Blob
Originally just a random event with notoriously bad AI, the Blob has been revamped extensively and carefully with new abilities and improved AI so that it actually posed a threat, and ultimately became a playable role and round type. The basis is simple: you are a blob that intends to have Space Station 13 as its next meal, and must expand over as much of it as you can, devouring and destroying everything in your path. But beware of the more robust members of the crew, as they will come at you with all the fire-based weaponry they can muster. Also, if you spawn anywhere even vaguely near space, you will be shot to pieces by a pod, so watch out for that.
Getting Started
In essence, playing as a blob is quite like playing an RTS (Real-Time Strategy) tower-defense game. When you first begin, you'll be the incorporeal Blob Overmind pictured at the upper-right of this page, with these commands on your HUD:
The Blob Overmind is functionally a Ghost: it can go wherever it wants, it can see and hear everything in its field of view and sees through walls, and it gets its own "Blobsay" chat channel to converse with any other blob players in the game. It can be moved with the directional keys or by left-clicking the tile you want to go to. But a ghost can't eat anything, so your first order of business is to pick a starting point with the Deploy command for the physical blob on the station. Choose carefully; your spawn location can easily make or break you! Remember that you cannot expand on space tiles, so picking secluded areas in the middle of nowhere will only end badly - make sure you at least have a path to the interior of the station!
Once you deploy, you'll be an itty-bitty Blob Nucleus surrounded by a sizable amount of blob tiles and special blob cells; letting the nucleus be destroyed means death for the blob, so protect it! At the beginning you'll be no bigger than a little splotch of blob, but given time and effort it will grow and cover the tiles around it. You'll also have these important bits of info on your Status tab:
- Bio Points: The points needed to use your abilities, showing how many points you have as well as your current maximum
- Generation Rate: How fast you accumulate Bio Points
- Blob Size: How many tiles the blob has covered
- Evo Points: The points needed for special upgrades
- Next Evo Point at size: How big you need to be to gain a free Evo Point, starts at 25 and increases by 25 each time the threshold is reached
- Living nuclei: How many nuclei you have remaining (letting this hit number zero means death!)
- Unplaced nuclei: How many extra nuclei you have earned, but haven't yet spawned
- Next Extra Nucleus at size: How big you need to be to spawn another nucleus, starts at 100 and increases by 100 each time the threshold is reached, maxes out at 5 extras
Your best bet when starting out is to completely consume the room you start in and work from there. As for what the blob can spread on, the options are plentiful, as there is very little that can get in the way of a growing blob; most objects such as doors and tables can be destroyed by attacking them, and walls and their girders will follow suit with the right upgrades.
Victory is attained either by simply surviving, or as the antagonist objective you're given, achieving and maintaining a blob size of 500 (i.e. big enough to field five nuclei). If it's a dedicated Blob round and all existing blobs have hit size 500 - "existing" meaning they no longer count if they are killed - then the round immediately ends in a blob victory. Let nothing stop you from being the biggest blob you can be!
Blob Abilities
The blob comes with a handful of special techniques to make your life easier and the lives of the crew harder. These are used by consuming "Bio Points" which the blob naturally generates; the bigger the blob is, the more Bio Points it can hold at once, but the slower it spreads. As for actually using the commands, there are two ways:
- The first method is to simply hover your Blob Overmind over the tile you want to interact with, then click the ability icon.
- The second method is to set a macro for a command, done by either using Shift+Click, Ctrl+Click or Alt+Click on the desired ability's icon; up to three commands can be set this way, one for each key, and they can be changed at will. Once set, <Key>+Click a tile on the screen to use the ability there.
Icon | Name | Bio Point Cost | Description |
---|---|---|---|
Spread | 2 Bio Points | Creates a new blob cell on a valid tile. Must be used on a tile adjacent to an existing blob cell. Note: When you first deploy you're given "starter help" that allows you to spread without cooldown until you reach a size of 40. You must contend with the cooldown afterward, though. | |
Attack | 1 Bio Point | Slimes up the target tile, in addition to making all the regular blob tiles on the screen lash out randomly. Special blob tiles cannot attack on their own and must be instructed manually by hovering the Blob Overmind beside them. | |
Consume | 10 Bio Points | Removes an existing blob tile, in case you made a mistake and converted it to the wrong cell type or something. | |
Repair | 1 Bio Point | Heals 20 HP to a damaged cell. Very important, as cells will not normally heal on their own. | |
Absorb | Free | Human or Monkey on top of one of your blob cells? Use this on him; if he can't get away in time, he'll be killed instantly and you'll gain Evo Points for the trouble! Note that unlike most cases you can freely spread the blob onto tiles occupied by players and NPCs. | |
Promote to Nucleus | 0 Bio Points | Converts a cell into an extra nucleus, effectively giving you an extra life. Nuclei are very durable, but require you to break a certain size threshold before you're allowed to create extras, with the requirement increasing each time. You can only get up to five extra nuclei total, so use them carefully! | |
Build Ribosome Cell | 5 Bio Points | Each one of these you have globally decreases your Spread cooldown, which is important because the bigger the blob is, the more cooldown it suffers. Note: The cooldown won't go below 1 second, though. | |
Build Lipid Cell | 5 Bio Points | A storage unit that contains 4 Bio Points separate from your counter. If you find that you don't have enough Bio Points to carry out a command, these can be consumed to make up the difference, leaving behind a damaged regular blob cell in the process. Nice to have for emergencies. | |
Build Mitochondira Cell | 5 Bio Points | Allows cells within 3 tiles of it to recover HP on their own. Works on a cycle system by restoring a certain amount of HP per tick, and recovers more with more mitochondria nearby. This doesn't make a cell invincible though, since it can still be destroyed in between regeneration cycles! | |
Build Thick Membrane Cell | 5 Bio Points | Basically the blob's walls, these have much, much more HP than regular blob cells. Perfect for blocking off blind spots you don't want people getting into. They also block the line of sight of other players. | |
Build Fire-resistant Membrane | 10 Bio Points | Your first line of defense against fire, these cells have heavy defense against heat and prevent flames and hotspots from spreading past them. Like thick membranes they block line of sight, however they have much less HP. | |
Devour Item | 3 Bio Points | This will digest an item on or adjacent to a blob cell - that is, handheld items that the blob doesn't normally destroy as it spreads. Useful for getting rid of weapons that other players drop. If the item was made out of a material of some sort, it will leave behind a "Material Deposit" that contains the materials devoured; or, if you devour something with reagents in it, it leaves behind a "Reagent Deposit" that contains the reagents and will go up in a plume of chemical smoke if destroyed or Consumed. Left-click on a deposit to see what it contains, and click-drag the deposit to move it around any of your regular blob cells. | |
Build Bridge | 15 Bio Points | Creates a synthetic blob flooring in space, giving you an extra tile to spread on. Prevents you from being totally stranded if you're surrounded by space tiles somehow. Note that blob floors are not actually part of the blob and do not contribute to your size, and must still be spread onto after placement. These tiles are also destructible by fire and heat-based weaponry. | |
Build Slime Launcher | 15 Bio Points | If a blob is like a tower-defense game, then these are your towers. Slime Launchers will fire weak projectiles at nearby players... or, if you have a reagent deposit, you can click-drag the deposit onto the launcher to use the reagents as ammo! Reagent-shots apply the TOUCH reaction of the reagent (if they have one) and also put a bit into their bloodstream, which can be pretty nasty if you can get your slimy non-hands on the right chemical. Per shot it will consume 2 Bio Points when fired without reagents, or 5 units from the loaded deposit until it depletes and resumes using Bio Points. | |
Build Plasmaphyll Cell | 30 Bio Points | Most players not using weldingtools will try to kill you with plasma fires. This tries to remove the threat by sucking any plasma out of the air to snuff those fires. This takes a point out of your Generation Rate to run, and returns it if destroyed. Devoured plasma becomes Bio Points! | |
Build Ectothermid Cell | 30 Bio Points | Negates heat over a small area in exchange for a gradual Bio Point cost. Like the Plasmaphyll, it takes a point of of your Generation Rate to run and returns it if lost. | |
Build Reflective Membrane Cell | 15 Bio Points | Energy projectiles can eat through blob cells fairly quickly due to their sheer damage output, and these devious cells are your answer to that; Reflective Membranes will bounce energy shots back in the direction they were shot from, giving them a taste of their own medicine. Also blocks line of sight. | |
Build Reclaimer | 4 Bio Points | These can only be built on reagent deposits, which it will then convert into Bio Points. Neat! Once the reagents are expended, the cell turns into a lipid. | |
Build Replicator | 4 Bio Points | Another thing that can only be built on a reagent deposit. This takes the highest volume reagent in the deposit and duplicates it by draining reagents from all of your other deposits, and reverts it back to a regular deposit when it's done. Perfect for if you happen upon powerful chemicals for your Slime Launchers! | |
Reinforce | 2 Bio Points | If you have a material deposit, its materials come out as little square chunks. You can then click-drag those square chunks onto a blob cell and use this ability, applying the material's stats to the blob cell of choice! You can apply materials to a cell more than once, mixing and matching them as you see fit - remember, different materials do different things! Consult the Mining page for more info. | |
Help | Free | Click this to turn on Help Mode any time, during which you can click a command or upgrade icon to see what it does and how much it costs. Click the Help icon again to exit Help Mode. |
Upgrades
Alas, for all the neat cells the blob has, the crew of Space Station 13 is a crafty lot that can surprise you with its murderous capabilities. And that's where these upgrades come in. These are activated by consuming "Evo Points"; rarer than Bio Points, you only get these at certain blob size thresholds or by pulling off a successful Absorb. These are meant to unlock special abilities and blob cells that increase your survivability; the ones you pick determine how you play.
Blob Weaknesses
Fortunately the blob doesn't have many weaknesses, but the few that it does have are things you absolutely must be aware of and be prepared for, or they will be your undoing.
- Fire. If a tile's temperature exceeds a certain threshold, you won't be able to spread on it, and enough fire or heat reaching a blobbed tile will instantly destroy the blob occupying it if you don't have the Fire Resistance upgrade. This is mostly encountered in the form of weldingtool-wielding and flamethrower-wielding crew members or plasma canisters, or bombs in extreme cases.
- Poison. There are a number of wacky and dangerous, toxic chemicals that wreak havoc with anything organic in Space Station 13, and the blob is no exception. Blob cells that get splashed/sprayed/smoked with poison will gain a grody green discoloration and gradually lose health. Radium is the most common of these chemicals, but some of the meaner Scientists will bring out nastier stuff like acid and sarin.
- Space. The rule of thumb when spreading as a blob is, "If you can see stars, you can't spread there." Unlike with heat the blob can exist on a space tile if its flooring is somehow destroyed while sparing the blob, but it still can't go anywhere without an acceptable adjacent tile to spread on. Blobs can create their own floor on a space tile to spread on, but this ability also comes with a long cooldown and is not helped by the floors being easy to destroy.
In addition, blobs are incredibly weakened by the loss of a nucleus. If the blob loses a regular blob tile, it's simply a biopoint wasted, a special tile, somewhere between 5-15 biopoints, but if it loses a nucleus, it loses all its Bio Points and Bio Point regeneration is halved for a short period of time, severely crippling its ability to attack and defend itself.
Tips & Strategies
- Think carefully about where you deploy. You're at your weakest when you're starting out, so you'll want a secluded area that will give you time to grow to a decent size yet won't be found by the crew immediately; the longer you can go without being discovered, the better. Or if you're feeling gutsy, try blocking off popular sources of welding fuel and plasma such as Toxins and Engineering.
There is one space-faring tile you can spread on, and that is the catwalk. If you're feeling bold, you can travel along the catwalks connecting the station, or even deploy in the Routing Depot for some peace and quiet while you slowly creep into the station from multiple entrance points.
- Don't go overboard with your cell improvements; regular blob cells are as important as improved ones since they do most of the attacking. 50% regular to 50% converted is a good ratio to follow.
- Try to force confrontations with the crew in choke-points like one-tile doorways or hallways. The less people are able to hammer away at you at the same time, the easier it is to fight them off. Do not allow yourself to be boxed in.
- Build lots of ribosomes. You will need them to combat the gradual slowing of the blob as it grows in size, and there are much better things to spend your Evo Points on than Quick Spread.
- Keep lots of lipids in a safe place for emergencies where you need to spend lots of Bio Points at once. They're very underestimated and could be your saving grace in a pinch!
- Only regular blob cells will randomly attack when the Attack command is used. To make special cells hit things, you need to use the Attack command beside it.
- Slime Launchers can't see or fire past any of the membrane cells (thick, fire-resistant, reflective)... but neither can the crew. It's hilarious to watch them tear down a thick membrane only to be met with five slime bullets to the face.
- It might be worth your while to look up Chemistry so you know what reagents to load into a Slime Launcher. Some are harmless, others are devastating.
- Save your fire-resistant membranes for when the crew actually discovers you. Spamming them before you're seen is pointless and a waste of cells you could convert into more useful things.
- Membranes and mitochondria go together like bread and butter. Stick them together in places that you really don't want the crew to reach, like your nucleus.
- Be aware of the locations of the station's welding fuel tanks and plasma canisters. If one isn't in its designated workplace, it's probably time to start spamming thick and fire-resistant membranes (and if you have them, plasmaphylls and ectothermids as necessary) because it's probably headed your way along with a small army of welders.
- Be very wary of Flamethrowers. These cobbled-together firearms are the blob's worst enemy and can cut entire chunks of cells out of you. Its handheld sprite looks like a longer weldingtool; if you see one headed for you, make damn sure you have Fire Resistance unlocked and crank out the fire-resistant membranes like an assembly line, then disarm the assailant of their flamethrower and digest it as fast as possible.
- If a human is up and able to run, don't try to spread under him right away. Instead, spread around him to box him in; this way you have more cells attacking him at once, and he has less chance of escaping when you spread under him to absorb him.
- Plasmaphylls and ectothermids are meant to be used together! Plasmaphylls will consume plasma fast but will die to a lit fire as easily as any other cell without the ectothermid's help, and while ectothermids can stop fire they'll eat away at your Bio Points frighteningly fast without plasmaphylls to replenish them. It can sometimes pay off to use ectothermids to prevent a non-plasma fire-bombing, but try to ensure you have a good buffer of Bio Points and Generation Rate first.
- Don't use Reflective Membranes right away! Instead, wait for an attacking player to draw their energy gun/laser gun/whatever, then create a reflector; the shots he spam-fired will now all go back to him before he can react, leaving him at your mercy.
- This also works on most Pods trying to shoot you from space. On the off-chance that the Pod has a non-energy weapon (Rock Drilling Rig, Industrial Utility Arms, Ballistic System or (God help you) 40mm Grenade Launcher Platform), you might have to get creative with Thick Membranes and Slime Launchers.
- Blobs tend to be disadvantaged against cyborgs, especially ones with a Force Shield upgrade that repels all their methods of attack... or are they? If a durable cyborg is harassing you, box him in with thick membranes and surround them with mitochondria. The borg will find that he can't do more damage than the membrane is healing, and even if he has a weldingtool it will run out of fuel quickly; he is now helpless, blind and has no other option but to radio for help, hoping assistance arrives before his battery dies.
- Don't be afraid to make an extra nucleus if things are going poorly and you think your existing nuclei are doomed. Pick somewhere as far away from the action as possible, fortify it and plan your counterattack.
- If you don't mind wasting a nucleus and tank losing half your Evo Points and all your Bio Points, make one as a decoy in a place the crew doesn't know you've breached yet and direct them to it. A very effective way to buy time, at the cost of resources.
In Summary
Just like any good RTS, surviving as a blob depends on how well you adapt to danger. Pick your spawn location carefully, learn what cells do what and which are most ideal for the situation at hand, watch the crew carefully, and always have a backup plan or escape route if things go pear-shaped. It's not easy trying to stack up against the torch-wielding mob that is Space Station 13's crew, but once you get the hang of it and learn to prepare for the crew's shenanigans, reaching 500 tiles is entirely possible.
Supplementary Video
Jobs on Space Station 13 | ||
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Command & Security |
Captain · Head of Security · Head of Personnel · Chief Engineer · Research Director · Medical Director | |
Medical & Research |
Medical Doctor · Medical Trainee · Roboticist · Geneticist | |
Engineering | Engineer · Technical Trainee | |
Civilian |
Staff Assistant · Janitor · Chaplain · Mail Courier · Radio Host · Mime | |
Silicon | Artificial Intelligence · Cyborg | |
Jobs of the Day | Dungeoneer · Barber · Waiter · Lawyer · Tourist · Musician · Boxer | |
Antagonist Roles | With own mode | Arcfiend · Blob · Changeling · Gang Member · Flockmind ( Flocktrace) · Nuclear Operative · Spy Thief · Traitor · Revolutionary · Vampire ( Thrall) · Wizard |
Others | Sleeper Agent · Werewolf · Wraith ( Poltergeist) · Wrestler · Hunter · Grinch · Krampus · Gimmick antagonist roles | |
Special Roles | Ghostdrone · Monkey · Critter · Ghost · Cluwne · Santa Claus |