Composeure wrote: 2023-03-28 01:53pm
Tbh I'm somewhat confused about what you mean by this. I mean, I understand the general idea here but it seems to me this approach will just upset a lot of people if you merely pretend there is no innate difference. A much better idea would simply just to give some kind of actual advantages (as I noted most fic writers here actually just do this). Otherwise, it might feel a bit like Graham Kennedy's ""writing"" style
Okay, imagine this -
The Empire arrives, and goes after the Federation.
The Empire has a massive speed advantage with hyperdrive, and by sheer size.
If you add in the firepower and shield advantage, it's over for the Federation in days.
While technically accurate, that's not much of a story. (Quite frankly, it's amazing that Mike's story is enjoyable based on that).
So, you have to equalize it a bit.
I'd leave the Empire's speed advantage, but pull it back down to what was noted in some of the early novels (150 - 200 light years per hour is still way faster then anything the Federation has), and do something that gives Federation ships a fighting chance in a one on one fight. i.e Technobabble that makes sense.
i.e
Picard: "How come our shields are holding, and are weapons are working, despite being weaker then the Empire?"
Laforge: "Lt. Crusher has a theory on that. Wes?"
Crusher: "It looks like the Empire never developed subspace technology beyond long-range commuication. We're guessing they achieved their Transwarp technology, what they call hyperdrive, without developing alot of the precursor technologies. That's probably why they don't have transporter technology."
Picard: "alright..."
Crusher: "Well, our shields, our weapons, are based on early subspace technology. We know how to shield against it, we know how to armor against it, but the Empire doesn't. That's why our phasers do so well against their ships. If the Empire were to fit a subspace force field generator on one of their ships, with their power technology, we couldn't stop it. All of Starfleet working together couldn't stop it."
Picard: "And that's why our shields work?"
Crusher: "We think so. Their weapons don't affect subspace very well, so they're not nearly as effective against our shields as you'd think. Mind you, once they drop out shields, they rip our ships apart with one shot. Meanwhile, we drop their shields, there armor holds up alot longer."
Picard: "And if they added a subspace component to thier weapons?"
Laforge: "They'd pop our shields like balloon."
Picard: "THen we better hope they don't acquire subspace weapons and shield technology in the near future."
At that point, it's a semi-fair fight, and inline with Star Trek technobabble. I actually had that in an explaination for a fanfic I never got going with, but had plotted out. Basically, the Federation kept pulling various plot-devices we've seen over the various series up, keeping the Empire at bay, while the Empire over-ran the rest of the galaxy.
Eventually, a species we've seen on screen using subspace/phasing weapons joins the Empire willingly in exchange for taking out an enemy nation. They figure out the difference, and the Empire refits their fleet with Subspace Force field generators, and then steam rolls the Federation. (Hint on species - there leader helps them put a boot up the Federations ass)
Example (and final) plot device - The Subspace Invertor used in the high ground. I've always been of the opinion that when a Federation ship goes to Red Alert, the shields go up to full power. If that's the case, the terrorist were still boarding the ship after the Red Alert went up. Meaning the Subspace Invertor/Subspace Rebound Transport bypasses shields.
The Enterprise refits their warheads with that sort of system, and fires them directly into Imperial ships. Photon and Quantum torpedoes going off near the hypermatter core are bad for Imperial ships. That stops the invasion for a time, until the Empire gets subspace force field tech.
I've been asked why I still follow a few of the people I know on Facebook with 'interesting political habits and view points'.
It's so when they comment on or approve of something, I know what pages to block/what not to vote for.