Night_stalker wrote:Just leave the poor troll alone, you can't argue with fanasticism.
No, but you can mock it.
Either way, Iosef Cross - proove your assertions about the Vong. And NOT by using NT or GE-numbers.
Show us
-their initial fleet strenght (just an order of magnitude at least)
-their FTL-speeds (they FTL is different than other SW-drives)
-their FTL-communications, if any
-their production speeds once they have conquered some planets
Here is
a Star Wars wiki for you, now go and give us some numbers.
Can't do that?
Then i am afraid that your assertion that they will just curb-stomp the IoM is just plain wrong.
By the way, most battles during the first year of the invasion that give us numbers list only single capital ships.
The LARGEST battle lists "hundreds of capital ships". Let's be generous and assume that that means "900 capital" ships.
(the opposing fleet was 300 capships strong, so that would be a more sensible number).
That is certainly enough to overrun most IoM-worlds, with the exception of larger ones (you have to keep in mind that a YV-capship merely equals an light IoM-frigate).
But it's a far cry from being able to run around and BDZing dozens or hundreds of worlds.
Now let's assume that they try your stupid strategy anyway, despite their desperate need for resources.#
Let's assume that they split their ships into ten fleets and then jump to random worlds (since they lack any information whatsoever - no one in the IoM could given them navigational data that is not based on the warp anyway).
Every fleet that hit's a world that is
not an imperial, clerical, forge, garrision or naval world will propably get away with minor casualties (say, 1 ship from the inital salvo of the defenders).
But if they run into any other world, they will get crushed by the defenses? I also assume that they can go to one world each day, for simplicity of calculation.
So how long can they keep that up?
Let's assume that only one in ten worlds falls into the "well defended" category.
Out of the inital ten fleets, one will get destroyed outright since they jumped to a defended world.
(The formula is: Number of remaining ships x 90% (because one fleet in ten is lost, ten percent of all ships) - 1% of all ships. 100 ships destroy 1 IoM world each, but 100 ships don't count since they hit the wrong world)
On day two, you will be left with an average of: 800x0.9-8
IoM-worlds lost: 7
Day three: 712x0.9-7
IoM-worlds lost: 6
Day four: 634x0.9-6
IoM-worlds lost: 5
Day five: 564x0.9-5
IoM-worlds lost: 4
Day five: 503x0.9-5
IoM-worlds lost: 4
Day six: 448x0.9-4
IoM-worlds lost: 3
Day six: 398x0.9-3
IoM-worlds lost: 2
Day seven: 356x0.9-3
IoM-worlds lost: 2
Day eight: 349x0.9-3
IoM-worlds lost: 2
Day nine: 309, 2 lost worlds
Day ten: 277, 1 lost world________________________ destoyed worlds total: 8+7+6+5+4+4+3+2+2+2+1=44
There you have it: A very rough and quite generous calculation of the damge done by your moronic strategy. After ten days, the YV-fleet is reduced to less than 300 ships and has destroyed a fourtyfour worlds, none of any significance
You can, of course, redo your strategy and try to attack with one giant fleet. While that will reduce your casualties, you will also be much slower and will eventually face a fleet that waits for you and crushes your small ships like bugs.
I'll let you propose calculations for that.
Edit:
If you wonder why that calculation is generous, i made the following assumptions in your favor:
-that you actually have 900 ships - 3-400 would propably more accurate
-that only one in ten worlds has the necessary defenses to stop your small assaults, which is most likely highly inaccurate.
-that you only need one day for each assault - but then again, that doesn't change the calculation directly
-that you don't run into any uninhabitated or non-imperial worlds
-that your fleet can sustain such an operation.