

Especially now, when tier 8 ships regularly end up against tiers 9 and 10, the effectiveness of that investment becomes somewhat devalued as a result. Especially when you are still learning.īuying a high tier premium ships is most ill advisable, even more so for a beginning player.

You might think that "bigs ships = big fun", but that's arguably not the case. As you can see, getting the Missouri is either very time-, or money consuming, or a little bit of both.Ĭhances are, you'll reach the Iowa sooner, and that would be a good enough substitution if you do not care about printing a disgusting amount of in-game credits with the Missouri.īut probably the best advice is seriously the above mentioned one: Don't think about high-tier premium ships until you don't get enough experience in lower tiers. The other possibility is of course simply waiting long enough to gain - and not spend on something/anything else - enough free XP so you don't need to rely on conversion. Do note though that you still have to have enough XP to convert on elite, standard tech tree ships, you can't profit from "unfinished" ships. You can do the math if this is worth it for you. This means that you can use the XP of your maxed out ships for something useful, but you have to pay for it. Later on you can, however, convert your elite ships' (ships on which you researched all modules and the subsequent ships) experience into free XP by investing doubloons. buy it for doubloons, read: for real money. Missouri is a special premium ship, because you can't - directly.

Please note that being able to collect free XP is probably linked to a specific account level, so at this point you might not even see this possibility in your game. For every battle, your ships gain experience (the silver stars), and 5% of this amount goes into the "free experience" pool (golden stars).
