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How do you arm your heroes?
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Basically, I go with what is considered standard for a soldier, policeman or secret agent in a given time period and place. Don't give me a modern hero in the USA today that fights with a bow and arrow, because I would then call him an imbecile, as he/she is not likely to survive a fight against gunmen for very long in the real world. Like Sean Connery said in the film 'The Untouchables': don't bring a knife to a gunfight! I could also refer to the movie 'Raiders of the Lost Ark', when Indiana Jones shot the big Arab swordsman doing a showoff with his big scimitar.

That, also, is why my Roman could win space battles later on. One major battle he won effectively used the strategy of Cannae (as for that matter did von Manstein at the third battle for Karkhov.) The essence of a good repeatable strategy is its simplicity, although one can add to it. Thus while Hannibal took one day, von Manstein executed this over a three month period, and still the opposition did not catch on, allowing him to annihilate the opposition with 9:1 against and no air power!
I also agree with Michel that so-called heroes fighting with inappropriate weapons or methods will be dead nobodies.


Needles are accelerated magnetically (? I never really specified) and carry a variety of "warheads" that can explode on contact, put someone to sleep, explode AFTER contact (penetration), etc. It all depends upon what you've loaded. It's a quiet gun -- until the explosion, and a low-level, shaped explosion can be fairly quiet.
It's a good weapon for assassination as well as combat use.
And no, I'm not the first author to use a "needle gun".
Where is my Klingon disrupter when I need one?

It was obsoleted by the Vorlon V12 blaster and cake icer.

[1] Swords & Battle-Axes.
[2] Automatic shotguns, H&K MP7s, Assault Rifles. .50 cal sniper rifles. Grenades of various types. Claymore mines. Milkor MGLs.
[3] Two classes of Helicopter gunships, variously armed with Hellfire & Stinger missiles, 7.62mm, .50 cal mini-guns and 20mm cannons.
[4] A drug called 'Lethe' that wipes memory of the last 24 hours.

[1] Swords & Battle-Axes.
[2] Automatic shotguns, H&K MP7s, Assault Rifles. .50 cal sniper rifles. Grenades of various types. Claymore m..."
A best friend of mine died a couple of years ago. He had several patents on the Stinger. I loved talking physics and missiles with him.

I have made them rather good at unarmed combat though, and then there's the 100kg felines who glow in the dark, can vanish at will, and are their constant companions. They tend to make up for the missing tech.

Some dangerous creatures -:)"
But very loving.

I think the key if to also invent a culture to go with it. It can't be totally alien or it would become incomprehensible, but it has to be different from ours and I think it helps if you can think of a reason why they are like that. The Star Trek borg come to mind here.
One of my efforts was in "Ranh". The civilization is based on evolved therapods related to velociraptors. We have some therapods now to get the odd clue from (birds), especially in relation to finding mates, but there has to be something different. I invented a game (tailball, of course) but now think of how they would play it. Recall they evolved from vicious killers.

I think the key if to also invent a culture to go with it. It can't be totally alien or it would become i..."
I also have some insectoid invading aliens, and another sentient race which is huge and lives a very long time. It was a challenge inventing completely different cultures, but rather fun, really, as you sort of have to get inside a different culture's head when you're writing their POV.
The insectoids have a beam type weapon, and quite a differently structured society.


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

An APEX predator.


Is there any defense?
Sounds like he who fires first wins.

I guess it's all about the range and the time frame in which to scramble the frequency, which might be directly related to range.
No deterrence guarantees war.
One of my heroines (a demon Succubus no less) uses magic spells as weapons, rendering her enemies either drooling idiots, blasting them with fireballs, disintegrating rays, flaming hands and the like, when she is not sucking their life essence while having sex with them. The perfect femme fatale!

On their way to a major city - can the heroes stop them being used? What if they get stolen by a rival faction?

-:)
Next question may be how you disarm/neutralize your anti-heroes? -:)

She stalks the battlefield like a chill breeze that carries a deathly silence in it's wake.

They have a signal disrupter that cancels out the signal, but they can't use their own system when it's active. And the size/power of the particular "scrambler," as I called it in the series, dictates how large an object they can manipulate, so eliminating an entire ship in one shot takes a larger device than they normally carry.
The point of it all was not just how ridiculous it can get, but how abusive the technology can become...they store everyone's "pattern" so when people die, they can be brought back with the save, but their memories and their bodies are reset to the point of the save (so there is a lot of "amnesia") Because there is no oversight of the space programs, people are treated as disposable. It becomes a variant of a cryochamber because you can just dematerialize people for storage and materialize them when you need them. When they need ground troops, they just replicate as many versions of the same individuals they need and let them all get killed. As far as the nations with the technology, combat is nothing but a game of who can push the buttons faster...there's no ultimate victory or defeat because everything can be undone at the end of combat, so there's this friendly hostility among the nations...one revelation comes when the central character learns his host has been trading his life pattern with captains thought to be adversaries.
The device is used to reimplement slavery because they can just drop a workforce onto a planet, and when the job's done, they are dematerialized for removal, but they fail to save the patterns, so when they drop them onto another world, they have no memory of the work they've already performed and hence they don't have to pay them.
Then there's the doctor conducting off-the-books experiments by adding alien DNA into the life patterns of human subjects and materializing the result to see what happens, essentially creating monsters without any regard to ethics.
@J.J.: Remind me never to visit your world. A civilisation that treats people that way, like disposable slaves or lab experiments, deserves only to vanish. I know that it is only a fiction story, but I do like to have something to cheer about in a novel, not only horror and cruelty.


The idea I had in the background was what happens when a society falls out of the public light, when suddenly they get to operate without any oversight. Just as our companies today increasing do what they want for as long as they get away with it, those nations operating in space regress morally because the rest of the world has no exposure.
The whole series focuses on a UN inspector who was given access and brought aboard a ship for a ride-along, and he can't keep his mouth shut - he can't sit back and simply observe. Throughout the series, I play with variations of the Hitler conundrum, ie. if you could go back in time and kill Hitler before he rises to power, would you, or would you actually make things worse by doing it? As if the technology itself doesn't lead to the absurd, I threw a time traveler into the mix to make a bigger mess of their civilization, and he presents the hero with the literal conundrum, but on other levels, he faces it in the present where he gets the real opportunity to try his hand at making a difference, but he only makes things worse because he doesn't understand the complexities of this "world" beyond his observations. To him, the situation is so horrible, he has to act, and he makes mistakes.
Boomerang, AK-47, nuclear submarine, alien inventory, blowgun or maybe knitting appliances?
What's your arsenal?