
Replace the Praetorite Vong with a Tyranid splinter fleet and the full invasion force with a hive fleet.
Moderator: NecronLord
Considering I said NJO in the thread title, I think we're putting it in the Rakata era. Of course post-Empire.gigabytelord wrote:Which setting? Post or pre-Galactic Empire?
agreedAhriman238 wrote:Hmmm, Tyranid FTL figures are indeed all over the place, but IIRC are broadly comparable to the IoM. That makes them slower than Wars, but it's more like the difference between crossing the galaxy in a year or two as opposed to the month or so it would take the NR.
I think the OP needs to clarify a few things here, because the unlike the Vong, the Nid invasion hasn't stopped, Hive fleets are still arriving and from what is shown in cannon each one is apparently larger and more powerful than the last.Ahriman238 wrote:The NR is screwed on the ground, but space will be a different story. The real question is how many 'Nid ships they are, what sort of Hive Fleet we're talking about.
Trouble is, I know more or less the basics of 40k (never played, never read the codexes; most of what I know comes out of the novels, chiefly Ciaphas Cain, and TV Tropes).gigabytelord wrote:I think the OP needs to clarify a few things here, because the unlike the Vong, the Nid invasion hasn't stopped, Hive fleets are still arriving and from what is shown in cannon each one is apparently larger and more powerful than the last.
Genestealer cults do much the same thing from what I've read. 'Course, I think it takes longer.There is also the known fact that the Vong send scouts ahead of their main fleet, these scouts proceeded to sow the seeds for conflict among major SW powers, and this combined with confusion, lack interest (at first) and the out right incompetence that local military leaders demonstrated early in the war allowed them to cause much more damage than would have otherwise been the case.
That's exactly what I was wondering, as a simple fleet vs fleet scenario would be pointless and we all know would win.Batman wrote:A technologically obviously militarily superior foe. I think one of the points of this scenario (or at the very least one I'd have considered if it were mine) is can the New Republic as per NJO deal with the Nids. Technologically, the Vong would have been a pushover too.
The question isn't can Wars technology kick the Nids back to wherever they came from (which in space, it can). It's are the morons in charge of the New Republic as of the NJO capable of seeing to that this is done.
So basically that's a great big "IF" and since I don't care for ifs I'm not going to push it unless the introduction of new evidence tells me otherwise.Batman wrote:The link between Force sensitivity and genetics is-muddled, at best. It's obviously occasionally hereditary (the Skywalkers and the Horn family come to mind) but I don't think we have a large enough a sample base to say it is regularly so (especially with the the OR Jedi 'no family ties' idiocy ensuring there wouldn't be).
Warp travel is incredibly variable. We have some 'rough' indicators, but even those can be contradictory. For example the Eisenhorn novels (by same author) indicate warp travel between adjacent systems within a sector or subsector can take days (hundreds of c to a few thousand c) whilst travel between sectors (within a segmentum, eg Scarus to Cadia) can take months, which can be tens of thousands to a few hundred thousand c minimum.) And its deliberately variable because the medium they travel through - the warp - is supposed to be hell and randomness mixed up. There could be reasons for why this all is tied up in psychic shit and belief, but as of yet I onyl have vague speculation and theory as to how that mechanism, goes. all we know is 'that shit be variable'.Jub wrote:Warp travel is an area I know less about than you would, but to the best of my knowledge in sector travel seems to take between days and weeks for the Imperium. I don't know how much faster or slower the Tyranids would be, but I'd bet they'd have more consistent travel times than the Imperium. There's also the fact that depending on what the state of the Warp is the Star Wars galaxy they could well have the faster FTL travel times.
note the logbook of the Proxxian traders that operate in the Nephilim sector. They primarily transport forced labour from the hive world of Proxx to the isolated mining colonies of Hephastian, approximately three times each Terran year. The distance is dozens of light years and requires a fleet to traverse the Immaterium. The route is anything but predictable, despite being classed as a semi-fluctuating passage (the most stable rating). Typical voyages range between one and six weeks, but the more extreme journeys have taken as much as 1,200 years and as little as two minutes. Some 22% of expeditions have, as of yet, not arrived at their destination - although given the time disparity, one can only estimate what percentage have been lost and which are still en route. In distance, this is a relatively short voyage example;the numbers only grow worse with longer journeys.
Well if you look at the various 'hive fleets' depicted (either on the wikis or in the codexes alone, nevermind te novels.) you tend to get some widely variable (and even inconsistent) depictions of tactics and capabilities. IT can even get complicated because the Tyranids will sometimes fight THEMSELVES - hive fleet trying to destory hive fleet. In theory this seems like its counter-productive, but it makes some sense from the Tyranids' DArwinina POV - it forces the individual fleets to adapt and evolve to win, and the one who defeats the other becomes a bigger force, acquires all the 'advantages' the defeated force has, and probably has learned new shit on top of it.I also know that the Nids aren't just the mass 'human wave' style foes that they seem to get depicted as. They could try to topple a sector with a gene stealer cult by getting people into positions of power, or they could start Tyranoforming the lower levels of a city world like Coruscant, or they could just lay down beacons and lead the hive fleet in for a straight up battle.
My main problem si with the infiltration angle. That's a huge problem because the Vong's purported presence int he Star Wars system is some five decades, and its hard to predict actually what influence (if any) they may have had and how bad they fucked things up. I remember hearing they had some hand in bringing about the Empire's downfall (and possibly the REpublic) and we know from the Crimson Empire 2 shit that Nom Anor was fucking around with the post-Endor Empire to topple that as well. Given that alone its hard to predict how the Tyranids would do in that situation with any accuracy, over that timescale, or even what the course of events 'unmodified' in STar Wars would result in.I'm not trying to find an I win button for either side, I'm just trying to set down a few things that sprung to mind as potential factors that could play a role based on my knowledge of the forces involved. It's way more interesting to find out how the different factors change things than to try and leap straight into side x wins because of y.