Difference between revisions of "Security missions"

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{{MissionLinks}}'''Security missions''' missions that involve combat. Usualy these missions are given by security agents but mining and distribution agents can in certain cases, such as storyline missions and COSMOS missions, give missions that behave like security missions.
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{{MissionLinks}}'''Security missions''' are missions that involve combat. Usually, these missions are given by Security agents but Mining and Distribution agents can in certain cases, such as Storyline and COSMOS missions, give missions that behave like Security missions.
  
 
==Structure==
 
==Structure==
  
When you receive an mission offer you will be given some basic info on the mission. On right side of the mission offer you can see the mission objective, enemy faction, possible ship restrictions, target system with warning on low sec space and rewards. It is important to at least look at the enemy faction as you are almost quaranteed to lose standings with this faction. On left half of the mission offer is the mission briefing, a lore fluff for your mission. This usually won't give you much details on the mission but sometimes there are hints such as "fit a fast ship, you will need to burn a long distance", "harder than usual combat" or "I will be updating your objectives on the fly".
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When you receive a mission offer you will be given some basic info on the mission. On the right side of the mission offer you can see the mission objective, enemy faction, possible ship restrictions, target system with a warning if you're being sent to low/null security space and the rewards. It is important to at least look at the enemy faction as you are almost guaranteed to lose standings with this faction. On the left half of the mission offer is the mission briefing. It provides some in-game lore but usually won't give you many details on the mission - sometimes there are hints such as "fit a fast ship, you will need to burn a long distance", "harder than usual combat" or "I will be updating your objectives on the fly", but don't rely on the briefing spelling out what you need to do exactly.
  
In the mission offer you should pay special attention to the mission objective, enemy faction, possible low srcurity route warning and possible special ship restriction (says "This mission contains special ship restrictions").
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Once you have accepted the mission you should prepare your ship. It is common to adjust your fit based on the mission. The usual adjustment is swapping resist modules to match the damage of the enemy faction. Sometimes it is also a good idea to fit modules to counter incoming EWAR, e.g. Capacitor Batteries to counter neuting or Sensor Boosters and Scripts to counter ECM and damping.
  
Once you have accepted the mission you should prepare your ship. It is common to adjust your fit based on the mission. The usual adjustment is swapping resist modules to match the damage of the enemy faction. Sometimes it is also good idea to fit modules to counter incoming EWAR: Extra capacitor to coutner neuting or sensor booster+scripts to counter ECM and damping.
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The mission itself is located in the system given by the agent. In this system you will be able to see a warpable mission location in space; in the right-click menu and in the top left corner of your screen.
  
The mission itself is loceted in system given by the agent. In this system you will be able to see a warpable mission location in space, in right click menu and in top left corner of your screen.
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The missions usually consist of simple things that you need to do to complete the objective:
  
The missions usually consist of simple things that you need to complete to reach the objective:
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* Missions often have various ''triggers'' that cause new enemies to spawn. The most common trigger is to attack or kill certain ships. It is often important to avoid activating many triggers at once so you don't get overwhelmed.
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* Mission pockets will often contain acceleration gates that take you deeper into enemy territory; these gates are often locked until all nearby enemies have been defeated. If you get to a gate you can't activate, make sure that you have found and killed all the enemy ships in the area. Also, sometimes you have to loot the commander of the defending ships to get a "key" that unlocks the gate.
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* Some missions tell you to go to a place, kill the ships there, and wait for reinforcements to arrive so that you can kill them too. If you don't read the mission statement, you may miss this notice and go back to the agent before the mission is finished.
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* Some missions look simple and easy, until a fleet of enemies suddenly appears. For example, [[Cargo Delivery (Blood Raiders) (Level 4)|Cargo Delivery]], tells you to fly to a warehouse to pick up cargo. Simple enough, but once you pick up the cargo, a cluster of ships appears and targets you. You are right next to the warehouse at this point, and if you panic and try to warp out, you can get stuck, warp disrupted...and then, of course, utterly destroyed.
  
* Mission often have various ''triggers''. that cause new enemies to spawn. The most common trigger is to attack or kille certain ships. it is often important to avoid triggering triggers to often to not get overwhelmed.
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Usually, the objective of a Security mission is to kill a ship or a set of ships. However, sometimes it can also be to destroy a structure, to get close to a location and then escape, to pick up an object at the location (which may or may not be an ambush), or to fly beacon-to-beacon. Be sure to read the mission description carefully. If you find that you cannot figure out what a mission is asking you to do, consider looking at a [[mission reports|mission report]] for that particular mission.
* Mission spaces will often contain acceleration gates that take you deeper into enemy territory; these gates are often locked until nearby enemies have been defeated. If you get to a gate, but it won't launch you, make sure that you have found and killed all the enemy ships in the area. Also, sometimes you have to loot the commander of the defending ships to get a "key" that unlocks the gate.
 
* Some missions tell you to go to a place, kill the ships there, and wait for reinforcements to arrive so that you can kill them too. If you don't read the mission statement, you can not notice this and go back to the agent before the mission is finished.
 
* Some missions look simple and easy, until a fleet of enemies suddenly appears. This mission, [[Cargo Delivery (Blood Raiders) (Level 4)|Cargo Delivery]], for example, tells you to fly to a warehouse to pick up cargo. Simple enough, but once you pick up the cargo, a cluster of ships appears and targets you. You are right next to the warehouse at this point, and if you panic and try to warp out, you can get stuck, warp disrupted ... and then, of course, utterly destroyed.
 
  
The objective of a Security mission is usually to kill a ship or a set of ships located at the encounter, but it could also be to destroy a structure, to get close to a location and then escape, to pick up an object at the location (which may or may not be an ambush), or to fly from beacon-to-beacon. Be sure to read the mission description carefully. If you find that you cannot figure out what a mission is asking you to do, consider looking at a [[mission reports|mission report]] for that particular mission.
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Once you have completed the objective of the mission, the mission icon will turn into a green check-mark. Note that if the mission required items to be retrieved, you still need to grab them. You can then return to the agent and receive your reward.
 
 
Once you have completed the objective of the mission the mission icon will turn into a green checkmark. Note that if the mission required items to be retrieved you still need to grab them. You can then return to the agent and receive your reward.
 
  
 
==Mission levels==
 
==Mission levels==
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Security missions go from level 1 all the way to level 5.
 
Security missions go from level 1 all the way to level 5.
  
*'''Level 1''' is where most new players start. Most, if not all, level 1 missions can be done in a basic frigate frigate, Only the most basic [[Starting_Skills|piloting skills]] are required.
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*'''Level 1''' is where most new players start. Most, if not all, level 1 missions can be done in a basic frigate, Only the most basic [[Starting skills|piloting skills]] are required.
*'''Level 2''' mining missions can be done in a [[Cruiser|cruiser]] or in a [[destroyer]] piloted by a more skilled pilot. These missions generally expect that you are continually improving your piloting skills and learning how to [[Fitting_Guidelines|fit out new ships]].
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*'''Level 2''' missions can be done in a [[cruiser]] or in a [[destroyer]] piloted by a more skilled pilot. These missions generally expect that you are continually improving your piloting skills and learning how to [[Fitting ships|fit out new ships]].
*'''Level 3''' missions require a [[Battlecruiser|battlecruiser]]. These missions go faster if you have trained for better ships and at least some [[Tech_2|Tech 2]] fittings.
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*'''Level 3''' missions require a [[battlecruiser]]. These missions go faster if you have trained for better ships and at least some [[Tech 2]] fittings.
*'''Level 4''' missions require a [[Battleship|Battleship]] with full T2 tank fitted. These missions can be time-consuming, but they offer large rewards.
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*'''Level 4''' missions require a [[battleship]] with full T2 tank fitted. These missions can be time-consuming, but they offer large rewards.
 
*'''Level 5''' missions are designed for groups of players or capital ship and are exclusively located in Low Security space.
 
*'''Level 5''' missions are designed for groups of players or capital ship and are exclusively located in Low Security space.
  
 
==Useful items to bring==
 
==Useful items to bring==
Some items are not necessary for completing missions, but are nice to have around.
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Some items are not necessary for completing missions but are nice to have around.
 +
 
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'''Keys''': Gate Key for Dread Pirate Scarlet, Angel Diamond Tag for L4 Angel Extravaganza bonus room, Zbikoki's Hacker Card for Worlds Collide.
  
'''Keys''': Gate Key for Dread Pirate Scarlet, Angel Pallidum Tag for L4 Angel Extravaganza bonus room, or Zbikoki's Hacker Card for Worlds Collide.
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'''Extra Modules''': Most pilots switch resist modules to maximize their resist profile against the faction they will be fighting. Once on site, you may find that you are taking more or less damage than expected. It is faster to refit in that system if a station or Upwell structure is available than to jump back to your base. Also applies if you want more damage mods because you barely take any damage.  
  
'''Extra Mods''': Most people switch resists for what rat they're against. Say you're mid-mission and discover your tank isn't so great. It's easier to refit in that system then jump back to your base to pickup extra resists. Also applies if you want more damage mods. Remember you have a limited cargo space, so don't go overboard.
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'''Mobile Depot''': This is a deployable structure that allows a pilot to refit their ship without docking. Useful for larger ships that need to swap between micro jump drives and propulsion modules during a mission.  
  
'''Mobile Tractor Unit (MTU)''':  This tool is very useful for looting and salvaging mission pockets. Bring it in your cargohold (100 {{m3}}), deploy it in a mission pocket and it will automatically collect and loot all wrecks created within 125 kilometers of itself. This also greatly increases the efficiency of salvaging by effectively eliminating the transit time for looting and salvaging. When scooping the MTU, it will automatically eject any cargo it has remaining into a standard, temporary cargo container.  
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'''Mobile Tractor Unit (MTU)''':  This tool is very useful for looting and salvaging mission pockets. Put it in your cargo hold (100 {{m3}}), deploy it in a mission pocket and it will automatically pull in and loot all wrecks created within 125 kilometers of itself. This also greatly increases the efficiency of salvaging by effectively eliminating the transit time for looting and salvaging. When scooping the MTU it will automatically eject any cargo it has remaining into a standard, temporary cargo container.
  
 
==Loot and salvage==
 
==Loot and salvage==
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[[File:Loot_and_salvage.jpg‎|thumb|370px|right|wrecks in the overview for looting]]
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Security missions almost always involve killing NPC ships. This creates the opportunity to loot and salvage wrecks.
  
Security missions almost always involve killing rats. This creates the opportunities to loot and salvage wrecks.
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The value of loot and salvage generally rises with mission level. The point at which it becomes worthwhile to loot and/or salvage the wrecks will depend greatly on the ships destroyed and the speed at which the pilot is completing the missions. The faster the pilot can complete successive missions, the less value the wrecks retain as more ISK is earned from bounties, completion rewards and Loyalty Points.
 
 
The worthness of loot and salvage rises with mission leve. Generally missions with large number of battleships are the only ones worth looting and salvaging but there are exceptions.
 
  
If you plant to loot and/or salvage the mission you should consider investing in a mobile tractor unit (MTU). The MTU is a personal deployable structure that will tractor wrecks from 125 km range around it nd store all the loot. Drop an MTU when when you start killing and bookmark the location. Once the mission is completed you can return in a salvaging ship and warp to a nice cluster of wrecks.
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If you plan to loot and/or salvage the mission, you should consider investing in several Mobile Tractor Units. Once deployed they continue to work even if you fly away. The strategy you should follow if you want to loot and salvage a mission is to drop an MTU in every mission pocket and bookmark it. This way, you can focus on completing the mission and after you've handed it in, all the acceleration gates will despawn. Then, you can warp from bookmark to bookmark with your salvage ship and collect the loot/salvage the wrecks.  
  
Certain missions have very low chance of having a faction ship present. It is very much recommended that this ship is killed and looted as they can drop faction modules, implants or blueprint copies.
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Certain missions have very low chance of having a faction ship present. These ships drop faction modules, implants or blueprint copies which can be worth a lot of ISK. A pilot should be on the lookout for these ships and ensure to destroy and loot these ships if they appear on grid.
  
 
===Farming a Mission for Loot===
 
===Farming a Mission for Loot===
  
Farming a mission means to do the same mission over a few days by NOT completing the mission. Ie.,for Vengeance, you can kill everything except one rat in the last pocket and then redo the mission after downtime (all the rats will respawn) until the mission expires. This is very good for high value missions like Angel Extravaganza (AE), Blockade, Worlds Collide, Vengeance, or Cargo Delivery.  
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Farming a mission means doing the same mission over and over by NOT completing the mission. For example, in the mission 'Vengeance', you can kill everything except one NPC in the last pocket and then redo the mission after downtime (all the NPC ships will respawn) until the mission expires. This is very good for high value missions like Angel Extravaganza, Blockade, Worlds Collide, Vengeance, or Cargo Delivery.  
  
<div style="margin:0; background-color:#333322; border:1px solid #1d3b1d; font-style:normal; text-align:left; padding:1em 1em 1em 1em; overflow:hidden; color:#ffffff;  margin-right:100px; margin-left:100px">
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While farming select missions can be profitable, it does lock out that mission agent from giving you additional missions until you complete the mission being farmed. Before farming a mission one should check the availability of other agents in the area. If the nearest available agent is a significant distance away, you may find that it is not only more profitable but also more convenient to complete the mission than to farm it.  
Example:
 
 
 
Say I usually play every day for an hour, and it takes me an hour to do Angel Extravaganza. Angel Extravaganza gives me 40 million ISK with bounties, loot, and salvage. To maximize my revenue, if I got AE, I would kill everything except Tiogo Kargaz. That way the mission would not complete and I could then repeat this after every downtime until the mission expires. This would give me 40 million ISK × 6 days = 240 million ISK
 
 
 
Now say I decided to kill Tiogo and complete the mission. On the next 6 days, I could get average missions that give ~20mil ISK. This way I would only get 20 million ISK x 6days = 120 million ISK
 
</div>
 
 
 
The downside is the repetitive monotony and if you want to play some more after you semi-complete the farm-mission. This can be somewhat mitigated if you have multiple agents. You can have an agent on standby for farming ''The Blockade'' and then keep doing missions with another agent.  
 
  
 
Notes:  
 
Notes:  
 
*To check the viability of farming a mission you can use [[mission reports]] to see if your mission has a 'completion trigger'.
 
*To check the viability of farming a mission you can use [[mission reports]] to see if your mission has a 'completion trigger'.
*Say you have a pocket with wrecks that you want to loot and/or salvage, but there's a pirate you have to keep alive in it to farm. You would need someone to loot/salvage while you tank the rat (or vice versa). You could also try fitting salvagers and/or tractor beams on a tanky ship or just abandon the wrecks.
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*If an NPC ship is still in site that you wish to loot/salvage, you will need either a second pilot to draw the NPC ship away or bring a ship capable of tanking the damage while looting and salvaging.
*A similar technique can be used to repeatedly mine ore from asteroids found in missions. See [[Mission Mining]] for details.
 
 
 
  
 
[[Category:missions]]
 
[[Category:missions]]

Latest revision as of 03:47, 20 January 2023

Security missions are missions that involve combat. Usually, these missions are given by Security agents but Mining and Distribution agents can in certain cases, such as Storyline and COSMOS missions, give missions that behave like Security missions.

Structure

When you receive a mission offer you will be given some basic info on the mission. On the right side of the mission offer you can see the mission objective, enemy faction, possible ship restrictions, target system with a warning if you're being sent to low/null security space and the rewards. It is important to at least look at the enemy faction as you are almost guaranteed to lose standings with this faction. On the left half of the mission offer is the mission briefing. It provides some in-game lore but usually won't give you many details on the mission - sometimes there are hints such as "fit a fast ship, you will need to burn a long distance", "harder than usual combat" or "I will be updating your objectives on the fly", but don't rely on the briefing spelling out what you need to do exactly.

Once you have accepted the mission you should prepare your ship. It is common to adjust your fit based on the mission. The usual adjustment is swapping resist modules to match the damage of the enemy faction. Sometimes it is also a good idea to fit modules to counter incoming EWAR, e.g. Capacitor Batteries to counter neuting or Sensor Boosters and Scripts to counter ECM and damping.

The mission itself is located in the system given by the agent. In this system you will be able to see a warpable mission location in space; in the right-click menu and in the top left corner of your screen.

The missions usually consist of simple things that you need to do to complete the objective:

  • Missions often have various triggers that cause new enemies to spawn. The most common trigger is to attack or kill certain ships. It is often important to avoid activating many triggers at once so you don't get overwhelmed.
  • Mission pockets will often contain acceleration gates that take you deeper into enemy territory; these gates are often locked until all nearby enemies have been defeated. If you get to a gate you can't activate, make sure that you have found and killed all the enemy ships in the area. Also, sometimes you have to loot the commander of the defending ships to get a "key" that unlocks the gate.
  • Some missions tell you to go to a place, kill the ships there, and wait for reinforcements to arrive so that you can kill them too. If you don't read the mission statement, you may miss this notice and go back to the agent before the mission is finished.
  • Some missions look simple and easy, until a fleet of enemies suddenly appears. For example, Cargo Delivery, tells you to fly to a warehouse to pick up cargo. Simple enough, but once you pick up the cargo, a cluster of ships appears and targets you. You are right next to the warehouse at this point, and if you panic and try to warp out, you can get stuck, warp disrupted...and then, of course, utterly destroyed.

Usually, the objective of a Security mission is to kill a ship or a set of ships. However, sometimes it can also be to destroy a structure, to get close to a location and then escape, to pick up an object at the location (which may or may not be an ambush), or to fly beacon-to-beacon. Be sure to read the mission description carefully. If you find that you cannot figure out what a mission is asking you to do, consider looking at a mission report for that particular mission.

Once you have completed the objective of the mission, the mission icon will turn into a green check-mark. Note that if the mission required items to be retrieved, you still need to grab them. You can then return to the agent and receive your reward.

Mission levels

Security missions go from level 1 all the way to level 5.

  • Level 1 is where most new players start. Most, if not all, level 1 missions can be done in a basic frigate, Only the most basic piloting skills are required.
  • Level 2 missions can be done in a cruiser or in a destroyer piloted by a more skilled pilot. These missions generally expect that you are continually improving your piloting skills and learning how to fit out new ships.
  • Level 3 missions require a battlecruiser. These missions go faster if you have trained for better ships and at least some Tech 2 fittings.
  • Level 4 missions require a battleship with full T2 tank fitted. These missions can be time-consuming, but they offer large rewards.
  • Level 5 missions are designed for groups of players or capital ship and are exclusively located in Low Security space.

Useful items to bring

Some items are not necessary for completing missions but are nice to have around.

Keys: Gate Key for Dread Pirate Scarlet, Angel Diamond Tag for L4 Angel Extravaganza bonus room, Zbikoki's Hacker Card for Worlds Collide.

Extra Modules: Most pilots switch resist modules to maximize their resist profile against the faction they will be fighting. Once on site, you may find that you are taking more or less damage than expected. It is faster to refit in that system if a station or Upwell structure is available than to jump back to your base. Also applies if you want more damage mods because you barely take any damage.

Mobile Depot: This is a deployable structure that allows a pilot to refit their ship without docking. Useful for larger ships that need to swap between micro jump drives and propulsion modules during a mission.

Mobile Tractor Unit (MTU): This tool is very useful for looting and salvaging mission pockets. Put it in your cargo hold (100  m3), deploy it in a mission pocket and it will automatically pull in and loot all wrecks created within 125 kilometers of itself. This also greatly increases the efficiency of salvaging by effectively eliminating the transit time for looting and salvaging. When scooping the MTU it will automatically eject any cargo it has remaining into a standard, temporary cargo container.

Loot and salvage

wrecks in the overview for looting

Security missions almost always involve killing NPC ships. This creates the opportunity to loot and salvage wrecks.

The value of loot and salvage generally rises with mission level. The point at which it becomes worthwhile to loot and/or salvage the wrecks will depend greatly on the ships destroyed and the speed at which the pilot is completing the missions. The faster the pilot can complete successive missions, the less value the wrecks retain as more ISK is earned from bounties, completion rewards and Loyalty Points.

If you plan to loot and/or salvage the mission, you should consider investing in several Mobile Tractor Units. Once deployed they continue to work even if you fly away. The strategy you should follow if you want to loot and salvage a mission is to drop an MTU in every mission pocket and bookmark it. This way, you can focus on completing the mission and after you've handed it in, all the acceleration gates will despawn. Then, you can warp from bookmark to bookmark with your salvage ship and collect the loot/salvage the wrecks.

Certain missions have very low chance of having a faction ship present. These ships drop faction modules, implants or blueprint copies which can be worth a lot of ISK. A pilot should be on the lookout for these ships and ensure to destroy and loot these ships if they appear on grid.

Farming a Mission for Loot

Farming a mission means doing the same mission over and over by NOT completing the mission. For example, in the mission 'Vengeance', you can kill everything except one NPC in the last pocket and then redo the mission after downtime (all the NPC ships will respawn) until the mission expires. This is very good for high value missions like Angel Extravaganza, Blockade, Worlds Collide, Vengeance, or Cargo Delivery.

While farming select missions can be profitable, it does lock out that mission agent from giving you additional missions until you complete the mission being farmed. Before farming a mission one should check the availability of other agents in the area. If the nearest available agent is a significant distance away, you may find that it is not only more profitable but also more convenient to complete the mission than to farm it.

Notes:

  • To check the viability of farming a mission you can use mission reports to see if your mission has a 'completion trigger'.
  • If an NPC ship is still in site that you wish to loot/salvage, you will need either a second pilot to draw the NPC ship away or bring a ship capable of tanking the damage while looting and salvaging.