Missile mechanics
This article takes a look at mathematics behind missiles. We look at the equations that govern how far your missiles will travel and how much damage they deal. There's some math at the beginning, but you can skip over this if you wish.
Missile Damage Output
First Look at the Damage Equation
Here is the equation for missile damage:
Here are the terms in the equation:
- S : Signature radius of target
- Vt: velocity of target (equals the speed of the target ship)
- D : base damage of missile (you can find this in the missile information under" EM damage", "Kinetic damage", "Thermal damage" or "Explosive damage", Base Shield Damage and Base Armor Damage are not relevant here)
- E : explosion radius of missile (You can find this in the missile information under "Explosion radius")
- Ve: explosion velocity of missile (You can find this in the missile information under "Explosion Velocity")
- drf: damage reduction factor of missile (You can not find this in the missile information)
Note that unlike the turret damage equation, the missile damage does not care about angular velocity, but absolute velocity.
To find your damage, the game computes each of the three numbers you see, picks the smallest of them, and multiplies that by the base damage.
You can also write the form more abstract as a = b1 * min (c1, c2, c3). the lowest of the 3 numbers (c1, c2, c3) will be multiplied with b to result in a.
Finding the values
Typical S/E Values
Below is a table that lists some expected values for S/E for each missile type against various hull sizes:
Speed Tanking Missile Damage
We will now look at what velocities you can speed tank missile damage, and how much damage reduction you can get from speed tanking. To start, we'll assume that S/E = 1. Of course, the table above shows that this is very wrong, but you can factor in this by multiplying the explosion velocity Ve by S/E, which will adjust the figures appropriately. Hence, if a ship fires a standard light missile at a frigate then we multiply the explosion velocity of 170 by S/E, which will be about 80%, which gives us an effectively explosion velocity of about 136. Below is a list of explosion velocities for most missiles.
Rockets |
Standard | 150 |
Anti-Ship | 150 | |
Range | 150 | |
Light | Standard | 170 |
Anti-Ship | 174 | |
Precision | 179 | |
Heavy | Standard | 81 |
High Damage | 97 | |
High Precision | 87 | |
Heavy Assault | Standard | 101 |
Anti-Ship | 93 | |
Range | 101 | |
Cruise | Standard | 69 |
High Damage | 58 | |
High Precision | 71 | |
Torpedoes | Standard | 71 |
High Damage | 61 | |
Range | 71 |
One final chart will be needed. This chart will indicate how many times faster than the missile's effective explosion velocity you must travel to reduce the incoming damage by a given amount, roughly.
File:Damage reduction chart.png
Using These Charts
How can we possibly use these charts effectively? Well, suppose I'm firing standard light missiles at a target. My explosion velocity sits at about 170. If I'm shooting this missile at a frigate, then my effective explosion velocity becomes 136. Since he's webbed and has his afterburner on, he's going at about 400 m/s, which is roughly 3 times my explosion velocity. We look at the proper row in the table above and scan across until we see which columns 3 lies between. We then look up and see that I'm doing about 50% reduced damage on him. If we were allowed to travel without the web, he could easily hit 10 times my explosion velocity, at which point the damage drops to 30-40%. From this, you should take away the fact that even a target that's the right size for your missiles moving even at very normal speeds might cut your DPS by 50%, much like a turret tracking something of the right speed and size might take a similar DPS cut.
From this, take away that ships do not need to be moving very quickly to slice missile damage, as the explosion radii are typically quite low.
Increasing Missile Damage
There are many things a player can do to increase the missile damage.