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<under construction>

Weather typeDescriptionCaused byEffects
Haze

Obscuration

Light atmospheric dust

  
Dust

Obscuration

Denser, often abrasive, atmospheric dust

 

Hover: 5% speed penalty

VTOL: 10% speed penalty

Mist

Obscuration

Impairs visibility

Light fog reducing visibility to 1 – 3km

 

Visibility reduced, but still above 1km, at low altitudes.

Fog

Obscuration

Dense fog reducing visibility to 0.1 – 1km.

 

Significantly impairs visibility to less than 1km, sometimes down to lower than 180m, at low and medium altitudes.

Hover: 5% speed penalty

VTOL: 5% speed penalty

Drizzle

Precipitation

Water droplets below 0.5mm diameter, almost mist-like.

St, Sc str opVTOL: 1% speed penalty
Rain

Precipitation

Water droplets above 0.5mm diameter.

As, Ns, Ac flo, Ac cas, Cu con, Cb

Ice from Ci or Cs may trigger rain formation in lower clouds.

VTOL: 5% speed penalty

Wheeled: 5% speed penalty

Halt-tracks: 2% speed penalty

Burn duration reduced by 25%

LightningElectrical discharge between earth and clouds (fork lightning), or between or within clouds (sheet lightning).Cb, Ac flo, Ac cas

Inflicts thermal damage if it hits a building, VTOL or hovercraft.

Inflicts EMP damage if it hits any other propulsion type.

Sensor range reduced by 10%

Disables minimap for 3 seconds if it hits HQ.

Snow

Precipitation

Clusters of ice crystals.

As, Ns, Sc str op, Cb

Burn damage reduced by 25%

VTOL: 2% penalty

Wheeled: 10% penalty

Half-tracks: 2% penalty

Blizzard

Precipitation

Dense snowfall often with gusty winds.

Significantly reduces visibility.

As, Ns, Sc str op, Cb

ROF reduced by 10%

Burn duration reduced by 10%

Burn damage reduced by 25%

Hailstone

Precipitation

Solid lumps of ice.

Cb, Ac flo, Ac casBurn damage reduced by 10%

Other types of precipitation not implemented (and do not intend to implement):

  • Diamond dust – minute ice crystals that only occur under very cold and frigid conditions.
  • Freezing rain – rain tat freezes on impact to create a shiny glaze.
  • Ice pellets – clear ice, below 5mm (frozen raindrops)
  • Sleet – melting snowflakes or a mixture of snow and rain
  • Small hail – snow pellets with a thin ice coating
  • Snow grains – opaque, flattened ice grains below 1mm diameter
  • Snow pellets – opaque ice grains between 2 – 5mm

Fog

"A summer fog for fair,
A winter fog for rain.
A fact most everywhere,
In valley or on plain."

Fog is formed when the air cools enough that the vapor pressure encourages condensation over evaporation. In order for the air to be cool on a summer night, the sky must be clear, so excess heat can be radiated into space. Cloudy skies act like a blanket, absorbing and reradiating the heat, keeping it in. So if it is cool enough (and clear enough) for fog to form, it will probably be clear the next day. Winter fog is the result of two entirely different circumstances. Above the ocean or a large lake, air is typically more humid than above land. When the humid air moves over cold land, it will form fog and precipitation. (To the east of the North American Great Lakes, this is a common phenomenon, and is known as the "lake effect"). In northerly climates, ice fog may form when the temperature drops substantially below freezing. It is almost exclusively an urban phenomenon, when the air is so cold that any vapor pressure results in condensation, and additional vapor emitted by automobiles, household furnaces, and industrial plants simply accumulates as fog.