Hans_vermeylen
SOC-7
Travel Classes
IMTU, the three canon classes (low, middle, high) are replaced by a (slightly) more developed system:
Staterooms come in three flavors:
Better staterooms are sometimes offered. This is usually only seen on large liners proposing a couple of prestigious suites in addition to their First Class staterooms. The exact size and configuration (and price) of those suites vary a lot from line to line (even a given ship can have several suites of various size and prices). One thing common to most of those suits is a private lounge (although the guests of a suite usually retain access to the First Class lounge should they enjoy a bit of social interaction).
Unlike in the OTU, staterooms are build for a certain class and cannot be upgraded by providing better food and bigger smiles... Upgrading (or downgrading) a stateroom is possible but require removing (adding) bulkhead and refurnishing the newly made space. Most small starships only have one type of stateroom, lacking the space needed to provide the different level of service matching each class. Larger starships generally have either both First and Business or Economy only, only a few line have experimented with three classes ships, with very moderate success.
Actual class designation vary a great deal between lines: Standard, Basic, Essential, Ivory, Silver, Gold, Noble, Premium, Elite, Prestige are some of the designations encountered. Note that a single designation can be used for different class depending on the line: a given line could provide Business and First under the names Silver and Gold while an other provide exactly the same under the names Gold and Platinum. To add to the confusion, low cost lines providing Economy only often give them impressing designation trying to avoid a low comfort reputation. In the same logic, cold sleep passages are often given idyllic names (e.g. Dream Class), trying to make the prospect of being shipped in a freezer a bit less gritty.
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IMTU - The Blog
IMTU, the three canon classes (low, middle, high) are replaced by a (slightly) more developed system:
Staterooms come in three flavors:
- First Class costs 3500 Cr per jump (regardless of jump number) and gets you 8 dTon of living space (about 4 of those are your actual stateroom, the rest being used for lounge, gangways...) This is a luxurious way of traveling, with matching service, used by noble, managers and wealthy people, roughly comparable to real world airplanes First Class.
- Business Class costs 1750 Cr per jump and gets you 4 dTon of living space (2dTon actual stateroom). It's the equivalent of a OTU stateroom and the way most people travel (e.g. businessmen, public servants and military people on a mission, tourists). It's roughly equivalent to real world airplanes Economy Class.
- Economy Class costs 875 Cr per jump and gets you 2 dTon of living space (1dTon actual stateroom). It gets really cramped and service is minimal (think disposable sheets and towels, reheated food and drinks in extra). This class (used by students, families on paid holidays and other people with just enough money to avoid cold sleep) is the equivalent of real world low cost carriers.
Better staterooms are sometimes offered. This is usually only seen on large liners proposing a couple of prestigious suites in addition to their First Class staterooms. The exact size and configuration (and price) of those suites vary a lot from line to line (even a given ship can have several suites of various size and prices). One thing common to most of those suits is a private lounge (although the guests of a suite usually retain access to the First Class lounge should they enjoy a bit of social interaction).
Unlike in the OTU, staterooms are build for a certain class and cannot be upgraded by providing better food and bigger smiles... Upgrading (or downgrading) a stateroom is possible but require removing (adding) bulkhead and refurnishing the newly made space. Most small starships only have one type of stateroom, lacking the space needed to provide the different level of service matching each class. Larger starships generally have either both First and Business or Economy only, only a few line have experimented with three classes ships, with very moderate success.
Actual class designation vary a great deal between lines: Standard, Basic, Essential, Ivory, Silver, Gold, Noble, Premium, Elite, Prestige are some of the designations encountered. Note that a single designation can be used for different class depending on the line: a given line could provide Business and First under the names Silver and Gold while an other provide exactly the same under the names Gold and Platinum. To add to the confusion, low cost lines providing Economy only often give them impressing designation trying to avoid a low comfort reputation. In the same logic, cold sleep passages are often given idyllic names (e.g. Dream Class), trying to make the prospect of being shipped in a freezer a bit less gritty.
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IMTU - The Blog
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