Granted, I'm not an expert, but I assuming we're talking about spaceships (if we're talking about naval vessels then my earlier points are invalid too, sorry) then mass is a bigger issue than "room" (volume).Imperial528 wrote:Drones will take up much less room than fighter crews or mounted weapons. With fighter crews you need life support and living space for them plus the storage for the fighters, or at least you'll take the mass penalty if they're just docked outside.
Here we're unfairly attributing mass and crewing costs to mounted weapons, when they could be equally automated.Imperial528 wrote:Likewise with mounted weapons you need to have a few more hands on board to maintain and use them, lest you strain your existing crew. With a dozen simple point-and-shoot drones a freighter that comes under attack can just release some of them and while the attacker is stuck dealing with what is little more than a gun and a targeting computer with maneuvering rockets the freighter can accelerate away and call for some help.
Similarly, having intelligent missiles would be more expedient than drones here, for the same mass cost.. to put it simply, more bang for your buck. It's one of the issues that have been discussed at length with regards to space fighters (manned or not), compared to simply carrying more ordnance.
If we're comparing "ship armed with short-range drones" to "completely defenseless ship", it works. But when we're comparing it to "ship armed with guns and missiles", it doesn't stack up.
The initial point makes the most sense though, and I have to totally agree with it: they are very good at serving as a distraction for an extended period of time, allowing an outgunned vessel to run. The drones could also have sensor jamming equipment on them, further increasing the chances for the fleeing vessel to escape. One or more of the drones can even interpose themselves between the attacker and the escaping vessel, ensuring that even focused directional sensors can be blinded.
So returning to Stark's original point, if we narratively want the living characters to be in danger due to the short operational range of drones, it works best plot-wise primarily when the situation involves around a weaker vessel attempts to escape from a stronger one.
As a rule, offensive use of unmanned combat vehicles will tend to strip the dramatic tension (danger) out of a story.
Edit:
Ah, funny how I didn't think of this earlier (probably my lack of imagination at work ).. if the attacker also uses drones, then there will be proxy battles between defensive and offensive drones, which can still be dramatic, if the controlling ships are still at dangerously close distances, perhaps due to limited control signal range.
So we can have swarms of combat drones fighting each other, with both sides trying to keep the enemy drones away from their manned carrier ships while simultaneously trying to get some to slip past and hit the enemy carrier ship. So danger to the characters is maintained, even with drones in the story.
Seems like a simple concept, so this has probably been done in fiction already, maybe there are already stories where this happens?