Darkevilme wrote:Construction commencing year 3400.
Economic mobilization level: 10%
8th battlegroup construction: $3360 total.
x2 $1200 Dominion class. Leaves yards: 3404, trials complete 3405.6
x3 $1200 Rampant class. Leaves yards: 3403, trials complete 3405
x8 $640 Predator class, leaves yards: 3400.8, trials complete 3401.2
x16 $320 Wayward escort, leaves yards: 3400.2 trials complete 340.3
Fleet reinforcement plan: $3040
x15 $2400 Principality class. Leaves yards: 3401.6, trials complete 3402.2
x8 $640 Predator class. Leaves yards: 3400.8 trials complete 3401.2
Darkevilme, I take it that the reported dollar figures are
totals for all ships of that class under construction? As in, you are constructing eight
Predator class vessels, each of which costs 80$?
PeZook wrote:Kartr_Kana wrote:Why are the Chamarrans such a big deal to the Collectors? Is it cause they're from "some place else" or just cause they're cat people?
They're human-based cat people bred for some strange purpose by an outside force.
They make us curious.
But the Diaspora remains the core of our research.
So, curiosity killed the... OW!
[is struck by rock thrown by outraged Chamarran ambassador]
Norade wrote:Akhlut wrote:Are one-liners considered inefficient?
Of course not, they're the single most efficient way to deliver witty puns and make people laugh before you do horrible things to them.
Or, for that matter, make people laugh after you do horrible things to someone else, whether you're going to do anything horrible to them or not.
Unit 7 no doubt has fond memories of getting away with killing dozens of people in brutal fashions and getting away with it by the appropriate use of one-liners...
Coyote wrote:Oh, no, the robots have probably observed that things like teeth and glowy eyes have an unnerving effect on biologicals and thus serve an important psychological warfare purpose.
(Actually, they may purposefully design some units to maximize the 'uncanny valley' effect for different reasons-- to put someone off their game during negotiations, or to freak out adversaries in combat).
Wouldn't be surprised. That may explain why the robot the Pendletonian spoke to was built to
look like a rather attractive woman... but spoke in a man's voice.