Dammit, I'm going to have to buy this book, aren't I?
Moderator: Vympel
Re: Dammit, I'm going to have to buy this book, aren't I?
Oh geez, I remember McEwok. Yeah, we'll get an earful on The Mighty 3 Million, because everything written down in an official book is gospel no matter how stupid, but filmed imagery is error-ridden and useless.
Call me petty, but you may have just saved me money. I don't want to flame the guy or suggest he's dumb or anything, and he's certainly written a billion times more on the subject of Star Wars than I have, but I don't actually like any of the shit I've seen travel from his brain to his keyboard.
Call me petty, but you may have just saved me money. I don't want to flame the guy or suggest he's dumb or anything, and he's certainly written a billion times more on the subject of Star Wars than I have, but I don't actually like any of the shit I've seen travel from his brain to his keyboard.
"I spit on metaphysics, sir."
"I pity the woman you marry." -Liberty
This is the guy they want to use to win over "young people?" Are they completely daft? I'd rather vote for a pile of shit than a Jesus freak social regressive.
Here's hoping that his political career goes down in flames and, hopefully, a hilarious gay sex scandal. -Tanasinn
"I pity the woman you marry." -Liberty
This is the guy they want to use to win over "young people?" Are they completely daft? I'd rather vote for a pile of shit than a Jesus freak social regressive.
Here's hoping that his political career goes down in flames and, hopefully, a hilarious gay sex scandal. -Tanasinn
You can't expect sodomy to ruin every conservative politician in this country. -Battlehymn Republic
My blog, please check out and comment! http://decepticylon.blogspot.com- Master Bane
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Re: Dammit, I'm going to have to buy this book, aren't I?
Actually, it seems the three million number has been retconed as the initial order, with the army size vastly expanded during the war. And the quintillions of droids were kept for the separatists, so the book isn't that bad on the ground.
The biggest problem I've seen is the fleet numbers: 6 mandator IIs during the clone wars total along with dozens of battle cruisers in the core and colonies. And a rebel intel estimate of 20+ executors built in all.
The biggest problem I've seen is the fleet numbers: 6 mandator IIs during the clone wars total along with dozens of battle cruisers in the core and colonies. And a rebel intel estimate of 20+ executors built in all.
Have a nice day.
- Fire Fly
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Re: Dammit, I'm going to have to buy this book, aren't I?
There's a small section on that subject. During the Clone War, the galaxy is divided into 20 sectors of operation. The GAR of 3 million is divided into 20 operational groups of 150k per sector. There are clone and non-clone units involved on the Republic side. The way in how it is written, there's a small wiggle room for striking down the 3 million number: 3 million is the number of clones available in the early phase of the war and that many more clones were subsequently grown.Anguirus wrote:Oh geez, I remember McEwok. Yeah, we'll get an earful on The Mighty 3 Million, because everything written down in an official book is gospel no matter how stupid, but filmed imagery is error-ridden and useless.
Call me petty, but you may have just saved me money. I don't want to flame the guy or suggest he's dumb or anything, and he's certainly written a billion times more on the subject of Star Wars than I have, but I don't actually like any of the shit I've seen travel from his brain to his keyboard.
There's a small section on Pellaeon's war with the New Republic. He had 3 Executor-class SSDs to work with (if memory serves), two of them were salvaged from secret abandoned shipyards owned by Harrask (?). The area of operation for Pellaeon was quite large, operating in an area of roughly 50 sectors (all of which have been given names, amazingly). His initial success at capturing the politically important world of Orinda meant that the moffs pushed him to be even more bold, resulting in a massive New Republic counterattack.
Other tidbits that I remember:
-Zsinj was Grand Moff of a certain oversector and his success at quelling pirates etc. resulted in his acquisition of an SSD and 100 VSDs to supplement his Crimson Command.
-There's a pretty sweet picture of a Bellator (now officially part of Star Wars ) performing a BDZ. I believe the Assertor-class SD is now also officially a part of SW (I may be misremembering).
-Vader's Death Squadron has quite flexible in size, being able to acquire ships from local sectors whenever it needed. They intercepted a smuggler's ship transporting materials to Echo base. This tipped Death Squadron into blanketing the sector where Hoth was located with probe droids.
-The remnant of the Imperial fleet at Endor makes up a sizable fraction of the forces under Thrawn's direct command. I forget how many ships the book says were lost at Endor. I think the communications ship now has a class.
Again, lots of interesting tidbits. I may buy the book when it is cheaper but as it stands, there's not enough novelty to warrant me shelling out $20 to $30 for it at this moment.
Re: Dammit, I'm going to have to buy this book, aren't I?
That just sounds like the old Spaarti retcon. I guess with the way Star Wars canon works they are well and truly stuck with it by now (c'mon, he said UNITS not troops!) They are also stuck with quintillions of battle droids (thanks Saxton). As long as there is none of that "Odds" bullshit maybe I'll live.There's a small section on that subject. During the Clone War, the galaxy is divided into 20 sectors of operation. The GAR of 3 million is divided into 20 operational groups of 150k per sector. There are clone and non-clone units involved on the Republic side. The way in how it is written, there's a small wiggle room for striking down the 3 million number: 3 million is the number of clones available in the early phase of the war and that many more clones were subsequently grown.
It also sounds like the book is thoroughly over the "Impstars are big and impressive" fallacy. I like me some dagger ships. There was never evidence to support tons of Mandators, and while 20 Executors is a small number is kind of fits with the idea that it's a very new ship class when we see it (less than five years old since the class ship was built after ANH).
"I spit on metaphysics, sir."
"I pity the woman you marry." -Liberty
This is the guy they want to use to win over "young people?" Are they completely daft? I'd rather vote for a pile of shit than a Jesus freak social regressive.
Here's hoping that his political career goes down in flames and, hopefully, a hilarious gay sex scandal. -Tanasinn
"I pity the woman you marry." -Liberty
This is the guy they want to use to win over "young people?" Are they completely daft? I'd rather vote for a pile of shit than a Jesus freak social regressive.
Here's hoping that his political career goes down in flames and, hopefully, a hilarious gay sex scandal. -Tanasinn
You can't expect sodomy to ruin every conservative politician in this country. -Battlehymn Republic
My blog, please check out and comment! http://decepticylon.blogspot.com- Fire Fly
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Re: Dammit, I'm going to have to buy this book, aren't I?
That's what people also said about the length of the Executor and the size of DSII.Anguirus wrote:That just sounds like the old Spaarti retcon. I guess with the way Star Wars canon works they are well and truly stuck with it by now (c'mon, he said UNITS not troops!)
- Master Bane
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Re: Dammit, I'm going to have to buy this book, aren't I?
DSI: equal to ~1 million executors, built in under two years
DSII: equal to several million executors, more than half built and operational in ~6 months
And the Battle of Coruscant, where one thousand venators survive the initial separatist ambush and thousands more rush back to the capital, including about a thousand from the fifth fleet of the open circle. So the equivalent of three executors (or over 4.5 mandators) is only a small part of Coruscant's home defense fleet or a part of a single fleet in a single armada.
The empire clearly can build far more than 20 executors, if .1% of the resources devoted to the death star project were used to build executors there would be thousands of them built in the four years between Yavin and Endor. And from the destroyer fleets built during the Clone Wars there doesn't seem to be any reason why only six mandators would be built.
DSII: equal to several million executors, more than half built and operational in ~6 months
And the Battle of Coruscant, where one thousand venators survive the initial separatist ambush and thousands more rush back to the capital, including about a thousand from the fifth fleet of the open circle. So the equivalent of three executors (or over 4.5 mandators) is only a small part of Coruscant's home defense fleet or a part of a single fleet in a single armada.
The empire clearly can build far more than 20 executors, if .1% of the resources devoted to the death star project were used to build executors there would be thousands of them built in the four years between Yavin and Endor. And from the destroyer fleets built during the Clone Wars there doesn't seem to be any reason why only six mandators would be built.
Have a nice day.
Re: Dammit, I'm going to have to buy this book, aren't I?
I like that they reveal some details about the Pius Dea Crusades (After 1000 years of war and misery the Jedi stepped in and overthrew the guy, before temporarily seizing power to ensure a stable transaction.) In this case the Jedi had legit reasons (the pius dea where zealotic fuckbags who had caused 1000 years of war and misery and they had tried peaceful means to get them removed.) It also explains why the jedi were willing to move against palpatine
Re: Dammit, I'm going to have to buy this book, aren't I?
It seems obvious to me that the Star Wars universe is structured on narrativium rather than mathematical sense. They build lots of little Star Destroyers and only a few big "I'm important don't mess with me" ships. This can be explained in part by the ability of hyperspace to vastly increase the patrol range/influence of a ship. An Executor could presumably wipe out hundreds of planets during its operational lifetime, but this simply isn't done in the SWU. Why would they build ships that there is no call for? Hell, the Emperor probably laughs at Moffs' letters hitting his desk begging for an Executor.
Why build a Death Star then? Well it's an instant win button for the galaxy that's why. If the Emperor really needed to blast tons of planets that were in open rebellion right then he would build ships, but planets aren't in open rebellion and the Rebel Alliance can barely knock off a Destroyer here and there.
As for the Mandators, probably Kuat didn't really manage to sell the Republic on them.
Why build a Death Star then? Well it's an instant win button for the galaxy that's why. If the Emperor really needed to blast tons of planets that were in open rebellion right then he would build ships, but planets aren't in open rebellion and the Rebel Alliance can barely knock off a Destroyer here and there.
As for the Mandators, probably Kuat didn't really manage to sell the Republic on them.
"I spit on metaphysics, sir."
"I pity the woman you marry." -Liberty
This is the guy they want to use to win over "young people?" Are they completely daft? I'd rather vote for a pile of shit than a Jesus freak social regressive.
Here's hoping that his political career goes down in flames and, hopefully, a hilarious gay sex scandal. -Tanasinn
"I pity the woman you marry." -Liberty
This is the guy they want to use to win over "young people?" Are they completely daft? I'd rather vote for a pile of shit than a Jesus freak social regressive.
Here's hoping that his political career goes down in flames and, hopefully, a hilarious gay sex scandal. -Tanasinn
You can't expect sodomy to ruin every conservative politician in this country. -Battlehymn Republic
My blog, please check out and comment! http://decepticylon.blogspot.com- Master Bane
- Redshirt
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Re: Dammit, I'm going to have to buy this book, aren't I?
I suppose I can see the empire choosing to limit the number of executors, but why would the Republic field only a handful of dreadnoughts and battlecruisers during the Clone Wars? Unless they're significantly more expensive per ton than smaller warships they would be preferred over a group of star destroyer scale vessels.
Have a nice day.
- Fire Fly
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Re: Dammit, I'm going to have to buy this book, aren't I?
Politics, most likely. If the Senate is squabbling about increasing the size of the army, then increasing the size of naval ships is going to be contentious as well.Master Bane wrote:I suppose I can see the empire choosing to limit the number of executors, but why would the Republic field only a handful of dreadnoughts and battlecruisers during the Clone Wars? Unless they're significantly more expensive per ton than smaller warships they would be preferred over a group of star destroyer scale vessels.
Re: Dammit, I'm going to have to buy this book, aren't I?
Oh ninja'ed lol
I hope this isn't a necro...
I hope this isn't a necro...
- Ashka Boda
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Re: Dammit, I'm going to have to buy this book, aren't I?
I'm severely disappointed there was no detailed map of the Black Fleet Crisis in it.
I personally emailed Jason Fry when the Essential Atlas came out, asking him if there was something in the works along those lines, and he said Michael P. Kube-McDowell had already made a really detailed map of it that was just waiting to be released, and since a lot of the Essential Guide to Warfare is filling in blanks in the Atlas, I assumed it would be there.
Otherwise, I think it kicks ass. Great artwork, clever retcons and decent prose. The Pius Dea Crusade stuff is kriffing aweXome.
I personally emailed Jason Fry when the Essential Atlas came out, asking him if there was something in the works along those lines, and he said Michael P. Kube-McDowell had already made a really detailed map of it that was just waiting to be released, and since a lot of the Essential Guide to Warfare is filling in blanks in the Atlas, I assumed it would be there.
Otherwise, I think it kicks ass. Great artwork, clever retcons and decent prose. The Pius Dea Crusade stuff is kriffing aweXome.
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- Youngling
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Re: Dammit, I'm going to have to buy this book, aren't I?
I know you posted this a while ago, but yeah that's one thing that really bugs me about SW "canon". Every tiny tidbit is taken as canon and people get outraged if even the tiniest detail from an RPG supplement is contradicted. Not only does it make it harder to kill stupid things like...lots and lots of what Traviss wrote, but it also seems incredibly limiting to me, the fact that all minor tidbits are treated as incredibly important in certain parts of the fan base. Which also feeds into, as mentioned even earlier in the thread, the fact that every single thing about the movies needs to be fleshed out and explained ad infinitum. I shudder at the convoluted explanations they're gonna make up to establish a timeline that includes all Clone Wars-related material, when they could easily just say "Anakin's adventures as a Padawan are all pushed up to the first few months or weeks of the war, he's a Knight for the rest of it" or something like that.Anguirus wrote:Oh geez, I remember McEwok. Yeah, we'll get an earful on The Mighty 3 Million, because everything written down in an official book is gospel no matter how stupid, but filmed imagery is error-ridden and useless.
Call me petty, but you may have just saved me money. I don't want to flame the guy or suggest he's dumb or anything, and he's certainly written a billion times more on the subject of Star Wars than I have, but I don't actually like any of the shit I've seen travel from his brain to his keyboard.
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Re: Dammit, I'm going to have to buy this book, aren't I?
I've had my own "battles" with McEwok, but it's been years since I've really cared about the EU. I haven't been keeping up with this book, or this thread, at all. Didn't realize that he had somehow gotten himself a job with LFL (seriously, WTF?). From the few excerpts that were posted though, it doesn't look that bad. The main writer even followed up on some things from Saxton's ICS.
Traviss's own writing is an example of that. She came up with stupid numbers in her clone army order of battle, and the fans complained. She could have come clean about the clone numbers being silly. She could have even brushed off the criticism by treating the numbers as the trivia that they are, and just moved on without saying anything more on the subject. But instead, she wrote entire stories like Odds which brought the clone numbers to the forefront, twisting and shaping canon into something else entirely. If we take an all-inclusionist stance on this, the Jedi were complete morons who didn't know the actual scale of the Clone Wars within several orders of magnitude, and they may have even been conspiring with Palpatine against the Republic...fat chance that LFL will ever acknowledge that, even though they never had the backbone to outright dismiss what she wrote.
Totally agree with this. And it's not just the SW fanbase, it's the EU itself. Everything is rationalized and retained, almost nothing is thrown out. Now rationalizing canon and coming up with good explanations that take everything into account is laudable, IMO. But it's lame when the dumbest parts of the EU are kept to the detriment of everything else.TheSpaceman? wrote:I know you posted this a while ago, but yeah that's one thing that really bugs me about SW "canon". Every tiny tidbit is taken as canon and people get outraged if even the tiniest detail from an RPG supplement is contradicted. Not only does it make it harder to kill stupid things like...lots and lots of what Traviss wrote, but it also seems incredibly limiting to me, the fact that all minor tidbits are treated as incredibly important in certain parts of the fan base.
Traviss's own writing is an example of that. She came up with stupid numbers in her clone army order of battle, and the fans complained. She could have come clean about the clone numbers being silly. She could have even brushed off the criticism by treating the numbers as the trivia that they are, and just moved on without saying anything more on the subject. But instead, she wrote entire stories like Odds which brought the clone numbers to the forefront, twisting and shaping canon into something else entirely. If we take an all-inclusionist stance on this, the Jedi were complete morons who didn't know the actual scale of the Clone Wars within several orders of magnitude, and they may have even been conspiring with Palpatine against the Republic...fat chance that LFL will ever acknowledge that, even though they never had the backbone to outright dismiss what she wrote.
"They're not triangular, but they are more or less blade-shaped"- Thrawn McEwok on the shape of Bakura destroyers
"Lovely. It's known as impugning character regarding statement of professional qualifications' in the legal world"- Karen Traviss, crying libel because I said that no soldier she interviewed would claim that he can take on billion-to-one odds
"I've already laid out rules for this thread that we're not going to make these evidential demands"- Dark Moose on supporting your claims
"Lovely. It's known as impugning character regarding statement of professional qualifications' in the legal world"- Karen Traviss, crying libel because I said that no soldier she interviewed would claim that he can take on billion-to-one odds
"I've already laid out rules for this thread that we're not going to make these evidential demands"- Dark Moose on supporting your claims
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- Sith Marauder
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Re: Dammit, I'm going to have to buy this book, aren't I?
There might have been a bottleneck in getting qualified crew onto it (people with enough heft/important missions to get Star Dreadnoughts might have higher expectations of crew competency and experience, though cloning could mitigate that issue, assuming said important people were willing to wait).Master Bane wrote:I suppose I can see the empire choosing to limit the number of executors, but why would the Republic field only a handful of dreadnoughts and battlecruisers during the Clone Wars? Unless they're significantly more expensive per ton than smaller warships they would be preferred over a group of star destroyer scale vessels.
Turns out that a five way cross over between It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia, the Ali G Show, Fargo, Idiocracy and Veep is a lot less funny when you're actually living in it.
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- Youngling
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Re: Dammit, I'm going to have to buy this book, aren't I?
Right on. I couldn't have said it better myself. I would love to see a Star Wars Galaxy where trillions of troops and millions of large capital ships battle one another, with some pretty epic weaponry involved. I know that will never happen at this pace, but maybe one day we could hope for a big retcon.Master Bane wrote:DSI: equal to ~1 million executors, built in under two years
DSII: equal to several million executors, more than half built and operational in ~6 months
And the Battle of Coruscant, where one thousand venators survive the initial separatist ambush and thousands more rush back to the capital, including about a thousand from the fifth fleet of the open circle. So the equivalent of three executors (or over 4.5 mandators) is only a small part of Coruscant's home defense fleet or a part of a single fleet in a single armada.
The empire clearly can build far more than 20 executors, if .1% of the resources devoted to the death star project were used to build executors there would be thousands of them built in the four years between Yavin and Endor. And from the destroyer fleets built during the Clone Wars there doesn't seem to be any reason why only six mandators would be built.
It was disappointing that this Essential Guide implied large capital ships were really rare throughout the history of the SW Galaxy. Didn't get much in the way of new superweapons either and the Clone Army numbers issue was not rectified. At least fractalsponge got a lot of his great designs canonized.
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- Youngling
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Re: Dammit, I'm going to have to buy this book, aren't I?
Yeah, the EU has really become a bloated corpse with the way they have to explain EVERYTHING and once it's explained, never go back on it ever. Even if it contradicts scripts and movies and so forth, as is the case with the "parsec" thing. I mean, I guess quality is subjective to an extent, but when people are defending terrible stuff because it's "canon" and arguing against well-written stuff because it contradicts RPG supplements, there's something wrong here.Jim Raynor wrote:I've had my own "battles" with McEwok, but it's been years since I've really cared about the EU. I haven't been keeping up with this book, or this thread, at all. Didn't realize that he had somehow gotten himself a job with LFL (seriously, WTF?). From the few excerpts that were posted though, it doesn't look that bad. The main writer even followed up on some things from Saxton's ICS.
Totally agree with this. And it's not just the SW fanbase, it's the EU itself. Everything is rationalized and retained, almost nothing is thrown out. Now rationalizing canon and coming up with good explanations that take everything into account is laudable, IMO. But it's lame when the dumbest parts of the EU are kept to the detriment of everything else.TheSpaceman? wrote:I know you posted this a while ago, but yeah that's one thing that really bugs me about SW "canon". Every tiny tidbit is taken as canon and people get outraged if even the tiniest detail from an RPG supplement is contradicted. Not only does it make it harder to kill stupid things like...lots and lots of what Traviss wrote, but it also seems incredibly limiting to me, the fact that all minor tidbits are treated as incredibly important in certain parts of the fan base.
Traviss's own writing is an example of that. She came up with stupid numbers in her clone army order of battle, and the fans complained. She could have come clean about the clone numbers being silly. She could have even brushed off the criticism by treating the numbers as the trivia that they are, and just moved on without saying anything more on the subject. But instead, she wrote entire stories like Odds which brought the clone numbers to the forefront, twisting and shaping canon into something else entirely. If we take an all-inclusionist stance on this, the Jedi were complete morons who didn't know the actual scale of the Clone Wars within several orders of magnitude, and they may have even been conspiring with Palpatine against the Republic...fat chance that LFL will ever acknowledge that, even though they never had the backbone to outright dismiss what she wrote.
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- Emperor's Hand
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Re: Dammit, I'm going to have to buy this book, aren't I?
Yeah- no military need for anything bigger than an an ISD, as you note, since no one in the galaxy can kill enough of them to make a real dent in the fleet. There's thousands of them, you'd have to blow up hundreds to really matter.Anguirus wrote:It seems obvious to me that the Star Wars universe is structured on narrativium rather than mathematical sense. They build lots of little Star Destroyers and only a few big "I'm important don't mess with me" ships. This can be explained in part by the ability of hyperspace to vastly increase the patrol range/influence of a ship. An Executor could presumably wipe out hundreds of planets during its operational lifetime, but this simply isn't done in the SWU. Why would they build ships that there is no call for? Hell, the Emperor probably laughs at Moffs' letters hitting his desk begging for an Executor.
There's also this big political issue about who controls such superships, see below.
Palpatine's a big fan of concentrated power. This makes sense for a guy who bases his rule on the Dark Side and his own personal powers to mind-trick people and fry them with Force lightning. He can find or mind-control one trusted lieutenant easily enough to command a giant battle platform. Controlling ten thousand people to fly ten thousand ships, any one of which could kill him if someone decides to backstab him with a turbolaser... I suspect he'd be less comfortable with that.Why build a Death Star then? Well it's an instant win button for the galaxy that's why. If the Emperor really needed to blast tons of planets that were in open rebellion right then he would build ships, but planets aren't in open rebellion and the Rebel Alliance can barely knock off a Destroyer here and there.
As for the Mandators, probably Kuat didn't really manage to sell the Republic on them.
The larger the number of individual powerful units (the Death Star is powerful, the Executors are powerful, individual ISDs are... kind of not powerful), the harder it is to control everything personally. We see this in real life with dictators- for example, Moammar Gaddafi had a huge army of tanks and artillery, but almost all of it was parked out in the desert and not used at any one time, because there were only a handful of troops he actually trusted with tanks and big guns. There were other things like a lack of money in play, but that was a big part of it- he didn't have enough loyal men to mobilize all his weapons at once.
And then on top of that is the control issue: who do you send if someone rebels? If a normal planet rebels you send an ISD. If an ISD goes rogue you send a big super-destroyer. If a super-destroyer rebels... I dunno, send the Death Star. Same as you would if a well defended planet that would laugh off an ISD rebels.
And if the Death Star rebels, you have a problem. A problem with two counters. One, Palpatine could just move his quarters to the Death Star and run the galaxy from there. Two, you could, oh... I dunno. You could cunningly engineer in a small exploitable flaw by which a Force-empowered pilot named Skywalker can slip a proton torpedo into the thing's power plant and blow it to bits. And then make sure Darth Vader has his personal, torpedo-capable fighter on hand to do the job.
(tip of the hat to Eleventh Century Remnant for all this)
This space dedicated to Vasily Arkhipov
Re: Dammit, I'm going to have to buy this book, aren't I?
The Rebellion Era scourcebook stated the Imperial military Numbers in Trillions...darthscott wrote:Right on. I couldn't have said it better myself. I would love to see a Star Wars Galaxy where trillions of troops and millions of large capital ships battle one another, with some pretty epic weaponry involved. I know that will never happen at this pace, but maybe one day we could hope for a big retcon.Master Bane wrote:DSI: equal to ~1 million executors, built in under two years
DSII: equal to several million executors, more than half built and operational in ~6 months
And the Battle of Coruscant, where one thousand venators survive the initial separatist ambush and thousands more rush back to the capital, including about a thousand from the fifth fleet of the open circle. So the equivalent of three executors (or over 4.5 mandators) is only a small part of Coruscant's home defense fleet or a part of a single fleet in a single armada.
The empire clearly can build far more than 20 executors, if .1% of the resources devoted to the death star project were used to build executors there would be thousands of them built in the four years between Yavin and Endor. And from the destroyer fleets built during the Clone Wars there doesn't seem to be any reason why only six mandators would be built.
It was rectified, Traviss's number was just the initial Order. So it left the numbers thought the course of the war vaguedarthscott wrote:It was disappointing that this Essential Guide implied large capital ships were really rare throughout the history of the SW Galaxy. Didn't get much in the way of new superweapons either and the Clone Army numbers issue was not rectified. At least fractalsponge got a lot of his great designs canonized.
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- Youngling
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Re: Dammit, I'm going to have to buy this book, aren't I?
That was fleet crew though, I am referring to seeing 100's of trillions or more of Army troops from the combined planetary forces of the Republic or the Empire. For me the more troops and capital ships the better.Ire wrote:The Rebellion Era scourcebook stated the Imperial military Numbers in Trillions...
True, it is better than nothing, and I don't mind vague either. I did like that he made mention that many Clone War battles were fought by natural born troops. on both sides.Ire wrote:It was rectified, Traviss's number was just the initial Order. So it left the numbers thought the course of the war vague
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Re: Dammit, I'm going to have to buy this book, aren't I?
No, it was for both naval crew and the army corps.darthscott wrote:That was fleet crew thoughIre wrote:The Rebellion Era scourcebook stated the Imperial military Numbers in Trillions...
Re: Dammit, I'm going to have to buy this book, aren't I?
The naval ships mentioned (Mandators) are controlled by the sector fleets of the core worlds - not a central Republic military or even the Judicial forces. Two for Kuat, one for Humbarine, and I forgot the other locations but I think Rendili got one.Fire Fly wrote:Politics, most likely. If the Senate is squabbling about increasing the size of the army, then increasing the size of naval ships is going to be contentious as well.
The fact that Separatist holdouts helf out for more than 10 years in some cases in the Outer Rim, as well as cases like the Dornean navy also shows a Death Star is amazongly useful. That, and the Outer Rim Sieges.Anguirus wrote:Why build a Death Star then? Well it's an instant win button for the galaxy that's why.
I'd think when the Core Worlds are getting ass-raped by Grievous and the Confederacy is building Subjugator-class battleships the Republic would be a lot more willing to build those.As for the Mandators, probably Kuat didn't really manage to sell the Republic on them.
Two of the old Mandators were upgraded to Mandator-IIs during the Clone Wars, and I'd think they'd still build more of them when Durge's Lance went on.
I'd assume the desperation from Grievous' terrorist attacks would render those sort of things very Moot though. Given the attacks on 26 strategic Loyalist worlds.Pelranius wrote:There might have been a bottleneck in getting qualified crew onto it (people with enough heft/important missions to get Star Dreadnoughts might have higher expectations of crew competency and experience, though cloning could mitigate that issue, assuming said important people were willing to wait).
To be fair that is the purpose of stormtroopers being on Imperial warships. They are personally loyal to the Emperr somehow and have a separate command, so they would be able to (theoretically) prevent the Death Star from rebelling against the Emperor. Of course, again it's theoretically.Simon_Jester wrote: And if the Death Star rebels, you have a problem. A problem with two counters. One, Palpatine could just move his quarters to the Death Star and run the galaxy from there. Two, you could, oh... I dunno. You could cunningly engineer in a small exploitable flaw by which a Force-empowered pilot named Skywalker can slip a proton torpedo into the thing's power plant and blow it to bits. And then make sure Darth Vader has his personal, torpedo-capable fighter on hand to do the job.
(tip of the hat to Eleventh Century Remnant for all this)
"Opps, wanted to add; wasn't there a study about how really smart people lead shitty lives socially? I vaguely remember something about it, so correct me if I'm wrong. Frankly, I'm of the opinion that I'd rather let the new Newton or new Tesla lead a better life than have him have a shitty one and come up with apple powered death rays."
-Knife, in here
-Knife, in here