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General FreeSpace => FreeSpace Discussion => Topic started by: Jeep-Eep on February 09, 2019, 12:49:11 am

Title: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Jeep-Eep on February 09, 2019, 12:49:11 am
Derelict:

The reason why Shivan craft had Lovecraftian names was a result of the swarms of capship bogies in need of tagging to be found in Capella burning through their supply of evil supernatural names.

Alpha 1 was one of only a handful of women in the Scythes.

There was explosive failsafes being set up aboard the Nyarlethotop, but they weren't fully set up by the time of the Stars Being Right.

Freespace 1

The GTA was lucky enough that the Shivan war landed just as the latest cycle of newer weapons and craft were finishing their dev cycles, which was prompted by the increasing obsolescence of the fairly un-diverse terran fighter fleet at the time - as the Seth and Horus replaced the aging Anubis, the matchup was getting rather bad for the explicitly generalist Apollo - which was designed as an all-rounder design in an attempt to save resources, and was rather more successful then many previously.

Freespace 2

The main advantage of the HL-7 was being cheaper to operate then the Avenger, which required expensive ammo; the HL-7 was mostly equivalent or slightly worse elsewhere, but the Avenger was simply too expensive to be worthwhile once cheap and effective XASER tech was available.

The Prometheus Rs were mostly standards that were downgraded to inferior power systems to keep them working as a stopgap, until the Kayser's protracted dev cycle could be finished and a superior replacement non-dependent on rare materials could be furnished.

The NTD Jacobus was a GTD Hecate.

Post your own!

Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Snarks on February 09, 2019, 07:48:58 am
During Freespace 1, the ML-16 was selected as the primary armament of GTA strikecraft due to a need to simplify logistics and provide an easy to use weapon that pilots with limited training could use effectively. The "ML" designation stands for "medium laser" and was used as a classification in conjunction with the "HL" or "heavy laser" and the "SL" or "small laser" designations. This meant that the GTA likely had more powerful laser weaponry that could have been pressed into service, some of which were notably more effective against Shivan shields than the ML-16. Rather than restarting production of HL weapons, the GTA decided that it didn't want to interrupt its planned logistics and to wait until the introduction of the Avenger cannon. Once it became clear that the Shivan was an existential threat, this policy of logistics simplification was thrown out the window, resulting in the huge development of ships and weapons during the first Shivan Incursion. Many of the ships and weapons developed during the First Shivan Incursion had been in development for years, with their deployment and production being deemed unnecessary during the Terran-Vasudan War.

Special Terran Intelligence units may have been issued limited run HL weaponry. These weapons were expensive to manufacture and consumed large amounts of the strikecraft's power supply, requiring skilled pilots to use effectively. Nonetheless, they were invaluable for special ops missions during the early stages of the Shivan Incursion. The decision was made to hide the deployment of HL weapons as every frontline combat unit would begin demanding the procurement of HL weapons for their squadrons and the resulting controversy over the decision to wait for the Avenger cannon would result in massive morale issues during a critical point in the war. Subsequently, any kills by Terran Intelligence pilots using HL weapons were off the books.

By the Freespace 2 era, the GTVA once again attempted to standardize its logistics train due to peace time budget constraints. The HL-7 was adopted as the primary armament for strikecraft, although provisions were put in place to quickly restart production of heavier/experimental weapons should the need arise. The Prometheus R, despite its lackluster performance, was kept primarily in production because the factories could quickly switch to the production of the original Prometheus S if sufficient resource deposits were found or if the need outstrip the high costs of its production.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Jeep-Eep on February 09, 2019, 09:48:35 am
The Kayser program was started to create a replacement for the Prometheus that didn't depend on exotic materials.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nyctaeus on February 09, 2019, 10:14:25 am
Hecate is based on modified blueprints of Hades. Additionally, majority of next-gen terran ships were influenced by various GTI blueprints. Perseus for example is a hybrid of Loki and Valkyrie. Second prototype of Hades mentioned in FS2 tech description probably exists somewhere.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on February 09, 2019, 10:47:08 am
I rather thought FS2 Terran ships had taken some Vasudan influence, though the GTI idea is interesting too.

I once wrote an entire Economic history of FS that explained (to me) several things in FS universe (like reconstruction GTVA, NTF etc, minus Shivans).
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Jeep-Eep on February 09, 2019, 10:51:33 am
I rather thought FS2 Terran ships had taken some Vasudan influence, though the GTI idea is interesting too.

I once wrote an entire Economic history of FS that explained (to me) several things in FS universe (like reconstruction GTVA, NTF etc, minus Shivans).

Do tell?

Edit: Vasudans popularized the fighter based doctrines we recognize now; GTA doctrine saw cruisers and up as the instrument of decision far too long in the war, which lead to the excessive life and utilization of the Apollo, which caused serious strategic problems as the Horus and Seth came into use, replacing the cheap peacetime patrol Anubis.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: General Battuta on February 09, 2019, 11:26:51 am
The ancients were a slower-than-light, purely relativistic civilization even when they'd filled their whole galaxy. (Arguably this is canon not headcanon)
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on February 09, 2019, 11:45:03 am
The ancients were a slower-than-light, purely relativistic civilization even when they'd filled their whole galaxy. (Arguably this is canon not headcanon)

My guess on this one was that there was some mix-up between galaxy and starsystems.

I rather thought FS2 Terran ships had taken some Vasudan influence, though the GTI idea is interesting too.

I once wrote an entire Economic history of FS that explained (to me) several things in FS universe (like reconstruction GTVA, NTF etc, minus Shivans).

Do tell?

It requires some touch ups, and when I did post similar things in the past I received half a dozen replies in total (with 50% being my own) so I have to see when that happens, also I wrote a campaign out of parts of that thing.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Novachen on February 09, 2019, 12:02:18 pm
Shivans are an artificial race that cannot advance and fight their wars with the technologies they have since their beginning.

The Shivans are patrolling our part of the galaxy every 32 years due to their "programming". 2302, 2335, 2367, 2399 etc. So the last shivan visit was in 2015, the next one will be in 2047.

The Shivans are operating in several galaxies, which make it impossible to "defeat" them.

Subspace is not a regional effect, the same subspace spans a whole galaxy. That is the reason why the subspace cataclysm in 2335 made it impossible for the Shivans to use any other than the stable jump nodes after that event. The cataclysm simple destabilized much of the subspace in our galaxy in a whole. That also clear every node inconsistency between the two games  :D
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: HLD_Prophecy on February 09, 2019, 12:43:06 pm
My one biggest headcanon was always that Shivans were an anaerobic (or capable of thriving on very low oxygen) species that were born/lived/their 'homeworld" was in asteroid fields. Possibly centered around asteroids large enough to have very thin atmospheres and far enough away from a sun that the thin atmosphere didn't get torn away via radiation. If that makes ANY sense astronomically I have no idea.  :lol:

They're very, very comfortable floating/walking/leaping in three dimensions/environments with low/null gravity. They also appear to be cool with jumping through space (alhough IIRC that's limited to the hidden animation of one attacking a Thoth).

The interior of their vessels are clearly disorienting to humans BUT well-designed for a species that can climb/run easily in 6dof.

One minor glip is that the Terran Marines are able to be there without full helmets/hermetically sealed armor. Certain areas of their heads are bare. 99% certain they have oxygen breathers under those masks, though.

To solve this I figured that the capital vessels might have thin, weak atmospheres to facilitate even climate control/sound and scent transfers. Humans would probably find it rather lukewarm with a mild breeze sensation but just warm enough for bare skin.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Colt on February 09, 2019, 12:57:37 pm
Mjolnir RBC's are very expensive to produce. The five experimental units deployed to the Capella node were destroyed by the juggernaut, and the GTVA was unable to produce more units in time before Capella went boom.

The GVD Toeris is a Typhon-class, given the briefing lists them in the order of: Psamtik, Aquitaine, Toeris. Likely a list ranging from most to least powerful warship (taking into account weapons systems+squadrons).
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Colonol Dekker on February 09, 2019, 02:08:14 pm
Admiral wolf was a goddam legend.

Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Jeep-Eep on February 09, 2019, 03:09:59 pm


My guess on this one was that there was some mix-up between galaxy and starsystems.


Or it was the Ancient speaker using poetic overstatement.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nyctaeus on February 09, 2019, 04:14:12 pm
I rather thought FS2 Terran ships had taken some Vasudan influence, though the GTI idea is interesting too.

I once wrote an entire Economic history of FS that explained (to me) several things in FS universe (like reconstruction GTVA, NTF etc, minus Shivans).
This is also true. Furthermore terran warships are much more influenced by vasudan designs, than vasudans influenced their new designs with terran technology.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: General Battuta on February 09, 2019, 04:22:01 pm
The ancients were a slower-than-light, purely relativistic civilization even when they'd filled their whole galaxy. (Arguably this is canon not headcanon)

My guess on this one was that there was some mix-up between galaxy and starsystems.

You can theorize that but the text is the text. And it's a consistent theory with some nice bonuses; the Ancients wiping out all other life in our galaxy, then being wiped out by the Shivans, left a clean slate for Terrans and Vasudans (and explains why we don't have a bunch of super advanced neighbor species).
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Jeep-Eep on February 09, 2019, 04:56:30 pm
I rather thought FS2 Terran ships had taken some Vasudan influence, though the GTI idea is interesting too.

I once wrote an entire Economic history of FS that explained (to me) several things in FS universe (like reconstruction GTVA, NTF etc, minus Shivans).
This is also true. Furthermore terran warships are much more influenced by vasudan designs, than vasudans influenced their new designs with terran technology.

Alternately, the design changes to Vasudan craft are less visible - Terrans seem to be consistently ahead in weapons tech; there's a reason why most of the arms in the Vasudan segment of FS2 were of terran design, although probably manufactured under licence.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on February 09, 2019, 05:46:19 pm
The ancients were a slower-than-light, purely relativistic civilization even when they'd filled their whole galaxy. (Arguably this is canon not headcanon)

My guess on this one was that there was some mix-up between galaxy and starsystems.

You can theorize that but the text is the text. And it's a consistent theory with some nice bonuses; the Ancients wiping out all other life in our galaxy, then being wiped out by the Shivans, left a clean slate for Terrans and Vasudans (and explains why we don't have a bunch of super advanced neighbor species).

Well there are no super advanced neighbor species except for the Shivans. Probably the Ancients managed to get their own share while they could. GTVA has access to about 2 dozen star systems, the chance that they contain civilisations similar to GTVA at timespans of 100 million years is unlikely.

I rather thought FS2 Terran ships had taken some Vasudan influence, though the GTI idea is interesting too.

I once wrote an entire Economic history of FS that explained (to me) several things in FS universe (like reconstruction GTVA, NTF etc, minus Shivans).
This is also true. Furthermore terran warships are much more influenced by vasudan designs, than vasudans influenced their new designs with terran technology.

Seemed to me like a prelude to a complete amalgated Terran/Vasudan fleet maybe 50-100 years post FS2, the Colossus was the first T-V hybrid.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: General Battuta on February 09, 2019, 07:23:23 pm
Well there are no super advanced neighbor species except for the Shivans. Probably the Ancients managed to get their own share while they could. GTVA has access to about 2 dozen star systems, the chance that they contain civilisations similar to GTVA at timespans of 100 million years is unlikely.

I don't understand what you're saying.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on February 09, 2019, 07:36:14 pm
That the galaxy was cleaned from advanced life/civilisations by the Shivans rather than the Ancients.

If you take that into account it is highly unlikely that you'll find in only 24+ out of 180 billion stars the chance that you find a species not living in Neolithic nor having been annihilated by the Shivans is tiny, but in the Terran case they found one, just finding another one is unlikely.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: General Battuta on February 09, 2019, 10:50:12 pm
The Ancients didn't meet any other life until they had subspace — it took them thousands of years to invent subspace, and once they did they had apparently wiped out multiple species within a few months. It reads like they didn't totally fill up the Milky Way until after they had subspace ("it gave us our galaxy and it gave us the universe").

They didn't meet the Shivans until they went intergalactic, so they got done killing everybody in the Milky Way before the Shivans turned up.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: General Battuta on February 09, 2019, 10:53:47 pm
And given how easy node travel is, if a reasonably expansionist species made it to subspace even a few thousand years before humanity/Vasudanity the chance of meeting them would be 100%, because they would have filled up the galaxy already. It only takes about a million years to fill up the galaxy without FTL travel.

The Ancients were destroyed about eight thousand years ago, so humans and Vasudans were probably some of the first species to hit the subspace stage after the Ancients finished killing every technological species they met.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Rogue Assassin04 on February 10, 2019, 12:19:46 am
The ancients were a slower-than-light, purely relativistic civilization even when they'd filled their whole galaxy. (Arguably this is canon not headcanon)

My guess on this one was that there was some mix-up between galaxy and starsystems.

You can theorize that but the text is the text. And it's a consistent theory with some nice bonuses; the Ancients wiping out all other life in our galaxy, then being wiped out by the Shivans, left a clean slate for Terrans and Vasudans (and explains why we don't have a bunch of super advanced neighbor species).

Then the ancients made contact with vasudans in the latter's infancy of their civilization. That's why they could read the ancients' texts.

Also... Vasudans may have witnessed the death of ancients and the remaining ancients could have become vasudans themselves. That would explain the hammer of light faction. Their belief of shivans were the ones who answered to all their sins.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on February 10, 2019, 04:50:41 am
I just don't think that the Shivans would give them that much time, maybe 30 years or so after they discovered subspace. Enough to kill an insane amount of people and short enough to perish like all other species before due to the lack of technology to defeat the Lucifer with.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Colonol Dekker on February 10, 2019, 05:17:15 am
They might have been elsewhere and taken 30 years to arrive.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: General Battuta on February 10, 2019, 09:37:51 am
I just don't think that the Shivans would give them that much time, maybe 30 years or so after they discovered subspace. Enough to kill an insane amount of people and short enough to perish like all other species before due to the lack of technology to defeat the Lucifer with.

Again, I don’t follow. Are you arguing the Ancients didn’t wipe out all the other starfarers in our galaxy? That would be weird, given that they went extragalactic before meeting Shivans. (I’m assuming here that intergalactic travel is slightly harder than intra, even with subspace.)

If there were spacefaring survivors of the Ancients, where are they? They would’ve had plenty of time to fill the galaxy in the past 8000 years, including our local stars.

E: I get your argument about time, but consider that once they had subspace the Ancients’ already massive empire could get a lot of killing done real fast.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: The E on February 10, 2019, 10:22:40 am
I just don't think that the Shivans would give them that much time, maybe 30 years or so after they discovered subspace. Enough to kill an insane amount of people and short enough to perish like all other species before due to the lack of technology to defeat the Lucifer with.

There's a huge implicit assumption in here, namely that the shivans always react (and always have reacted) the same way (i.e. humans and vasudans have subspace for ~30 years, then suddenly shivans happen).

I would posit that that's not actually the case. Rather, we are living in a post-Ancients galaxy; One in which the shivans enforced their genocide and then left a lot of their toys around afterwards. The shivans did not exist as a galaxy-level threat before the Ancients necessitated that they become one; now they are everywhere (and thus on a hair trigger, comparatively speaking), and thus species like ours get wiped out long before they can develop to the same level that the Ancients did.

Compare this to an inflammatory immune response: after the initial flareup and after the initial crisis has been dealt with, the immune system remains sensitive for some time afterward; This sensitivity will decay after some time. We (and, by extension, any other species that started to develop interstellar travel) have bad timing in that the shivans became aware of us while still on alert for us.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nyctaeus on February 10, 2019, 10:24:23 am
Some rules of Fermi Paradox still apply to FS, even if other, intelligent and spacefaring species are known. Both Ancients and Shivans are answers to Fermi Paradox, but there also other factors.

Homo Sapiens exist on Earth from +/- 100 000 years, excluding ancestor species. Overally life on Earth exist from 4 bilions years. We're the only intelligent species on Earth... So the Universe is rarely giving birth to potential candidates to become interstellar powers.

So answer for your questions Batts, is: Because there were none more in this sector of space. Intelligent life in space is rare. I always liked how ASW portrayed Ancients. Their Empire was much bigger than GTVA, they had multiple juggernaut-grade ships, but overally they were not tremendously big. I guess they destroyed 7-10 interstellar species before Shivans annihilated them. Only 7-10 just because they never encountered any more.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on February 10, 2019, 10:33:41 am
Some of the systems colonized as part of their pre-subspace empire were reachable through subspace, others had only weak/instable nodes so they built the Knossos gates when they could not reach all of them.

What happens to the rest remains open - I thought they either survived and developed slowly (like in my "FS3 could be..." story) or perished over time for a number of reasons (ultimatly, not even those that are supposed to have influenced the Vasudans survived in the long run). Also, if the Ancients had colonized the entire galaxy at sublight speed, wouldn't the chance that they are still around be much larger?

I can PM you the small story I wrote there in case you're interested, it's not too long though.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on February 10, 2019, 10:38:28 am
Spoiler:
My take on the thing that the Shivans are the main solution to Fermi paradox with the Ancients being a temporary subtype like "how would the galaxy look like without Shivans".

I put a lot of thought into this but it would be bad if I just post all my campaign ideas here. :(

Quote
Compare this to an inflammatory immune response: after the initial flareup and after the initial crisis has been dealt with, the immune system remains sensitive for some time afterward; This sensitivity will decay after some time. We (and, by extension, any other species that started to develop interstellar travel) have bad timing in that the shivans became aware of us while still on alert for us.

While I like the immune analogy, I think the Capella incident showed that the Shivans weren't particular expecting local resistance (atleast it wasn't their task to deal with that obviously).
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: General Battuta on February 10, 2019, 12:51:24 pm
Some rules of Fermi Paradox still apply to FS, even if other, intelligent and spacefaring species are known. Both Ancients and Shivans are answers to Fermi Paradox, but there also other factors.

Homo Sapiens exist on Earth from +/- 100 000 years, excluding ancestor species. Overally life on Earth exist from 4 bilions years. We're the only intelligent species on Earth... So the Universe is rarely giving birth to potential candidates to become interstellar powers.

So answer for your questions Batts, is: Because there were none more in this sector of space. Intelligent life in space is rare. I always liked how ASW portrayed Ancients. Their Empire was much bigger than GTVA, they had multiple juggernaut-grade ships, but overally they were not tremendously big. I guess they destroyed 7-10 interstellar species before Shivans annihilated them. Only 7-10 just because they never encountered any more.

We differ there, I thought ASW's take on the Ancients was way too plain and didn't really work with the Ancient monologues. They didn't feel like a species that had colonized all their available star systems via slower than light travel.

The Ancients committed at least one (and presumably more than one) genocide within months of getting subspace. They did this in other galaxies as well as ours. It is canon that the Ancients went transgalactic. I don't see how that squares with the idea that they were 'not that big' or that their conquests were limited.

The 'not in our sector' answer doesn't really work. If there is intelligent spacefaring life in the galaxy, then very rapidly there should be intelligent spacefaring life everywhere in the galaxy. It would only take about 1 million years to fill up the Milky Way without using subspace. 8000 years is a long time given that subspace is much more than 100 times faster than light.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on February 10, 2019, 01:03:05 pm
Do you mean this?

Quote
In months the extermination of billions of years of evolution on a similar but slower path.

I thought this refers to the time they needed to conquer other species.

Though I agree that ASWs take on the Ancients, as good as it showed their society, did not entirely reflect the monologues.

"In our sector" is massively ambigous - 50 stars connected by subspace out of 180 billion.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: General Battuta on February 10, 2019, 01:33:15 pm
I don’t think it portrayed their society well either. I did not think its creative choices were interesting.

I don’t understand what you’re saying about the definition of ‘sector’. If there were other starfaring species since the Ancients, they had plenty of time to fill every star in the galaxy by subspace, including ours. We should be finding their ruins rather than the Ancients’.

The only possibility I can see (aside from the Ancients cleaning out the galaxy until we arrived) is that there are species which became technological since the Ancients vanished, but which haven’t discovered subspace or only did so very recently.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on February 10, 2019, 01:43:01 pm
GTVA possibly managed to live longer than most species by surviving the Lucifer armada (and although there are 2 instead of 1 species) but still they expanded to only 30 systems; I doubt that other species (except the Ancients) could get their hands on significantly more systems before being discovered and eliminated by the Shivans.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Aesaar on February 10, 2019, 01:49:04 pm
The notion that the Ancients explored 100 billion stars and covered an expanse 150,000 ly in diameter on sublight drives is so ludicrous it can't be anything but hyperbole.  By the time a ship got from one end to the other, they might not even be the same species anymore.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on February 10, 2019, 01:59:15 pm
Not if you take relativistic time dilation into account... but if they had become too good at sublight missiles they simply would bombard the Shivans with relativistic missiles.

If you take a radius of 5-10 lightyears (Alpha Centauri is 4.37 ly from Earth) the number of systems is highly limited and it takes a long time to reach them but you still can stay in contact with them.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: General Battuta on February 10, 2019, 02:04:03 pm
GTVA possibly managed to live longer than most species by surviving the Lucifer armada (and although there are 2 instead of 1 species) but still they expanded to only 30 systems; I doubt that other species (except the Ancients) could get their hands on significantly more systems before being discovered and eliminated by the Shivans.

You are canonically wrong. The Ancients expanded into other galaxies before meeting the Shivans. The_E explained above why the Shivans might have reacted more quickly to the Terran/Vasudan conflict than they did to the Ancients...and yet canon even leaves open the possibility that the Shivans reacted faster to the Ancients than they did to us. (I don't believe it, but it's there - the suggestion that the Shivans attacked the Ancients within months of their first xenocide, whereas they took at least 14 years with the Terrans and Vasudans).

e: Okay rereading this I see 'except the Ancients', lol. I guess it then depends on what you think attracts Shivans - whether it's subspace activity or interspecies conflict.

The notion that the Ancients explored 100 billion stars and covered an expanse 150,000 ly in diameter on sublight drives is so ludicrous it can't be anything but hyperbole.  By the time a ship got from one end to the other, they might not even be the same species anymore.

It's not ludicrous at all. It simply requires a psychology and culture very different from humanity's. Thousands or millions of years of internal conflict between branching sects of Ancient descendants could produce the instinctive, competitive, universal xenophobia the Ancients exhibited. They were 'a proud race, and always the strongest'; once one subgroup of Ancients got subspace, they would have such a total advantage over the rest that they could probably rule by sheer threat. And their history of internal competition would make their instant, xenocidal expansion natural and normal for them.

Not if you take relativistic time dilation into account... but if they had become too good at sublight missiles they simply would bombard the Shivans with relativistic missiles.

If you take a radius of 5-10 lightyears (Alpha Centauri is 4.37 ly from Earth) the number of systems is highly limited and it takes a long time to reach them but you still can stay in contact with them.

The Ancients primarily using relativistic weapons is exactly why I believe the Shivans destroyed them. The Lucifer was immune to relativistic impacts due to its shields, and the smaller Shivan vessels could simply jump out of the way - or into the local reference frame of Ancient ships, to tear them apart at ranges so short the Ancients would never have even considered them viable for warfare.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Jeep-Eep on February 10, 2019, 02:14:27 pm
I always figured the galaxy thing was a result of node-line wierdness.


...Subspace gave us the galaxy; I think we can put paid to the theory that the Ancients had the galaxy before subspace.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on February 10, 2019, 02:20:51 pm
I don't see why the Shivans should give a **** about warfare as long it not using subspace.

To me the most important line of this thought is from the closing cutscene of FS1:

Quote
Without the Shivans, someone would have discovered the Ancients in their infancy, and eliminated them, just surely as they eliminated countless billions of others.


It's not ludicrous at all. It simply requires a psychology and culture very different from humanity's. Thousands or millions of years of internal conflict between branching sects of Ancient descendants could produce the instinctive, competitive, universal xenophobia the Ancients exhibited. They were 'a proud race, and always the strongest'; once one subgroup of Ancients got subspace, they would have such a total advantage over the rest that they could probably rule by sheer threat. And their history of internal competition would make their instant, xenocidal expansion natural and normal for them.

My personal opinion is that while this is quite possible, the monologues don't seem to be something written by super intelligent ants, or there is atleast not the necessaty to think about something that spectecular different. Short human history has proofed to be very effective at generating all the social and individual traits above.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: General Battuta on February 10, 2019, 02:27:16 pm
They're depersonalized, collective, and 'racial', without much sign of individual subjectivity or perspective. They don't feel very human to me.

...Subspace gave us the galaxy; I think we can put paid to the theory that the Ancients had the galaxy before subspace.

They were running out of available systems, so they either had most of the galaxy before subspace, or they had filled up a large galactic structure (like a spiral arm, or a globular cluster, or one of the orbiting clouds) that for some reason they were unable to leave.

Once you are expanding between stars it's hard to not fill up the galaxy, so any theory of the Ancients has to provide a good reason they're not in full control of the galaxy before subspace. One theory I favor is that they'd filled up the galaxy but not in a united fashion; there were lots of Ancient subspecies in competition. The one that got subspace first became the galactic hegemon.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Jeep-Eep on February 10, 2019, 02:31:13 pm
They're depersonalized, collective, and 'racial', without much sign of individual subjectivity or perspective. They don't feel very human to me.

...Subspace gave us the galaxy; I think we can put paid to the theory that the Ancients had the galaxy before subspace.

They were running out of available systems, so they either had most of the galaxy before subspace, or they had filled up a large galactic structure (like a spiral arm, or a globular cluster, or one of the orbiting clouds) that for some reason they were unable to leave.

Once you are expanding between stars it's hard to not fill up the galaxy, so any theory of the Ancients has to provide a good reason they're not in full control of the galaxy before subspace. One theory I favor is that they'd filled up the galaxy but not in a united fashion; there were lots of Ancient subspecies in competition. The one that got subspace first became the galactic hegemon.

Possibly they depended on Bussard Rams, and they had reached the edge of a thick area of interstellar hydrogen that made it feasible- we're actually in an unusually thin area of such, so it's not implausible.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on February 10, 2019, 02:37:31 pm
They're depersonalized, collective, and 'racial', without much sign of individual subjectivity or perspective. They don't feel very human to me.

IIRC, in the Old Kingdom of Egypt the word "human" and "Egyptian" was identical because they had next to no contact to anyone outside, and when contacts increased later on they weren't particular pleasent yet they remained this way for millenia. Perhabs they don't feel the way you do, but they still belong to the same species.

Once you are expanding between stars it's hard to not fill up the galaxy, so any theory of the Ancients has to provide a good reason they're not in full control of the galaxy before subspace. One theory I favor is that they'd filled up the galaxy but not in a united fashion; there were lots of Ancient subspecies in competition. The one that got subspace first became the galactic hegemon.

Time for some analysis.

Quote
Ours was a proud people, and always the strongest. For thousands of years our empire expanded. For so long we could imagine ourselves alone in the universe. For so long never did we encounter advanced life. And we travelled faster and further, spreading in our galaxy and before long we could see the day when our reachable systems would have been exploited. And then there would be nowhere else to go.

They were spreading in the galaxy, but there's no need to conclude they had thousands of systems before they discovered subspace.

Quote
And we discovered subspace. It gave us our galaxy and it gave us the universe. And we saw other advanced life. And we subdued it or we crushed it. In months the extermination of billions of years of evolution on a similar but slower path. With subspace, our empire would surely know no boundaries.

It somehow reminds me how the old Mesopotamian kings considered themselves "kings of the universe".
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Colonol Dekker on February 10, 2019, 02:49:00 pm
I take from that last quote that the ancients did not encounter any advanced (space faring) life until they got their subspace thang on.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Aesaar on February 10, 2019, 03:39:30 pm
It's not ludicrous at all. It simply requires a psychology and culture very different from humanity's. Thousands or millions of years of internal conflict between branching sects of Ancient descendants could produce the instinctive, competitive, universal xenophobia the Ancients exhibited. They were 'a proud race, and always the strongest'; once one subgroup of Ancients got subspace, they would have such a total advantage over the rest that they could probably rule by sheer threat. And their history of internal competition would make their instant, xenocidal expansion natural and normal for them.

It would take thousands of years just to receive news of the ships you sent out a million years ago.  On this sort of timescale, discussing the Ancients as though they were a single species just doesn't work.

I suppose you could say that all the 'aliens' the Ancients found were actually earlier Ancients that had sufficient time to evolve that they were basically aliens.  Maybe that's what Humans and Vasudans are?
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: General Battuta on February 10, 2019, 04:15:58 pm
They were spreading in the galaxy, but there's no need to conclude they had thousands of systems before they discovered subspace.

You rather have to. They were in the boom phase of an explosive expansion, or they wouldn't be worried about running out of space. Even if for some magical reason they can't leave, say, a globular cluster, that's still hundreds of thousands of stars, and they'd fill it up in a blink even without subspace.

It's not ludicrous at all. It simply requires a psychology and culture very different from humanity's. Thousands or millions of years of internal conflict between branching sects of Ancient descendants could produce the instinctive, competitive, universal xenophobia the Ancients exhibited. They were 'a proud race, and always the strongest'; once one subgroup of Ancients got subspace, they would have such a total advantage over the rest that they could probably rule by sheer threat. And their history of internal competition would make their instant, xenocidal expansion natural and normal for them.

It would take thousands of years just to receive news of the ships you sent out a million years ago.  On this sort of timescale, discussing the Ancients as though they were a single species just doesn't work.

I suppose you could say that all the 'aliens' the Ancients found were actually earlier Ancients that had sufficient time to evolve that they were basically aliens.  Maybe that's what Humans and Vasudans are?

You can either view them as a diaspora of 'post-human' subspecies, like in Alastair Reynolds' Revelation Space or House of Suns, or you can postulate that part of their xenophobic superiority was their fanatical adherence to their 'true form', including the extermination of divergent populations, anyone who used technology or selective breeding to modify themselves, and any cultural offshoots.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on February 10, 2019, 04:31:23 pm
If the Ancients would have the technology to colonize the entire galaxy at sublight speed they could just ram a fighter into Lucy at 0.999c which then would be simply instant toast, shields or not.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: General Battuta on February 10, 2019, 05:44:10 pm
No, because the Lucifer is invulnerable to conventional attack. In fact the FS1 Shivans are very well adapted to fight an opponent used to engaging in war at relativistic speeds and ranges.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on February 10, 2019, 06:03:22 pm
Where is that stated? I don't think there was anything moving around with a relative velocity of more than a couple hundred m/s.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Mito [PL] on February 10, 2019, 06:44:35 pm
So, if we assume that Ancients were colonising the galaxy with subluminal methods en masse, and only discovered subspace during the process, there might be some interesting thoughts to make. For example, Ancients may have tried to expand into a different galaxy/star cluster via subspace and alerted Shivans to their presence - and the steamroll had begun. And while the parts of Ancient empire that actively used subspace for travel have been eradicated, the ones who didn't invent subspace FTL methods "yet" had to be eradicated by Shivans with more crude methods. If there's a populated system that no nodes lead to, or they're too unstable for even Shivans to travel, or there is a some kind of Ancient colony ship traveling through the void between systems, I guess Shivans might have taken the approach of totally spreading throughout the galaxy and methodically eradicating whatever remains they can find. Maybe the Lucifer armada was going around doing just that, yes, it might have taken them 8000 years after the subspace part of the empire fell, and they got... attracted by the sudden increase in subspace activity with the T-V conflict erupting.

Also, I don't see how Lucy could survive such a strike, and several dozen tonnes of metal accelerated to near-c speeds is by no means a conventional attack... Looking up some relativistic energy calculator, it seems like a ton of stuff accelerated to 0.9c gives you over 100 exajoules... I'd call that a planet-cracker. Even if Lucy's shields managed to absorb the hit, I really doubt the resulting acceleration wouldn't instantly make her break apart. Of course, we would need to know how the shields exactly work to make the jugdement.
My guess is, based on how the ML-16 works against shields of Shivan fighters in FS1 and how Maxim does that in FS2, that while shields are potent in deflecting/absorbing mass accelerator shots, they also have their limits. The fact that a Shivan bomber can regenerate its shields faster than you can spam ML-16 bolts at it doesn't mean that ten thousand of these impacting at once would not instantly evaporate it, or that a sufficient amount of Fury warheads doesn't do the same. Actually, isn't Avenger a weapon based on bullets?
And if we compare the biggest capship guns or warheads attacking Lucy to these pitiful ML-16 bolts bouncing off of a bomber, wouldn't a big enough impact also kill it?
And uhhhh, beams are basically a kinetic weapon too. Yet they penetrate shields, maybe because fighter's systems don't have the time to react to them? In this case, fastas**** object don't really differ much.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Colt on February 10, 2019, 06:52:48 pm
My brain hurts.

In a good way.  :p
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: General Battuta on February 10, 2019, 07:09:43 pm
How do you hit anything Shivan with an RKV? Especially if it takes a long time to accelerate?
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on February 10, 2019, 07:16:11 pm
Don't know, but if you colonize the Milkyway at sublight speed you have atleast 100.000 years to develope a working target system. RKVs probably don't cause any subspace disturbance and the projectile arrives the fraction of a second after its own light, so the Shivans most likely don't know that something's coming.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Mito [PL] on February 10, 2019, 07:36:29 pm
Well, if we go with this, we can just say that every FS ship is invulnerable to RKVs... Or anything that can accelerate is, basically.
I'd say it requires planning. You could just have an accelerator wrapped around your star, unleashing a rain of bullets at a jump node. If Vasudans had such a device and it survived into the incursion, they could totally block anything from entering Vasuda at all. Or at least the capships. Or swarm bullets into Lucy's orbital slot while it bombards Vasuda Prime. Eventually even envelope the whole planet and its surroundings with this kind of rain.
With such a device in Sol, GTA would only need to spam these projectiles at the jump node, waiting for Lucy to jump in to be instantly obliterated. Given that we don't really have to accelerate these to 0.9c to deal a lot of damage and that, at least in FS1, the jump node is near Earth, which is like 9 light minutes away from the Sun, it would be rather easy to use.
Plus, RKVs can (should) have some side thrusters to allow them to adjust their location in relation to the enemy, so they could hit even objects moving out of the way.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on February 10, 2019, 07:47:10 pm
I once thought of something similar for a Sol fleet. All ships used LR-beams which could be fired at relay stations, from where they were (literally) channeled through subspace (via warp hole). The result was that Solforces with a medium sized fleet could attack every point in the system with the strength of INFs Icanus main cannon while remaining in a safe position. :D

Here's some cool read regarding RKVs/RKKS: https://www.orionsarm.com/eg-article/4771ba89da222
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: General Battuta on February 10, 2019, 08:12:29 pm
Don't know, but if you colonize the Milkyway at sublight speed you have atleast 100.000 years to develope a working target system. RKVs probably don't cause any subspace disturbance and the projectile arrives the fraction of a second after its own light, so the Shivans most likely don't know that something's coming.

Why would they need to know something’s coming? With slower than light technology how do you possibly get your projectile on target before the Shivan jumps to, say, 1km away from your unarmored starship and blows it up?

And don’t forget that Shivan ships are stealthy.

100k years of relativistic tech don’t make you less vulnerable to a radically different tech base, they make you more vulnerable. Everything about the FS1 Shivans seems adept at utterly annihilating a relativistic civilization.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on February 10, 2019, 08:28:16 pm
Why would they need to know something’s coming? With slower than light technology how do you possibly get your projectile on target before the Shivan jumps to, say, 1km away from your unarmored starship and blows it up?

That's called game balance. :D But the Ancients would have tons of ships to launch such things, while there's no canon evidence IIRC that there have been multiple Lucifers attacking them. And without the Lucifer, the Shivans are atleast less dangerous. Keep in mind that by the time they made contact with the Shivans they could have subspace ready ships capable of firing RKVs.

Quote
And don’t forget that Shivan ships are stealthy.

Yes. Just that Terrans and Vasudans dealt with that rather quick. For the Ancients you can of course say what you want. :nod:

Quote
100k years of relativistic tech don’t make you less vulnerable to a radically different tech base, they make you more vulnerable. Everything about the FS1 Shivans seems adept at utterly annihilating a relativistic civilization.

Except that they're depending on their largest target for executing effective operations.
While FS tech obviously doesn't include exponentiell growth (I mean they still need human pilots in the 24th century) 100k years is a HUGE amount of time...
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: General Battuta on February 10, 2019, 08:36:55 pm
The Lucifer has an invulnerable sheath shielding system and can jump faster than you can possibly accelerate your projectiles. I encourage playing some Kerbal Space Program to see how insanely hard it would be to hit anything that’s changing orbits so rapidly and arbitrarily.

Has it occurred to you that the stealth the Terrans and Vasudans defeated so quickly might have been adapted against the Ancients?
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on February 10, 2019, 08:55:50 pm
I don't know if Lucifer was constantly changing position to avoid being hit. It would make sense though, elseway the Vasudans might have tried to hit it with a kamikaze destroyer.

I think it would be next to impossible to hit something the size of the Lucifer, but if the Ancients were a galactic civilisation and had the resources to do so there would be an insane amount of chances though and unless the shield is made of solid magic, 1 hit should be enough. Of course you could argue that they scrapped their relativistic technology just before the Shivans showed up...

I think it's an interesting question whether the Shivans adapt to certain opponents and to which degree. The thing is, most of my ideas about the Ancients are based upon whatever I could find out about OTT, and that part about the Shivans was sadly missing.

Do you think the Ancients were unable to operate/adapt like Terrans and Vasudans?
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Jeep-Eep on February 10, 2019, 09:08:02 pm
RKKVs are utmost trash garbo against anything that can actually respond to the things, and they're casual to beat - just a bit of sand and suchlike will be enough to ruin one, let alone the ability to  :warp: when it sees the light from one. They're only good at kicking around soft targets - 'preemptive defensive strike against non-military installations' are just about the only mission profile they're fit for.

http://bbs.stardestroyer.net/viewtopic.php?t=158707
A good thread that deconstructs the thinking around such and why they're such a damnfool idea - I'm surprised anyone in this forum is giving them the time of day... especially when Carl and company are around to demonstrate how to build an effective preemptive galacticide system right.

Which comes to another headcanon - if the Great Preservers theory is accurate, Shivans lock onto the light signatures of accelerating RKKVs and similar doomsday weapons, as well as subspace usage as signs of valid targets.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: AdDur on February 11, 2019, 01:32:41 am
Even with thousands of years to expand, travels with sublight speed are too slow to allow colonisation of entire galaxy. Milky Way has diamater of over 100.000 light years. Monologue doesn't says about other galaxies if i understand it correctly - it is rather a poetic use of "universe" term. Personally i always imagined Ancient empire as controlling at least hundreds, maybe thousands of star systems.

The long time of ancient sublight era always made me wonder - does some of the civilisations they destroyed would not be... another ancient colonists, from ships send reeeealy far away, and changed by millenias of isolation.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Mito [PL] on February 11, 2019, 02:11:44 pm
Well, anything capable of  :warp: is really well suited against RKVs, then. So, GTVA too, but not as well as Shivans, since Terrans/Vasudans still rely on planets and semi-stationary installations. In this case, ORS fleets from Exile are even better (every piece of industry being mobile in space and with subspace drives).
Shields are one more thing - but the question is, does Lucy use a shield system similar to what is on Shivan fighters, but in a much greater scale? If it does, it would really be only a matter of more dakka. The reason why in direct engagements with the Lucifer all FS1 capital ships have no chance of surviving is because Lucy's weapon damage to size ratio more resembles a fighter's one than that of a FS1 capship - so the shield strength to size ratio is probably around that too.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Colonol Dekker on February 11, 2019, 03:14:35 pm
Leaning away from this topic, headcanon-wise I always liked to think zods eat fish and headz exclusively.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: General Battuta on February 11, 2019, 03:21:18 pm
Even with thousands of years to expand, travels with sublight speed are too slow to allow colonisation of entire galaxy. Milky Way has diamater of over 100.000 light years. Monologue doesn't says about other galaxies if i understand it correctly - it is rather a poetic use of "universe" term. Personally i always imagined Ancient empire as controlling at least hundreds, maybe thousands of star systems.

The long time of ancient sublight era always made me wonder - does some of the civilisations they destroyed would not be... another ancient colonists, from ships send reeeealy far away, and changed by millenias of isolation.

The Ancient monologues definitely talk about 'conquering and colonizing in galaxies where we had no place'.

Sublight speed isn't too slow to colonize the Milky Way. In fact, one of the more baffling things about the galaxy is that it's not already full of life. It only takes about a million years to fill up the whole galaxy and there have been lots of millions of years before us.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on February 11, 2019, 03:28:07 pm
Quote
The Ancient monologues definitely talk about 'conquering and colonizing in galaxies where we had no place'.

But there's no mention this was done before they discovered subspace.

Quote
Sublight speed isn't too slow to colonize the Milky Way. In fact, one of the more baffling things about the galaxy is that it's not already full of life. It only takes about a million years to fill up the whole galaxy and there have been lots of millions of years before us.

Not if the Shivans or their creators were for among the first ones to do so and wiped everybody out that discovered subspace since then.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: General Battuta on February 11, 2019, 04:00:44 pm
No, moving to other galaxies clearly happened after subspace. That's never been in debate.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: AdDur on February 11, 2019, 04:21:16 pm
But was it necessary to conquer entire galaxy to move to another one? Systems known in FS are well... quite distant from each other, and connections between them always seemed to me random - maybe ancients simply found a node connecting two different galaxies? Expansion in FS is not restricted by normal distances, but by subspance connections... So possibly there could have been clusters of subspace trails not connected to the greater network - maybe knossoses would then serve to connect such clusters?
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: General Battuta on February 11, 2019, 04:43:20 pm
All we know for sure is that before they had subspace, they were anticipating running out of reachable systems.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on February 11, 2019, 04:56:22 pm
I'm curious - what kind of force did the Shivans use to wipe out the Ancients? I remember INFR1 had the Vinaashak as unstoppable shielded planet killer instead of the Lucifer.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Black Wolf on February 11, 2019, 05:37:51 pm
Even assuming the language in the monologues is 100% accurate and includes no metaphor or errors whatsoever (which I doubt, personally) I think there are still three key assumptions in the "Ancients filled the whole galaxy at sublight" narrative that aren't necessarily true.

1. The Ancients' "thousands of years" of imperial expansion all took place in interstellar space.
2. The Ancients' definition of "reachable" meant any star system they could physically reach under any circumstances and had no other limitations.
3. Going intergalactic is inherently more difficult than intragalactic with subspace.

For point 1, the Ancients' could be tracing the ancestry of their empire or society back thousands of years to a terrestrial origin (imagine a future Chinese dominated human spacefaring civilisation that traces its ancestry back 5000+ years despite only bring in space a few hundred). Once you account for the time taken to colonise a solar system on a relatively low technological base, you can easily imagine a civilisation that spent 2000 years dominating it's planet, a few hundred colonising it's solar system, and maybe only a century or two in interstellar space.

For point 2, reachable might imply a bubble around their home system within which they felt they could effectively control an empire with relativistic tech. Or it might be that the infrastructure to support their empire was only available on their home system, and the recreation of that infrastructure on colony worlds would take centuries, effectively ceasing their expansion. Or prolonged spaceflight might be technologically or physiologically beyond them, putting a limit on distances they can travel, and it might not be possible to daisy chain between habitable planets if their particular home planet archetype is rare in the galaxy. When you're not talking about Von Neumann machines, there are other factors to consider when spreading out in a galaxy which might have restricted them.

Finally, on point 3, it might be that intragalactic travel isn't actually any more difficult than intragalactic, it might just be that intragalactic nodes are rarer. Once you're on a paved road, for example, it's not really any more difficult to travel down to the local shops than it is to travel across a continent, assuming you have sufficient fuel. If the Ancients found a node that went intergalactic, it might be unusual that such a ring formed, but it doesn't necessarily mean they were particularly advanced, nor that they had necessarily filled up the entire galaxy and were somehow overflowing into the next.

To me, it's entirely plausible and consistent with the Ancient monologues that they inhabited a large empire which they gained through relativistic means, but that was not necessarily anywhere near the scale of an entire galaxy when they first discovered subspace, and that it didn't necessarily have to grow substantially beyond that before they encountered the Shivans.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on February 11, 2019, 05:54:19 pm
I had come to a similar conclusion as in point 1 - for example the Vasudan emperor (and with him, the Vasudan Empire) was stated to be the heir of a 10.000 year old dynasty, but besides that you can wonder whether it's just an exagaration, you probably would not presume that the Vasudans have been spacefaring all the time.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Megawolf492 on February 11, 2019, 10:21:37 pm
I would like to try and break down these monologues and nitpick on things we may be glossing over.

Quote
before long we could see the day when our reachable systems would have been exploited. And then there would be nowhere else to go.

1. How much of the galaxy is "reachable"? I agree with (and piggybacking off of) Black Wolf that "reachable" probably doesn't mean the entire galaxy (sans the deep core even). Because if we're simply talking about pointing a ship somewhere and accelerating, then MOST stars in the (observable) universe are "reachable". I think that "reachable" really means "maintainable".

2. How much of the "reachable systems" had they conquered before they "could see the day..."? I would say that it is pretty low, maybe 10%, but I get the feeling others would put it at 85+%. For me, it seems like it is a far-off eventuality vs a current crisis.

Quote
And we discovered subspace. It gave us our galaxy and it gave us the universe.

3. When was this? Certainly this was after the "we could see the day", but before the "nowhere else to go", right? Why would subspace "give them the galaxy" if they already had (most of) it?

Quote
And we saw other advanced life.

4. Where was this advanced life? Was it in this galaxy or another? While I believe the Shivans were from another galaxy, I find it hard to believe that the Ancients were the only advanced life in this galaxy.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: DefCynodont119 on February 11, 2019, 11:29:14 pm
Plot Twist: The Ancients are originally from a closed star cluster outside the Milky Way's galactic plane, Hence- the "reachable" systems and the fuzzy use of "galaxies".

Also, the GTA and GTVA Refer to themselves as "Galactic" yet only have like 20 or so star systems colonized. The Ancients are painted as being more arrogant and prideful too.

Also if natural cross-galactic nodes exist, and your civilization happened to be close to one, wouldn't you coo over the chance to colonize it and call yourselves a "MULTI-GALACTIC SPECIES" over and over at every diplomatic exchange? Even though you only claim 4 star systems? oh wait, no. It's FIVE, Because one of them is a binary!

My headcanon is that the Ancients were only technologically ahead of the GTVA by few centuries at most, And owned only a modest portion of the Milky Way.  :warp:
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on February 12, 2019, 05:36:37 am
IIRC :v: stated that the Ancients were only a couple decades ahead of the Great War era Terrans and Vasudans except for subspace technology.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: AdDur on February 12, 2019, 07:06:54 am
Thread quickly became discussion about ancient empire, so i will write about something different to bring some fresh air.

T-V War:
GTA was close to actually win conflict by military measures - or at least strike Zods hard enough, to cripple PVN ability to continue war. Vasudan military-industrial complex capabilities were much lower than terran, and they were forces to use Anubis, despite having better fighters simply because they could not afford to produce more comples fighters in large quantities. Also, Zods overextended in prievious phase of the war, launching several deep strike operations (remnants of these are Vasudans in Ross 128 or Betelguse), and many of their battlegroups were either destroyed, left without enough supplies or badly damaged. Terrans were in the meantime preparing to launch decisive offensive, using GTD Hades to directly strike one of Vasudan core worlds and military shipyards. Fighters and weapons we see during FS1 were actually created to be used during that offensive - new heavy fighter Hercules to replace Apollo bomber type, and Medusa bomber with tsunami warheads were in my opinion created to combat PVD Typhons. However, the GTA was rotting and internally collapsing due to failing war-time economy and civilian unrest caused by massive losses and suspension of some liberties. After eventual victory over Vasudans, these problems would probably cause collapse of GTA - also, GTI would probably try to seize power and create dictatorial state.

NTF Rebellion:
Bosch rebelled because... GTVI was close to find out what he is planning. Before NTF rebellion Bosch was probably one of most influential military officers (in not the most one), also having strong political and business connection. It would alloud him to redirect large amount of resources to his projects (like construction of Iceni), and gather more data he needed. However he was simply too big fish, and Intelligence started to check his activities. He could not finigh ETAK in secret in time he had left, so the only choice was to start an uprising.

Why te rebellion lasted 18 months, and then collapsed so quickly (even without Colossus it was quite obvious, that it is only matter of time, before NTF would be crushed. In first few weeks/months terran component of GTVA fleet was in a state of constant mutiny - entire squadrons and warships simply defected to the NTF instead of fighting them, further swelling their ranks. Also, Bosch had large number of agents or followers of NTF ideology in GTVA military, conducting acts of sabotage or gathering intel. GTVA had to conduct wide "purges" to eliminate remnants of Bosch clique in its own ranks. Later, GTVA simply did not tried to solve war quickly, fearing of inevetable losses - they simply decided to wait for deployment of Colossus - Bosch also knew about Colossus, but being not restricted be neccesity to keep low-profile he had enough time to finish ETAk.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Jeep-Eep on February 12, 2019, 09:40:57 am
It would explain some of the odd decisions that the GTVA suffered from during FS2 between the NTF and the security shakedown needed to clear that lot out, plus the remaining sympathizers leaving the Terran half of their officer corps in something of a shambolic state.

I think, between the GTI rebellion and the tech room in FS2, and how they were running about like beheaded chickens in FS 1, the GTA being a crashing out mess is basically text at this point.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: 666maslo666 on February 12, 2019, 09:50:49 am
Quote
For thousands of years our empire expanded. For so long we could imagine ourselves alone in the universe. For so long never did we encounter advanced life. And we traveled faster and further, spreading in our galaxy and before long we could see the day when our reachable systems would have been exploited.

It takes much more than "thousands of years" to colonize an entire galaxy at sublight speeds. It takes 100k years just to sent a lightspeed message to the other end of the galaxy, never mind getting a reply back. So this notion that Ancients were a galaxy spanning empire that would soon bump against the edges of it is quite absurd.

Yet we do have a line about Ancients "spreading in our galaxy" here.

There is a contradiction here and it does not make much sense as written. We may try to analyze it forever (Ancients being from a globular cluster or a dwarf galaxy is my favorite interpretation), but ultimately I think it is just inconsistent writing by Volition, nothing more, nothing less.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: The E on February 12, 2019, 09:56:22 am
It takes much more than "thousands of years" to colonize an entire galaxy at sublight speeds. It takes 100k years just to sent a lightspeed message to the other end of the galaxy, never mind getting a reply back. So this notion that Ancients were a galaxy spanning empire that would soon bump against the edges of it is quite absurd.

Look up "Von-Neumann-Probe" and "exponential growth". It is absurd, yes. About as absurd as an FTL drive that moves you from one inertial reference frame to another.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: 666maslo666 on February 12, 2019, 10:01:29 am
Look up "Von-Neumann-Probe" and "exponential growth". It is absurd, yes. About as absurd as an FTL drive that moves you from one inertial reference frame to another.

Even exponentially growing von neumann probes cannot colonize a galaxy like Milky Way in "thousands of years", as they are still limited by the speed of light. At best they can approach the 100k years limit.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: 666maslo666 on February 12, 2019, 10:27:25 am
SD Lucifer =  trident wielded by the god Shiva? The shape is similar..

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trishula

https://wiki.hard-light.net/images/a/a4/Sdlucifer-old.jpg
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Rhymes on February 12, 2019, 10:39:23 am
You know it's possible to edit posts right? Double posting is generally frowned upon.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on February 12, 2019, 10:42:23 am
The Shivans deployed more Juggernauts at Capella than destroyers because they were expecting very little to no resistence.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: General Battuta on February 12, 2019, 12:11:34 pm
Look up "Von-Neumann-Probe" and "exponential growth". It is absurd, yes. About as absurd as an FTL drive that moves you from one inertial reference frame to another.

Even exponentially growing von neumann probes cannot colonize a galaxy like Milky Way in "thousands of years", as they are still limited by the speed of light. At best they can approach the 100k years limit.

999,999 years is “thousands of years”.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on February 12, 2019, 12:26:43 pm
I think it would be insanely hard even for the Shivans to destroy a civilisation that encompasses the entire galaxy, alone finding the homeworld could take decades (in which the Ancients could adapt to the Shivans and still have the resources to execute their plans while they couldn't in canon).
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: General Battuta on February 12, 2019, 12:47:55 pm
Why? We know the Lucifer fleet took out the Ancient home world. We have no idea how long passed between first contact and that final cull. It’s not the only viable reading, but it’s a plausible one. Decades are milliseconds at the galactic scale, and with subspace the Shivans could be almost literally everywhere at once.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on February 12, 2019, 01:04:24 pm
Absolutly agree with the galactic time scale thing, but if they have the population to fill the entire galaxy they have incredible industrial and scientific resources thousands upon thousands of times larger than the GTVA. Despite being ridiculous small in terms of size Terrans and Vasudan are probably only a few decades away from catching up with the Shivans in most technological aspects minus supernova (Sol isn't even part of that).
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: The E on February 12, 2019, 01:09:51 pm
This is, again, a very anthropomorphic reaction. But consider what must be true about a civilization that can colonize a galaxy using STL travel. One of those things, almost certainly, is that such a civilization would move, culturally speaking, much much slower than any human civilization. Think "ents" rather than humans; It would be reasonable to assume that the shivans were, on all axes of interaction, an Outside Context Problem for the Ancients -- They use FTL rather than relativistic travel, they use it far more freely and adeptly than the Ancients, they are utterly immune to whatever weapons the Ancients have and almost invisible to their sensors, they can iterate on strategies in a matter of minutes rather than days or years.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on February 12, 2019, 01:20:27 pm
The Ancients possessed FTL for quite a while before the Shivans attacked though. If not all Ancients had access to FTL (it would probably take a long time if it was discovered in one location to spread throughout the galaxy), would the Shivans even look for those parts not having them?
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: HLD_Prophecy on February 12, 2019, 01:53:15 pm
This is, again, a very anthropomorphic reaction. But consider what must be true about a civilization that can colonize a galaxy using STL travel. One of those things, almost certainly, is that such a civilization would move, culturally speaking, much much slower than any human civilization. Think "ents" rather than humans; It would be reasonable to assume that the shivans were, on all axes of interaction, an Outside Context Problem for the Ancients -- They use FTL rather than relativistic travel, they use it far more freely and adeptly than the Ancients, they are utterly immune to whatever weapons the Ancients have and almost invisible to their sensors, they can iterate on strategies in a matter of minutes rather than days or years.

This is interesting  :) - how do you know that they would for a fact develop at a cultural crawl? Have we seen an STL galaxy-spanning species develop? Not saying you're wrong, it could certainly be, but I'd like to hear why you say it's a near certainty that they'd develop slowly rather than at the same rate or even a faster rate than human civilizations as we know them - why "must" that be true?

Certainly a slow-brewing culture is convenient for sci-fi writers who don't have to keep up with centuries of pop-culture trends.  :nod:  :lol:
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Colonol Dekker on February 12, 2019, 01:56:16 pm
Did the ancients canonically have shields?   Not in my head.......
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: AdmiralRalwood on February 12, 2019, 02:01:44 pm
One of my headcanons—which I got from Scotty—is that the Ancients' natural form of communication was FTL (for those familiar with BP canon, the idea was that it was specifically Nagari-like, making them uniquely vulnerable to Shivan mental e-war and adding another reason they were wiped out so effectively), giving an explanation of how they could maintain their culture while slowboating across the galaxy.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on February 12, 2019, 02:07:52 pm
Did the ancients canonically have shields?   Not in my head.......

I think it would have taken them longer to acquire them. The Shivans tend to protect their shields, perhabs the Ancients failed to get them due to lack of combat experience if they could slaughter everyone before with pure force alone instead of tactic.

However, one should keep in mind that they did travel between stars at STL speed, so they would need atleast some sort of powerful armor to protect their seed-units against micro-meteorites impacting at a significant portion of lightspeed.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: General Battuta on February 12, 2019, 02:17:58 pm
Absolutly agree with the galactic time scale thing, but if they have the population to fill the entire galaxy they have incredible industrial and scientific resources thousands upon thousands of times larger than the GTVA. Despite being ridiculous small in terms of size Terrans and Vasudan are probably only a few decades away from catching up with the Shivans in most technological aspects minus supernova (Sol isn't even part of that).

Why would their development over tens or hundreds of thousands of years necessarily prepare them to fight the Shivans? Why do you think they would have incredible industrial and scientific resources, rather than 'the resources of one solar system, repeated thousands of times'?

What if they were like the scramblers in Blindsight, or even like humans using seedships - scattering their progeny across the stars to form lonely, disconnected colonies, most of which would fail, some of which would gain starflight and send ships out to make contact with others, but still limited to a fraction of lightspeed and a frightening attrition rate? Add in a possible ethos of xenophobia and racial purity, which might drive the Ancients to actively destroy 'post-Ancient' developments, and you end up with a milieu of splinter cultures actively competing with each other, not a pan-galactic supersociety.

That's the whole point I brought up in the beginning - the FS1 Shivans appear exquisitely adapted to fight a 'hard SF' civilization. They have capabilities which are essentially magical if you're a Reynolds/Watts style hard SF alien. They operate at ranges measured in kilometers, not light-seconds. They don't produce drive plumes while moving around, because they're in subspace, so all your long-range detection gear is useless; and even at ranges of kilometers, their ships are stealth even to sensors designed to deal with subspace enemies. Projectile weapons in FS are conventionally useless against shields (with destroyer-shattering bombs just washing over fighter shields!), and the Lucifer is Extra Shielded, as if it needed to shrug off attacks by fast kinetic weapons. 

It is possible, reading the canon, that the Ancients met the Shivans as soon as months after discovering subspace. Their campaign of xenocide up to that point could have been as simple as jumping through nodes, detecting inhabited planets, and firing impactors at them. They probably never fought an alien species with subspace at all! It's conceivable that the Ancients didn't even have warships as Terrans and Vasudans conceive them - vessels designed to survive high-yield exchanges at extremely short ranges. A single shielded Shivan fighter might have been enough to wipe out one of their 'capital' warships.

When the Shivans followed them, they may have understood the node network better than the Ancients themselves. They could have appeared in hundreds of systems over the span of mere years. A civilization used to operating on timescales of centuries or millennia would have been utterly unable to react.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: The E on February 12, 2019, 02:31:17 pm
This is interesting  :) - how do you know that they would for a fact develop at a cultural crawl? Have we seen an STL galaxy-spanning species develop? Not saying you're wrong, it could certainly be, but I'd like to hear why you say it's a near certainty that they'd develop slowly rather than at the same rate or even a faster rate than human civilizations as we know them - why "must" that be true?

Our own experience with culture is one of rapid shifts. A hundred years ago, our lived experience was fundamentally different from our lives now; we assume that a hundred years from now, our experiences will be different still.
For us, an interstellar, STL culture is unimaginable. Our experience shows that we would lose much of whatever commonality we started out with in just a few decades of isolation.

But if we assume that the Ancients could built an interstellar society that way, then that must mean that their culture is much more static than ours is. That they can remain recognizably "Ancient" even if they've been out of touch with their homeworld for thousands of years.

To me, that suggests that they are slow to develop new ideas, and somewhat reluctant to adopt them when they do. They probably took a long time to switch from newtonian physics to Einsteinian, and probably even longer to adopt the utter mind****ery that subspace would have to be for them -- but when they did, they could disseminate that tech quickly because they knew that all the colonies out there were still thinking roughly the same way and still speaking the same language, something humans could not.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on February 12, 2019, 02:40:14 pm
I agree that the chance that the Ancients ever fought a species possessing subspace drives is extreme low. It is also my guess why the Ancients screwed up so badly after they ran across the Shivans, whereas the T-V had 14 years of practice.

I don't get the point with the sublight colonies though. At first you said they colonized the entire galaxy, now they're just a small bunch of people that ended up everywhere; and instead of purposeful colonisation the Ancients just didn't dared to throw their own surplus people directly into the next sun?
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: General Battuta on February 12, 2019, 03:27:27 pm
What difference do you see between colonizing the entire galaxy and ‘a bunch of people ending up everywhere’?
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Colt on February 12, 2019, 03:28:23 pm
Did the ancients canonically have shields?   Not in my head.......

I agree. I feel that if they had shields then they would have known off the bat that shields+subspace=null, thus node-bombing the Lucifer a lot sooner and preserving their empire (even if temporarily). Granted the GTA and PVE had shields for a month or two before they destroyed the Lucifer, but my skullcannon tells me they were more concerned with tried and true conventional methods.

Edit: Also new, unrelated theory: The GTSC Erikson discovered the Knossos in Gamma Drac first. Admiral Bosch, who was likely a high-ranking officer in GT(V?)I by this point probably intervened and had the report stashed away and waited until he had secured more power/influence, then kicked off his rebellion to have full access to the old Ancient sites in Deneb.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on February 12, 2019, 04:03:22 pm
What difference do you see between colonizing the entire galaxy and ‘a bunch of people ending up everywhere’?

That there's a plan what to do after arriving at their target.


I don't think that the Erikson discovered the Knossos - an a couple km wide ship in a system is virtually undetectable.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: General Battuta on February 12, 2019, 04:11:14 pm
What difference do you see between colonizing the entire galaxy and ‘a bunch of people ending up everywhere’?

That there's a plan what to do after arriving at their target.

Sure, the same plan any r-selector has: hope you can find a way to survive, and if you don't, well, hope somebody else did.

These aren't humans.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on February 12, 2019, 04:28:01 pm
The hope of those relocating or the government wanting to get rid of them? I don't see why they would undertake such massive efforts if their colonisation would have no purpose. They could put them into some cheap rocket and directly launch into the next sun or have them self destruct at the rim of the system. Results are the same.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: General Battuta on February 12, 2019, 04:29:40 pm
You are thinking way too much like a human. Go read Blindsight, (https://rifters.com/real/Blindsight.htm) it's free and awesome.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: General Battuta on February 12, 2019, 04:32:01 pm
Also, as a weird bit of trivia, it's less difficult to achieve solar escape velocity than to crash into the sun (at least starting from Earth).
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on February 12, 2019, 04:37:35 pm
Will do if I find some time. :) Perhaps FS is to blame for my thinking, as one of the basic ideas I had about it was that there was a fundamental difference between the Shivans and all other intelligent species, as Terrans and Vasudans were comparable similar.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: General Battuta on February 12, 2019, 05:20:45 pm
The general takeaway is that things like 'governments', 'valuing your own life', or (for that matter) 'moving people (rather than zygotes) between stars' are all very narrow, human ways to look at the problem.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Black Wolf on February 12, 2019, 05:41:11 pm
It is possible, reading the canon, that the Ancients met the Shivans as soon as months after discovering subspace.

Not really. They had enough time after they discovered subspace to master it to the point of being able to construct Knossos portals (something Terrans and Vasudan weren't able to do despite a half century or more of subspace tech development) and construct at the absolute least three of them, potentially many more.

Debatably they could have been building Knossos' as part of the war effort somehow, but that seems an odd use of probably a substantial amount of time and resources in an existential struggle.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: General Battuta on February 12, 2019, 05:49:30 pm
That is a good point. Of course as of the time the FS1 monologues were written nobody had thought of Knossos portals  :nervous:
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: HLD_Prophecy on February 12, 2019, 06:02:02 pm

For us, an interstellar, STL culture is unimaginable. Our experience shows that we would lose much of whatever commonality we started out with in just a few decades of isolation.

But if we assume that the Ancients could built an interstellar society that way, then that must mean that their culture is much more static than ours is. That they can remain recognizably "Ancient" even if they've been out of touch with their homeworld for thousands of years.

To me, that suggests that they are slow to develop new ideas, and somewhat reluctant to adopt them when they do.

Aha, an excellent point.  :nod: Thanks!
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Firesteel on February 12, 2019, 07:01:34 pm
On the subject of STL interstellar war, I highly recommend the Forever War if you haven't read it.

While I do agree with Battuta that you could read the Ancients as running into the Shivans months after their discovery of subspace, their first monologue makes it seem like they exploited it to conquer more of the galaxy faster than they had (though if we're still viewing them as predominantly using seed ships, I could still see the months, though the Knossos stuff does again possibly contradict that).
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on February 12, 2019, 07:09:37 pm
On the subject of STL interstellar war, I highly recommend the Forever War if you haven't read it.

I'd recommend Gunbuster. :p


For us, an interstellar, STL culture is unimaginable. Our experience shows that we would lose much of whatever commonality we started out with in just a few decades of isolation.

But if we assume that the Ancients could built an interstellar society that way, then that must mean that their culture is much more static than ours is. That they can remain recognizably "Ancient" even if they've been out of touch with their homeworld for thousands of years.

To me, that suggests that they are slow to develop new ideas, and somewhat reluctant to adopt them when they do.

Aha, an excellent point.  :nod: Thanks!

Good thing I already used these ideas in my little story. :D
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: General Battuta on February 12, 2019, 07:09:58 pm
I personally think it would be kinda dumb if they were just a subspace empire for months.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Jeep-Eep on February 18, 2019, 10:30:47 am
The Kayser uses a derivative of the Banshee power system.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Colonol Dekker on February 18, 2019, 01:31:40 pm
Main gun Plasma cores are reloaded like old school artillery field guns and then require reconditioning before they can be used again. Much like a vape coil for some reason my head conjured up.  Each ship has a stash and in normal conditions is able to get them to last for a tour.   In wartime tempo, they'll obviously get used up quicker.   (Entirely derived from surrender bellisarius)  Headcanon remember.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: FrikgFeek on February 20, 2019, 09:58:53 am
My new headcannon is that the Ulysses was used as an interceptor between the Valkyrie's retirement and the introduction of the Perseus.

Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Jeep-Eep on February 24, 2019, 10:28:21 pm
Also bear in mind that they already had a perfectly good pure interceptor in the form of the Horus from the Vasudans.

In a pinch, the Terran parts of the fleet could have a few transferred over and converted to Terran controls, in the event of the failure of the Perseus program.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Colonol Dekker on March 19, 2019, 06:02:06 am
Headcanon.   Using the hallfight cutscene for scale reference, in particular the marines against the door of the Elysium- I imagine Orions to be very very cramped for 10'000 crew.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: starlord on March 19, 2019, 06:59:16 am
The thing with that theory is that one of the characteristics of interceptors aside from speed is the fact of having stopping power in the form of ample secondaries.

This is something the Ulysses lacks, due to it being more in the space superiority breed, where maneuvrability and primary weapons are key.

The Ulysses definitely works as a scout though.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on March 19, 2019, 07:37:14 am
Headcanon.   Using the hallfight cutscene for scale reference, in particular the marines against the door of the Elysium- I imagine Orions to be very very cramped for 10'000 crew.

Do you mean with that how the interior is built? Because 10000/2000m makes 1 crewman every 5 meters, but the ship is hundreds of meters wide and has dozens of decks.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: 0rph3u5 on March 19, 2019, 08:31:34 am
Headcanon.   Using the hallfight cutscene for scale reference, in particular the marines against the door of the Elysium- I imagine Orions to be very very cramped for 10'000 crew.

Do you mean with that how the interior is built? Because 10000/2000m makes 1 crewman every 5 meters, but the ship is hundreds of meters wide and has dozens of decks.

You have ever been on a non-nuclear, military submarine? - You know the ones designed that way that at best two people in the entire boat can be away from their station/shared bed/galley
(Its a dying design as lot of componenents arctually get smaller, but they exist(ed))
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on March 19, 2019, 09:12:59 am
Nope. Just FS stated that an Orion is an nuclear (fusion-powered) submarine. Given their size and sheer inner volume I don't think it would be designed in a way it would be particular uncomfortable, though any kind of luxus would be a waste of space that'd be bad on the battlefield.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Colonol Dekker on March 19, 2019, 05:48:40 pm
I feel the need to clarify, looking at the scale of marines to the Elysium, (from hallfight.mve) then the Elysium to the Orion, humanity have clearly evolved to be 40 foot high.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: 0rph3u5 on March 20, 2019, 04:44:38 am
Nope. Just FS stated that an Orion is an nuclear (fusion-powered) submarine

Source please.

Given their size and sheer inner volume I don't think it would be designed in a way it would be particular uncomfortable, though any kind of luxus would be a waste of space that'd be bad on the battlefield.

The Orion is a design that can almost be described as brutalistic (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brutalist_architecture), which means it is function over comfort all the way down...

Side note: I am inclined to say that it looks like that some part of the Orion's lower hull, including the fighter bay, might have been additions to the design rather than an original feature.
Side note to side note: Orion with an Icanus (https://wiki.hard-light.net/images/f/fe/Tsjicanus.jpg)-style weapons array instead of the hangar...
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Colonol Dekker on March 20, 2019, 05:13:08 am
The reference bible (https://wiki.hard-light.net/index.php/FreeSpace_Reference_Bible) refers to an Orions "Fusion Pile Genrators".
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on March 20, 2019, 08:52:15 am
I felt that the Orion wasn't the very first generation of large ships (though that's just my guess), which indeed might've been very limited in internal space. Looking at the mainhalls of FS1, they don't appear to be neither particular big nor small; a balance between crew comfort and necessity with tendencies towards the latter.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: 0rph3u5 on March 20, 2019, 05:07:11 pm
The reference bible (https://wiki.hard-light.net/index.php/FreeSpace_Reference_Bible) refers to an Orions "Fusion Pile Genrators".

The mode of power generation was not in question; I was just confused because all sources I know (including the Ref-Bible) liken FS's Destroyer to Carriers not submarines.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Colonol Dekker on March 21, 2019, 12:59:18 am
Sorry bud.  Yeah I definitely agree.  Fleet carrier/destroyer.   Not cramped man-can.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: 0rph3u5 on March 22, 2019, 08:48:22 pm
Fleet carrier/destroyer.   Not cramped man-can.

Which is not mutually exclusive in a space ship.

The ample internal space of aircraft carriers is large parts a function to achieving sufficent displacement and stability - neither is a problem for space ship.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Colonol Dekker on March 23, 2019, 05:00:45 am
The FS1 (and silent threat) mainhalls seem quite spacious.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: 0rph3u5 on March 23, 2019, 09:40:36 am
The FS1 (and silent threat) mainhalls seem quite spacious.

They also seem to double as spaces to house, arm and maintain the fighters you would be flying in the mission; which just to move the fighters around would mean that would have to spacious for no reason related to the comfort of the crew.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: FrikgFeek on March 23, 2019, 01:58:44 pm
Considering a Nimitz carries 9000 crew at only 300m long a 2km long Orion should have no problem with 10000.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Colonol Dekker on March 23, 2019, 03:55:18 pm
All I was saying is because of the scale differences between the elysium,  the orion,  and the marines, way back when I played it in 1998- the marines should have been super tall if the orion was 2k long ;)  an easy headcanon to form when I was 16.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: DefCynodont119 on March 23, 2019, 03:57:58 pm
Considering a Nimitz carries 9000 crew at only 300m long a 2km long Orion should have no problem with 10000.

^This a thousand times.   The official crew complement of an Orion is crazy small for a ship that big, also semi-related:

Quote from: FS2 Orion tech room description
The Orion's cavernous hanger bays easily accommodate more than two dozen fighter or bomber wings
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: DefCynodont119 on March 23, 2019, 04:26:12 pm
Of course It's also possible that the ship's entire crew are in a tiny module within the ship and the rest is just corridors patrolled by maintenance robots.

Or maybe it's secretly a full lux liner for the admiralty/command and a tin can for everyone else, who knows? Without internal diagrams or official lore about the insides of GTA ships it's kinda hard to tell.

Out of curiosity, does anyone know the 3-dimentional area of an Orion? I want to calculate the minimum population density but I'm not great at that kind of math.  :nervous:


Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Colt on March 23, 2019, 05:01:36 pm
I can't help but imagine there being some sort of high-speed transit system that gets people around warships quickly.  Pretty sure by the time you have read up to this point, the Argo has since docked with the Aquitaine and gotten its engines back up running, or the Discovery has already arrested the Trinity's crew.

I know it's like that for gameplay purposes and whatnot, but still.  :lol:
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: niffiwan on March 23, 2019, 06:54:23 pm
I feel that a comparison with a submarine size/crew is more relevant, i.e. a ship that needs to operate in a completely hostile to human life environment, not a ship where roughly half the surface area is open to the atmosphere.

So, Los Angeles class submarine (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Los_Angeles-class_submarine), 110m with (from reading this (https://www.amazon.com.au/Turn-Ship-Around-Building-Breaking/dp/1591846404)) around 140 crew, which scaled up linearly gives ~2550 crew for 2km length. Of course, to be accurate I should calculate the actual volume difference but I can't be bothered :p (the wiki needs beam & "draft" for all ships!!!  ;7)
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: DefCynodont119 on March 24, 2019, 01:23:07 am
Of course, to be accurate I should calculate the actual volume difference but I can't be bothered

Alright then, as I said I'm not great at this but I'll give it a shot:

After taking some measurements in FRED, (a unit in FRED is one meter) The main block of an Orion is about 450 meters tall, 400 wide, (without the hanger outcrop) and 2km long exactly. Putting that into here:

https://www.calculatorsoup.com/calculators/geometry-solids/rectangularprism.php?given_data=hlw&h=450&l=2000&w=400&units_length=m&sf=6&given_data_last=hlw&action=solve

I get a Volume of 360000000 m3

The Volume of the Los Angeles-class submarine is 491127 m3

so, we divide the GTD Orion's volume by the submarine's and we get 733.  So the Orion has 733 times more volume.


Multiply that by 140 crew each and we get: 102,620.  Over ten times the 10,000 crew that we needed.  :lol:


and 100,070 more then 2550. . but hey, that's the difference between scaling up linearly and calculating the actual volume difference!

Anyone who wants to check my math or make a more accurate volume estimate for the Orion is more then welcome too.  :yes:

Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Colonol Dekker on March 24, 2019, 04:11:55 am
I assume a huge amount of the rear quarter/third to be taken up by propulsion.

Ps-  I always felt the bastion meson bomb refit command brief had a bit of artistic licence to it regarding the bomb placement within the hull.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on March 24, 2019, 07:56:22 am
Ps-  I always felt the bastion meson bomb refit command brief had a bit of artistic licence to it regarding the bomb placement within the hull.

IIRC the CB showed the meson bombs with their TC-MB containers, what would make the whole thing much more complicated.
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Iain Baker on March 24, 2019, 10:42:33 am
This is interesting  :) - how do you know that they would for a fact develop at a cultural crawl? Have we seen an STL galaxy-spanning species develop? Not saying you're wrong, it could certainly be, but I'd like to hear why you say it's a near certainty that they'd develop slowly rather than at the same rate or even a faster rate than human civilizations as we know them - why "must" that be true?

Our own experience with culture is one of rapid shifts. A hundred years ago, our lived experience was fundamentally different from our lives now; we assume that a hundred years from now, our experiences will be different still.
For us, an interstellar, STL culture is unimaginable. Our experience shows that we would lose much of whatever commonality we started out with in just a few decades of isolation.

But if we assume that the Ancients could built an interstellar society that way, then that must mean that their culture is much more static than ours is. That they can remain recognizably "Ancient" even if they've been out of touch with their homeworld for thousands of years.

To me, that suggests that they are slow to develop new ideas, and somewhat reluctant to adopt them when they do. They probably took a long time to switch from newtonian physics to Einsteinian, and probably even longer to adopt the utter mind****ery that subspace would have to be for them -- but when they did, they could disseminate that tech quickly because they knew that all the colonies out there were still thinking roughly the same way and still speaking the same language, something humans could not.

This sounds very much like the depiction of 'The Race' in Harry Turtledove's 'World War series'. They have a 3.5 system STL empire (the .5 being ours, since they were only able to successfully take over Earths' southern hemisphere) Their society was hyper-conservative. They fear change. Indeed 'that would be a change' is possibly the worst sentence a member of the race can utter. They revere the spirits of past emperors and their imperial lineage goes back 100,000 years or more, so their society is very stable, but also very slow to adapt. A comical example is when they invented TV. They first allowed only a small isolated population to experience it for about three generations. Only after that experiment showed that TV was not disastrous to society did they allow it to the masses. (Considering how bad Reality TV is nowadays, they may have had the right idea  :lol: )

Their hyper-conservatism is linked to their development and geography. Their home world has no natural barriers to movement - no oceans, no mountain ranges etc. As such their tribal ancestors were pretty homogeneous, with little in the way of tribal conflict. So their society didn't fracture as much as ours did, and the lack of conflict meant they didn't need to advance rapidly. so hey didn't.

The other two sentient species they have encountered and taken over were very similar, so they assumed all life was like that. So, when they sent a probe to earth during the medieval period and saw knights on horseback being the most advanced weapons they naturally assumed that would be the same when their invasion arrived in 1940. We came as one hell of a shock when they saw we now had tanks and spitfires ;-)
Title: Re: Freespace Headcanons
Post by: Nightmare on March 24, 2019, 12:01:35 pm
You don't need to go into the realm of SciFi to find explinations for static societies - Stalin for example partitially outlawed research on genetics, because he felt that you only needed a "communist mind" to be able achive everything you need (health, intelligence etc.). That could hit other areas as well - if you ban certain parts of research, technological progress won't come immediatly to a stop, but sooner or later you'll find yourself in a place where you can't advance anymore because you lack basic knowledge about different routes.