Alerik the Fortunate wrote:
I think in Stross' case, part of the plot was pitting different kinds of smugness against each other. The reader knows the New Republic doesn't stand a chance against the forces they're up against, but they march on with insufferable arrogance because God is with them and their blessed Emperor and all that. I do admit that it was overplayed a bit. However, there were elements, such as the captain, who suspected that all the trash talk about transhumanist societies being weak and decadent was off the mark, and they might be facing an opponent to competent to handle, but dared not speak out against the establishment.
I just ended up feeling sorry for the New Republic because the narrative was so dead set against them, with even the omniscient narrator going into detail about their incompetence and the admiral being a senile old man and the flag officer being an overzealous idiot, and all their plans easily being foiled by either the Festival or the Terran agents in the fleet. Honestly there was so much smugness from the good guys and from the narrative itself for me to feel any satisfaction with the silly fascists getting their comeuppence.
Having said that I do remember some of the bits with New Republic crewmembers who didn't buy their own nation's smugness. I think there's one scene where two crewmen are talking about how much trouble they'll be in if they break the AI god's No Temporal Meddling rule, when an officer walks in and they have to start shouting about the captain's personal honour to maintain appearances. That I thought was funny.
Alerik the Fortunate wrote: Another (purpose to a hugely unequal conflict) is to make a conflict a purely moral question rather than a practical one. If group A can easily annihilate group B if they resist group A's wishes, the degree to which A intervenes depends entirely on the prevailing ethics within group A and on internal politics. That can make an interesting story, though no concrete examples come to mind immediately.
That would indeed make an interesting story potentially, and though I can think of a few examples where this must have happened in the background, I can't think of any where the whole story has been about this.
Avatar is actually kind of close, although in the end the guy on the curb ends up tripping the stomper up and delivering a vicious face stamping of his own, so to speak, so I'm not sure if that would count.
An example of it happening in the story but not as the main plot is in
Last and First Men, by the author of
Star Maker and in the same continuity, where one of the races descended from humanity has to escape from Earth and decides to wipe out the native ecology of Venus so they can survive, reasoning that theirs is a more advanced and durable civilisation.
Oh, and Michael Moorecock's
The Eternal Champion, but that's fantasy
Earth001 wrote:Stark wrote:Above and beyond the daft things people have said in this thread, the complete lack of ability for DirtNumbers to respond to anything or even discuss his own random ideas is amazing.
I honestly don't think he understands that people are mocking him - and yet those 'joke' suggestions generally contain more information than his posts!
I am ignoring the insult responces. Also I am trying to ignore you.
It looks as if you're ignoring all the responses. Seriously man this is your thread and all you've offered is this plus two suggestions for fights which are hardly 'curbstomps'.
To clarify, you suggested The Ori vs the Green Lantern Corps, that is; a transgalactic empire ruled by superbeings of terrific power vs a transgalactic army made up of superbeings of terrific power, and the Systems Commonwealth vs the Galactic Empire, two vast galactic civilisations with huge fleets of ultrapowerful warships. Neither of these are exactly foregone conclusions.
PS. I don't care if it is obvious to someone who has read all the ICS books and watched all of
Andromeda and seen
Stargate at the point where the Ori appear and read a
Green Lantern comic who would win these fights. Because I haven't and don't plan to