This discussion has been moved from “LBB6 system generation questions” to avoid creating a lot of off-topic chatter.
Your claim that "puking your guts out, losing your hair and dying young" are "realistic aspects of space exploration" is misguided at best though. Yes, there's lot of radiation out there, but it's only really a problem if you're caught with your pants down in outer space and nowhere near a storm shelter (and I'm sure that any starfaring society as advanced as the OTU would have their ships lined with nuclear-damper derived tech to remove that threat, or at the very least have radiation-hardened shelters and habitats). And I don't recall hearing about any real astronauts who are dying of radiation poisoning.
And yes, it's a risky business right now - but then so was flying and ocean travel when they first started. By the time the OTU is set, there's not so much serious risk involved in space travel (other than the perpetual threat of misjump and cold berth revival).
Then again, if there's one thing I've learned on this board, it's that people's opinions about what is realistic are usually very different to what actually is realistic. I just throw the realistic options on the table so people know what they are - feel free to ignore that if you have a TU that isn't based on reality. </font>[/QUOTE]Malenfant: Keep up the good work.
Don’t get me wrong, I enjoy talking about what is realistic, but I also recognize that we are very selective in our use of realism (and rightly so).
In spite of all of the current research, FTL travel is probably not possible. Even if near light speed travel becomes possible, it is a one-way trip with lots of temporal complications. A star empire is possible only with the use of 99.9% pure handwavium. The argument that a star faring culture would be able to solve these problems is the tail wagging the dog.
The conditions under which fusion occurs are so extreme that a fusion reactor would be a weapon of mass destruction – allowed nowhere near a planet and not the stuff of a “tramp freighter”.
The instances of populations on earth from different continents being exposed to each other is full of ecological disasters and the spread of new plagues. Alien life (if it exists) will probably be even more so. That means that the first explorers in space will likely find countless worlds hostile to human habitation.
Artificial gravity is also a technological improbability. That leaves linear or rotational acceleration as the only practical artificial gravity. What are the long term health effects of decades of exposure to artificial gravity? Another complete unknown given our current technology.
Not to step on anyone’s beliefs, but aliens did not build the Pyramids and there is no Stargate. Ancient advanced civilizations that fixed all of these problems and left the secrets lying around where we can find them are pure fiction.
To close the circle by returning to my original post:
Puking your guts out – could also be alien micro-organisms.
losing your hair – could also be the long term heath impacts of artificial gravity.
dying young – could also be the result of the unknown dangers of real interstellar space travel.
My only point was that Science Fiction is a lot more fun than reality, so we use reality where we can and quickly discard it where it doesn’t fit. Feel free to post your opinions or contradict my facts with your own knowledge.
Then I guess you're the ideal target audience for the OTU.Originally posted by Malenfant:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by atpollard:
Puking your guts out, losing your hair and dying young are realistic aspects of space exploration. I find REALISM in a game to be highly over-rated, give me a good "barely-plausible" setting any day.
Your claim that "puking your guts out, losing your hair and dying young" are "realistic aspects of space exploration" is misguided at best though. Yes, there's lot of radiation out there, but it's only really a problem if you're caught with your pants down in outer space and nowhere near a storm shelter (and I'm sure that any starfaring society as advanced as the OTU would have their ships lined with nuclear-damper derived tech to remove that threat, or at the very least have radiation-hardened shelters and habitats). And I don't recall hearing about any real astronauts who are dying of radiation poisoning.
And yes, it's a risky business right now - but then so was flying and ocean travel when they first started. By the time the OTU is set, there's not so much serious risk involved in space travel (other than the perpetual threat of misjump and cold berth revival).
Then again, if there's one thing I've learned on this board, it's that people's opinions about what is realistic are usually very different to what actually is realistic. I just throw the realistic options on the table so people know what they are - feel free to ignore that if you have a TU that isn't based on reality. </font>[/QUOTE]Malenfant: Keep up the good work.
Don’t get me wrong, I enjoy talking about what is realistic, but I also recognize that we are very selective in our use of realism (and rightly so).
In spite of all of the current research, FTL travel is probably not possible. Even if near light speed travel becomes possible, it is a one-way trip with lots of temporal complications. A star empire is possible only with the use of 99.9% pure handwavium. The argument that a star faring culture would be able to solve these problems is the tail wagging the dog.
The conditions under which fusion occurs are so extreme that a fusion reactor would be a weapon of mass destruction – allowed nowhere near a planet and not the stuff of a “tramp freighter”.
The instances of populations on earth from different continents being exposed to each other is full of ecological disasters and the spread of new plagues. Alien life (if it exists) will probably be even more so. That means that the first explorers in space will likely find countless worlds hostile to human habitation.
Artificial gravity is also a technological improbability. That leaves linear or rotational acceleration as the only practical artificial gravity. What are the long term health effects of decades of exposure to artificial gravity? Another complete unknown given our current technology.
Not to step on anyone’s beliefs, but aliens did not build the Pyramids and there is no Stargate. Ancient advanced civilizations that fixed all of these problems and left the secrets lying around where we can find them are pure fiction.
To close the circle by returning to my original post:
Puking your guts out – could also be alien micro-organisms.
losing your hair – could also be the long term heath impacts of artificial gravity.
dying young – could also be the result of the unknown dangers of real interstellar space travel.
My only point was that Science Fiction is a lot more fun than reality, so we use reality where we can and quickly discard it where it doesn’t fit. Feel free to post your opinions or contradict my facts with your own knowledge.