Tiree wrote:I've been thinking about a comment Seto made on how the vast differences in Tech Levels, and supposedly Macross out performing the other two arcs that make up Robotech.
You've got a few misconceptions about the settings of the various original shows here...
Tiree wrote:In Macross - you have Humans who got a boost in technology through rebuilding Alien technology. It's pretty impressive. They have a few space ships, along with one capable of folding (again salvaged from an alien ship). By the end of it, they have a huge manufacturing capability, cloning capability, and very little human life. They built a colony (yet abandoned), but only after finding the Alien ship.
In
Macross, you indeed do have humans who get a several thousand-year boost in technology through the reverse engineering of overtechnology from the wrecked Supervision Army gun destroyer. By the time the ship has been rebuilt 10 years later, they've gained an understanding of the advanced material sciences behind the ship's construction, the advanced higher-dimensional physics behind the operation of its power systems, gravity manipulation technology, its space fold system, FTL sensors and communication systems, and super dimenson energy weaponry, and much of the rest of its technology. Thanks to those lessons learned, they had almost a hundred and fifty interplanetary spacecraft in 2009, they were in the middle of building a fleet of fold-capable spacecraft including a second ~1km+ battleship, they'd constructed space colonies at the Lagrange points along with an immense shipyard at Earth-Moon L5, built permanent settlements on the Moon and Mars, solved Earth's energy crisis, and advanced weapons technology by leaps and bounds with laser, particle beam, and dimension weapons, created a clean alternative to nuclear weaponry for planetary defense, conventional explosives ten times as potent at today's technology, robotic weapons to deploy it all, drone fighters with AI, and hundreds more advancements.
During wartime, they developed numerous other advancements, including space-distortion energy shielding.
Tiree wrote:In Masters - Humans have already traveled the stars. Designed Mecha "On their Own". Achieved Fold like technology without Alien intervention. And apparently can amass armies that dwarfed their human counterpart in Macross.
In
Southern Cross, humanity has indeed traveled to the stars... out of necessity... and a century later. Humans had destroyed Earth's biosphere with nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons near the end of the 21st century, forcing them to flee to Earth-like planets discovered in the Proxima Centauri and Epsilon Eridani systems using rudimentary faster-than-light warp technology. Their interstellar capability is limited to distances of only a few light years, and is rather unreliable and dangerous*.
Glorie, in the Epsilon Eridani system, is a relatively new and sparsely populated colony in 2120. Most of their technology isn't much advanced over ours today, with the chief advances being the military-only hover technology, laser weaponry, and the couple dozen warp-capable spacecraft and the various space fighters and ground-based war robots only recently introduced at the time they first encountered the Zor. The planet is defended by the Southern Cross Army, which is smaller by far than most national armies in the world today, with a few tens of thousands of troops tops. (The entire ATAC is just fifteen tank squads, about 400 troops, and many other groups for which we have Arming Doublet variations are individual specialist squads.) The main reason they're able to resist invasion by the more numerous and technologically superior Zor is that the Zor have been a peaceful society for so long that war is pretty much an alien concept to them and thus they're rather poorly equipped to actually fight one.
* In fact, a warp accident is exactly what kicks off the entire plot. The Zor are not aliens, they're the descendants of the original scouting party sent to evaluate and colonize Glorie, who were cut off from the rest of humanity when a warp accident sent them back in time, where they were exposed to the protozor flowers and formed a symbiotic relationship with them. Glorie was inhabitable because of the Zor... by their initial colonization efforts, their civil war that sent the planet plunging into nuclear winter, and the planet's subsequent recovery from same.Tiree wrote:In New Generation - Humans colonizing other planets, built transformable Mecha, built combining Mecha. Have a variety of ships, including energy shield technology. All this, without Alien influence. And this is all done within 50 years of the same time frame as Macross?
In
MOSPEADA, humanity has established small colonies on Mars and in orbit of a few other planets in the outer solar system in the years leading up to the Inbit invasion. However, most of the technology seen in the series is actually very new when the events of the series start in 2083. Humanity has some warships with basic gravity control for interior spaces (not antigrav flight), nuclear rocket engines able to transport them across interplanetary distances in a matter of weeks instead of months. Their transformable fighters and Ride Armors are brand new technology being deployed in combat for the first time, armed with conventional anti-tank missiles, lasers, and rudimentary particle beam weaponry. The mecha are all powered by hydrogen fuel cells, which have performance roughly equivalent to a normal turbine or combustion engine, and a greatly reduced lifespan when operating in robot mode (the Ride Armors are good for about 380km as bikes or 30 minutes of ride armor operating time). Their ships are very small, and functionally are little more than lightly armed boxes intended to move combat robots and ground troops from staging areas on the moon to Earth's surface. Late in the conflict, humanity begins to deploy larger-scale, more effective particle beam weapons (the synchrotron cannons) which fare much better than the smaller implementations and laser weapons.
Humans in
MOSPEADA possess no faster-than-light technology, no antigrav technology, no energy shielding, no small-scale nuclear or dimensional power systems, etc. Even their jet engine technology is fairly weak, with most of their engines being about 1/2 the dry thrust (no afterburner) of a F-14 engine.
Tiree wrote:For some reason, I just don't buy that Macross is better...
Just goin' out on a limb here, but it may be because you don't have all the facts?
It's this disparity in the technical settings of the original shows that created the problem of a "true successor" to the VF-1 in the first place, and many of the other technological hiccoughs in the composite show. The first fighter to appear in the series is also its most high-spec, versatile, and powerful combat aircraft... trying to work around that created a big ol' mess.
If you were to look at the VF-1 Valkyrie vs. the TASC-01-SCF Logan vs. the AFC-01 Legioss, you'd find that the VF-1 outclasses the other two in practically every way... and the vast majority of that is attributable to the differences in tech setting. The VF-1 is the leader in operational diversity, power plant endurance, power plant output, main engine thrust, secondary engine thrust, thrust-to-weight ratio, top flight speed, service ceiling, diversity of armament, overall firepower, and a number of other categories.
Tiree wrote:Getting back on topic: What the RPG's big failure is the fact they did not produce books in the right order. Instead of Macross Core Book, you got TSC, the last arc of the series. Then they jumped back to the beginning. What is worse, is that they carried over stats and elements from the original line of roleplaying games (MDC hit locations anyone - why does an Alpha have both upper and lower limb locations, while a mecha practically twice its size only has one?)
That, yes, was a big mistake... though really, covering TSC at all was premature, considering we basically only have the first of the four planned episodes, which leaves almost no plot to work with and almost nothing in the way of new mecha or hints as to what the antagonists are really after.
The Super Shadow Fighter barely even fits in the succession anyway, as it's not even a production design and may not have been seriously intended for use in the first place. There was talk of a Gamma fighter to succeed the Alpha/Beta combo directly and to possibly be the TRUE successor to the VF-1 in-series, but it evaporated mid-development.
guardiandashi wrote:2 the southern cross the hover tanks are effectively the earth force "hero units" and everything else on both sides are grunt/trash units, unfortunately trash vs trash tends to favor the side that has significantly larger numbers (the masters) therefore the earth forces get mauled ... badly, in addition the earth "hero" units are ground combat units, wheras the masters bioroids are designed (and or equipped) for 3dimensional and multi environment fights with the effect that often they are just better suited or close enough that they will dominate the smaller earth forces most of the time.
Part of the reason the Masters Saga feels a bit off is that
Robotech's writers tried to recast the Zor Lords' lack of understanding of war (and lack of preparedness to actually fight a war) as the Robotech Masters being drastically short on viable power sources...
The hero mecha in
Southern Cross did as well as they did because the Zor straight-up stunk at warfare. (I privately suspect that, had they been allowed to finish the series as intended, the original Bioroids would have been revealed to not even be military hardware.)