Warning - this is text you may have seen before, and it may be boring. Read no further. You have been warned.
I am a process junkie: I prefer documents to flow at a high level, where sections are predictably broken down so I can skim over the parts I'm not interested in at the time. Kind of like being able to skip chapters on a DVD, maybe.
When it comes to ship design, I am a complete basket case, because I love building ships, but am not a details-oriented person. This complicated situation is why I love Book 2 -- it doesn't have any distracting details at all. And yet I also dislike Book 2 -- it doesn't have additional features that might be useful for Traveller.
When Marc was developing ACS design, he mentioned that the level of detail would be somewhere between High Guard and MegaTraveller, and I think he's probably correct.
However, I think that ACS design could be nearly as easy as Book 2 design at the same time. What's required is some flow text. How much flow text? Well here are a few examples of what I'm talking about.
Hull. The top of this section might read like this:
Table H-1 would only have default hulls: that is, hulls which can have Plate construction. Table H-2 would have the full table.
Hull Features. The top of this section might read like this:
Do you see where I'm going with this? If Book 2 were expanded, it would work much like this, perhaps with appendices for each design step which would cover additional but optional details. Providing depth that is optional and ignorable gives us a rich design system that also pushes the complexity down.
I am a process junkie: I prefer documents to flow at a high level, where sections are predictably broken down so I can skim over the parts I'm not interested in at the time. Kind of like being able to skip chapters on a DVD, maybe.
When it comes to ship design, I am a complete basket case, because I love building ships, but am not a details-oriented person. This complicated situation is why I love Book 2 -- it doesn't have any distracting details at all. And yet I also dislike Book 2 -- it doesn't have additional features that might be useful for Traveller.
When Marc was developing ACS design, he mentioned that the level of detail would be somewhere between High Guard and MegaTraveller, and I think he's probably correct.
However, I think that ACS design could be nearly as easy as Book 2 design at the same time. What's required is some flow text. How much flow text? Well here are a few examples of what I'm talking about.
Hull. The top of this section might read like this:
Fanciful Text Addendum for ACS said:Defaults. Ships will tend to use a default hull, given in table H-1 below. Ship architects with non-typical designs may prefer to use the comprehensive table H-2.
Table H-1 would only have default hulls: that is, hulls which can have Plate construction. Table H-2 would have the full table.
Hull Features. The top of this section might read like this:
Fanciful Text Addendum for ACS said:Default Structure. Ships which use default hulls may elect the default hull structure; if so, note the default structure is "Plate", note the armor value is 2 x TL, and move on.
Default Fittings. All ships may elect to use default hull fittings as follows:
Landing skids (no cost, no volume).
Jump bubble (no cost, no volume).
If these defaults are used, you may skip these pages.
Do you see where I'm going with this? If Book 2 were expanded, it would work much like this, perhaps with appendices for each design step which would cover additional but optional details. Providing depth that is optional and ignorable gives us a rich design system that also pushes the complexity down.