I kind of want to do something like that, only bigger (assuming you're not completely maxed out ). I'm curious to see how large of an incoming force I can get. Only problem is, I might not survive the necessary 10/10 to get that far...
If you want to do this in a legitimate game, I'd suggest trying something along the lines of a Snake 120 planet map with as many AIP increasing structures as possible available, start with multiple homeworlds and champions for the wave-increasing effects and extra firepower, and attempt a "must take everything" strategy, then start setting off nukes. Might want Fallen Spire on, as well, for the extra firepower and defensive strength. Whatever map type you choose to try, you should probably make certain you can put a single chokepoint in place that everything must go through in order to hit you.
Alternatively, if you aren't opposed to a little cheating to experiment on how large of an incoming force you can get, you could give yourself a bunch of nukes for upping the AIP very quickly at the start of the game. You can find the cheats on the ArcenWiki if you want to try doing things this way.
Fully loaded motherships are basic starships in the biggest of wars.
Oh. And you thought mark Vs were the best? Nah, the AI's using its weakest models on us. The tech in their larger wars is off the charts.
Hooray, imagination!
Nonsense, the tech in the larger worlds is not off the charts! You just need to start using log(log(log(log(log(x))))) charts in order to properly graph their power. And that gives you the mark number in scientific notation in the form XeY, with Y in the range of 1 to 11 (we had to adjust our scale - it used to be 0 to 10, but that wasn't large enough). Have a nice day.
I shudder to think at what kind of power the AI must wield "behind the scenes" as it were, if even the Imperial Spire in Andromeda aren't considered the primary threat to its continued existence
Note that Keith did not say that the Imperial Spire is not the primary threat to the continued existence of the AI, only that the Imperial Spire is not necessarily the only or main threat. In other words, you don't have enough information on the things the AI considers to be threats to tell what the AI considers to be the main threat to it. As the player, you know that:
1. You, the (probably) dominant faction of human rebels, are not the main threat to the AI - you can only do what you can because the AI is distracted
2. The AI is distracted by something (or perhaps several somethings) outside the galaxy
3. The Imperial Spire is (probably) the strongest non-human and non-AI faction that you've come across so far. Also, the Imperial Spire is not based inside the Milky Way, so it is an 'outside of the galaxy' threat to the AI
4. The Zenith and the Neinzul probably do not represent an outside-the-galaxy threat to the AI (while we don't necessarily know that the Neinzul and Zenith are from the Milky Way, I don't think it's ever been indicated that they aren't from the Milky Way, and the Spire were stated to not be from the Milky Way, so safest assumption is that the Zenith and Neinzul are from the Milky Way rather than another galaxy), although at least some of the Zenith factions show evidence of having the potential to be major threats, and things like the Dyson Sphere give evidence that the Zenith were at least once a very powerful faction. The AI also appears to have good relations with the Neinzul (better, at any rate, than the Humans do, since most of the Neinzul stuff seems to be AI-ally), so, while the AI might have some forces guarding against Neinzul activities, the Neinzul are not likely to take up a significant amount of the attention of the AI. The Zenith factions probably rate some concern for the AI, but not enough that the AI will really start doing much about them, and unless they group together the individual factions are more likely to rate as an inconvenience than as a major threat.
5. The AI homeworlds are locally important to the AI, perhaps as central processing nodes for the local sector of AI-controlled space (or possibly for the galaxy), but probably aren't so important to the AI that the lose greatly injures the AI's activities since if the loss of the homeworlds had the potential to greatly injure AI operations on more than the local level I would expect them to have much greater defenses than they currently have (though this could also be evidence of the AI disregarding the Human factions as a threat)