
Formations will break on combat into combat groups based on the ships that are part of the formation.This is to more closely emulate HW1 and to make sure that ships perform as optimally as you would expect. Formations have a unit cap depending on the ships and formation used.This is to ensure formations are as effective in combat as possible and so that the game performs at a reasonable speed. All ships have been rebalanced to work with formations.All ships have had a pass to improve flight dynamics and engagement behaviors.Weapons will now use ballistics when set to do so.(Many ships are set to this by default now.) Tactics have been split into "Rules of Engagement" and "Stances" to better emulate HW1 and HW2 gameplay at the same time.Ships will attack all enemy ships that enter range.Ships will retaliate against attackers of allies and themselves.Ships will not retaliate, even when fired upon.
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When minimized, the window will be hidden from the taskbar and from Alt+ Tab. When windowingBehavior is set to "useExisting" or "useAnyExisting", they will ignore the existence of the _quake window. The window automatically enters focus mode (note that you may have multiple tabs in focus mode). The window can no longer be resized horizontally or from the top. The terminal is automatically snapped to the top half of the monitor. "Quake mode" is the name for the special mode the terminal enters when naming a window _quake. To learn more about this command, see toggleFocusMode. (In the case of our example, Shift + F12). You can now toggle focus mode using the "action" shortcut key that you created. Remember to Save after making any changes.

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You can also see a list of Actions with associated keybindings, and + Add new bindings, in the Actions tab of the Windows Terminal Settings dashboard. Replace "ctrl+f12" with the shortcut / keybinding of your choice, but be sure not to repeat any existing keybindings from the Actions list. The tabColor can be set as part of a profile. Use the hex field to set your tab to the same color as your background color for a seamless look. to pick any color using the color picker or the RGB/HSV or hex fields. You can select from a predefined list of colors or you can select Custom. to color the tab for that terminal session. You can right-click on a tab and select Color. If you'd like to set the tab title for that profile for every terminal instance, you can learn more in the Tab title tutorial. Clicking this option in the context menu will change your tab title into a text field, where you can then edit the title. You can right click on a tab and select Rename Tab to rename a tab for that terminal session. Put settings here that you want to apply to all profiles. Learn more about General profile settings, Appearance profile settings, and Advanced profile settings.

This can be done by adding a setting inside the "defaults" array inside the profiles object. Windows Terminal enables you to apply a setting to every profile without having to duplicate the setting for each profile entry. If you’d like to view the default settings file, you can hold Alt and click on the Settings button inside the dropdown menu. Windows Terminal comes with a large set of default settings, including color schemes and keyboard shortcuts (now called "Custom actions"). Specific distribution icons do not come shipped inside the terminal but can be downloaded and assigned using the terminal settings. You can change the icon of each WSL distribution if desired.
