Civil War Man wrote:
Piett brought it up largely because they had been coming up empty until then and that the location of the settlement was unusual...
'A Rebel base?' can't help but jump out as a possibility. Ozzel didn't even want to check it out. Even if it wasn't the main Rebel base, an investigation with at least a follow-up probe should have immediately followed. If he was a Rebellion sympathizer, he wasn't a very discreet one.
Clones were the only Republic force, but they made up the bulk of it. Keep in mind that the Separatists were building the overwhelming numbers in secret so when they finally played the secession card, they would have enough troops to terrify the Senate into inaction. They didn't count on the possibility that a secretive puppet master would have been spending the previous ten years building an army specifically designed to eventually wipe out the Jedi. It's not so much that the B-1s were shit, it's that the Clones were designed to fight on a level that the droids couldn't match.
A second or third class droid filling last class B-1's role could be made, but wasn't by the TF. The Senate may or may not be intimidated. A human being can only be tweaked so far physically.
Republic troopers would do what Clones would not; question Order 66 long enough to alert the Jedi to trouble and likely defy it when it came out of the blue. Clone effectiveness against battle droids comes from weapons, armour, and training the Regular forces surely must have have in measure, the crucial difference being capacity for mindless loyalty to Palpatine, not innate combat effectiveness. Otherwise, prepositioned droids from foudaries secreted all over the galaxy would have overwhelmed conventional forces before the initial batches of Clones could deploy after Geonosis.
By the logic you have been using, a TIE Fighter is a piece of shit because a single TIE Fighter won't do well against an X-wing. Or, to use a real life example, a Sherman tank is a piece of shit because it probably can't survive a one-on-one fight with a Panzer. This of course discounts the actual intended use of these military units, which is to use superior numbers and cheap replacement of losses to overwhelm a given opponent.
Battle droid loss ratios were a lot worse than Ties and Shermans. I did account for the intended roles; B-1s are are junk even as chaff.
I do find the progression of this thread interesting. It started with generalizations of the Gungan species as a whole based entirely off a single exile from their culture, plus taking the TF's belief that the Gungans are a backwards people (though they knew almost nothing about them other than they were the indigenous people) and inflating it to the point where the Gungans are millenia behind every other in universe civilization. When confronted with the Gungan military using their own tech to fight the Trade Federation military and not being instantly wiped out, the goal then shifts to trying to paint the Trade Federation as also being millenia behind every other in universe civilization in an attempt to validate the original assumption that the Gungans are, too.
I'm trying to avoid temporal centrism as a measure, and my impression of Gungans is not based on Jar Jar, if only because I try to forget him. The Gungans and Trade Feds, or for that matter the Borg, are not millenia behind the Republic. Neither are they up to its capabilities in military technology. They could adopt the standard of quality, though not quantity or scale, but won't.
The Gungans are bound by experience, ceremony and tradition formed by a different kind of warfare and cultural environment centred on their one planet. That worked fine until contrasted against a different type of warfare formed over millenia outside Gungan experience. They can't duplicate millenia of different experiences, but they don't have to; they need only adopt the discrete lessons. As of TPM, Goo-ball atlals are quaint, blasters are better, and Gungans don't have blasters in the Grand Army despite centuries of contact with the Naboo humans.
The Trade Feds are bound by Republic law and their own non-military priorities not to meet Republic military standards. Their 'army' can police under the shadow of the Republic. If the TF somehow confronted the Chiss, a separate political entity from the Republic not as advanced in quality or quantity, the TF would lose. The TF fields a contrivedly inferior standard of Republic technology the worst possible way, with lessons learned tempered by placing cost effectiveness ahead of military effectiveness.
The Borg are restricted by their belligerance from easily obtaining SW standard military technology. They could otherwise buy or barter for it, learn it, and add its technological distinctiveness to their own. They can even visit slave markets for biological disticntiveness. However, they won't, because their means define their ends and they conquer soley to be able to conquer.