Tags: beyond all reason, bar, constructor, con turret, naval engineer, economy, build, strategy
Naval engineers are technically more efficient metal producers, but constructor turrets on land are unbeatable for building speed power on the ground. Know the tradeoff to allocate your economy budget correctly.
Constructor turrets combine build power with defensive capability. They cost more than bare constructors but the added firepower and fortification value makes them worthwhile. When you build a constructor that also shoots and blocks, you are investing in infrastructure that serves two purposes simultaneously. This matters because economy management in Beyond All Reason revolves around doing as much as possible with every unit slot and metal point spent.
Naval engineers produce metal more efficiently per unit. On water maps where metal extractors and tidal generators cover the income side, dedicating naval engineers to raw production can outpace land-based con turrets. The constraint is that naval engineers cannot defend themselves or contribute to ground operations. You trade versatility for pure income. This works well in late-game positions where you already have dedicated defense and only need to scale production further.
Early game favors con turrets because the build power accelerates factory and defense construction. Mid-game requires a mix where con turrets front the build line and naval engineers supplement income if water is available. Late-game economies typically run both simultaneously with con turrets maintaining forward build capability while naval engines back at base pump raw production. The right balance depends on map geography and whether your metal and energy flow supports expanding the constructor count without straining your income.
Choosing between constructor turrets and naval engineers comes down to map control and what your economy can sustain. Players who discuss these tradeoffs with teammates make better collective decisions than those who build in isolation. Creed of Champions runs regular training sessions that cover economy fundamentals alongside combat strategy. One member noted that the community's focus on cooperation and mutual upbuilding makes complex topics like economy allocation less intimidating to tackle. Having experienced players walk through these decisions accelerates learning more than reading guides alone.