Starter Guide

From Sojourn
Revision as of 20:18, 17 January 2023 by Soleil (talk | contribs) (→‎Antagonism Tab: Grammatical correction. This is why we read everything twice before calling it good.)

Space Station 13 is a multiplayer roleplaying game developed using the BYOND engine. In Space Station 13 (from here on to be referred to as SS13, players take the role of workers in a sci-fi setting. There are many different jobs available, and each player chooses and plays a role in the space station.

Sojourn is a heavy roleplay server. The choice is not optional; it is enforced. Should you be new to roleplaying, consult A Crash Course in Roleplaying. Should you still have questions, poke any of the in-game admins.

The Rules

Yes, there are rules set in place to ensure an enjoyable experience for all players. Please take a moment and read them.

Joining the Server

To join the server you'll need to follow a couple of steps:

  1. Download the BYOND client from here. You'll need it to start playing
  2. Register for a BYOND account here.
  3. Add the server address to your bookmarks, or just join manually using the BYOND client. Either way, connect to byond://104.243.38.223:35565

If all has gone well, congratulations! You're on the server! Before you can jump in and start playing, we strongly recommend you set up your character first.

Character Setup

General Tab

These often do not have any mechanical effect on gameplay, but are some of the most critical aspects of the character.

General

  • Name: As part of the roleplay guidelines followed by the server, it is required that all characters have a first and last name (with the exception of different languages or cultures, but use common sense!). By randomizing your name, the game will pick a suitable name for your character, accounting for gender.
  • Gender: Self-explanatory; this may or may not alter your sprite depending on your selected species' gender dimorphism.
  • Gender Identity: Alters the pronouns used to refer to you in-game.
  • Age: The only cosmetic setting that is basically useless. It will only appear on in-game security and medical records and won't change your character's appearance.
  • Spawn point: This selects where on the map your character will spawn in. If you are not familiar with the different locations, just leave the default setting.
  • OOC Notes: You must input your ERP preferences into this section so other players can read them and decide if your preferences align for ERP purposes.

Languages

  • Adding/Removing Languages: You can add and remove any language you wish, except English common which is the default language for all characters. Depending on your species or whitelist status for restricted languages, you may see more or fewer choices.
  • Language Keys: When you wish to speak in another language, you must prefix the message with one of these keys, followed by a language-specific character, visible in-game in the "Check Known Languages" screen.

Body

  • Reset (R): The small R in parenthesis will reset your body to a random state, clearing your custom settings.
  • Species: Here you will select the species which you wish to play as. Some species have mechanical advantages and disadvantages, but all of the commonly available, non-whitelisted species are fairly similar. Whitelisted species may have large mechanical differences.
  • Blood type: As in real-life, this determines your compatibility for transfusions from blood packs or to/from other characters. See Blood Type for details.
  • Needs glasses: Whether or not your character needs prescription lenses to have full visual acuity. If you are saying "why would anyone want this? that's a disadvantage!" you should read up on roleplaying realistic characters.
  • Limbs: Here you can replace any of your limbs with cybernetic facsimiles or remove them altogether. Playing a cripple not capable of performing any job is generally not allowed. See the Rules.
  • Internal Organs: You can modify the state of your internal organs here, namely whether or not they are mechanically assisted or cybernetic.
  • Hair: You can select a hairstyle here. For some species with ears, you should select their 'Speciesname'-style hairstyles to keep the ears as the ears are actually part of the hair sprites.
  • Facial: For facial hair selection, similar to hair style selection.
  • Eyes: They may only be one pixel, but they're pretty obvious if you're not wearing glasses.
  • Body Color: The overall color of your body. Depending on the species, may take some playing with to get the color you want exactly right.
  • Body Markings: You can add and remove colorable body markings here to further customize your character. Please keep it reasonable, however.

Equipment

Here you can select some undergarments for your character. Most of the options are fairly self-explanatory. None of them confer any mechanical change: they are purely cosmetic changes. Underwear and socks can be removed in-game with the use of a verb in the IC tab.

Background Information

Purely for roleplay purposes, these show up on your employment, security, or medical records in-game for other players, so should be populated to match the backstory for your character. Not having records as a colonist can and will get you arrested, make sure to fill them out; you can find templates for each record here: Example Paperwork

Records

Security, medical, and employment records should each be populated with appropriate information that might be in a real record for that character. None of the records should contain any 'fantastic' information that a normal HR, security, or medical person wouldn't include. No backstory involving extra-ordinary crimes or mercenaries or ninjas or other things is allowed without a Special Character Application to the staff.

Flavor

You are required to populate your flavor text with some information about the visual appearance of your character. Without this, people will only have an idea of what you look like based on the tiny sprite, and that is not a lot to go on. These should contain things that people can SEE, not thoughts the character has. 'Robot' flavor text is the flavor text applied if you join as a Cyborg rather than any other job slot, and is not used any other time.

Occupation Tab

This grid allows you to set job preferences. These preferences only take effect when the game is automatically assigning jobs at the beginning of a round, and have no effect if you are joining after a round has already begun.

If you set your preferences here, it will attempt to assign you the highest preference job, in competition with anyone else who has that same preference set, and do the same for all other players, trying to assign them each their most desirable job. You can also pick what happens if none of your desired jobs are available, at the bottom of this tab.

Antagonism Tab

Most of the options in this tab have no effect, as we do not play with traditional randomly-assigned antagonist roles. Some settings still influence things, however:

  • Be positronic brain: If someone selects a positronic brain and requests in-game that a ghost inhabit it, if you have this enabled, you will be asked if you wish to inhabit the brain and join the round.
  • Be pAI candidate: Similar to the above, but for inhabiting pAI devices.

Loadout Tab

Here you can select some equipment to start the round with, aside from your default starting equipment. Some of the pieces of equipment on this page may be restricted to certain jobs, and even if you select them, you will not spawn with them if you do not join as that job.

You have a certain number of points to allocate on this screen, if you wish. There's no requirement to use any of the points.

Global Tab

This has some settings that apply to all of your characters, as they are not really character-specific settings, but rather 'player' settings on how your client should behave.

  • UI Style: You can select a style for the in-game user interface here, as well as the color and transparency level of the interface.
  • Preferences: There are many settings here, each which you might not understand until you have played the game to some extent. It's recommended you not alter any of them until you have played the game and understand what they mean.
  • pAI: When you are a pAI candidate and someone is searching for a ghost to inhabit their pAI, these fields will be displayed to them so they can make their choice.
  • Communicator Identity: These settings allow you to configure a communicator, if you begin the game with one. Traditionally the game starts you with a PDA to communicate with other players, however you may also take a handheld Communicator capable of voice and video calls. You can pick this in the Loadout tab.
  • Jukebox Volume: If you find the in-game jukebox music to be too loud, you can permanently alter the volume here.
  • Media Player Type: See the in-game description.

The User Interface

This is a general guide to the game interface; note that it won't be accurate to all UI styles, nor are all the elements shown in the image at right.

Equipment

File:Tut-Equipment.png
Equipment Area

There are several slots on which you can equip items that represent different parts of your body.

  • 1: Head slot, for hats, helmets, and other things you can put on your head.
  • 2: Ear slots, for headsets and other very small objects that could be put behind an ear (pens, etc).
  • 3: Eye slot, for glasses and goggles.
  • 4: Face slot, for masks mostly.
  • 5: Uniform slot, the base clothing layer that most people will have equipped.
  • 6: Suit/Exosuit slot, for clothing worn over your uniform, including spacesuits.
  • 7: Gloves slot, for various gloves.
  • 8: Shoes slot, for various shoes, boots, and sandals.
  • I: ID slot, holds an ID card, a wallet, or PDA. Doors check the access in your hands first, then this slot.
  • B: Belt slot, you can also put some smaller items here to clip them onto a waistband.
  • P: Backpack slot, where a bag is usually stored, though can also hold O2 tanks, jetpacks, and hardsuit modules.
  • Hands: You usually have two of them, and can swap between them. The active one has a lit border. You will 'use' this hand when you click on things in the world.
  • Pockets: Only usable if you have a uniform equipped, these pockets can hold one small item each.

Modes

File:Tut-Modes.png
Modes Area
  • M: Movement speed toggle, switch between running and walking. Walking allows you to cross slippery areas without tripping.
  • I: Intent setting. This selects how you will interact with an object or a person when you make an action. Blue is Disarm, green is Help, yellow is Grab, and red is Harm.
  • T: Targeting diagram. You can click body parts here to select what body part to affect when clicking other characters. For example if you have the head selected and click someone with a crowbar in your hand, you will hit them in the head with the crowbar.
  • G: Gun settings. Toggles between either immediately firing a gun each click, or aiming and notifying the player that they are targeted. You can then select options to automatically fire in certain conditions such as if they move.

Status

File:Tut-Status.png
Status Area
  • W: Warnings will be displayed here about temperature or pressure problems you're experiencing, such as being exposed to fire, vacuum, or toxic atmospheres.
  • I: A button that represents whether or not you are breathing through your air mask (or hardsuit) if one is worn. Click to toggle.
  • D: A dummy of your body is here to show where you are feeling pain. It will usually be green, with darker and darker red highlights to indicate more pain. If grey, you are unable to feel pain due to being a synthmorph, or for other reasons.
  • H: A hunger indicator is displayed here which will show darker and darker shades of red as your character becomes more and more hungry. This represents charge level for synthmorphs.

Interacting With the World

Interacting with your surroundings in Space Station 13 is mostly done by the mouse. You can click with an empty hand active to pick up items or open containers, click on something with an item in your active hand to use the item on it, click on a computer or device to view its display, and so on. Once you get the hang of managing your character's hands, things will make more sense: you can't, for example, open a toolbox in your left hand if your right hand is full.

A good way of interpreting the interaction system in Space Station 13 is to think of each click as 'using' the object (or hand) on whatever you're clicking on. For instance, to use a computer in real life, you'd essentially 'use' an empty hand on it to start typing. Using an empty hand on an object will pick it up, if you can hold it. Holding an item in your hand and clicking on something can result in three things:

  • If the object in hand is meant to be used with the object you're clicking on, the desired effect should occur. In the case of containers, such as drink bottles or beakers, you'll transfer a certain amount of fluid units (usually 10) of the liquid from the container in your hand, to the container you're clicking on. For things like crowbar'ing the floor, you'll pry off a floor tile.
  • If the object in hand is not meant to be used with the object you're clicking on, more often than not (and very annoyingly, sometimes) you'll attack the target with the object. This can result in rather funny cases of hitting people with first aid kits, hitting your drinks machine with a bottle of vodka, etc. Or more dangerously, hitting someone with a crowbar, scalpel, toolbox, etc. This happens to be the essence of Robusting, as well (which we do not recommend you to try on unsuspecting crewmembers for no reason), which is basically clicking on someone, but with a weapon or very damaging object in hand.
  • If what you're clicking on is something that stores objects, the object will be taken out of your hand and placed in or on the target. This can be something like a table, opened locker or crate, which will place the object on top of the target, such that drinks will be placed on tables and jumpsuits will be placed in (technically, on) lockers. Objects like boxes and backpacks/satchels, which can be opened to reveal more slots for storing objects, will remove the item from your hand when clicked on, placing it in a slot inside.

Several interactions also use mouse drags to interact. For example, if you are standing adjacent to a cardboard box, dragging the sprite of the box onto your character's sprite will open the box and display the contents. Dragging your backpack that you are wearing to one of your hand slots will remove the backpack and put it in that hand. That's important because clicking your worn backpack just opens it and displays the contents, so this is one of the only ways to remove backpacks.

It's okay to memorize those, but playing jobs that involve more object handling, such as Chef, Barman or Cargo Tech, will really help you understand how the system interprets clicks, and what to expect when trying to use something.

Interacting with Other People

Sojourn is a roleplay-heavy server, and so your interactions with those around you are going to be very, very important. You won't get very far with pointing-and-clicking alone, so there are several basic commands to remember when dealing with other characters on the station:

  • Say:, Speak to those in sight. You can prefix your message a semicolon (;) to talk on the general radio channel, if you have a headset, or a colon and a letter (i.e. :m or :s) to talk on your department radio channel. (You can examine headsets to see which channels they can access.)
  • Whisper: Speak quietly, only audible to those right next to you. Anyone farther away will be told that you're whispering something.
  • Me: Lets you narrate your character's actions in an emote. This will have your character's make in front of the text.
  • Subtle: Lets you narrate something your character is doing subtly and would not be obvious to those further away. 'Subtle' is to 'Me', as 'Whisper' is to 'Say'.
  • OOC: Speak to everyone currently playing, in an Out-Of-Character way. This can be used to ask about game mechanics and other things not concerning the game. Do not send lots of messages via this. If you have a lot to discuss, join one of the out-of-game communication methods (forums, Discord, etc).
  • LOOC: Speak to everyone within your view in an Out-Of-Character way. This can be used to ask other players to explain procedures or ask for help without having to broadcast your request to the entire server. Also used for negotiating ERP preferences with those that you're playing with.

Don't be afraid to be creative! Writing speech with an accent, or being descriptive with your emotes, will make you a lot more memorable.

For example:

Say ":n Dr. Glass, could you come to Xenobiology, please? I think you should see this...

Whisper "Don' bloody move, yeah, or you're a dead man.

Me "grumbles irritably and kicks his feet up on his desk, glowering at his boss.

And don't forget to type properly! Consistently making typos or forgetting punctuation looks about the same to other players as showing up to a job interview drunk and slurring.

Here's a quick list of the different radio keys: (NOTE: YOUR HEADSET MUST HAVE THE CHANNELS TO USE THEM. EXAMINE THE HEADSET TO DETERMINE IF THEY DO)

  • :h Will send your message to your department radio directly.
  • :c Will send the message to the Command Channel
  • :s Will send the message to the Security Channel
  • :m Will send the message to the Medical Channel
  • :e Will send the message to the Engineering Channel
  • :n Will send the message to the Research Channel
  • :u Will send the message to the Supply Channel
  • :v Will send the message to the Service Channel
  • :b Will send the message to the Blackshield Channel (not yet implemented)
  • :k will send a message to the Prospector Channel
  • :t will send a message to the Absolutist Church Channel

If you wish to emote something over coms then use " say;! [...] ".

What To Do Now

There's a couple of things to do to help you settle in at Sojourn once you've gotten the hang of the game:

  • Read up on some other Guides: You can never know too much.
  • Try advanced jobs: Once you feel you have the basics of the game under your belt, don't be afraid to check the guides on the other positions available. Not only is it more fun, but you might actually get to help the station!
  • Help out the game: If you're good with programming, drawing sprites, telling stories or designing maps, feel free to drop by and show us what you can do.

Most importantly, have fun! After all, isn't that we're all here for?

Welcome to Sojourn and enjoy your stay!