This guide has already said more than once, "Population is power." Now is a good time for an example of why that's true.
Games of MOO II are won by industrial capacity and technology. Let's look at research first, as it's a little simpler. In a pre-warp game you start with no research-boosting technologies, so the speed of your research directly depends on how many people you have working as scientists. If your race and planet have no research bonus or penalty, that's 3 RP (research points) per scientist. Now suppose you build a Research Lab, the first research building in the tech tree. Remember that you can only have one of each type of building per planet. A Research Lab produces:
So a Research Lab plus 1 scientist will produce 9 RP, while for example a Research Lab plus 4 scientists will produce 21 RP and with 10 scientists it would produce 45 RP.
The difference is more dramatic if you have any kind of research bonus (racial or provided by some technologies). For example if your scientists produce 5 RP each without any buildings (achievable in mid-game), the figures for Research Lab are:
Similarly more advanced research buildings produce a larger increase per scientist.
Looking at industrial production and the effects of an Automated Factory, the first industrial building in the tech tree, the figures for construction points work out in the same way, except for one thing - at this low tech level you have no pollution control technologies. So an Automated Factory plus 4 workers will produce 18-19 PP (production points) instead of 21, because 2-3 have to be spent on cleaning up pollution (unless your race is Tolerant; then you get the full 21 PP). Once you get adequate pollution control, the construction figures work very like the research figures: adding a few more people increases your output significantly.
Money is usually a constraint in the early game, and growing you population fast increases your income fast. This is usually essential, so that you afford the maintenance costs of increasingly advanced buildings.
The same principles apply in Average and Advanced start games - more advanced facilities may be available, but all except 1 research building, 1 industrial building and 2 agricultural buildings require people.
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You could just wait for the population of each planet to grow naturally, but that's inefficient:
You start a pre-warp game with no technologies that boost population growth, but you're doing everything else ( farming, production, research) with zero or minimal help from automation, so you urgently need more pairs of hands (or whatever appendages your race uses). Fortunately there's a very effective zero-tech way to increase population growth. You can order a colony to "build" Housing, which directs its industrial output into population growth.
Rather surprisingly, Housing works fastest in colonies with a population of 1, so it does not divert a lot of your population from research and construction. A population 1 planet "building" Housing with no industrial buildings and no racial or planetary industrial bonuses or penalties will produce a new unit of population every 4-5 turns. This means you should check every couple of turns for Housing colonies with more than 1 unit of population, and move the excess to production / research / farming elsewhere. That's a win-win deal: you get more efficient Housing as well as increased production / research / farming output.
The easy way to do this check is via the Colony List: click the "Producing" label at the bottom and the List will sort by what each colony is producing. Housing is always at the bottom of the listing, so scroll to the bottom. All your Housing colonies are grouped, and it will be easy to spot any that have more than "person".
Then you can use the Colony List to move the excess to where they're needed. MOO II wasn't designed for Windows, so it doesn't use the common "drag and drop" technique. In fact it's even simpler: click a "worker" icon (in the "Workers" column) and the cursor will change to show the icon; move the icon to where you want the "person" and click. When your empire gets larger you may need to scroll the Colony List to find the destination you want; and you can use the scrollbar while the cursor is a "person" icon. Quite often you will want to move the "person" to another planet in the same system; but the destination will be making something else. You can make it easy to find the destination by clicking the "Name" label to sort the List by names of planets (they are always star name followed by a number) so that planet in the same system are grouped together, then scroll until the planets in that system appear. All this time the cursor is the "person" icon, but the game software won't drop the person until you click in the "Farmers", "Workers" or "Scientists" box of a colony.
It's usually easiest to move colonists by using the Colony List, but occasionally Colony Screen provides an easier way to move colonists within the same system. For example if you're using the Colony List to see which Housing colonies have spare population, the list is sorted by what each colony is producing and it's hard to find other colonies in the same system. But if you click the Housing colony's name in the Colony List, you diplay the Colony Screen; then you click a colonist and then click the destination planet's icon in the top left corner of the screen. Afterwards you can return to the same place in the Colony List by clicking the "Return" button or pressing the ESC key.
Unlike food transfers, population transfers:
Note that just 1 puny warship can blockade a system, preventing Freighter movements into and out of the system. If you transfer population to another system and that system is blockaded when the Freighters arrive, the people in transit die. Try to avoid transfers to systems that are at risk of being blockaded: there are often safer destinations; even if there are not, at least you don't waste the cash spent on the transfer.
If a colony becomes full, move 1 or 2 people to another colony that's productive but some way short of full, so that the sending colony starts producing "people" again by natural growth (slow but free). Unfortunately the Colony List doesn't have an option to sort by amount of spare living space, so you have to scroll through it every few turns once some of you colonies get close to full. This can be a pain, but getting a few percent more people may give you a slight but vital advantage over the empire next door. To check each colony's population:
See the notes above about Freighters.
Eventually you'll want at least some of your "baby factories" to start producing real buildings, but you may want to keep up your population growth rate. There are 3 technologies that help you to do this:
When you build a Cloning Center, a colony's population growth increases by 0.1 "person" per turn, i.e. 1 "person" every ten turns.
This an "achievement", i.e. you get the benefit without producing a building: the natural growth rate of all your colonies increases to 125% of the standard starting value.
Another achievement that increases the natural growth rate of all your colonies to 150% of the standard starting value (and replaces Microbiotics if you got that earlier). Universal Antidote is so high up the Biology tech tree that it is not often seen in competitive games.
There are useful alternative technologies at each of these levels, so if your empire is not Creative you will have to decide which one you want, and hope to get the others by spying, conquest or trading.
Eventually more of your colonies will become full, and your population growth will grind to a halt if you haven't prepared for this. You could create more colonies, but by this time other empires are probably in a similar situation, so wars for territory are very likely. You could make ships to defend new colonies, but ultimately defense does not win games; your fleet should be as free as possible to attack.
Fortunately there are technologies that resolve this dilemma.
These low-tech buildings (80 RP; 60 PP; maintenance 1 BC) increase the population capacity of a colony by 2. If your race is not Creative you have to choose at this tech level between Biospheres and Hydroponic Farms (automated farms that produce 2 food; 60 PP; maintenance 2 BC), but Biospheres are almost always the better choice: they cost less to maintain (at this stage most empires still have to be careful with money); on a good planet you can use 1 of the 2 extra people for farming and the other for research or production.
Terraforming (1150 RP; no maintenance) and Gaia Transformation (7500 RP to research; 500 PP to "build"; no maintenance) enable you to improve planets in ways that generally increase both farming efficiency and population capacity. No production cost is quoted for Terraforming because it's variable for reasons that you'll soon see. Terraforming is the only tech at that level, so even Uncreative races will get the opportunity to research it. Gaia Transformation is 1 of 3 at the top of the Biology tech tree, so non-Creatives have to make a choice; but competitive games don't usually last long enough for it to matter.
To understand Terraforming you need to understand how a planet's population capacity depends on its size, its type ("climate" in the manual) and the race that inhabits it (not necessarily the race that owns it, as it might have been conquered). The following table shows the maximum populations of each size and type of planets for each of "normal", Aquatic, Tolerant and Subterranean populations (if you use combinations such as Aquatic + Tolerant you'll have to get used to working them out yourself):
| Tiny | Small | Medium | Large | Huge | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Normal race | |||||
| Toxic, Radiated, Barren, Desert, Tundra, Ocean | 1 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 |
| Swamp | 2 | 4 | 6 | 8 | 10 |
| Arid | 3 | 6 | 9 | 12 | 15 |
| Terran | 4 | 8 | 12 | 16 | 20 |
| Gaia | 5 | 10 | 15 | 20 | 25 |
| Aquatic race | |||||
| Toxic, Radiated, Barren, Desert | 1 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 |
| Arid | 3 | 6 | 9 | 12 | 15 |
| Tundra, Swamp | 4 | 8 | 12 | 16 | 20 |
| Ocean, Terran, Gaia | 5 | 10 | 15 | 20 | 25 |
| Tolerant race | |||||
| Toxic, Radiated, Barren, Desert, Tundra, Ocean | 1 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 |
| Swamp | 3 | 7 | 10 | 13 | 16 |
| Arid | 4 | 9 | 13 | 17 | 21 |
| Terran, Gaia | 5 | 10 | 15 | 20 | 25 |
| Subterranean race | |||||
| Toxic, Radiated, Barren, Desert, Tundra, Ocean | 3 | 7 | 10 | 13 | 16 |
| Swamp | 4 | 8 | 12 | 16 | 20 |
| Arid | 5 | 10 | 15 | 20 | 25 |
| Terran | 6 | 12 | 18 | 24 | 30 |
| Gaia | 7 | 14 | 21 | 28 | 35 |
The rules that govern Terraforming are:
When you're playing a competitive game rather than just showing off against the AI(s), you may want to terraform each sub-Terran planet only once, and even then you may only want to terraform where you gain the most in population capacity. Of course there will be exceptions, for example a large or huge Rich or Ultra-rich planet with good pollution controls will complete even a 3rd terraform in a few turns, and the extra population capacity will enable it to become a monster ship-builder that produces high-tech Battleships in 3-5 turns.
The changes made by 1 terraforming project are:
Gaia Transformation is quite expensive (500 PP) but its population gains are less impressive:
This very advanced achievement (6000 RP; no construction or maintenance) adds 5 to the maximum population of all your colonies (except any that you captured from empires that already had Advanced City Planning). It's so late in the tech tree that it will not appear in many competitive games. As usual if your race is not Creative you have to choose between this and 2 other technologies at the same level.