
But that's all speculation, and no matter what, I'm sure once he gets back into the groove, he won't do us or more importantly, the story any great disservice.
CJSF
Moderator: Outsider Moderators
Clearly by serving up answers to the fans, you are telling us ThingS MaN WAs nOt meANt tO kNoW.Arioch wrote:If I can't answer a simple question on a forum without being accused of fanservice, then I don't know what to say.
It's just behind the scenes banter, Arioch. I think we're all looking at it in good fun.Arioch wrote:If I can't answer a simple question on a forum without being accused of fanservice, then I don't know what to say.
I had and still have the exact same thoughts and I think I got the answer when I was writing my big fan-fic.novius wrote:But, seriously...
Human vessels of war are cramped. Seriously so. Space is a luxury, and everything to save some precious material or fuel to propel and support a vessel is done. Given this, this disabuses any notion of personal space in whoever serves, say, on a submarine.
So why are Loroi vessels so spacious?
I can't really think that the Loroi Union is that rich that they can allow such extravagancy in their spaceships. If one can build and sustain six smaller, equally or more effective vessels for the price of four, (s)he would do it. Especially in a war where every woman, every ship and every gun or missile tube counts.
So I think space is not a luxury on Loroi vessels, but a necessity. But why?
One possible explanation is that the Loroi taboo on touching is much, much more prevalent than any human might think. That it's one of their design criteria to give any two Loroi more than enough space to comfortably pass each other, everywhere.
And that means, sorry guys, scratch any thoughts about communal baths, because bathing would definitely be a highly private affair.
Though... on the other hand, that makes Beryl's readiness to intrude into Alex's personal space an even more glaring breach of social mores.
( http://www.well-of-souls.com/outsider/outsider072.html. http://www.well-of-souls.com/outsider/outsider101.html , http://www.well-of-souls.com/outsider/outsider105.html )
This one, too, but I guess even Loroi would feel the need to dispense with 'good manners' if it is sort of an emergency. ( http://www.well-of-souls.com/outsider/outsider091.html )
I know that Human military planers would do so too, if they could afford it. For morale reasons.orion1836 wrote:Loroi ships could be so nicely designed because they are likely the last home their Loroi crew will ever know.
I have recently begun to rewatch Star Trek The Next Generation. That Enterprise are a marvel of luxury and huge spaces but then again it is the federations flagship that tend to get the lionshare of the diplomatic first contact missions. It is commanded by Picard that is a captain that could be an admiral if he just wanted to. The entire crew is probably made up of similarly deliberately underpromoted people that WANT to be there. The station there IS the promotion in itself. As such it is also an elite crew that you can rely on to get the job done. It is the federations dream team. Could the same be said of the crew of the Tempest?JQBogus wrote:Prior to the start of the war, the Loroi hadn't been in a foreign war for ~600 years, and their last civil war was ~350 years back.
It is unclear how long the design phase for a new class of ships is for the Loroi. There is a good chance that the Vortex class (Tempest) may have had a substantial amount of its design work done before the war, or, even if it was designed after the start of the war, that its design carried a lot of pre-war features and assumptions.
One of those features/assumptions may have been a lot of room. If your job for several generations has been cruising around showing the flag and impressing the natives, a cramped, smelly ship may be contraindicated.
And so far, the only ship we've seen the insides of is the Tempest. Other Loroi ships may not have so much room.
It's a racial trait, not a personal trait. All Loroi have a bad reputation.dragoongfa wrote:Also remember that Beryl, Fireblade and Tempo have 'bad reputations' in their GURPS character sheets. Dream team members don't have that.
The Loroi interiors are deliberately more spacious than the comparatively tight corridors of the Bellarmine to contrast the differing technology levels and aesthetics of the two civilizations; the humans are low-tech and utilitarian, and the Loroi are much higher-tech and more concerned with aesthetics. Loroi ships are not meant to feel like space submarines. Also, Bellarmine is a small scout, while Tempest is a large command ship; they shouldn't feel the same. So this is a visual design choice rather than a practical choice at its root.novius wrote:Human vessels of war are cramped. Seriously so. Space is a luxury, and everything to save some precious material or fuel to propel and support a vessel is done. Given this, this disabuses any notion of personal space in whoever serves, say, on a submarine.
So why are Loroi vessels so spacious?
I can't really think that the Loroi Union is that rich that they can allow such extravagancy in their spaceships. If one can build and sustain six smaller, equally or more effective vessels for the price of four, (s)he would do it. Especially in a war where every woman, every ship and every gun or missile tube counts.
So I think space is not a luxury on Loroi vessels, but a necessity. But why?
As I've said before, it's casual touching between strangers that is taboo, not touching between intimate friends, which not at all unusual. A Loroi in a washroom with people she didn't know well would bathe herself. However, it's important to remember that for the Loroi, your good friends among your squadmates are the most intimate relationships that you have. Good friends will frequently touch hands and make close telepathic contact, and doing each other's hair or washing each other's backs is no problem at all. There's nothing taboo or sexual about it (at least, from the Loroi point of view).dragoongfa wrote:Now as to communal bathing; I don't think that touching is an end all taboo, especially for warriors who rely on each other to survive. I think that a lot of trust must be involved in such demanding circumstances and the Loroi must have ways for building and maintaining that trust. Ancient Greeks had various ways to do this, including communal bathing before battle was taken.
It's not just volume to consider. While the raise in mass for the larger hull and larger surface to be armored may be not that much to consider, there are definitely other considerations, like energy consumption for life support (heat, air filtration and so on), and, and here comes the most important consideration, a larger ship definitely has a larger scanner footprint. Be it any kind of electromagnetic emissions or absorption, gravimetric or maybe other tech we wouldn't even dream of. And, when it comes to blows, a larger ship offers more target area.... though on the other hand a direct hit might be easier to shake off because the chances are lower for a vital component to be hit.orion1836 wrote:You know, that's the most cogent argument I've heard for the Starship Luxurious trope. If the amount of pressurized space isn't a factor... who cares about volume so long as you don't meaningfully raise mass?
The shuttle they're on has enough space for a small shower, though there probably isn't a permanent one there. A fold-away tub is certainly possible if they really wanted one. And this is on a shuttle craft. It's not like you'd see a full-scale reproduction of the Loroi Imperial Baths in a courier vessel, but having some baths is NOT that big of a deal.ShadowDragon8685 wrote:Sure, but there may not be room for a small tub and a small shower, yanno?Arioch wrote:If there is room for a large shower, there is room for a small tub.ShadowDragon8685 wrote:If there isn't space or infrastructure, would they just do the relaxation in a larger-than-strictly-nessessary-for-cleansing shower, then?
1) The luxury of space is relative. Submarines are much more cramped than surface ships of the same crew size: for an extreme example, the Ohio-class carry around 155 crew, while the Seawise Giant (likely the largest tanker ever built) had a crew of around 40. The Seawise Giant could have fit a very large resort for those 40 on top of it's deck if the expense was considered worthwhile, whereas doing the same for the Ohio class's crew would have been more difficult due to the greater crew count.novius wrote:But, seriously...
Human vessels of war are cramped. Seriously so. Space is a luxury, and everything to save some precious material or fuel to propel and support a vessel is done. Given this, this disabuses any notion of personal space in whoever serves, say, on a submarine.
So why are Loroi vessels so spacious?
I can't really think that the Loroi Union is that rich that they can allow such extravagancy in their spaceships. If one can build and sustain six smaller, equally or more effective vessels for the price of four, (s)he would do it. Especially in a war where every woman, every ship and every gun or missile tube counts.
Mostly because she's a glass cannon based around a design philosophy that the Loroi have mostly abandoned (faster is better than armor was the philosophy: they didn't mask it faster enough to compensate for the reduced armor), as I best recall. They apparently don't really use the Wave-loom much, despite it being one of the centerpoints of the design (new designs often just don't include them at all).JQBogus wrote:Tempest is the last of its class. Statistically, she is a dangerous ship to serve on, possibly because she has too much extraneous mass in her design, possible (again) because she is essentially a pre-war design.
Not a major change. Volume rises much faster than either surface area or silhouette area (volume rises with the cube of diameter, both areas rise with the square: small changes in area get you big changes in volume, so it's fairly easy to get it to pay off).novius wrote:It's not just volume to consider. While the raise in mass for the larger hull and larger surface to be armored may be not that much to consider, there are definitely other considerations, like energy consumption for life support (heat, air filtration and so on), and, and here comes the most important consideration, a larger ship definitely has a larger scanner footprint. Be it any kind of electromagnetic emissions or absorption, gravimetric or maybe other tech we wouldn't even dream of. And, when it comes to blows, a larger ship offers more target area.... though on the other hand a direct hit might be easier to shake off because the chances are lower for a vital component to be hit.orion1836 wrote:You know, that's the most cogent argument I've heard for the Starship Luxurious trope. If the amount of pressurized space isn't a factor... who cares about volume so long as you don't meaningfully raise mass?
It's probably a derivative of an older design, but the Tempest & it's sisters were all new-build ships: the Waveloom was designed in, and was only developed during the war.novius wrote:Or, yes, the Tempest may be a pre-war design, with later ships being more utilitarian in their layout. A prestigious posting, to be sure, but a dangerous one in wartimes. Definitely a good place to shunt off a highly lauded, but troublesome officer. Might be a common theme amongst Loroi, with Beryl and Tempo having gotten on Stillstorms bad list as well...