This is a long one, so if i missed anyone in the mean time, you'll have to excuse me. Illuminatus Primus, i'd gladly continue this at another time, maybe tomorrow, but this is the last i can say about it for right now because finishing this response was frankly exhausting. I think it took like an hour...Jesus...
Illuminatus Primus wrote:
Yeah, and the primary utility of the Death Star is that it fires a coherent, high-intensity unitary beam of 1e38 J, which can overwhelm the strongest defenses (still, however, capable of dissipating the beam briefly). So the Eclipse is useless for that purpose.
But that wasn't it's purpose. Nor was i saying it was, i said in a pinch i would suspect a number of Eclipses could do the same thing because they're similar in power. By the way i looked it up, the canon numbers say the Eclipse was 1/4th as powerful as the Death Star. So that's actually canon, it's not G-canon but it's definitely C-canon, so unless you have some way to refute it besides incredulity this is something you can't really deny. Considering the smaller, cheaper nature of the Eclipse (basically a big Executor) yes it, and the Sovereigns, could be produced in greater numbers than the Death Stars. Indeed you could probably make thousands for the price of one Death Star.
Now obviously there IS a place for strategic weapons like the Death Star, and if someone came up with some absurd multi-level shield (Coruscant has one, i gather) then sure such a weapon would be used. But under normal circumstances this could be more easily accomplished with a number of other, smaller weapons.
I'd also like to point out i don't think the Death Star was a waste, i think it was impractical in combat when other alternatives, smaller and more economical alternatives, could do it's job against MOST targets. Yes some, probably rare targets have multi-level shields with multiple backup theatre shields, but really if this were commonplace then we would see it far more often. In most instances when planetary shields are seen they're either local (like on Hoth) or single layer shields like the kind on Alderan that Torpedo Spheres were designed to defeat. At least as far as i know. I understand that other instances of shields exist but be realistic here for a second...obviously these uber shields that the Death Star was designed to defeat are fairly rare or else more planets would have had them during the Clone Wars, like most of the CIS worlds where the Republic invaded. Invaded...as in landed on the planets. Either they were unshielded (i find it unlikely a wealthy planet like Munilist would be) or the shields were punched down with some other weapon or weapons over time. This probably was the "siege" in Outer Rim Sieges.
The goal of suspension of disbelief should be to analyze the films such that the events and scenarios can be taken as literally and seriously as possible. As if they could occur in their own logical bubble reality. And the idea that any realistic government would build such a ludicriously overcapacity tool as the Death Star for some vague shit reasoning like "psychology lol" is absurd.
Hardly. It's clear that Palpatine genuinely believed he could rule through fear alone, from his sociopathic point of view it probably seemed like a given. More over, there WAS a strategic interest there, but not as immediate as you seem to believe. Clearly planet shields are fairly commonplace, or at least i think so and i think you agree, but the very FACT that the Clone Wars saw multiple planets, many of which were no doubt shielded (factory worlds, city planets, fortresses et al) invaded by Republic and CIS forces shows that these can be dismantled with or without the Death Star. Combined with the known fact that Palpatine honestly believed in this "rule through fear" nonsense, and that he was clearly tremendously arrogant, such things as "morale" or "courage in the face of annihilation" probably never even crossed his mind. Fuck the man built a battlemoon and
named it after himself, the Eye of Palpatine. He designed whole weapon systems so that he could destroy them with a single command, never even considering this a stupid move if someone somehow subverted this kill-switch system. He was an insane, arrogant old cocksucker...it makes perfect sense.
Now of course then we're saying "Well he was crazy, he didn't get it" and that probably bothers some people but really look at ROTJ...
look at it. He used himself as bait, never even considering for a moment that if ONE THING went wrong (the Rebels have more firepower than he thought, the shield fails or malfunctions, his sidekick Vader suddenly grows a pair) that he would die and the Empire would fall. This never even crossed his fucking mind. Think about Hitler here for a second, think of how arrogant and self-obsessed he was, how he expected at the end that he could "order" divisions into being as he was cracking up. Is it really that unrealistic? I mean it's actually
happened before. Here, on Earth, like more than once. Indeed i would say that may in fact be the entire point of ROTJ, that his arrogance destroyed him. And frankly it destroyed him MORE THAN ONCE.
This is not what drives realistic military planning, malevolent or otherwise. And if we have reason to interpret it such that we don't have to resort to that loathsome last resort of Trek rationalizing "well, the characters are just stupid or otherwise unreasonable". Implying that the enormous opportunity cost of the Death Star was merely for the threadbare purposes previously stated leaves me with no reasonable SoD conclusion other than the Imperials are Snidley Whiplashes self-consciously bumbling inefficient villains just to make a point.
Only if you discount the thousands of other intensely arrogant, self-absorbed, sociopathic dictators that have actually existed and have done things not even close to as stupid as using themselves as bait in a trap that depended on everything going perfectly to function. And what makes you think it was stupid? As i said from his standpoint, from what he SAID was his political beliefs, the whole idea of a terror weapon is perfectly in line with his belief system. So yeah he honestly believed he could just scare people into doing what he wanted, obviously he was wrong but that doesn't change anything.
And really all of this is just to add some unnecessary tactical capacity to the Death Stars which were already immensely useful strategic weapons, even if they were not practical for battlefield deployment in a meaningful way beyond sieges. The Death Stars were powerful, they were spectacularly effective at what they were designed to do, but like any other siege weapon they were not as practical as something smaller and more agile that can be mass produced like a World Devastator or an Eclipse or Sovereign. The fact these ships EXIST is evidence that the Emperor himself saw the Death Stars as something close to untennable after a while anyway. He would never have had them built at all otherwise, as they weren't as powerful as a single Death Star in terms of sheer destructive ability. The fact they exist means he was obviously moving towards a more tactical scale of superweapon.
The torpedo spheres are not said to be completely effective against all shields regardless of strength, and its quite obvious that one can figure they're simply totally ineffective against even the barest double-walled shield or theater/locally-shielded shield components. The fact there are larger "torpedo platforms" than the standard torpedo sphere (Children of the Jedi), implied to be larger than an Executor-class suggests basic torpedo spheres are definitely not the end all to be all of shield defeating hardware.
I agree, but the fact is that i'm willing to bet that they, and other such shield buster weapons, were more practical to deploy in numbers than the Death Star. And more so again i point out that the fact that whole planets were invaded, including core worlds and extraordinarily wealthy planets like Munilist (which was a BANKING WORLD) mean that such double-walled shields are possibly rarer than normal, single layer shields. Otherwise again, why none on Munilist? They couldn't afford it? The Intergalactic Banking Clan, who are literally made of money, couldn't afford it? Who were allied with the most powerful industrial factions in the galaxy--the Techno Union, the Trade Fed, the Corporate Sector--and who had what amounted to virtually limitless money and resources? How is that possible? For that matter how many double-wall shields have we seen, compared to single layer shields?
So far all i know of is Coruscant, and it was invaded too. Now you can say "Well Palpatine shut it down" ok fair enough, but how come no one noticed it? No one. Not a single person, and no one informed the Jedi or the Army? And somehow they couldn't raise them again after the attack began? Either they can, in fact, be brought down by sustained bombardment (mayhap some kind of...
siege? Like of the Outer Rim variety?) or they are extremely rare and expensive to maintain. I actually think the latter, since i can't recall any other double-sheield besides Coruscant, and again, i doubt the CIS would have not a single shielded planet amongst them despite having immense industrial and financial resources.
Furthermore, its still possible to defeat enemies, because a shielded planet can be starved out or cut off from its economic productivity. It is just slower, more dangerous, and less guaranteed.
Not really, i mean a relatively small force could probably do it. The Trade Fed blockaded a planet and they're just a corporation, obviously the Imperial Navy has vastly more resources to do so. Or they could just use automated forces, drones and droid starships, surely this is all within their capacity. And of course all of this assumes that one cannot simply knock the shields down, which seems to be untrue, what with the whole OUTER RIM SIEGES! Seriously, they invaded a planet that was way, way richer and more important than Alderaan and it's shields were either bypassed or knocked down rapidly. Unless Munilist, an important CIS capital world with huge amounts of money and industrial resources, considered extremely strategically important, was unshelded. And i doubt that.
Alderaan besieged could have called upon its sequestered defense forces, could have rallied support in the Senate, and could have encouraged civil war. Alderaanian defense make it practical for the member worlds to stage opposition to the New Order from the Senate, because the alternative to defying them is to risk a rapid escalation to civil war. The Death Star makes it completely impossible to hide anywhere, so it significantly stymies this ability in conjunction with conventional warmaking capability and the centralization of political and administrative institutions. A fully fortified world cannot communicate easily with the outside, cannot easily coordinate warmaking from its centralized position, cannot maintain control of productive industry, and if unsustainable, cannot feed or supply itself indefinitely.
Where are you gettin this about Alderaan? What defense forces, they were never confirmed to even HAVE any as far as i know, and even if they did wouldn't they have to lower the shields to get out? Like opening a fortress gate to send your army out? That'd just make it worse. The Senate was already hanging by a thread as it was, by the time of Empire Strikes Back it was dead and gone, and it's entirely likely it was little more than a rubber stamp commitee by that time anyway. More so there already WAS a civil war going on, an armed rebellion on a rather large scale, it's doubtful it could have gotten worse and even less so that the plight of some core would (one of countless billions of inhabited planets) would smark a civil war. To be honest the Empire had every right to attack them, they were aiding the open guerrila rebellion against the Emperor, they would have no claim to moral superiority and no high ground here, they're at best allied with criminals and terrorists and at worst a rouge state. The Empire was well within it's rights to retaliate, which doesn't excuse it, they're still cocksuckers for killing billions of people that way but
still.
And really all of that can be done with just a fleet of ships, assuming you cant just knock the shield down...which we have evidence they can, since they invaded strategically vital CIS worlds during the Clone Wars and...the Outer Rim Sieges. You see where i'm going here? Either these planets were unshielded, which is phenomenally unlikely, or shields are not as durable as you seem to think they are. A blockade is effective at cutting them off if need be, and i seriously doubt anyone would care since the Empire controls virtually all communications, and more so even if someone did care a civil war is already raging. That's WHY they attacked Alderaan, it was a planet assisting the Rebellion, and while we know they were infact freedom fighters and the Emperor was insane, there is no reason to believe anyone else knew that. At least not on a large scale. The Empire dominated the FTL communications market, no one was going to call for help.
Already defeated the latter claim.
What do you mean exactly?
Has it occurred to you that doctrinal memory for the prolonged length and cost in men, money, and materiel of the infamous Outer Rim Sieges might be one of the reasons that Imperial planners did not feel that the political goals of the Establishment could be advanced without a weapon which could break such sieges effortlessly and thus dissipate such a heavy possible cost to pursuing their political aims?
Well since Palpatine already outright stated he believed this stuff about ruling through fear and was insane, and the Death Star really designed as a strategic weapon and a terror weapon, somehow i doubt it. Especially since the "loss of men, money and materiel" is kind of irrelevent to a civilization the size of the Empire. They have billions of worlds, they don't run out of raw materials or energy. But ok, lets say they only have a million, like the movey says...even if every world deployed ONLY one million men, it would be a trillion men. That's with a planetary force of one million, when we know
single planets like Coruscant have many times that number already. Ok so lets say they have to lay siege to a hundred worlds at once...unlikely but ok. That's
ten billion men per planet, not including reserves, assuming the barest minimal forces available. And that's excluding cloning technology which, using more advanced methods, would allow them to mass produce soldiers in immense, almost arbitrary numbers. But really, i could recruit a trillion men from Coruscant alone and not even put a dent in the population, considering it's something like several quintillion in all. And they have more than one such planet. AND they realistically have tens of millions of Earth-like planets. AND they have clones. AND they have droids, wich...i mean the CIS produced quintillions of them. So yeah...no.
Proroguing the Imperial Senate, passing decrees, ruling through viceroys, seems a lot less worth it if you could be looking at the Outer Rim Sieges all over again, except across the much more economically important and heavily populated Core Worlds. War is politics by other means.
What i just said...the numbers are irrelevent on this scale. They'd have fewer ships than they do armies to put in them. Even if it took a billion men to conquer a planet, they could do it easily, several times over. Assuming they want to conquer the planet at all and not just blockade it with droid ships and starve it out.
What evidence do you have that big ass rocks which will require comparable reactors, fuel, hyperdrive, sublight drives and defenses (who wants the thing killed en route or while being built)
Uh, no? Hyperdrive allows you to equip this thing far, far in your own territory and zip it out to where you need it in a few hours. No need for weapons, or even a similar reactor. Just one big enough to get a Pluto-sized planet up to, say, a goodly portion of c. Fuck you could just move it into the system on a ballistic trajectory so it would eventually hit the planet in it's own time. Either they drop the shields and try to run, and you kill them, or it hits and you kill them. More so, even if they shoot it down, so what? I cant even begin to imagine how many of these things there are in the galaxy. And if this planet is so immensely important that taking it out is a MUST then who cares. You're assuming this is some heavily armed, shielded war world...i'm talking about throwing rocks at them really hard. Fuck you could probably tow the thing with enough large ships and just move it on a collission couse with the enemy world.
to the Death Star (unless you're willing to grant it by fiat the same performance in maneuverability with 1% the hardware) will be cheaper than a Death Star itself?
Who says it needs to be the same preformance? It's just a big bullet, it's not like you have to even aim it that well, a "grazing hit" would do the job of fucking the planet up.
Especially because each of these suicide rocks will be fucking thrown away everytime its used! The Death Star is more heuristically economical because all the support hardware can be reused at length, not destroyed upon first use each time!
So what you'll run out of uninhabited planetoids somehow? I really think you misunderstand me, this is basically a hyperdrive on a big moon or something, jump it in and let it fly on it's own trajectory with maybe some assistance. The drive unit could even detatch if you really want it to, but frankly i don't think it's necessary, since hyperdrives are cheap as fuck.
Unless you have an even shitty backup shield or local shielding for "weak link" shielding hardware, in which case your one-time small gap is not an insta-kill. Like I said, there's room for capacity beneath the Death Star, but it is you who is suggesting that anything ever said to batter down any kind of shield can be used instead of the Death Star to batter down any possible shield, no matter how strong or employing any defense in depth. Shielded targets had a vulnerability profile before, the Death Star increases that vulnerability profile immensely, allowing for greater flexibility.
Thats the thing, that's not really what the Death Star's purpose was. It was clearly built to subjugate people and to be a terror weapon. It was all part of an overarching political dogma within the Empire where the leadership honestly believed this was entirely logical, now were they right? Well, maybe yeah, i mean the Rebellion wasn't getting a lot of support as far as i can gather before their major victory in ANH...which was, ironically, killing the Death Star I.
Except dickwaving among competing hegemon like the Saturn V and the Tsar Bomb is not comparable to the Death Star's purpose against domestic opposition. Apples and oranges. Maybe you really don't get how this is not intuitive, but it isn't.
Ok fine, forget the analogy then.
So what, it wasn't designed for this operational environment or to work without the support of a comprehensive military doctrine. You're complaining that a Nimitz-class cannot fight off hundreds of submarines stranded in the Pacific by itself. The Empire is HUGE man. WEG says the Death Star was slated to be placed at the regional and oversectorial echelons in general. Tarkin's was the proof-of-concept. The Death Star II was 180 times the volume of the first. This kind of stuff is available to private individual shippers; because it was Xizor who supplied the DS2 as a favor. Your grasp of the scale is just poor.
It's not about the resources, it's about the fact that supply lines are a weakness here. I'm not saying a Nimitz all by itself surrounded by hundreds of subs, i'm saying that if you use guerrila tactics you can take out the fuel ships, supply tenders and such and never have to even fight the carrier. The scale does not take away the fact that such a massive ship requires orders of magnitude more to support it than any number of smaller vessels would. Possibly a whole FLEET all on it's own, and you know what,
fuck that, you're the guy who thinks that a civilization with BILLIONS of planets can be affected by the loss of "men, money and materiel" during a siege. My grasp of scale is poor, really? How about your grasp of logistics is poor dude.
I never said it was a do-all-kill-all weapon. I'm saying it fills a previously empty strategic niche and is pretty much irreplaceable or un-substitutable for that purpose. They needed a Death Star to do what it could.
Yeah and i'm saying that unless double-shields are very rare, very new, or the CIS never heard of shields then obviously the strategic element was more or less not as relevent to the people who built this thing. Again, we've seen sieges, during the Clone Wars. We KNOW they attacked strategically vital planets...either these uber planetary shields are almost unheard of (so much so that Alderaan and Munilist and half the CIS' most vital factory worlds never got them) or they're very newm or the CIS never used planetary shields, or they can be overwhelmed with time and sustained firepower. You can not escape the fact that the Clone Wars happened, the Outer Rim Sieges happened, Coruscant happened, something overwhelmed these shields OTHER than a big ass strategic weapon, or they were unshielded, or the shields on modern Coruscant are some new thing made after the war.
Yes, reasons which DO NOT APPLY TO THE DEATH STAR. You're really thick.
Then why did you bring it up, earlier, which i was responding to.
No evidence provided. We KNOW the Death Star is not novel technology except for the scale and it is scaled even further up (DS2) and down (Darksaber, &c.) This is an unjustified assumption.
Star Wars displays a rather pronounced technological stagnation. They already learned all they can about physics, their technology is basically the same it's been for generations, i'm simply "assuming" that no magical supertech just appeared out of nowhere to make the Galaxy Gun possible. You know that retarded argument that Trekkies use against the Death Star.
Empire's End demonstrates irrefutably that the refire rate was limited to hours. Furthermore, it misfired twice. Its reliability is pretty low, we know from the same source that it only fired a couple times. That's a very low performance rate. Meanwhile, the Death Star's fundamental technology (composite beam turbolasers) has been understood for a long time. It performed without flaw each time fired, its test bed worked, it was much better performing than the Galaxy Gun by the evidence.
So yeah, then you'd need to build more than one, like i suggested below...
Didn't you once claim that the world's nuclear arsenal could sterilize the planet?
Yes i did. Utterly irrelevent to the discussion, but way to bring up shit that's completely outside of the discussion at hand. What does this have to do with the Galaxy Gun or Death Star again?
In TESB, Vader asks that the Falcon be tracked to every possible destination based on its last known trajectory, so clearly its not intrinsically impossible. The fact remains that the Galaxy Gun's mobility is not known to be as high as the very mobile Death Star.
Alright you got a point there.
There are at least twelve million major population centers, more than fifty-one million inhabited worlds, and at least billions of worlds with some level of industrialization. A weapon which destroys target by gimmick, misfires twice for less than every ten attempts which could only be made over the course if maybe a couple months is a very poor weapon to completely dismantle the enemy in a conventional civil war.
Good thing too, since that's not what it would be used for. If you built enough of them, you could cause serious damage to the enemy's core worlds and have the capacity to strike against pinpoint targets without actually having to send the Death Star itself--and risk it being destroyed, intercepted or cut off.
The New Republic was already in decline from conventional warmaking when the Galaxy Gun was introduced. Its primary value was political and psychological, adding insult to injury. We don't even really know how often they could produce and fire a planet-killing shot, since they apparently used a couple killing a troopship, a space colony, and a moon. We actually don't have any direct reference for comparison with the Death Star. We don't know how often it could have effectively killed (if at all) an Alderaan-analogue.
EGTW says it could. That's C-canon, and unless you have some G-canon to refute it, the fact remains it was documented as being designed to do JUST THAT.
Its not like the New Republic didn't know there was a bunch of hyperspace missiles coming out and killing their shit.
Ok granted.
A lot of people would suggest ICBMs are a shitty weapon.
Like how?
And its more like a pin-point surgical kill tool with arbitrary range and response time, so not that much like an ICBM, really.
From a strategic standpoint, if enough could be produced--and we have no reason to assume they couldn't since it's not even as big as the SSDs of which there are thousands--then it could still be a devastating weapons system on a strategic, MAD scale.
The same reasoning for why Trekkie arguments for adapting Borg ships to arbitrary energies is stupid. We know the Galaxy Gun works by workarounds to the shields and the inherent stability of matter and defends itself with deflector shields which are quite effective. Now that's obviously less effective in principle than simply pouring 1e38 J into a planet.
Workarounds to the shields, so now they're permiable? I thought that double shields were supposed to be almost invincible. Seriously if a workaround exists then why not use it, who says it WASNT used before? Again...Outer Rim Sieges, Coruscant, Munilist, Clone Wars...why? Where the shields at? So now you're saying there is a workaround? Ok so what is it now? And don't get sarcastic and pissy, are they permiable without sheer intensity or not?
First of all, what if you just physically put a big fucking rock in front of a Galaxy Gun projectile? The superlaser would instantly atomize the object and push on. What is the Galaxy Gun projectile going to do?
Well gee, i guess the engines, weapons, navigation systems and shields it has would probably help. Yeah it has all that. The "projectiles" are basically small ships with droid brains, heavily armed and shielded in their own right. Again, C-canon.
Are you arguing they cannot be intercepted in principle? You are the one shaking the "no-limit" fallacies here, and assuming that any tool shown to do ANYTHING LIKE the Death Star can do EVERYTHING IT DOES EQUALLY WELL.
No i'm not. I'm saying that the fact the CLONES WARS EVEN HAPPENED they way they did means that obviously double-shields are either:
A--not common
B--not as powerful as you think
C--new to the galaxy
D--the CIS never used them, even on vital capital and fortress worlds
Due to technological stagnation i simply presumed it was B, but frankly the others are absurd and no other explanation exists. Somehow, someway, they managed to lay siege to a huge number of important fortified planets and capital worlds of the CIS. Somehow they managed to either get past their shields, or the planets had no shields to begin with, and if the latter then why not just Base Delta Zero the fuck out of them. Especially the droid factory worlds and fortress planets, even if capital worlds like Munilist were out of teh question. And this still doesn't explain why Couscant took a beating, since it HAS double shields and yet they seemed to do jack shit for it against...wait for it...a large fleet with sustained bombardment. Which would be a siege...which would thus put the
siege in Outer Rim
Sieges.
Further more, the fact that they can be intecepted doesn't mean that they will be intercepted in time. They are hyper-capable, they can maneuver, defend themselves, have shields and weapons. Can they be intecepted, yeah, but putting a rock in front of them isn't going to do it. Seriously a
rock? What did you think this was like a rail gun? The things travel through hyperspace, what is a rock going to do?
I'm pointing out there are intrinsic and heuristically obvious drawbacks and cost-benefit exchanges associated with substituting one for another. I'm not arguing the Galaxy Gun is pointless or has no advantages.
And i'm not arguing the Death Star has no value or advantages. But it's just not as bad ass as it seems. It's a highly effective terror weapon, as it made the whole Rebellion shit themselves in unison like some kind of trained seals. It's a more powerful siege engine than Torpedo Spheres if you simply MUST take down a shield in short notice. No one is saying this isn't the case. But that doesn't mean it's a practical or even logical weapon, when others are available that can accomplish the same thing. And yes the
same could be said about the Galaxy Gun.
A multi-ship BDZ would not kill the Alderaan shield, as the energy threshold of the Alderaan shot is at least a TRILLION TIMES GREATER than a Base Delta Zero.
Well, again, this assumes you can't wear it down by sustained bombardment. Seriously, again, Clone Wars, Munilist, Coruscant, Outer Rim Sieges...either the CIS never heard of shields, planetary shields are new, or there are ways around them. The first two are absurd, the latter would explain it perfectly.
Yes, a 1e38 J bombardment.
I'll say it again...Munilist, vital CIS planet, certainly shielded right? Ok, so how come it went down? Or are you going to argue it wasn't shielded; ok then what about the OTHER CIS worlds, and even if they're not shielded then why weren't the droid factories destroyed from orbit. Frankly i think it's absurd to think the CIS never deployed planetary shields, so either the Alderaan shield is somehow unique (unlikely), or they can be worn down with a similar amount of energy over time, or by other, smaller siege weapons. Again...shields of the kind you're describing, this invincible uber shields, make the Outer Rim Sieges and most of the Clone Wars IMPOSSIBLE or else both sides would hide behind their shields with the other unable to penetrate. Obviously these things can fail against less powerful weapons. Unless, as i said, you can figure out a way to invade a shielded planet somehow.
No, its "continent searing", which lowers its energy threshold to
1e10-1e11 megatons. The Alderaan shot was approximately 1e22 megatons, based only on the kinetic energy of the expanding debris cloud. The difference between the two is 1e11; or a hundred billion, the relationship between our Sun and ALL THE STARS IN THE ENTIRE GALAXY.
I was wrong, it's actually 1/4th as powerful. Again, this is all canon, no evidence you've shown as disputed this. Indeed i doubt any exists. So please show me higher canon evidence or some kind of evidence that it's not as powerful as the actual C-canon says, because otherwise you're incredulity is irrelevent.
According to your reasoning, there was no advantage to the innovation of gunpowder-powered artillery because previously sieges of castles and forts using sapping, primitive catapults, and scaling the walls could work too.
What the fuck are you talking about? Please explain how you came to this conclusion.
I think they are very common.
I do to, indeed i'd imagine they're actually fairly ubiquitous. Almost to the point you'd think they'd have some way to...gee i don't know, batter them down somehow. Some kind of siege weapon...
And what makes you think all planetary shields work exactly the same, and are the same strength and employ the same depth of defense? If I tell you a vehicle is armored, and weapon A (a RPG-7) can kill it (a Humvee or Stryker vehicle from the front), would you, based purely on your semantical argument, take it into battle against a First World Main Battle Tank (M1A2SEP)? Would you think that the Javelin man-portable Anti-Tank Guided Missile system would be overkill and wasteful because of the prior example with the RPG-7?
Which is all well and good except that shields aren't armor. We know they're based on power input, so unlike steel which remains in place if the vehicle's engines fail, shields drop if they're generators are overloaded.
We know for a fact that different deflector shields are different. The Borelias theater shield could be battered down by the sustained bombardment of a single ISD. The Hoth theater shield was impervious to the combined firepower of all of Death Squadron (including 1 Executor-class warship, at least six ISDs, another large warship (as per the arcade game referenced on SWTC identified with one of the anonymous Star Battleships), and more (the novelisation has Vader consulting with "20 battleship commanders").
You could probably shoot around them and melt the planet. Unless you think a Base Delta Zero would somehow be defeated by a theater shield. If the entire planet is an airless, molten husk it's really irrelevent how tough the shield is over one particular area. Unless the shield makes it's own air, somehow. And that still wouldn't stop the ground from melting to slag as the atmosphere basically boils. Really i always read this as Vader not wanting, or wanting an excuse, to not have to BDZ the planet and turn his baby boy into a handful of dust
Contrariwise, the Coruscant deflector shield boasted two layers of full-intensity shield impervious to all but plot-device sabotage. However, the replacement or repaired shield was easily punched through from below by a single
Executor-class starship's salvos. And then the Alderaanian shield system absorbed a 1e38 J beam for several tenths of a second without any phase transitions (an eternity for a hemisphere to absorb a coherent intense single beam containing all the energy produced by the Sun since Moses).
Wait so an Executor shot it's way out through a "replacement shield"? Was this shield stated, in the book, to be less powerful than the original somehow?
See above. Your arguments are simplistic. I'm not arguing only the Death Star works for any shield. It is you who are treating "planetary shield" to be all-encompassing term regardless of performance figures or observed characteristics as if there is no variance or differences within this set. I am not. I am saying that if there is some subset of the set "planetary shield" which can only be easily defeated according to the performance characteristics of the Death Star, than it is a useful weapon. You have presented no evidence to suggest that the deflector shields that the Death Star can defeat can be arbitrarily defeated with equal performance by other methods.
Then where ARE these shields. How come we've seen, maybe, two in all of the canon? Where were they during the Clone Wars, you know that HUGE interstellar war where the Republic almost went under, that war? Either these shields are so small a subset as to be almost one of a kind items or relics, or there are other ways around them that you're ignoring. The only reason you're ignoring it, i have a feeling, is because you don't want to admit that the Death Star was built by quoute "mustache twirling supervillains"...even though that PRECISELY THE CASE, and even George Lucas seems to agree since his characterization of the Emperor was exactly that. The Death Star, while a powerful weapon and certainly an example of the Empire's peak power, was basically built because Palpatine is insane. Whatever these uber-shields are they're either not common enough to be relevent (assuming Alderaan counts, plus Coruscant that'd be a whopping
two) and evidence seems to suggest that less powerful shields are far, far more common. Or maybe shields are quite rare over whole planets, it's a crazy thought but it would explain the Outer Rim Sieges, and Munilist and every OTHER major planetary invasion in the Clone Wars. If that's the case then you would actually have a very good argument--if shields are rare, and extremely powerful, then you would need the Death Star to punch through them.
I am not arguing they should not exist. I am arguing they do not substitute for the Death Star in important respects, and suggestions that they do or should are retarded suggestions from retarded people.
Why? Cause of what? Look, again, i have about a ton of C-canon that says either shields, as you describe them, are extremely rare or not nearly as powerful as you seem to think they are. Unless you want to remove the entire Clone Wars cartoon series, both of them, from canon, as well as most of the books, AND the part in the movie where the Outer Rim Sieges are mentioned...then something else is going on here. Now if you want to say there is some subset of shields that are uber-maxi-super powerful, fine but that subclass would be so small as to be irrelevent since you seem to be unable to think of more than two. I can think of about a dozen cases that say otherwise. Maybe more. And the movies also show the lack of a shield during the battle of Couscant, several other Clone Wars battlefields if briefly, and mentioned the Outer Rim Sieges...which would be IMPOSSIBLE if what you describe is true.
If we care about SoD, we should prefer interpretations where we do not have the make the characters retarded or unprofessional or otherwise silly in order to make the setting make physical sense. And we don't here because the evidence implies the Death Star was a practical weapon for a particular purpose, not just a OOH SCARY BIG tool.
Well like i said...Outer Rim Sieges, Munilist, Coruscant, Clone Wars...they happened. WTF Primus?