
Umeria's brightest, renegade-est and strangest scientific mind, Dr. Ulrich von Murderstein, plotting to crossbreed the color grue with yellow and several shades of ultraviolet. FOR SCIENCE!
Cernans, while I suppose are under some peoples definition a product of mad science, aren't fans of it. Their policy is pretty lax just as long as said mad scientist(s) don't try to be taken seriously. If they do, well, the policy for that kind of mad science is significantly less lax, if you get my drift.Simon_Jester wrote:Hmmm.
What are your nations' positions on mad science?
Dr. Murderstein doesn't take himself very seriously. Other people do, especially after the attack noodles.Imperial528 wrote:Cernans, while I suppose are under some peoples definition a product of mad science, aren't fans of it. Their policy is pretty lax just as long as said mad scientist(s) don't try to be taken seriously. If they do, well, the policy for that kind of mad science is significantly less lax, if you get my drift.Simon_Jester wrote:Hmmm.
What are your nations' positions on mad science?
Hm.Esquire wrote:Possibly important question: Am I allowed a minor re-fluffing of my nation? I decided I want to switch my guys' natural philosophy over from it's-science-but-we-don't-know-it to something like the Ork psychic powers from 40k - if enough Hellens believe space is filled with luminiferous aether, it is, for their purposes, and things like massive catamaran galleys mounting heavy particle cannon function because they refuse to accept the idea that they wouldn't.
Going off of that, take the Old World Blues route. If asked about how something works, just brush it away and say, "We have no idea! This line of questioning isn't important to us now! Why must you ask these tangential questions?! Stop it!" That's what I'm going to do for my Brainiac analog, anyway. A Trek example would be "How does the Heisenberg compensator work?" "It works very well."Simon_Jester wrote:If you want to do stuff that's awesome but physically implausible, just be... nonspecific. I mean, we already have FTL, relativity, and causality all in the same setting. You don't have to worry too hard about it. But naked defiance of reality risks that undesirable blurring similarity.
Fire a delay-fuzed shrapnel shell- or a bundle of flechettes, with spin imparted to the round as it leaves the barrel, and unbundle the round in lieu of using bursting charges. Problem solved.Panzersharkcat wrote:I suppose if it can hit an enemy warship, it'd be pretty devastating. The "ultrasteel" projectile is supposed to be around 100-200 meters in diameter.