Which then gets into the question of how much training should be devoted to fighting a single enemy faction. Especially a faction that rarely comes into Federation space and has been dealt with each time with existing tactics.Tribble wrote: ↑2022-09-07 08:41pm And ya, the effectiveness of these tactics would depend on them being practiced... which is why they should be practiced, if they do indeed work. But they should at least be attempted first, especially the ladder after the Borg have adapted to being hit from a single weapon.
Replicating anti-borg weapons can be done between detecting the borg and engaging them, only costing the space of a few replication patterns for the times when borg aren't present. Training people in anti-borg tactics is something that needs to be done with every cadet going through the academy.
A combination firearm and phaser seems the best choice if the borg can deploy defences against kinetics. The firearm to force the borg to keep whatever disadvantages come with those defences or pick off any borg that aren't using them, with the phaser reserved for the drones that can withstand bullets.Crazedwraith wrote: ↑2022-09-08 04:31am If you want to hit a drone with multiple phase beams at once. Rather than coordinate mutliple redshirts at once, build some kind of phaser volley gun. Strap the guts of seven hand phases to a stock and call it a day.
If we were going full on fanwank equip federation marines type deal. I'd give them some kind of very reliable firearm as a base and give it and underbarrel phaser for the diversity of effects and stun option if needed.
Unless they can figure out how to have phasers change frequency while in the field, which is what a few Trek games have done.
Those DOTs might be the standard probe in Discovery's time. Though I do remember asking why Discovery only launched their flare in a single direction instead of a wider spread.NecronLord wrote: ↑2022-09-08 06:51am
There was an episode of Discovery recently where they decided to send one of their DOTs into a negative space wedgie and the audience had to watch the cute robot scream, rather than someone saying 'launch a type V probe.'
For probes, they might be useful in some situations.