Lucky wrote:You need to respond to other people then myself. You may want to respond to Darkstar in in Rebuttal to darkstar's website he is 2046 at this site as I recall.
I'm busy, but I'll try.
StarWarsStarTrek wrote:
The ICS-II does not say the picture is of a later model. It say it is the model seen in the movies.
Evidence please.
Besides dinosaurs of the Cretaceous are just later and more advanced designs of dinosaurs of the Jurassic.
...
But no other versions appeared in episode 2, and the book says the version shown is the version in the movie.
Again, evidence please.
Off the top of my head the Invisible Hand.
Those were flak cannons, not turbolasers. Said flak cannons were designed to shoot down starfighters and missiles, so obviously they wouldn't do as well against Star Wars capital ships.
Watch the episodes about retaking Ryloth. episodes.
To the left is a veridical cliff we can't see the top on.
To the right is a gorge we are lead to believe is extremely deep, and is to wide for the AT-ETs and troops to cross. On the other side of the gorge are CIS battle droids and tanks shooting at the Republic forces.
The Republic forces are on a path/road so narrow AT-ETs must travel single file.
And firing full powered shots would do what, exactly? What advantage would full powered shots that might simply miss have against multiple smaller powered shots? AT-ETs are hardly that durable or well armored by Star Wars standards.
Except that it wasn't a "full power shot", nor was it even the main laser cannons.
Watch the episode
The hits looked smaller then this, and I don't think the blast when Obi-won turned the guns on each other, and blew up the extra ammo with the guns was 100 tons..
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eU8joiS62js
When I watch the Battle of Ryloth episode (I will, trust me), I'll respond to this. Hopefully today or tomorrow.
The Germans would have still been bombed to hell because like their Star wars counter parts they would not turn on their shields until the gound troops were about to attack..
What? If you had a theater shield that could stop air bombardment, why wouldn't you turn it on during an enemy air raid?
Shields are useless unless they are turned on.
And, of course, you need to provide evidence supporting your claim that the shields were off or concede.
Yet 200,000 clones and a few hundred(?) jedi won the battle and took the planet by taking the droids out 1 or 2 at a time.
Those are 5 to 1 numerical odds. You seem to think that winning against 5 to 1 odds is somehow impossible, but it really isn't, especially when you have the element of surprise, Jedi, air superiority, armored support, better equipment and better training on your side and are facing dumbass battle droids whose intelligence is questionable.
The total droid army was 100 droids for ever one clone. 3,000,000 X 100= total number of droids in the CIS army.
Except that "100 to one" is a common figure of speech that isn't always literal; in fact, it rarely is. For example, Han Solo in a book said that these new Mandalorian starfighters could go through supernovas. Do you want me to use that figure of speech against you?
The fist sized bomb was planted on a reactor. The picture is the reactor blowing up.
Forgive me if I'm wrong, but a fusion reactor will not "blow up" in any chain reaction if a bomb were to blow it up. Star Wars only uses hypermatter for things such as star destroyers and other space ships, but in buildings they typically use fusion reactors; although not necessarily any fusion that we know of, and there's no evidence that said fusion reactor would be like a lighted bomb.
Half a gigaton will make the ground shake as if there is an earthquake.
Fair enough, but how does that negatively affect Star Wars in this debate, if at all? What's your point? Are you admitting that Star Wars ships can destroy Star Trek ground installations with even near misses?
The invisable hand comes to mind, and the Venator from jedi crash.
Details for the second one? For the first one, I explained that earlier in this post.
To bad they never seem to do it.
Because channeling all their power to their main guns would leave them extremely exposed to return fire and would reduce their mobility and other important things. Power isn't unlimited.
It's easier to meet the needs of a smaller number of people then a larger one. If Mandalore can't do it why should we assume Coruscant can?
Because Coruscant has been a stable planet in terms of food/water supplies for a long time, whereas Mandalore is repeatably facing purges and severe population decreases do to various reasons.
Maps show the star wars galaxy to be in the low doubt diget thousands at best, and those maps show about maybe 25% of the galaxy to be call unknown region, or wild space.
*sigh* Not this whole "omg the Star Wars galaxy is 'modest sized' ha" thing again. The Star Wars essential atlas; or was it the new essential atlas? something like that, states that the Star Wars galaxy is 120,000 LYs across.
You have a galaxy that is possibly about 10,000 light years across, about 25% of it is "wild space", and a tiny part of the galaxy if the Empire/Republic
The UFP is 8,000 light year long
Double standard, not only is the 10,000 LY figure for the Star Wars galaxy BS, but the UFP also only inhabits a very small portion of its 8,000 LY territory.
Do watch the series. It's not casual trade. You wouldn't get revolts against the government if that was the case. They wouldn't turn to smugglers to get food and water. I know that sounds stupid, but it's canon.
If the United States were cut off from the rest of the world for some reason, it WOULD suffer major instability due to its economy crashing, and possibly suffer a huge oil crisis. However, in the short term it will not suffer a major food or water shortage iirc.
That's interesting, and makes sense, but we see no sign of that.
Where could there be a "sign" needed for that? It isn't contradicted so it stands as valid.
You really should post the link to the page you are getting the information from.
Uh, I DID. Wookieepedia, and Wookiepedia also cites it.
I'm thinking of the novelization of the movie, the movie, and a few others.
Evidence?
They shoot three times at about one third the of full power, and get different results each time with the third blowing up the planet. That is not what a DET weapon does.
Since when? If someone shoots a missile at a tank, the first shot will not cause the same damage as the next two, especially since modern tanks have very formidable armor. Evidence shows that the Death Star's superlaser was indeed DET, because a chain reaction weapon would be unlikely to work via 3 bursts.
The episode just said 3,000,000 battle drpoids had been purchased. It was suppose to be enough to defeat the Republic is all that matters even though it's to tiny a number to even realistically take a single planet.
"be enough to defeat the Republic" - evidence or concede.
More like they got caught flatfooted not knowing the Republic even had an army/navy.
Which proves the point that the CIS was not ready for full scale war, since they had no counter to many of the weaponry that the Republic had.
G canon > those sources, given that G canon shows hyperdrive speeds in the tens of millions of C.
The TV series episodes are only 20 something minutes long. It also does not really matter what order you watch them in so long as you watch the two and three part episodes in order.
The movie is going to take about an hour. I'd almost say go to a movie rental place to get
Actually, I watched the movie.
Actually, one of the G canon novels mentions 1 million star systems, so G canon actually proves my point.
That might explain why they decided to not wait for the Death Star-II to be finished, and the Emperor put such a risky plan in motion..
They completed the Death Star 2 to 60% completion in 6 months. This is an astronomically large display of industrial might. Do you understand how large of a feat this is? A 900 km battle station constructed to 60% completion in 6 months is a feat beyond anything that the Federation can construct.
Those are not exactly thick staffs. Again, iirc bending a thin enough staff is possible even if it's made out of high grade steel, simply because it's super thin.
I have never seen any grades of durasteel. It seems to be durasteel or not durasteel.
Are you seriously saying that durasteel doesn't have varying grades of quality, even though practically EVERY material has varying degrees of quality? Are you saying that a durasteel staff in Star Wars would have the same quality as a Star Wars reinforced bunker?
What about the fusion reactors we see?
What fusion reactors? We don't see any fusion reactors in the Death Star, not in G canon, which you claim overrides the idea of hypermatter, even though G canon does not contradict hypermatter. Thus, hypermatter is canon.
Star Wars does occasionally use titanium alloy hulls, especially for starfighters. However, said alloys are obviously far stronger than any alloys that we have today.
The Death Stars are mostly empty space.
Which does not make it any easier for Death Star to not collapse on itself, which it clearly didn't.
Why is it impossible for UFP humans to have gone from 1000 worlds to 1,000,000?
Because such a population boom would have been mentioned and yet we see no such evidence of a 1000 to 1 million leap in planets.
When you have most if not all of your population on ships, and you use those ships to attack things a lot of people are going to die.
Which the Yuuzhang Vong war proved. The fact that Star Wars took over 300 trillion casualties and yet was still able to function shows its clearly massive scale compared to Star Trek.
It does if they don't want to be part of your empire.
Why is it that Trekkies only let the Empire on the Star Wars side, and yet allow a bunch of various powers on their side, including the borg?
Except the station it's self, the system it resided in, things like the Maw, all the weird single climit planets. It's actually seems the Rakata are the terraformers.
Except that there is evidence that the rakata were less advanced than the PT/OT/post OT Star Wars galaxy, and there is no evidence that they went around teraforming millions of planets when they themselves only controlled a few dozen.
That was Archer's era, and they only improved.
You have not compared this with Star Wars teraforming, and thus your feat isn't in perspective.
There stuff in DS9 that points to them having perfected The Genesis Device technology.
They even solform stars.
Really? Evidence?
It's clones, but logically we can throw in the cost of the equipment and training for them as well. Naked clones who might as well be infants when it comes to mental capabilities aren't very useful
Please provide details. The situation/context, etc.
Come on, some some evidence. They let the trade fed trade with both sides, and let the trade fed blockade worlds on a whim during the war with the CIS.
In comparison, the Federation engages ships at almost literally spitting distance, mix up "joules" and "watts", and on the ground charge into battle with pajamas and no combined arms tactics.
Considering trek ships throw around kiloton(Silly low end calc that makes no sense) weapons that move at FTL speeds that seems low.
I guess you just prove the Earth has a shield, and ground based weapons.^_^
Except that we clearly see the weapons being fired and HITTING cities, causing kiloton level explosions. A common trekkie counterargument would be to claim that the shields lessoned the damage, except that ST shields don't seem to "lesson" the damage of weapons, but instead stop them until the shields go down.
How did the Vong go about causing 300 trillion casualties?
With massive fleets and powerful armies far more powerful than any Federation fleet?
I think you should start a UFP VS Vong thread.
Perhaps.
]
Where I say the author said anti-gravity, but meant electromagnetic, and like many did not know the difference.
Evidence?
Well when something contradicts G-canon G always wins.
Except that you haven't provided any contradiction from G canon, and thus your "it's contradicted by G canon!" claim is unsupported.
So they lower the internal artificial gravity to somehow lower the stresses put on the passengers, or the ships?
Presumably the passengers, based on the text, but maybe both.
You need to provide proof that without hyperlanes Star Wars ships can go hundreds of thousands of C
More than that; hyperdrives can go tens of millions of C, as shown when Obi Wan went to Kamino, or the numerous examples of ships moving across the galaxy in a matter of hours.
Or they die as make hyper-jumps without knowing where you are going is bad as shown in Jedi crash, and A New hope, and this ignores the fact that hyperdrives often only go hundreds of times the speed of light.
What part of the fact that Star Wars ships can cross the galaxy in hours don't you understand? 100s of C could not accomplish that; tens of millions of C would, thus proof that Star Wars ships are astronomically fast.
Evidence that they "could not continue the war" instead of that they would be logistically harmed?
Then you can provide proof of this? The Rakata certainly seemed to use the force to navigate.
The infinite empire was actually very small by Star Wars standards mainly because of their limited hyperdrive capabilities compared to later Star Wars civilizations.
The outer rims might have been perhaps the biggest black market, but in terms of economic might the core worlds were obviously larger.
What you still don't seem to understand is that KAMINO WASN'T EVEN KNOWN TO MOST OF THE GALAXY! Hence why Obi Wan had to FIND Kamino first. To suggest that Obi Wan used a hyperlane to get there when Kamino was hardly known to anybody is a little ridiculous.
Purhaps silly, whimsicle, or light hearted would be better.
I find that Star Wars is best when it is not taking it's self very seriously. Episode 1, 4, 6, and the SW: TCW cgi movie are the best.
Eh, the SW:TCW cgi was good, but not great compared to the main movies.
Obviously a lot of people knew where it was, and how to get there, or else Obi-won would not have been able to get there.
Did you even watch AOTC? Obi Wan got the information from a friend, who in the novel he states is one of the most knowledgeable people in he knows to get information from, and even he doesn't know the exact coordinates to get there. Then, Jocasta Nu, who Obi Wan says is also one of the most knowledgeable people he knows, didn't even know of the planet's existence. And yet you're claiming that "lots of people knew where it was"? Heck, even Yoda didn't know that the planet existed, and Yoda was almost 900 years old!
It seems the Jedi records were like tampered with.
The Jedi records WERE indeed tampered with. Kamino didn't show up in Star War's astronomical amounts of libraries nor the holonet, or else Obi Wan could have found information there. If there was indeed a hyperlane plotted to Kamino, there would also be data about it, which there wasn't.
Therefore, your "Obi Wan used a hyperlane to get to Kamino!" argument is moot because Kamino was an unknown planet to 99.9999+% of the galaxy.
Meaning the UFP can mine the lanes, and stop everyone from traveling with hyperdrives like they mined the Wormhole in DS9.
Which is assuming that the UFP could find said hyperlanes somehow, have enough competence to mine them, have enough mines and ships to mine them, act fast enough to mine them and that said mines would do any more than cause minor damage to Star Wars ships. In fact, given that Star Wars ships in hyperdrive move astronomically fast, the mines might not even have fast enough reaction times to detonate; mines don't detonate easily, and a Star Wars ship going over a space mine field for less than a nanosecond isn't likely to trip it.
It's not an easy thing to just go around the mined area.
Why not, given that Star Wars ships are orders of magnitude faster than any opponent the Federation has ever faced?
, and if the lanes are mined they you have to find a completely different way to get from point A to point B. It's not a matter of simply going around the mines.
Or it could simply be withstanding the mine detonations, which would be unlikely to damage shielded star destroyers, or simply moving so fast that the mine fields would not have time to detonate, and said detonations would actually release energy SLOWER than the Star Wars ships are moving.
It means travel times increase a lot. Watch the Malevolence trilogy to under stand.
Except that even without hyperlanes Star Wars ships are FAR faster than Star Trek ships, as shown when Obi Wan traveled to Kamino in his starfighter in a matter of hours or days. Your idea that Obi Wan used a hyperlane even though nobody seemed to even know the location of Kamino is absurd.
Just like we do that with nukes in the Real world? Nuclear powers just throw around nukes willy nilly.
The point is that the Federation supposedly has some extremely powerful weapons that they lack the competence to actually use, even if said use would simply be an effective deterrence.
The fact of the matter is that if you destroy the star/planet you lose resources, and make others more likely to want to blast you into the stone age, and do remember what happened in "Survivors".
Ever heard of deterrence? Apparently, the Federation is too stupid to understand that basic theory.
The Borg are not based on planets, and at best you just destroyed .00001% of their forces. Keep in mind the Borg is a it, and not a them.
Then how would the borg produce ships? Do they magically appear out of nowhere?
How do you know they don't? There are actually time police in the UFP's future making sure things turn out okay.
So you're making the unsupported claim that the UFP has indeed been time travel attacking the borg, but we just don't hear of it, even though the borg are still around?
Where did I say they can't beam through shields?
I didn't claim that you said that they can beam through shields, but you did admit that can't. Maybe "concede" was the wrong word; perhaps "agree" is better for this scenario.
The fact the Borg are not really trying to assimilate the UFP tells us that they are not all that interested in assimilating the UFP. The Borg could likely do it with just one ship.
Or maybe the borg are simply utter morons.
There is likely something about the UFP that it find interesting. It knows the UFP has been able to defeat it's cubes when by all rights they should not have been able to, and keeps adapting to better repel it. I also don't recall there being a UFP type group anywhere else in Star trek.
Then why don't the borg send 2 cubes instead of 1 to attack it? Oh yeah, because the borg are morons.
Why would the Borg do it? It doesn't want to destroy the Earth, or the UFP. It seems mildly interested in the UFP.
Contradiction; you claim that they have a special interest in the UFP, but then claim that they have a "mild" interest in the UFP. Warp strafing could have destroyed critical Earth defense systems and infrastructure, and possibly damage the Federation fleet, but the borg are obviously too stupid to try that.
There are actual quotes that state that what is seen on screen if often not what is really happening. The makers of the show are limited by a number of things like money, man power, and technology. Do you honestly think trek ships randomly change size and design?
By that logic, your supposed contradictions from TCW are merely based off of the fact that the show is made for children that are too young to care about technical calculations, and that the creators of the shows themselves probably don't know about Star Wars ship calculations. Unlike your OOU explanation, this is actually a pretty valid explanation, given that it's basically a cartoon with other examples of ridiculousness, such as Ahsoka Tano defeating 3 magnaguards and holding off Grevious, and that the creators of the show actually admitted that the show is designed to appeal to a younger audience and is therefore exaggerated.
You made a claim that imperial storm troopers/Republic clone troopers are more competent then UFP ground forces. Saying something is so does not prove it.
Star Wars troopers have armor, NBC protection, weapons that actually have trigger guards, grenades, mortar, artillery support, HUDs, advanced communications systems, tanks, etc. Federation redshirts lack these in any consistent manner. Instead, they have phasers that don't have trigger guards and red pajamas.
If it was only on par with a black hole then it would not be able to overcome a black hole, or make one on a whim. We have already proved this.
Except that the Enterprise was barely able to escape what was a weaker than usual black hole, and needed a plot device to survive it.
Wow...that took me about an hour to type.