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Enslavers follows the hunt for the "second-rate smuggler" Alan (Allen) Schezar, who has managed to establish multiple extensive bases as well as gain control over a Cerebrate. The question of whether to aid the Protoss being held captive by Schezar or to kill the Cerebrate results in a split path. In A, players ignore the Protoss plea and kill the cerebrate, leading to the last level's Protoss and Terran enemies. In B, players save the Protoss instead, leading to the last level's Zerg and Terran enemies. The B path provides players with Protoss allies in addition to the Terran forces, but also adds in the Ultralisk hero Torrasque, which is periodically resurrected. Both paths have a trick in the last level: in A, destruction of the Protoss Temple will prevent the Protoss enemies from Warping In additional units, while in B, destruction of the Zerg Cerebrate will prevent the return of Torrasque. | Enslavers follows the hunt for the "second-rate smuggler" Alan (Allen) Schezar, who has managed to establish multiple extensive bases as well as gain control over a Cerebrate. The question of whether to aid the Protoss being held captive by Schezar or to kill the Cerebrate results in a split path. In A, players ignore the Protoss plea and kill the cerebrate, leading to the last level's Protoss and Terran enemies. In B, players save the Protoss instead, leading to the last level's Zerg and Terran enemies. The B path provides players with Protoss allies in addition to the Terran forces, but also adds in the Ultralisk hero Torrasque, which is periodically resurrected. Both paths have a trick in the last level: in A, destruction of the Protoss Temple will prevent the Protoss enemies from Warping In additional units, while in B, destruction of the Zerg Cerebrate will prevent the return of Torrasque. | ||
Enslavers I was released with the original StarCraft, whereas Enslavers II was released with Brood War. Thus, an argument could be made that you should play Enslavers I from the original StarCraft menu – and, therefore, that you should play it without any of the new Brood War units and abilities. This means that some of the strategies detailed here (particularly the Dark-Archon-heavy strategy for the final mission) might be considered "cheating" by | Enslavers I was released with the original StarCraft, whereas Enslavers II was released with Brood War. Thus, an argument could be made that you should play Enslavers I from the original StarCraft menu – and, therefore, that you should play it without any of the new Brood War units and abilities. This means that some of the strategies detailed here (particularly the Dark-Archon-heavy strategy for the final mission) might be considered "cheating" by more hardcore gamers. | ||
==Mission 1: Schezar's Scavengers== | ==Mission 1: Schezar's Scavengers== | ||
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Build a second expansion there while upgrading marines' attack and armor. Begin building three or four starports, and take out the Zergs in the north for a third expansion. Here you decide if you want to attack the Cerebrate or free the Protoss. If you free the Protoss, you go to Scenario 2b where you have a small army with heroes, and have to free more Protoss with a small base wherever you free the first one. If you kill the Cerebrate, you have to go to Scenario 3a with no Protoss help. | Build a second expansion there while upgrading marines' attack and armor. Begin building three or four starports, and take out the Zergs in the north for a third expansion. Here you decide if you want to attack the Cerebrate or free the Protoss. If you free the Protoss, you go to Scenario 2b where you have a small army with heroes, and have to free more Protoss with a small base wherever you free the first one. If you kill the Cerebrate, you have to go to Scenario 3a with no Protoss help. | ||
To free the Protoss, take about 12 battlecruisers along the north side of the map straight into the human camp. When you get to the Protoss, you win. To kill the Cerebrate, start on the west side of the map and go straight at the Zerg camp. | To free the Protoss, take about 12 battlecruisers along the north side of the map straight into the human camp. When you get to the Protoss, you win. To kill the Cerebrate, start on the west side of the map and go straight at the Zerg camp. | ||
==Mission 2B: The Rescue== | ==Mission 2B: The Rescue== | ||
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The key is to know which base to attack first. Red and purple are both impenetrable with the units you start with; don't even try approaching them, you'll just get wiped out. Brown, however, in the south, is not well-defended. So when the mission starts, hotkey your various forces and then send them up the ramp to the left and around the high ground, moving west and south. Have your Observer go ahead so you don't accidentally walk too close to brown's Siege Tanks. When you see them, prepare your units for an attack. If you take advantage of your heroes' abilities, you should be able to take down the base. Put your single Archon at the head of your troops, to draw the enemy fire, and hit it with a Defensive Matrix from your Science Vessel right before sending your units in. Target the two Siege Tanks and Bunkers and take them down as quickly as you can; keep an eye on your Archon, because you will probably need to give it another Defensive Matrix early in the battle, after it gets hit by some tank fire. | The key is to know which base to attack first. Red and purple are both impenetrable with the units you start with; don't even try approaching them, you'll just get wiped out. Brown, however, in the south, is not well-defended. So when the mission starts, hotkey your various forces and then send them up the ramp to the left and around the high ground, moving west and south. Have your Observer go ahead so you don't accidentally walk too close to brown's Siege Tanks. When you see them, prepare your units for an attack. If you take advantage of your heroes' abilities, you should be able to take down the base. Put your single Archon at the head of your troops, to draw the enemy fire, and hit it with a Defensive Matrix from your Science Vessel right before sending your units in. Target the two Siege Tanks and Bunkers and take them down as quickly as you can; keep an eye on your Archon, because you will probably need to give it another Defensive Matrix early in the battle, after it gets hit by some tank fire. | ||
Once that front line is taken out, you can move into the base and take out the few Marines, Firebats, and Goliaths scattered around, and slowly raze their buildings. The priorities are the unit-producing buildings nearby (two Barracks) and then the Command Center. Once those are out of the way, you can take your time clearing out the Supply Depots and other junk; soon, though, you should send your remaining units down the ramp to the south to destroy the | Once that front line is taken out, you can move into the base and take out the few Marines, Firebats, and Goliaths scattered around, and slowly raze their buildings. The priorities are the unit-producing buildings nearby (two Barracks) and then the Command Center. Once those are out of the way, you can take your time clearing out the Supply Depots and other junk; soon, though, you should send your remaining units down the ramp to the south to destroy the Statis Cell and release Danimoth, an Arbiter hero. Danimoth will be extremely useful early in the game; it will take you a long time to build up defenses, but Danimoth can keep your units cloaked to give you an edge when red and purple start to attack. Once you have Danimoth, you can send your units up the ramp to the left and destroy the remaining Factories and units, keeping them cloaked so the leftover Siege Tanks and Goliaths there can't harass you. As soon as you can, take the two Probes you were given with Danimoth and set up a base on the ruins of the Command Center you destroyed. Right off the bat you will need a ton of Pylons to make up for the large number of units you started with, and you might want to construct a second Nexus closer to your vespene gas, which is quite far away. | ||
Once you're up and running, the mission becomes significantly easier; you can just build up your base and army like normal. The majority of attacks you'll face will come from the north (red), and some from the east (purple); most can be fended off pretty easily with a combination of cloaked units and a large array of Photon Cannons. You will also want to build at least a few cannons behind your minerals, as red sometimes tries to send air units back there. If you need space to build more buildings, the lower ground where you destroyed the Statis Cell earlier is spacious and safe. | |||
''' | This base does not have a lot of resources, and there are no other resource patches on the map except in the bases you need to destroy. So, you will need to get started relatively quickly on building an army to take out either red or purple and steal their resources. It's easier to take out purple first, as the red base is on higher ground behind some ramps that both Archons and Reavers can't navigate well. Purple is easiest to approach from the south (go east from your base, destroy a Barracks and Missile Turret, go down a ramp, and proceed north along the eastern edge of the map); approaching from the north is dangerous because they have multiple bunkers and Siege Tanks, but if you come in from the relatively undefended south you'll force their Siege Tanks to move and you can take them out more easily. Do not empty out your main base entirely while attacking purple, because red will occasionally send a Battlecruiser at your base. Once you destroy the purple base and release Mojo (a Scout) from the Statis Cell, you can build a new Nexus and start harvesting some much-needed resources (if you like, you could mind-control an SCV during the attack and set up a Terran base here – it's not really necessary, though, since you would have to climb the whole Terran tech tree, and in any case you don't need much more power to take out the red base). You probably don't even need a whole lot of defenses here; red more or less leaves this base alone, and the few units that do stray in are taken care of by your attack force that's sitting around here. | ||
After replacing your fallen units and doing whatever else you like here, you can proceed west from your new base, across a gravelly bridge to the northwest, and take out the red base using whatever tactics you prefer. By this point red should be pretty quiet; once you get through the bunkers across the bridge, red will have precious few units in the base to welcome you. The base falls pretty easily, and you can destroy the Statis Cell in the northwest corner of the map. You don't need to destroy everything; once the Statis Cell is razed, the mission will end. | |||
==Mission 3B: The Final Blow== | ==Mission 3B: The Final Blow== | ||
{{sidebar|title=Note|width=300px|contents=As mentioned in the introduction, the strategy here is not possible if you play the mission as it was originally intended, without Brood War units and thus without Dark Archons. If you are a purist, the best strategy is probably to build more Siege Tanks in place of your Dark Archons in the early portion of the mission | {{sidebar|title=Note|width=300px|contents=As mentioned in the introduction, the strategy here is not possible if you play the mission as it was originally intended, without Brood War units and thus without Dark Archons. If you are a purist, the best strategy is probably to build more Siege Tanks in place of your Dark Archons in the early portion of the mission. While Mind Control is a nice way to deal with Torrasques, it certainly isn't the only way – indeed, even with Mind Control, sometimes the Siege Tanks you have are enough to kill a Torrasque before you can steal it, so they can be handled without Dark Archons (you just won't be able to build your own army of them). In the latter half of the mission, when the big problem is Battlecruisers, building lots of strong anti-air units (Goliaths, Scouts, or even the Archons that you probably will have built a ton of anyway) and Missile Turrets will probably do the trick. Carriers are not great against Battlecruisers, so don't rely on them alone.}} | ||
This is a hell of a mission; if you didn't think the Enslavers campaign was insane, this is the mission that will change your mind. First of all, the enemy attacks begin sooner and are bigger and more frequent; you'll be spending as much time rebuilding your base as anything else. And if that's not enough, you'll once again have to face Torrasques (the souped-up Ultralisks who terrorized you in the final Terran mission of [[StarCraft: Brood War|Brood War]]). But the Torrasques in this mission will make the Brood War ones look like frail grandma Torrasques. There, you had several minutes in between attacks, and it took the Torrasque a long time to travel from his base to yours; here, it is regenerated almost immediately after you kill it, and its base is relatively close, meaning that you will pretty much have a Torrasque at your front door all the time. On the positive side, since you play this mission with an allied Terran/Protoss force, you have | This is a hell of a mission; if you didn't think the Enslavers campaign was insane, this is the mission that will change your mind. First of all, the enemy attacks begin sooner and are bigger and more frequent; you'll be spending as much time rebuilding your base as anything else. And if that's not enough, you'll once again have to face Torrasques (the souped-up Ultralisks who terrorized you in the final Terran mission of [[StarCraft: Brood War|Brood War]]). But the Torrasques in this mission will make the Brood War ones look like frail grandma Torrasques. There, you had several minutes in between attacks, and it took the Torrasque a long time to travel from his base to yours; here, it is regenerated almost immediately after you kill it, and its base is relatively close, meaning that you will pretty much have a Torrasque at your front door all the time. On the positive side, since you play this mission with an allied Terran/Protoss force, you have one advantage you didn't have when you faced them in Brood War: you have Dark Archons and their mind control ability. | ||
With that in mind, your most urgent task in this mission (after beefing up your perimeter of Photon Cannons and deploying a couple Siege Tanks, of course) is to research | With that in mind, your most urgent task in this mission (after beefing up your perimeter of Photon Cannons and deploying a couple Siege Tanks, of course) is to research mind control and get a few Dark Archons building. Unlike the previous missions, this time you actually have the fortune of starting with a rather well-developed base, so you should be able to have Dark Archons before long. Don't just build one; the Torrasques come much faster than your Dark Archons regenerate their energy, so you will need at least three to keep up. Researching their energy upgrade will also help. Position an Observer northeast of your camp, along the path that the Torrasques take, so you can spot them early and have a Dark Archon ready in time; hopefully you can mind control it before your Siege Tanks hurt it too much. Proceeding in this way – building up your defenses and creating an attack force while mind controlling the Torrasques that attack you – should allow you to stay relatively safe, and build up a free army of souped-up Zerg. The base you start in has bountiful resources, so the need to expand is not as urgent as it was in other missions. In this early part of the game, the most important thing is being alert and multi-tasking well, as you will need to build lots of things and defend lots of entrances at once. The Zerg will be sending forays constantly into the northern entrances to your base, and the Terrans will attack along the bottom of the map, sometimes with Siege Tanks; both enemies will occasionally fly over the cliffs behind your base, in the northwest, so you'll want defenses there as well. Don't hesitate to use your heroes in defense, especially if your defenses aren't built up well yet; they're all expendable (you don't lose the mission if they die), and their beefed-up stats can significantly tip the scale of early battles, whereas in the later part of the game it's not such a big deal anymore – thus, you might as well put them to good use while you still can. One final point: make sure you have Observers a ways in front of every entrance to your base. The Terrans will start trying to nuke you not very long into the mission, and if you skimped out and only have one Observer then you don't have much chance of finding the Ghost before the nuke falls. So, it's crucial to have Observers and Siege Tanks at every entrance, especially the southern one (which is closest to Schezar's camp). | ||
Eventually you will want to destroy the | Eventually you will want to destroy the yellow Cerebrate and stop the Torrasques from bugging you (although you can wait until you've accumulated a dozen or so of them for yourself). You can construct whatever units you like; although Archons (since the base has two vespene geysers and you'll be burning through minerals rebuilding your defenses, you should have a surplus of vespene gas) and Siege Tanks (they do the same job as Reavers, but cheaper) are recommended. A dozen of each, plus your Dark Archons, should be sufficient to take out the Cerebrate. Send them out the northwest of your camp and up the path; you will have to take out a cluster of Sunken Colonies and a bunch of units before turning west across a bridge to head for the Cerebrate. For now, just focus on getting the Cerebrate and don't worry about finishing off the other bases closer to you; you don't want to have to deal with Torrasques at your front door while your main force is off attacking other bases. Once you cross the bridge, head west across an empty area and you will eventually hit the camp where the Cerebrate is; it will be a long and messy fight before you reach the Cerebrate itself. And because the Torrasque respawns so quickly, you will probably have to fight it several times within this base – each time you deal with it, it'll respawn again before you've made much progress. Hence the need to bring your Dark Archons along. | ||
Once this base is razed, you should set up a new base on its ruins; keep your army and your Dark Archons there for defense, as Schezar will start to hit you pretty hard now that his Cerebrate is dead. Build a Protoss base here rather than Terran, since a single probe can construct everything rather quickly. (Or, if you're feeling adventurous, you could have mind controlled a Zerg drone during your attack and then build a Zerg base here – you'd have to climb a whole new tech tree, which is a pain, but then you'd have used all three races.) Just southeast of this position is | Once this base is razed, you should set up a new base on its ruins; keep your army and your Dark Archons there for defense, as Schezar will start to hit you pretty hard now that his Cerebrate is dead. Build a Protoss base here rather than Terran, since a single probe can construct everything rather quickly. (Or, if you're feeling adventurous, you could have mind controlled a Zerg drone during your attack and then build a Zerg base here – you'd have to climb a whole new tech tree, which is a pain, but then you'd have used all three races.) Just southeast of this position is an undefended mineral patch; there is no gas there, but an extra mineral source is nice, especially if you want to build a circle of Photon Cannons three layers thick around all your bases. This mineral patch is so close to your new base that units like Archons can run between the two quickly and thus defend both of them relatively well. That doesn't mean you should skimp on defenses at either base, it just means you can spread your forces thin for a few minutes while you're hurrying to set up. And again, keeping Observers and Siege Tanks ready applies here as well – the Terrans will often come across the bridge and try to nuke you. Your mineral base nearby will often get attacked by air, so keep plenty of air units and cannons around it. | ||
With the Cerebrate gone, the tempo of the mission changes; now it's simply a matter of staying alive through bigger and bigger attacks, while building up a few armies to take out Schezar's camp. The Zerg are not a big threat anymore – they will still attack you with little forays, but nothing that's likely to wipe out any of your bases. Between your three bases you probably have all the resources you need, but you are welcome to destroy the Zerg if you wish; they have a small base just outside your original base (you destroyed part of it when you crossed the bridge to get the Cerebrate), another base just beyond there in the northwest corner, and a final base in the lower center of the map, directly west of your original base's southernmost exit. That final base, even if you don't need the resources, can be a nice staging point for your later attacks since it's right at Schezar's front door, and if you still have a dozen or so Torrasques you can take them and destroy this little base almost single-handedly with them (along with some backup to deal with air units). | With the Cerebrate gone, the tempo of the mission changes; now it's simply a matter of staying alive through bigger and bigger attacks, while building up a few armies to take out Schezar's camp. The Zerg are not a big threat anymore – they will still attack you with little forays, but nothing that's likely to wipe out any of your bases. Between your three bases you probably have all the resources you need, but you are welcome to destroy the Zerg if you wish; they have a small base just outside your original base (you destroyed part of it when you crossed the bridge to get the Cerebrate), another base just beyond there in the northwest corner, and a final base in the lower center of the map, directly west of your original base's southernmost exit. That final base, even if you don't need the resources, can be a nice staging point for your later attacks since it's right at Schezar's front door, and if you still have a dozen or so Torrasques you can take them and destroy this little base almost single-handedly with them (along with some backup to deal with air units). | ||
As for building up an army, make Carriers and build a few Stargates to do so, or use anything you want. Schezar's attacks, which get bigger and bigger as the mission wears on, will include two or three Battlecruisers each time; just like the Torrasques, you can mind control these and build up a free army. You can cross into Schezar's base on the eastern side of the map whenever you feel ready. On the safe side, have five groups of 10–12 units each: a group of Archons, one of Siege Tanks, one of Torrasques, one of Carriers, and one of Battlecruisers. Bring the Torrasques and Carriers in from the south, the Battlecruisers in from the east, and the Archons and Siege Tanks in from the north. This ends up being overkill: after using up all his resources and units attacking | As for building up an army, make Carriers and build a few Stargates to do so, or use anything you want. Schezar's attacks, which get bigger and bigger as the mission wears on, will include two or three Battlecruisers each time; just like the Torrasques, you can mind control these and build up a free army. You can cross into Schezar's base on the eastern side of the map whenever you feel ready. On the safe side, have five groups of 10–12 units each: a group of Archons, one of Siege Tanks, one of Torrasques, one of Carriers, and one of Battlecruisers. Bring the Torrasques and Carriers in from the south, the Battlecruisers in from the east, and the Archons and Siege Tanks in from the north. This ends up being overkill: after using up all his resources and units attacking me, there won't actually be much resistance within Schezar's base, and in fact you'll find his base less challenging than Mengsk's bases on Korhal in Brood War (specifically, Schezar does not have so many Ghosts around to lock down your mechanical units). There are spider mines (so bring Observers), and a few units here and there, but nothing serious, so you probably won't need five whole groups. In any case, you'll end up mercilessly destroying his base at the end. | ||
Once you destroy all the Terran buildings (this will take a while, it's quite a large base), you will have won the mission, and the Enslavers campaign. Schezar himself didn't turn up – that's what [[../Enslavers II/]] is for. | Once you destroy all the Terran buildings (this will take a while, it's quite a large base), you will have won the mission, and the Enslavers campaign. Schezar himself didn't turn up – that's what [[../Enslavers II/]] is for. | ||
==Mission 3A: Assault on Aiur== | ==Mission 3A: Assault on Aiur== | ||
{{sidebar|title=Note|width=300px|contents=This mission covers the non-canonical storyline. You can access it by destroying the Cerebrate in [[#Mission 2A: Playing with Fire|Mission 2A]], instead of rescuing the Protoss. Or you can access it whenever you want through the Play Custom menu.}} | {{sidebar|title=Note|width=300px|contents=This mission covers the non-canonical storyline. You can access it by destroying the Cerebrate in [[#Mission 2A: Playing with Fire|Mission 2A]], instead of rescuing the Protoss. Or you can access it whenever you want through the Play Custom menu.}} | ||
This mission occurs on the same map as the canonical [[#Mission 3B: The Final Blow|final mission]]. The difference is that you control a Terran-only force, instead of an allied Terran-Protoss force, and you fight Protoss and Terrans instead of Zerg and Terrans. Finally, because there are no Torrasques to deal with, it feels a good deal easier | This mission occurs on the same map as the canonical [[#Mission 3B: The Final Blow|final mission]]. The difference is that you control a Terran-only force, instead of an allied Terran-Protoss force, and you fight Protoss and Terrans instead of Zerg and Terrans. Finally, because there are no Torrasques to deal with, it feels a good deal easier. | ||
Your two objectives are | Your two objectives are | ||
# Destroy the Protoss Temple. | # Destroy the Protoss Temple. | ||
# Destroy all of Schezar's buildings ( | # Destroy all of Schezar's buildings (the red base that takes up the eastern half of the map). | ||
Like in The Final Blow, you'll probably do the first objective on the way to the second. Once you destroy the Protoss Temple, the Protoss will no longer be able to produce units and thus will be effectively out of the game. So in the beginning of the mission you should focus on building up defenses and preparing something to take out the Temple with. | Like in The Final Blow, you'll probably do the first objective on the way to the second. Once you destroy the Protoss Temple, the Protoss will no longer be able to produce units and thus will be effectively out of the game. So in the beginning of the mission you should focus on building up defenses and preparing something to take out the Temple with. | ||
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For your defenses once all the bases are set up, put as many Siege Tanks and Goliaths as you can in the north-central base, along with a few Missile Turrets and the Science Vessel hero (Schezar tries to use nukes a couple times); in your original base, keep your usual setup of three or four Siege Tanks and two Bunkers at each of the central and southern entrances. Let your Battlecruisers roam around the map, because they are quite helpful in destroying Siege Tanks before they can reach your bases – since Battlecruisers are so slow, keep them more or less in the middle of the map so they can get to any base more quickly. If you can eliminate the Brown base in the south-central part of the map (directly east of your original base), your defensive job will get much easier. Once you have sufficient forces, the brown base can go down pretty easily to Battlecruisers, Siege Tanks, and a couple judiciously placed nukes. | For your defenses once all the bases are set up, put as many Siege Tanks and Goliaths as you can in the north-central base, along with a few Missile Turrets and the Science Vessel hero (Schezar tries to use nukes a couple times); in your original base, keep your usual setup of three or four Siege Tanks and two Bunkers at each of the central and southern entrances. Let your Battlecruisers roam around the map, because they are quite helpful in destroying Siege Tanks before they can reach your bases – since Battlecruisers are so slow, keep them more or less in the middle of the map so they can get to any base more quickly. If you can eliminate the Brown base in the south-central part of the map (directly east of your original base), your defensive job will get much easier. Once you have sufficient forces, the brown base can go down pretty easily to Battlecruisers, Siege Tanks, and a couple judiciously placed nukes. | ||
With bases and defenses set up, the mission becomes simply one of attrition. Schezar's forces will hit you with a couple hard attacks, particularly in your north-central base (Siege Tanks, Battlecruisers that like to use Yamato | With bases and defenses set up, the mission becomes simply one of attrition. Schezar's forces will hit you with a couple hard attacks, particularly in your north-central base (Siege Tanks, Battlecruisers that like to use Yamato Cannon on your Battlecruisers, and Ghosts that like to use Lockdown on anything they see), but once you survive a couple of these he'll pretty much start idling. While you're defending, you can also build up your attack force. You can beat the mission with three groups: Battlecruisers, Siege Tanks, and Goliaths, with each group as close to 12 as possible. (If you hit the psi limit, you can empty out some of your unused Bunkers in the northern part of your original base and kill those Marines or send them on a kamikaze mission.) With those troops ready, you can go and enter Schezar's base through the opening in its southwest wall – it's a good idea to send your Battlecruisers in first to take out the Siege Tanks stationed all along the walls. | ||
Once you're at the front door of Schezar's base, the mission is pretty much over. Your forces will overwhelm him, and most of his troops will die defending that front door – after the initial battle, his base will be nearly empty. He probably won't have any Spider Mines around the perimeter of his base like he did in The Final Blow, although he seems to have more Ghosts. Once into his base, you just need to go around and destroy all the buildings, which takes a while. If you're having a hard time finding them all, you may have missed a pair of Command Centers | Once you're at the front door of Schezar's base, the mission is pretty much over. Your forces will overwhelm him, and most of his troops will die defending that front door – after the initial battle, his base will be nearly empty. He probably won't have any Spider Mines around the perimeter of his base like he did in The Final Blow, although he seems to have more Ghosts. Once into his base, you just need to go around and destroy all the buildings, which takes a while. If you're having a hard time finding them all, you may have missed a pair of Command Centers secreted away in the northeast part of the base, or a Barracks surrounded by Missile Turrets south of the base and a bit outside the main wall. | ||
Once all the red | Once all the red buildings are destroyed, victory is yours. | ||
{{Footer Nav|game=StarCraft|prevpage=Starcraft Campaign Editor|nextpage=Enslavers II}} | {{Footer Nav|game=StarCraft|prevpage=Starcraft Campaign Editor|nextpage=Enslavers II}} |