Avatar of OfWindAndRain
  • Last Seen: 2 yrs ago
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    1. OfWindAndRain 8 yrs ago
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Recent Statuses

2 yrs ago
Current This account old AF
2 likes
3 yrs ago
You heard 'em, chaps, lock the gal up! No marriage here! Freedom! Single Pringles only! Vivia la baguette!
6 yrs ago
If the Earth is flat, then how does one explain tens of thousands of people all across the globe in various space agencies not ONCE leaking that it's all a lie and everything's flat?
11 likes
6 yrs ago
Got myself Overwatch's Pink Mercy skin for charity!
16 likes
6 yrs ago
Did you know that baby cheetahs are given Labrador puppies to bond with because they need a stress relief buddy.
9 likes

Bio

I'll be honest, I don't wanna put a bio up cause I'm afraid I'll scare people off by writing plainly, but not really interested in taking a bunch of time for am that formatting.

So if ya wanna chat, do send a PM!

If you're a friend of mine and wanna see the bio filled, and wanna write a truthful description of yours truly, lemme know! A description from a third party is alwayd the best kind.

Most Recent Posts

@DracoLunaris@Alfhedil

there's also the fact that making arks could be considered massively wasteful as well, especially considering how *easy* they'd be to hit, and the massive amount of logistics and architecture that'd be required to make such a massive construct that wouldn't fall apart if a single part of it started moving. After all, a normal starship sitting on the ground would probably tear itself apart, if only for the fact that you only need to build the structure around the center of mass and wherever the propulsion is, versus the entire structural integrity that's required of an aircraft or naval ship, because of the immense pressure that the entire thing receives from *gravity*.

Colonizing planets would be cheaper bro.

Furthermore, you'd have to have some really good defensive measures in place. Something so large, again, would be really easy to hit. A fleet sitting twenty lighthours away could just fire thousands of railguns and mass accelerators. It'd be extremely hard to detect inanimate, unpowered, ballistic projectiles of such small size. The difficulty and cost of setting up a defensive sensor grid to detect and eliminate any such projectiles, natural or fired from a hostile weapon, would be expensive.

I'm no GM, these are just my thoughts on it. This is also soft scifi, so being as realistic as possible isn't a necessity. Just my take on things. You do you bro
Barren Source System
Black Hole Research and Exploitation Facility, orbit

With a snap of unseen energy, three warships shocked back into normal space with a small ripple in real-space. A single battlecruiser, flanked seven kilometers to either side by its missile destroyers, slowly spun in space to angle towards an orbital slot around the giant frame that hung in deep space some four million kilometers away. It was standard procedure; every ship was required to warp outside of orbit of any occupied gravitational well, and be challenged and verified before they could approach.

It took a minute or so for the battlstations around the giant frame supporting EM projectors, drive field modules, and the inwards-pointing mirror, to detect the ships; no sensor could detect other ships faster than light, after all. It took another minute more for the challenge to be received by the small patrol fleet, and one more minute in addition to that as the response was beamed back to the battlestations. The code given was verified in the battlestations' networks, and then another challenge was put through the quantum entanglement communication network to Interstellar Fleet Command, back on the homeworld. It verified there, and another challenge was sent from the battlestation through the same network through to the given origin of the patrol fleet. The local fleet base there also confirmed the verification code.

Ten minutes after appearing in-system, the ships received confirmation to approach. They were given authorization to take data from the sensor network that had detected them-- a massive array of hundreds of thousands of small passive-sensor stealth platforms that dotted the three-dimensional space around the black hole and its mortal masters. Missile platforms tracked the warships as they accelerated up to Sublight Cruise Acceleration, the speed that limits wear and tear on the device while still providing the best possible acceleration.

Even as they passed a network of hundreds of thousands of platforms, mass produced things, some of which have been in service for just a couple years, some for decades, the ships themselves didn't actually *spot* any of them. Even though the entire area was seeded with passive sensor arrays and defenses waiting to go active, the ships' sensors weren't powerful enough without going active to detect a single one. It was only the command network that clued them in to their existence.

Halfway to the facility, the ships' drive fields reversed, their constant acceleration switching to a negative value as the ships slowed their journey. They had received orbital slots; from four million kilometers away, they had a route precisely planned to bring them straight there.

Some fifty hours after arriving in their orbital slots after the relatively short trip, the ships were again ready to leave. This time, however, a dozen freighters were in tow. While the freighters each had a much greater size and tonnage, a single destroyer could've taken them all out.

Loaded in the freighters were one of the most prized tool that the Taybuse had created: the powercell. Using a variety of technologies, the stations that orbited the black hole and its EM Sphere that amplified all the EM waves that went in injected massive amounts of power into the power cells. While inefficient as all hell, this construct had been in service for a few decades now, and the energy bouncing around inside the sphere was carefully controlled to be as efficient as possible: the energy cells that these freighters were packed full of, more than a fusion reactor could produce with the freighter filled to the top with the most efficient fuel could produce in its lifespan-- Taybusen fusion reactors had a tendency to run hotter and wear down faster.

So power cells were a fantastic solution, given an energy source that didn't require all that much effort to maintain. Warships loaded powercells into their energy weapons to allow the on-board reactor nodes to focus on powering life support, drive nodes, etc. Plasma might be their most effective energy weapons, but laser turrets worked best for point defense; plasma traveled slower, could miss. Lasers didn't miss, though they took notably longer to kill something. If a warship powered all its energy weapons at once, the reactor wouldn't be able to keep up-- it would handle it for a few hours, maybe, but after that battle was over, it'd have to be completely torn out and replaced. Powercells allowed higher effectiveness.

The small fleet of fifteen ships left the watchful eyes of a dozen battlestations, several squadrons of warships sitting idle, and another shipment coming in.

His Royalty's investment in black holes definitely paid off. Not only did he command the military, he supplied them with one of their most important technologies. Maybe, many a captain and politician had thought, that was the entire reason the Tayb was still in power. At a snap of his fingers... their military fleet's efficiency would drop from one hundred percent... to forty. All the admirals were in his pocket.
Dyson spheres are incredibly expensive. There are easier ways to harvest loads of energy.
@Willy Vereb
Oh what really? Thats kinda lame.

I still like it but its sorta lame.
I also recommend using that notebook.ai website. You can write up your race, government, notable characters, creatures, locations, etc.

Recommended that we use Notebook.ai for organiational purposes. I've even created a universe for people to add their stuff to, if they so wish:
notebook.ai/plan/universes/120032



keyguy's title is now very relevant
yeah but ive been jumped on way too many times this past week and im making sure i get in my reasonings *immediately*

im really tired of people jumping on me for everything
im exhausted
You have to admit that all my nations up until now have been extremely communistic. All central leadership and everything for the cause.

But I recently came to grips with realism and realized that a nation that focuses primarily on economy and industry would have a far more robust system than a communistic one, because in a capitalistic nation, one has the freedom to do things, and the prospect of success to inspire them. Communism can't promote the same sort of creativity as capitalism, nor the same enthusiasm.

If I really want to make some examples, I can just point how Russia has the largest tank fleet in the world, but ultimately they were inferior to their enemies' because of a lack of innovation and consistent high quality. Meanwhile the capitalistic nation of the world practically owns the global market, because if America collapsed and disappeared, the global economy would crash spectacularly as well. I can say that because the global market crashed back during America's Great Depression, and we weren't as important then to the global scene as we are today. And not only did Capitalism #1 have such a hold on economy, we also have the infrustrature. Japan was a very centralized country with a single ruler, and they did manage to take out Pearl Harbor... and then we replaced our losses and then some, and overwhelmed them. Even if they traded American ships in a 1-2 ratio, with them taking out two ships to everyone one of theirs, we'd still be able to overwhelm them. We had the economy and industry to do so, once it switched over to war production.
<Snipped quote by Ophidian>

Please do.

What would these roleplays be without something vaguely anime and extremely communist.


What would these roleplays be without something vaguely anime and extremely communist.


something vaguely anime and extremely communist.


@KeyguyPerson

also, duck, review my CS already, you nerd.
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