Dino.707 Posted February 2, 2015 Posted February 2, 2015 It happens in real life, where the sea is not orderly. Waves do not always travel in the same direction, sometimes they come at you from every which way. It should disrupt the orderly flow, and timing of firing guns. The up and down motion, and the left and right roll, can be broken into chaos in confused seas. Please implement into game.
Dino.707 Posted February 2, 2015 Author Posted February 2, 2015 not just in a storm setting, but the flow of the current, and the wind blowing from a different direction can cause waves coming from a different directions, even on a clear day. They have even been know to cause unusually sized waves, (like what was considered to sink the Edmund Fitzgerald in the American Great Lake.
Dino.707 Posted February 2, 2015 Author Posted February 2, 2015 I think they tend to be in areas where there is a strong current flow (from the ebb and flow of tidal action, or the mouths of great rivers), and where wind tends to strong enough to create wind chop on the surface.
Dino.707 Posted February 2, 2015 Author Posted February 2, 2015 Sorry to keep adding like a noob , I think the confused sea is more permanent than a storm. As long as the wind is blowing from a different direction other than the direction of the flow of current, there will be a confused sea. Also, it happens wherever to currents meet.
Baggywrinkle Posted February 3, 2015 Posted February 3, 2015 Confused seas: Before and after a change in wind direction - the waves generated by a storm travel far and wide, and arrive before the wind itself does. Once it has gone those waves will continue in addition to those kicked up by the current breeze. Off the land - up to a few miles offshore it is sometimes possible to detect the presence of a coastline (particularly if rocky and steep) by the waves ricocheting off it. The disturbance of a vessel's regular motion is noticeable. Prevailing wind against tide/current: Not 'confused' per se, but noticeable in the shorter steeper waves created, sometimes at odds with the underlying swell. Both are trademark features of the English Channel, which was talked about a year ago as being the first map. Whilst this seems to have been changed for the Caribbean (pity), hopefully we'll see it one day... Baggy
russian Posted February 3, 2015 Posted February 3, 2015 Captain Aubrey encounters such seas in Mediteranean in Ionian Mission. Only sailed through that sea once on something way larger so cannot comment from experience.
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