Cthulhu wrote: ↑Tue Aug 31, 2021 1:11 pm
Nope, it's a Type-KT cruiser, those have around 300 bugs on board.
This alone means Alex could play a significant role without ever touching a weapon, because the deciding factor in their success isn't going to be direct combat per-se, but in managing to access the right control interfaces to do something like force-venting the ship (or doing it the "hard way.") Of course, just getting
that far will give Fireblade et al more than enough bugs to handle.
Given the perilous odds, even if all Alex manages to do is keep himself alive that'd count as an impressive achievement, because as his minder has said they definitely can't spare anyone to protect him.
Also, everyone talking about the bugs being sluggish in 1G should remember that they're quite nimble in their native low-g environment and the characters are currently onboard an enemy warship, who's artificial grav is set to their sub-1G optimal (as Alex himself noticed.)
Arioch wrote: ↑Tue Aug 31, 2021 6:44 pm
- The Loroi weapons don't have familiar features like trigger guards or iron sights because they are meant to look futuristic and alien. We suppose that an ultra tech weapon has more advanced features. Iron sights are not the only type of sight.
- Gun sights weren't a feature of regular military firearms until the late nineteenth century. Surely we are not to assume that nobody hit anything during the first 500 years of their use?
Interesting note here - personal weapons often lag behind the cutting edge of tech by 100 years or more, due to the extreme reliability demanded of them. There's currently some contention among Firearm People as to whether red dot sights are reliable and rugged enough to justify the total omission of a back-up iron sight (on both rifles and pistols.) Firearms, and especially sidearms are the last thin line between life and death, and life is priceless. Thus the issue is always in constant tension between "most rugged, proven and bulletproof option available" and "when fighting for your life, even the slimmest advantage is worth having."
Fortunately, a TL-11 civilization zooming around with
antimatter drives still has a wide-open field even under that standard, making this entirely a matter of artistic license. You'd be very hard pressed to come up with something unjustifiable in your setting as presented. Personally, I think a wee holographically projected sight that is only visible in a cone behind the gun (i.e. to the user) would be highly practical and also look pretty cool.
Y'know, if it should happen to come up.
