore (TEST), a
then-massive Reddit-based alliance. TEST collapsed in the aftermath of the Fountain
War and their loss of a few additional regions. Many members and member
corporations (think guilds in other games) left for other alliances or left the
game, but the animosity remained. The numbers TEST used to have permeate most every
corner of the game, a diaspora of sorts.

Still from the Fountain War Book Kickstarter video

From the 'Fountain War Book' Kickstarter video.


The Imperium�s NATO was met by a Warsaw Pact in the N3 Coalition, made to form a
deterrent to the Imperium expanding any further or attacking and destroying its
enemies. They clashed in two major wars�the Halloween War in which the iconic
Bloodbath of B-R5RB happened, and the less widely publicized Fountain War 2015. In
this most recent Fountain War, N3 decided to wage one last major attack before the
new system of attacking and holding sovereignty was implemented. The assault failed
to take more than border systems, and upon the retreat of N3, the Imperium decided
to attack. Soon the massive empire that N3 had built was in shambles and the
coalition disbanded. Some of the N3 alliances died, some merged into others, some
continued on. Animosity towards the Imperium grew.

This brings us back to late October, at the announcement of the Kickstarter. The
diaspora of N3 and TEST cried out at the idea, believing that the book was a money
grab by The Mittani and would be biased towards the Imperium in painting a picture
of the war. Furthermore, the diaspora was outraged that anyone at all would attempt
to make money off of their war and called out the CFC (aka the Clusterfuck
Coalition) for rebranding itself as the Imperium to make the name more marketable
for The Mittani Media. So, they refused to support the Kickstarter. The initiative
reached just over a third of its $150,000 goal.

The Mittani, angered by all this, declared war upon nearby �lowsec� regions that
contained the perceived enemies of the Kickstarter, and perhaps to him, the game.
Space in EVE is divided into three areas: highsec, in which PvP is met with lethal
NPC police response, nullsec, in which most large battles happen and space can be
conquered, and lowsec, between the two, where only unsanctioned aggression away
from stations and stargates is allowed. The Imperium began a campaign against the
valuable moons held by these entities in an attempt to �punish� them. The brief
conflict produced a few large fights but was largely unfruitful, the Imperium being
almost consistently defeated. Then, a fateful decision was made.

The gamble

Gambling with your ISK (money) in EVE isn't necessarily condoned by the EULA but is
generally let be. One website does this and makes quite a pretty penny doing so:
IWantIsk (IWI). A member alliance of the Imperium, SpaceMonkey�s Alliance, pissed
off IWI by accusing them of real money trading with their ISK, a strictly forbidden
practice. IWI, with its massive money reserves, hired two alliances called Pandemic
Horde and Psychotic Tendencies to assault SpaceMonkey�s home region of Fade.
Psychotic Tendencies was paid 1.2 trillion ISK to do so, according to its leader;
around $23,000 real dollar value. The region has been under assault for months, and
until recently had not shown many cracks, but the continued pressure caused a loss
of over 1,000 members for SpaceMonkey�s Alliance. The assault warranted a wider
coalition response, resulting in a few very large fights. Seeing the success, IWI
began to hire more and more alliances to assault Imperium borders both in Fade and
in another region, Vale of the Silent.

Duels over a few valuable moons in the Hakonen system led to the Battles of
Hakonen, costing 1.1 trillion in game currency.

As the new anti-Imperium coalition formed (named The Good Guys by its citizens and
the Moneybadger Coalition by its leaders), huge fights began. Duels over a few
valuable moons in the Hakonen system led to the Battles of Hakonen, costing 1.1
trillion in game currency, or over $20,000, including three Titans. The real
tipping point came when TEST, rejuvenated and rebuilt, was hired to join the fray.
Leaving behind their holdings in the south, their 4,400 members moved north to
assault Vale of the Silent. Soon afterwards, the fighting came to a head in 2DWM-2,
a system in which the Imperium alliance Get Off My Lawn was building
supercapitals�Titans and Supercarriers. Here the Imperium suffered a crushing
defeat, the baby supercapitals abandoned and their fleets in tatters. The Mittani
announced that due to the distance from the capital of the coalition and wanting to
avoid overextension in the war, Vale of the Silent was to be abandoned, its two
inhabiting alliances retreating to the coalition staging system of Saranen.

Screenshot by Lazlow Jones

Screenshot by Lazlow Jones.


Then we come to the events of March 28. The capital system of Imperium member
alliance Circle-of-Two, M-OEE8, was under attack. Both sides campaigned hard for
massive numbers to contest the system and the developers at CCP allocated extra
server hamsters on wheels to the area in which the fighting would occur. Finally
the time came, and thousands had formed into many different fleets to decide the
fate of one of two main structures in the system, the Infrastructure Hub. Loss of
the Infrastructure Hub would make the defense of the system�s station much more
difficult. When the time came, over 5,800 players were ready with guns loaded�the
largest of any fight in the game ever, save for the Bloodbath of B-R5RB. Fleets of
battleships, cruisers, battlecruisers, and frigates were all ready to deploy.

When the time came, over 5,800 players were ready with guns loaded.

As fighting broke out across the constellation, a Moneybadger bomber fleet managed
to destroy a Hurricane- and Sleipnir-class Imperium fleet in a highly successful
bombing run, taking care of one combatant group. As the chess pieces began to place
themselves, it became evident that not every system in the constellation had extra
hamsters allocated and so fighting became extremely slow and laggy. The Imperium�s
roughly 1,600 pilots were taking heavy fire from the Moneybadger�s roughly 3,800,
and so the Imperium sought to sow discord by �headshotting� the enemy fleet, or
killing their commander, progodlegend. In retaliation, two of the main Imperium
commanders were likewise headshot, Jay Amazingness of one of the battleship fleets
and Asher Elias of one of the cruiser fleets.

The time dilation feature of EVE that slows down time to compensate for massive
server load was crippling as things happened at less than 10% speed. Hoping to take
advantage of this, the capital powers of Northern Coalition and Pandemic Legion
decided to drop carriers into the constellation to secure capture points. Carriers
in EVE can fit a special device called a triage module that turns them into a kind
of 'super-priest' with colossal healing abilities both for themselves and others.
The logic was that due to the time dilation being lighter in these other systems,
the Imperium fleets would be unable to bring down these carriers before help
arrived. Though attempts were made to bring down the carriers, the Imperium was
unsuccessful, and the Infrastructure Hub was destroyed amidst a fire that destroyed
some $8,600 worth of ships.

An assault on Pure Blind may be next, the last region before the Goonswarm
Federation�s mother country of Deklein.

Immediately following the fall of M-OEE8, the announcement came that the former
owners of the system, Circle-of-Two, were leaving the coalition and presumably
switching sides. The leadership cited a list of grievances that can be found in
this Reddit thread. The Mittani responded by saying that this was blatant betrayal;
it was later revealed that the decision to leave the coalition had been made in the
morning of the 28th, to be executed following the Battle for M-OEE8, regardless of
outcome. It cannot be confirmed if this led to certain steps not being taken that
could have prevented the use of triaged carriers to destroy the Infrastructure Hub,
but this is an accusation leveled by The Mittani. Accusations of setting a trap to
tackle and engage allied supercapitals, thereby sparking a second supercapital
bloodbath, were also leveled. Regardless of the validity of these accusations, the
loss for the Imperium is as immense as it is important; it constitutes the loss of
3,100 players, possibly to the enemy, as well as a sizable portion of the Imperium
supercapital fleet and a section of the entire region of Tribute. Since Vale of the
Silent has already fallen and Tribute and Fade seem to be on their way out, an
assault on Pure Blind may be next, the last region before the Goonswarm
Federation�s mother country of Deklein.

Though a full assault on Deklein has not yet begun, another bordering region,
Branch, is under attack. The capital system for the Imperium alliances living in
Tenal, Branch, and Vale was assaulted on Friday in a fight that topped 3,500
players. The Infrastructure Hub was saved but the station was pushed to its final
timer, that come out Sunday afternoon USTZ uncontested. The station fell at 22:41
on April 3rd.

The Easter War, as CCP is calling it, is looking to be the biggest in a while, if
not a contender for the biggest ever. Alliances change loyalties, regions fall,
coalitions clash; all hallmarks of the great player-driven story of EVE Online.
This war may be cataclysmic, bringing about the downfall of old or new powers. Old,
dormant players have begun resubscribing and engaging in the war while new players
flow in. If you're interested in joining in, check out EVE's official site (or be a
pal and sign up using my referral link!). Corporations that welcome new players and
are participating in the war include Brave Newbies Inc and Pandemic Horde on the
Moneybadgers side and Karmafleet on the Imperium side.
SEE COMMENTS
TOPICS
BEST OF
MMO
EVE ONLINE
LOAD COMMENTS
Advertisement
RECOMMENDED

Why Digital Extremes is finally reworking Warframe's level progression

Give your bow a crosshair and more with Kingdom Come: Deliverance console commands
Advertisement
HARDWARE BUYING GUIDES
LATEST GAME REVIEWS

1
The best gaming mice
2
The best wireless gaming mouse
3
Recommended PC gaming chairs
4
The best ATX mid-tower PC cases
5
The best Z270 motherboard
Advertisement
PC GAMER NEWSLETTER
Subscribe to get the best content of the week, and great gaming deals, as picked by
the editors.

No spam, we promise. You can unsubscribe at any time and we'll never share your
details without your permission.
PC Gamer is part of Future plc, an international media group and leading digital
publisher. Visit our corporate site.

About Us
Terms and conditions

Privacy policy

Cookies policy

Advertise with us
� Future US, Inc. 1390 Market St, Suite 200, San Francisco California 94102.

Vous aimerez peut-être aussi