Arioch wrote: ↑Mon Jun 21, 2021 8:09 amMy thought is that the "glass" material would automatically dim in response to off-limit light sources, but would "fail" when overloaded by becoming permanently opaque, which is what happened to the shuttle canopy. Which is why there are no stars visible in pp.195-199. Which might result in the wearer being blinded anyway, but at least not permanently blind (or dead).Cthulhu wrote: ↑Mon Jun 21, 2021 7:51 amAre even the helmet visors poweful enough not to be overloaded or is that a property of the material itself?
I also recall an idea for a "vision-impairing" bomb for such a situation from a sci-fi story I've read. A container releasing compressed and now rapidly expanding (due to a memory effect or a chemical reaction) ultra-low density "fluff" particles made from something like aerogels, quickly filling up the field of vision, yet still being transparent for radar. Or do the Loroi helmets have additional sensors?
Anyhow, I try to proceed from the assumption that tactical "tricks" in use today probably have technological countermeasures, where feasible.
So flash bangs are still useful then?
Too bad poor buggy did not think to use any...for him. But good for the team....unless the Umiak put him as bait for the team and a whole bunch are watching and waiting behind him?
A flash bang would at the very least blind their helmet visors, which would at least somewhat impair Teidar and Mizol, and definitely the rest if all their helmets blacked out.
That said, you could always say that a light source powerful enough to blacken the helmet is powerful enough to destroy the whole room!
Which the missile blast that blinded the shuttle surely was.
Then you have a perfect excuse why the Umiak is not using flash bangs....because any flash bang powerful enough to blind Loroi visors is a bomb that will blow up that part of the shuttle...and they want the shuttle intact.