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Published on February 4, 2008 By Zoomba In Sins Modding

Download the Galaxy Forge Tool

Introduction

Note: Download the example map that accompanies this tutorial here.

Sins of a Solar Empire is an incredibly robust RT4X strategy game that allows you to grow your empire and conquer the galaxy. Games can last hours, weeks or even months. To start you off, Sins comes with dozens of pre-built maps, 3 sizes of randomized maps and a sophisticated in-game map generator that lets you define virtually every aspect of a map. Set your preferred planets, stars, distances etc and have the game automatically generate a map based on your choices. You can even share and distribute the map to friends, either via the Sins of a Solar Empire site, or directly in online multiplayer matches.

Unfortunately, the in-game designer doesn't give you complete control. You can't choose, for example, where you want a planet to be placed, or what you want it to connect to. You can't set how many militia forces are stationed there, or whether or not it's a homeworld, or if it's a pirate base. If you want to hand-craft your map, the in-game tools won't meet your needs.

Galaxy Forge is the answer to that problem. Part of the Forge Tools suite used by Ironclad Games to develop content for Sins of a Solar Empire, Galaxy Forge is a map editor tool that allows you to place stars, planets, travel lanes and more. You can build a map to your exact specifications. Do you want a multistar map with strategic choke points and no pirate base? No problem, just create it in Galaxy Forge and load it in the game. Galaxy Forge is a WYSIWYG editor, so placing planets, phase lanes, stars and more is as easy as a few clicks of the mouse.

While Galaxy Forge is incredibly easy to use for the amount of control it gives you, it's not fully an end-user-friendly tool. So, to get everyone up to speed as quickly as possible creating great maps to share with the community, I've created this short guide to building a complete map from start to finish..

WARNING: The editor has no undo feature, so be careful when you move elements or make any changes. Save early and often to make sure you don't accidentally delete something you've spent hours tweaking and customizing.

Getting Started with Galaxy Forge

Galaxy Forge is a stand-alone tool that does not use the main game to run. So you can install this on virtually any machine, even that old Pentium III you have stashed in the closet.

To start, make sure you have the Galaxy Forge tool downloaded to your PC. You can get a copy of the tools from the Sins of a Solar Empire website on the Downloads Page.

imageOnce you've downloaded and extracted the tool, open up Galaxy Forge.exe. You will be greeted by the following screen (pictured right). When you start the Galaxy Forge tool, you begin with a default map already setup with the following:

  • One Star set to random color
  • Two terran home planets
  • Two default players (NewPlayer0 and NewPlayer1)

Before you get started adding planets, phase lanes and more stars, you probably want to decide if this is going to be a 2,4,6,8 or 10 player map.

To modify the number of players in your game, go to the Edit menu and select "Players..."

image

imageThat will open up the Player editor tool. On a new map, you already have NewPlayer0 and NewPlayer1. Even if you want to make a two player map, you'll probably still want to edit the names of the players. Select a player from the left, and all of their editable options will appear in the box on the right.

For this simple guide, we'll focus on the following options:

  • Design Name - Name your race. This will be how the race is referenced in the editor only.
  • InGameName - The name of the race as displayed in-game if it belongs to the AI
  • StartingCredits - How many credits the player starts the game with.
  • StartingCrystal - How much crystal the player starts the game with.
  • StartingMetal - How much metal the player starts the game with.
I am going to stick with a simple two player map, and name the first player "Alcari Crusaders" and the second player "Vor Syndicate" and I'll leave them both with the default starting resources.

Naming Your Map & Filling in The Details

Now that you have a new map with your starting players setup, lets start to configure the big-picture details for the map. Click somewhere in the black space of the map to bring up the galaxy details in the settings panel on the right. imageThis is where you'll make some default changes about your map and how the editor works. Defaults These are basic settings for new planets, players and stars that are added to the map.

  • New Planet Type - The default planet type for any new planet you add to the map.
  • New Player Starting Credits/Metal/Crystal - The starting resources assigned when you add a new player to the map.
  • New Star Radius - The radius of any new star system added to the map

I'm going to leave these as my defaults for this tutorial map. Display The options for how the map is displayed in the map selection screen within Sins of a Solar Empire.

  • Browse Description - Description of your map. Put a line or two about the map, lore etc. This is the creative description players will read in the map browser.
  • Browse Picture - The icon associated with your designed map in the map browser. This image should be a .tga file and placed in the Textures directory where you installed Sins of a Solar Empire.

For my tutorial map, I'm going to use the description "An example map created to go along with the Galaxy Forge guide"

For Browse Picture, I'm going to be lazy and just take one of the existing scenario images and reuse that. In this case I'll use: ScenarioPicture-Fulcrum (found in \Textures\ScenarioPicture-Fulcrum.tga)

Edit

These are settings to edit how the editor works with scrolling and zooming and shows your current zoom level. These settings will not impact the map itself.

Galaxy

These are some overall game settings for your map. They will impact how the game plays.

  • Is First Capital Ship Free - Sets whether or not the first capital ship is free for players to purchase.
  • Planet Artifact Density - Value 0-100. Controls what percentage of planets will have artifacts on them.
  • Planet Bonus Density - Value 0-100. Controls what percentage of planets will have bonuses on them
  • Players - How many players have been added to the map (this number is based off of the Player editor)
  • Recommended Players - Set what kind of game(s) the map is best suited for (i.e. solo, 2v2, 4v4, FFA etc.)
  • Scale - Controls how big the galaxy is. Large values will spread out your galaxy more.

imageTo set the Recommended Players, click on the field, and you'll see a [...] button on the right. Click on that to bring up the Galaxy Scenario Game Type window.

By default, this is empty. Click "Add" and a new game type will be added. By default it's set to "Solo". However, if you select the item from the left, on the right you can change the type from a drop-down menu.

You can add multiple types if you have a large map you feel would work well for multiple configurations of players. A map designed for 10 players for example could be set for Solo, FFA, 5v5, 2v2v2v2v2 to fill all spots.

For the tutorial map, I think I'll leave the first capital ship as free, but bump up the % of planets with artifacts from the default 15 to 50 (I want this to be a rich map), but I'll leave the bonus density alone. I'm also going to designate my map as a solo only map since it's just two players.

Home Planet

These are the default settings for any planet you designate as a homeworld in your game. Setting any of these to 10 locks it, preventing the player from upgrading it further.

  • Exploration - How much of the planet has been explored. You explore planets to discover artifacts and planet bonuses.
  • Infrastructure - How much infrastructure the planet starts with. Building this up helps defend your planet against bombardment
  • Logistical - How much logistical infrastructure the planet starts with. Logistics limit the number of orbital structures you can place around a planet.
  • Population - How much population support your planet starts with. This limits how many people can live on a planet.
  • Tactical - How much tactical infrastructure your planet starts with. This limits the number of defense placements you can build around a planet.

For the tutorial map, I'm going to leave these alone. Ok, we have successfully configured all the meta details for our map. We've set description, picture, game type and messed with the distribution of artifacts. Now that all of the fluff details are out of the way, it's time to get down to the business of making the map!

Making the Map: Adding Planets, Stars and Phase Lanes

Ok, now for the fun part, actually drawing out the game map! For this part you'll be focusing almost exclusively on the map window, instead of the details window like the previous section. Here you'll place, move and connect up all the planets and stars you want to add to your map.

To start, lets look at our map as it stands

image

We have one star, two home worlds on opposite ends of the system, and that's it. There isn't even a phase lane connecting anything so if you loaded this map right now, you wouldn't be able to travel anywhere. The planets were auto-assigned to the two players we edited earlier.

Before we get started editing the map, there are a few controls that will make life much easier when trying to move around the map:

  • Panning The Map - Hold the middle mouse button and drag in any direction.
  • Zooming in and out - Scroll Wheel. When zooming in, it will center on wherever your mouse cursor is.
Now that that's out of the way, lets add a planet! There are two ways to do this:
  1. Double-click anywhere within the radius of the star
  2. Right-click anywhere within the radius of the star and select "Add Planet"

The planet added will have the default settings you defined when you were tweaking the overall map settings. So for this tutorial, it will auto-place a Terran planet.

I'm going to place a handful of planets around the map....

image

So now that I have all of my planets laid out approximately where I want them, it's time to connect them all together. To do this, right click on any planet, select "Add Connection" and then left click on the planet you want to connect with. Now let me connect up all of my planets...

image

At this point I have a fully functional game map. I could save this, load it up in the game and play it, but it would be a little bit boring considering all I have are Terran type planets, no pirates and just one other player to fight.

Editing Planets, Stars & Making Things Interesting

Every planet object on my map right now are terran planets with nothing special about them. We also have a star with the color set to random. Oh, and we haven't named a single planet, the star, or anything. Sure it's a technically complete map, but it just doesn't feel right. Here's a snapshot of the map loaded in the game:

image

The game will automatically name planets and stars you don't name, so technically you don't have to worry about that detail, but there's a lot more you probably want to tweak and fiddle with.

First off, having a few dozen Terran planets just doesn't look right. This is space, and habitable M class worlds are supposed to be rare right? Well, lets change things up a bit. To start with, we'll select the planet directly below the Vor Syndicate's home world. image

For editing the planet, you're going to be focusing on the details panel again.

Advanced

  • SpawnProbability - The chance that a planet exists in the game. 1 means always, 0 means never. You can set the value between the two for a % chance.
  • StartingUpgradeForArtifact - Controls what level of artifact upgrade the planet starts with
  • Starting UpgradeForCivilianModules - Controls what level of civilian module upgrade the planet starts with
  • StartingUpgradeForPopulation - Controls what level of population upgrade the planet starts with
  • StartingUpgradeForTacticalModules - Controls what level of tactical module upgrade the planet starts with.
Items
  • UseDefaultTemplate - Do you want to use the predefined planet template for this planet? This just gives you the standard structures and resources if it's an owned world, or if it's an empty planet occupied by militia.
Misc
  • Position - The X,Y coordinates of the planet on your map. Only edit these if you want very precise planet placement.
Name
  • Design Name - The name of the planet as displayed in the Galaxy Forge
  • InGame Name - What you want the planet to be named in the game.
Ownership
  • IsHomePlanet - Is this a homeworld?
  • Owner - Which player owns the planet at the start of the game.
Properties
  • Type - What type of planet do you want this to be? Terran, Ice, Gas Giant etc.
For a quick-and-dirty map, the only field you really have to play with is "Type" in the properties section. From there you can select any standard planet type programmed into the game. I will now go around my map, changing up the planet types to give me a slightly more interesting map to play on.

image

I now have a map with volcanic, ice, desert and terran planets. Various asteroids, Plasma & Magentic Storms, even a Pirate Base. This map pretty much covers everything and if you want to just do the basics to build a map that is playable with default settings, you're done. Just save the file and hand it out to your friends, or upload it to the Sins of a Solar Empire website for everyone to download.

There's a lot more under the covers that you can play with and tweak, but this guide was just meant to get your feet wet and familiarize you with the basic, bare-minimum steps needed to make a map.

And always remember you can open any map that comes with the game in Galaxy Forge to see exactly how Ironclad built each of the maps, what special options they used etc. It's perfectly alright to borrow heavily from great maps when you're trying to figure out how to get a planet to start with a specific artifact, or to give players a quick start by giving them a handful of ships to start out with.

If you have any more questions, be sure to visit the Sins of a Solar Empire Modding Forums. Players and developers alike will hopefully be able to answer any question you might have.

FAQ

Like with every mod tool, there are a handful of "gotchas" or places that aren't quite clear enough.  As people encounter problems/ask for help, we'll update this FAQ section with questions and answers we think everyone should know about when using the Galaxy Forge.

  1. I tried to load the map in my game, but I immediately get a victory/defeat screen after loading.  What's going on?
    Make sure you save the galaxy file in the Galaxy folder wherever you installed Sins of a Solar Empire (i.e. c:\Program Files\Stardock Games\Sins of a Solar Empire\Galaxy).  Do NOT save it in your local settings/app data directory.  Maps created with Galaxy forge will not load properly from that folder.

Comments (Page 12)
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on Mar 23, 2008
Hi there. I made a map with the galaxy forge, saved it in C:\Program Files\Stardock Games\Sins of a Solar Empire\Galaxy but it wouldn't show up on the lists. I have already changed the version number from 0 to 1. I saved the map under appdata's galaxy folder and it shows up on the list. But now everytime i try to play it, instant defeat screen... Anyone know what to do?
on Mar 23, 2008
I have the same problem, my map doesn't show on custom map list
on Mar 23, 2008
BTW, is there a full documentation for GalaxyForge tool available?

I'm badly missing some details of the beginer guide...

Thx in advance.
on Mar 23, 2008
For some reason, when I create a dual star map my ship will not jump to the second star. I've checked the .galaxy file and I don't see anything out of the ordinary.

Here are some things that I've checked.

Both of my stars do not intersect (as in the radius).
I have no wormholes and have not edited the galaxy file manually (aside from the Version 0 to Version 1)
Interstarconnections 0 ;(This line seems fine compared to all of the other .galaxy files without wormhole or other interstar connections added manually.

What happens. My ship will head for the outer gravity well of the star (as expected) but then does a U-Turn and heads for the inner part of the well. It then begins to "bump" and continue "bumping" into the inner well of the sun.

Any Ideas as to why this would happen?
on Mar 23, 2008
removing double post
on Mar 24, 2008
Ok, I am having a problem with Galaxy Forge custom maps. I DO have the 1.03 version, I saved the galaxy under the correct directory "NOT the applications one", I went to change the version number from 0 to 1 but it was already at 1 so I left it alone, the map showed up just fine, but it crashed with a minidump error after I launched the map. I do have net 2.0, and version in my galaxy file is correct, I did everything right "that I'm well aware of" and still it crashed. Does anybody know whats wrong? I REALLLLLY want to play my custom map but its being mean to me.


[EDIT] HAHA I'm such a dumdum! Some of the planets in my galaxy required a mod that I "like and idiot" forgot to activate! So I set it to load the mod automatically when the game starts and now my map works great! But allas, with every solution comes another issue. I noticed that the player race names I desognated in Galaxy Forge did not show up. They just show up as the vanilla randomly generated names . Does anyone know what I have to do to get the custom race names to show up?
on Mar 24, 2008
I like the layout and available options. The standard game map designer isn't bad but doesn't offer the level of control this software does, good job.
on Mar 24, 2008
I would like to do some ship battle tests.

For example:

I may want to see how 100 Javelis LRM Frigates would do against 60 Illuminator Vessels.
Is it possible do this with Galaxy Forge?
on Mar 29, 2008
I can't get this to work I dont know why not.

Vista 64bit. I can load map with 2 planets and a start like default and play it. I can see it in the list, and no prob. When I try to make my own map, then I either get, victory or defeat in the beinning. If I try to play it some more, I see that there are pirates in the beginning stars. Not sure how I am supposed to tweak the map so I can actually play on it.

Help plz

JBD
on Mar 30, 2008
ATTN everyone who can't play their Custom maps built with GalaxyForge:

1. Save your new maps into the 'C:\Program Files\Stardock Games\Sins of a Solar Empire\Galaxy' folder.
2. Open the map you designed in the application Notepad.
3. In Notepad, change (Line 2): "versionNumber 0" to "versionNumber 1"
4. Play your map and have fun!
on Mar 31, 2008
I sall rule the Galaxy with this guide!
on Mar 31, 2008
I read a discussion earlier on about placing milita onto a planet. I admittedly didn't follow it all the way to the end and I'm not even sure if those posters are still following this thread but I just wanted to mention an experience I've been having. I mucked around with the templates in the galaxy forge a little bit, looking to make unoccupied planets with no milita. Somehow I ended up with planets owned by the pirates with 1 or 2 frigates defending it, it meant I had to lay siege to the planet to take it but I just didn't want an army of frigates to fight through, so for my purposes it was ok.

The only problem was that it seems the pirates could now start raids from any planet that was 'pirate' controlled. I took 2 out of the 3 planets that I knew to be controlled by the pirates before a pirate raid targetted me and suddenly their entire force appeared behind my lines from the third planet that they owned. I know they didn't just fly there because there was only 1 entrance to my system of planets and I owned it. They weren't even created at the planet they appeared from because when I went there it didn't have any ship creation facilities, they must have just spawned in. This may have just been a little one off bug that I have but you might want to be careful with making planets 'pirate' owned.
on Apr 01, 2008
hey im not sure if this has been asked before but theres too many posts to look through and i dont have much time at the moment   

can the maps you make with galaxy forge work with the demo? i cant find the game anywhere over here in the uk yet ( and im getting a bit bored of the none pirate map (those pirates thrash me in the others   )

typical that my first post is in a map making topic     

on Apr 01, 2008
so i saved a game into the install directory (not the Local Dirc) and i cant not see the game at all once in Sins. if i put it in the Local Dirc, i can see it, but i get the insta-defeat. what am i doing wrong?
on Apr 02, 2008
How can I add artifacts to planets ???
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