Stofsk wrote:
Ah. It's been ages since I read the Thrawn trilogy, but I've been itching to for awhile now. Do you recall Bel Iblis' forces covering Han as they made their rendevouz to peregrine base? Having looked at the comic I see all those three dreadnaughts did was 'cover' Han and Lando from one ISD.
Yup.
Dark Force rising wrote:
The New Republic had a fair number of Dreadnaughts, and at six hundred meters long each they were impressive enough warships. But even three of them working together would be hard pressed to take out an Imperial Star Destroyer.
Apparently, the Dreadnaughts' commander agreed. Even as the Star Destroyer behind the Lady Luck opened up with its huge turbolaser batteries, the Dreadnaughts began pelting the larger ship with a furious barrage of ion cannon blasts, trying to temporarily knock out enough of its systems for them to get away.
3 Dreadnaughts, but still couldn't realistically hope of taking out an ISD. This is reiterated later on in the novel when the Peremptory shows up to help the Judicator and its noted 3 Dreadnoughts are still insufficient to take out an ISD (and in this battle again they relied entirely on Ion cannons (even with all 6 DNs)
Requires somewhere between 4-6 to match the thing, 6 being the definite number. It may be higher, since all 6 Dreadnoughts focus on the Judicator stirctly with ion cannon fire, implying they could not take the thing down in direct fighting.
Yes, I agree. I especially liked your point about how it's not all about superweapons and insta-win 'strategies' like we get in the worst of the EU.
Meh. Superweapons don't bug me, its how they're implemented that is usually the problem. Hell, Mount Tantiss was the key to Thrawn's current campaign, so in a way its a superweapon.
Anyhow, my impressions from TTT wasn't that Thrawn somehow was going to gain an instawin with a few hundreds new warships and a few tens of thousands of new clones. Basically the impression I get is "If we don't stop Thrawn we'll eventually get steamrolled" since he has a source of unlimited troops now. And the fact they didnt know what else might be at Mount Tantiss. Thrawn had basically broken the long running stalemate of the previous two books and was able to slowly but surely begin his conquest. Given his early tactics in TLC, I'm guessing he made efforts at taking key military and industrial/agricultural centers (like Ukio) or whatever he could grab so he could start churning out more warships (he'd have needed them eventually to sustain his momentum.)
EDIT- Abacus, sorry if your thread is hijacked btw. As far as the OP is concerned, I would love to see another Tim Zahn book in the works, but I don't think there's much time in between the end of the duology and SQ with the onset of the Vong war. I was very interested in what Zahn was obliquely referring to some kind of hidden threat in the unknown regions in the duology, but I think the Vong war menace was just too stupid a plot to deal with, unfortunately.
Zahn's an okay writer, but his best work was the Thrawn Trilogy and everything else has been pretty lackluster. I haven't read alleigance of course, but Outbound Flight left me wondering why Thrawn was in there at all (never mind Car'Das or the races from Survivor's Quest.) That sort of habitual self-insertion is kinda what has been ruining his work for me really - I'd have liked to see more "new" stuff from him that didn't have to do with the Chiss or Emperor's Hands or the Unknown Regions in general or whatever...
Of course this is far from the "RARRRR MINIMALIST" frothing obsessive nerdrage Zahn inspires people like Hoth to rant about at the drop of a hat. For that matter I may have to go back and poke a few holes in his ranting since he's fucked up on a number of details (like the source of the 25,000 ISDs - it didn't originate with Zahn.. but hey when have facts ever gotten in the way of nerdrage?)