They are weapons in realspace, with particles in real space. If they have subspace attached effects, it's one thing, but these weapons surely don't travel through subspace.KirkSkywalker wrote:Those are subspace-based weapons; comparing nadions to ions is… pretty misinformed about the difference.1. Deflector dishes hardly deflect torpedoes or the nadion particles of phaser/disruptor beams, so they're irrelevant.
No, it just means that their intensity is greater. It doesn't mean it particularly more powerful in total than the shields of a ship that is powered by a reactor many times the size of a torpedo.Likewise, ST torpedoes have shields that that are obviously more powerful than those of deflector-shields, to the point that they glow from the intensity.
Pardon?Just the space they travel through, which gets bent, and the weapon thus deflected almost effortlessly.2. Subspace interception/deviation tech does not matter to realspace weapons.
If you have nothing good to add to a point and you can only concede, then do it, or counter argue. But don't taint all paragraphs of a post with one single subtopic. See, for example, how the point about subspace is discussed above that paragraph.And that’s standard EM-based energy, not subspace-based.3. Battle shields are the only concern here. SW shields can cope with ions as "laser" bolts contain plasma as much as light (it's a weird mix), and they stop them well enough.
Here, we're talking about shields and ions.
And Praeothmin has properly addressed the case as well.
So ST and SW are pretty much even here.
You don't really know much about how policies are handled, do you?Nopers. It’s a DIFFERENT UNIVERSE.The EU is canon within a specific policy which is largely supported by Lucas' business.
There are two policies, that's all.
What. The. Hell.To hit a WARP-driven starship? At 300,000 km, it would take the beam SEVEN SECONDS to reach its target—by which time the ship would be long outta there.Far more than enough.If you consider .168C to be “near instant-hit—“
What are you arguing about with those warp speed ships?
ST ships don't fight against STL ships by warping around them.
Outliers won't work on me.
We're not talking about speeds beyond c.If you’ve never heard of a little thing called E=MC^2. Beyond lightspeed, you need subspace-based tech in order to exceed it.However, like anything, the speed of matter is dictated by how much energy you want to spend in it for its acceleration.
And please, stop abusing E=MC². It's getting both old and silly. It's not an intawin card.
Still no. A ship at warp firing at another ship at warp, with phasers, is not the same as a ship at warp trying... say hoping ever hitting a ship moving at STL.Yes, they do. The warp-bubble isn’t much bigger than the ship, while the-beam clearly moves that fast outside of it.No they don't.while phasers move at tens of thousands of times lightspeed.
They move that fast while inside the warp bubble of the ship that fired it. I believe I don't have to point out the obvious conclusion of this little fact that seems to have escaped your attention.
Phasers use subspace-distortion technology just like the warp-bubble, so it clearly doesn’t need the ship’s warp-bubble to move that fast.
Another point, btw.
The Star Wars galaxy is full of people open to business. It's also full of diplomats and military people open to ideas.
What do you think will happen, in a war not fictitiously limited to a struggle against the UFP, if SW companies and military industries want to acquire typical Trek tech, such as the kind that's sold by... the Ferengi?
You know, torps, phasers, disruptors, transporters, antimatter reactors and some other fairly basic stuff?...
Or, if SW people make a deal with any major power in the Trek galaxy... Romulans... Dominion... hell, even the Klingons perhaps? You never know, there's surely old timers who hate the way they fell they've been neutered by those deals with the UFP.
Simply put, Trek does not have the power to take on the SW galaxy. It can attack and make the Empire fall, but that's not the galaxy. The Empire is a reachable target because it's a big gas construct centered around a weak core, an Achilles' Heel.
It's also much more likely that, assuming we're dealing with a scenario during the Empire era, that once the beast gone, if contacts are still available with the UFP... they'd go for peace and make commercial deals instead of wasting worlds and people in a stupid war.