Boats

Revision as of 23:06, 19 August 2008 by Tancred RedStar (Talk | contribs) (Dry Docking)

Boats allow players to travel across the seas of Britannia. They are subject to decay and will sink if left alone too long(several days).

Buying

Boats may be purchased from players or NPC Shipwrights in most towns, usually ones near oceans or large bodies of water. NPC Shipwrights will always sell boats in deed form, a ship deed indicating the boat size and type(see below).

Players may sell boats as either deeds or, much more commonly, a Ship Model, which appears as a miniature ship. Never purchase a boat in any other format including "handing you the keys" at dockside in exchange for payment as it's likely a player perpetrating a scam.

As a quick sidenote, there is also a scam involving players selling a miniature ship called A Ship Model which is actually just a ship named Model which has been dry-docked into the miniature ship. The true rare item known as a Ship Model does exist but be sure to denote the lack of a preceding A in the item name.

Types of Boats

There are six types of boats. They all have the same speed and storage capacity in their holds. The only real difference is in size, with the mediums being two tiles longer than the smalls and the larges two tiles longer than that. The size difference allows for a bit easier manueverability of the smaller ships through tight areas. A dragon's head carving adorns the prow of the various sizes of dragon ships while the regular ships lack it, merely a decor preference.

Ship Type Hold Size Cost
Small Ship 400 Stones 12,500 GP
Small Dragon Ship 400 Stones 12,500 GP
Medium Ship 400 Stones 14,200 GP
Medium Dragon Ship 400 Stones 14,200 GP
Large Ship 400 Stones 15,900 GP
Large Dragon Ship 400 Stones 15,900 GP

Sailing

To use a command just speak it so the tiller man can hear it.

Commands Description
Raise Anchor Raises the anchor readying the boat to move.
Drop Anchor Drops the anchor so the boat can no longer move, even if already moving.
Forward, Unfurl Sail Makes the boat sail forward at full sailing speed.
Forward One Sails the boat one tile forward.
Forward Slow Sails the boat forward slowly at half speed.
Back, Backward Makes the boat sail backwards at full sailing speed.
Back One Makes the boat sail one tile backwards.
Back Slow Sails the boat backwards slowly at half speed.
Right, Drift Right Makes the boat sail in its right hand direction.
Left, Drift Left Makes the boat sail in its left hand direction.
Start Makes the boat begin following a course set on a map.
Stop, Furl Sail Makes the boat cease all motion.
Come About, Turn Around Makes the boat turn around 180 degrees instantly.
Port, Turn Left Turns the boat in the counter-clockwise direction.
Starboard, Turn Right Turns the boat in the clockwise direction.

Some commands may be spoken in combination together, such as forward left or back right and capitalization is not necessary as the tiller man never finished school and could care less.

Security

Boats are secured using the boat key, which each player is given a pair of every time a boat is placed in the water. One key goes into the player's pack while the other is placed automatically in their bankbox. When a boat first enters the water, the plank, or gangway, on each side of the boat is locked. Players use their boat key on the plank to unlock and lock the it, allowing for ingress and egress. When the plank is unlocked, it can be extended by double-clicking on it, allowing anyone to enter or exit the boat, done by double-clicking the plank or simply walking on or off it if it is close enough to land, such as docks.

When both planks are locked, no one may come board the boat via the planks. The exception is if someone has one of the boat keys, which then allows them to use Recall, Sacred Journey or Gate Travel upon the key as if it were a marked rune.

Keeping the boat secure is vitally important when sailing in pirate-infested waters to avoid being boarded by either murderers or thieves.

To avoid people being trapped on boats against their will, a plank may be double-clicked to temporarily extend it for exiting purposes only, even if it is locked.

Keeping the boat key secure is also important as anyone with one of the keys can command the tiller man as well as drydock the boat and keep it, even if they were not originally the person who bought or placed the boat in the water. Boat keys in player backpacks can be a juicy target of thieves.

The Hold

Each type of boat has a hold players can store items in, up to 400 stones or 125 items, whichever comes first. The hold cannot be locked, so anyone able to get onboard the boat can access the hold. The hold is located at the front of the boat inside the hatch. When a boat sinks due to decay, any items stored in the hold will simply float motionless in a pile on top of the water where the boat sank free to be salvaged by any passers-by.

Dry Docking

Since boats are an expensive investment, one of their great features is they may be stored safely when not in use. The hold must be empty, no one aboard, the decks clear of any debris or corpses, both planks locked and the anchor dropped before a boat may be drydocked. Once those conditions are met, a player holding the boat key simply double-clicks the tiller man to drydock the boat, at which point it disappears from the water and goes into the player's pack as a miniature ship with the name of the boat(or description if the boat was unnamed). Miniature ship models are blessed and cannot be stolen.

Previously, players would drydock their ship with a Harbormaster and receive a Ship Claim Ticket. They could then hand the ticket back to the Harbormaster to reclaim their vessel. When the drydocking process was instituted, Ship Claim Tickets became an unforseen yet valuable collectible rare item.

Combat

Boats are unarmed, but players experienced in the ways of the sea and with a good knowledge of sailing can easily outclass players who are inexperienced in sailing. Boats can be used to box in, block, bottleneck and stop other boats. Much of this can be done with skillful manuevering using combinations of sailing commands as well as having an intimate knowledge of the nearby coastlines, islands and even server lines. Some spells have unanticipated effects at sea, especially on moving targets.

Seaborne murderers in Felucca, or pirates, favor Poison Field and Fire Field spells against their prey as there is little room to run around on the deck of a boat. Additionally, the seas of Sosaria can be desolate of other people making finding help or even a resurrection difficult and time-consuming. Absent-mindedly leaving a plank unlocked and being boarded by surprise is often a sealed fate at the hands of pirates. Some pirates will even set traps of piles of gold or items on drifting boats, hoping to lure a passing player closer out of curiosity. If one is not itching for a usually one-sided fight, the best advice is steer clear of enclosed coastlines or opportunities that seem too good to be true. Many a miner at sea in Felucca with hopes of easy double ore stacked high on the deck, or adventurers seeking a treasure chest on that facet provide a fine day's pickings for pirates.

Practical Uses

Aside from their primary purpose as a means to travel upon the seas, boats can be employed in many other useful roles.

  • Useful for boat mining as the miner merely sails along a rocky coastline mining the whole way and dumping ore on the deck for later smelting.
  • Invaluable for fishers in gaining skill at higher levels in deep water as well as retrieving a Message in a Bottle.
  • Can be used as a sort of mini-fort in treasure hunting. After a chest is dug up and the guardians appear, players will retreat to fight from onboard the ship, keeping the monsters on land at arm's length.
  • Players participating in Factions and carrying sigils sometimes used boats as a way to travel while avoiding opponents at moongates.
  • And of course the heart and soul of Pirating, by which murderers take to the seas in search of adventure, booty and unlucky victims.

Formerly, boats were heavily used in the 8x8 method of skill gain. Changes to game mechanics and the way skills were gained removed this method, thus leaving the seas desolate to some degree.