Seto Kaiba wrote:That assumes, of course, that a Genesis Pit's recreation of a particular biome is anything more than a macro-level approximation.
The Regess didn't need that level of detail for her research, because she was only interested in finding the form most suited to life on Earth for her people to adopt.
[...]
Not for the kind of research she was doing... she was 65 million or so years back, and the half-life of DNA is 521 years. She wouldn't be able to get anything usable from fossils that old. The upper bound for any recoverable DNA sequences at all (not a complete genome, just fragments) is about 1.5 million years.
Yeah... but then again, these dinosaurs were really there. Alive. Eating. Reproducing.
All of which points to at least their bacteria and the ones usually found as symbiotic to certain creatures, at least as much as it is needed for their biological function, to be there.
Plus, there wasn't only dinosaurs. There were plants, and insects, and probably stuff we never saw.
Somewhere along the lines, all this will need bacteria to eat and develop correctly. Some of which will escape the clones and populate the new environment.
(Though using the outdated reptilian model for said dinosaurs might be a consequence of not being able to reconstruct them correctly, yes...)
Plus... if all DNA was unusable after that time frame... this whole technology wouldn't work.
No matter how she does it, she does it. She can use DNA that is that old. And it would probably be easier to start by rejuvenating bacteria from scratch in order to analyses their DNA to reconstruct that of the bigger critter than the reverse. Simply because spectrography and shape would be closer related at that scale.
Seto Kaiba wrote:xunk16 wrote:Plus, you seem to consistently ignore the individuality, though limited, of the Invid scientists.
One problem is this whole notion requires two things that weren't in the same place to be in the same place... the scientists (with the Regent) and the genesis pits (with the Regess).
The pit that mutated Edwards in Prelude to Shadow Chronicle did not came back from Earth.
Neither did the Inorganic pits left optera, the Regess wouldn't want those.
So, in fact, the Regent and his scientist did have access to the technology. And probably a bit of know-how since the scientist are kinda supposed to administrate these while the Regess is away.
Now, I recognize that the regent would probably pull the plug from any "too intellectual" passive endeavour... But that doesn't mean there wouldn't be any Regess loyalist staying behind because no one told him to stop his stuff directly and in so many words.
Especially since the first step of the Invid war was to populate new frontier planets and amass what they needed to create / complete their "army". (At least in old material... maybe Optera was left less barren in the reboot?)
Seto Kaiba wrote:xunk16 wrote:They might lack understanding of others species, but that too makes them curious. [...] I guess this would include Zentraedi communication systems
That's a pretty big jump from evolutionary biology to applied cryptosystems...
Going from peacefully grazing slugs to a space invading civilization IS also a huge evolutionary jump.
Now the Gura-Invids brings us a nice intermediary stage between these two, but still.
Considering most of this was made possible by the Regess and Zor Mind-copulating... I guess at least one Invid would have some ideas about frequencies.
Especially since we are speaking of a psionic race already able to sense energetic fluctuations.
I can't say what they would be detecting would be very useful to anyone else, but that doesn't stop them from trying.
Seto Kaiba wrote:The Invid never exhibit anything close to this level of understanding of their enemies in the official setting, though. Either these scientists are less good than you credit them with being, or their areas of interest are much narrower than you credit them with being. Possibly both, as they're rather new to this whole "technology" thing.
I don't contest their way of going at science is awkward sometime. But that goes with the territory of having an alien race doing alien things.
And while it might not be official for the purpose of HG striping it bare, the RPG kept Invid ingenuity at work with the Janus Scenario in the Genesis Pit Sourcebook. They do try stuff. And sometime stuff that works out.
But they can be "easily" deceived through the little they really understand about their enemies.
What we have here is a 2nd ed example of Invid applied strategy and scientific applied development.
Something that forced the Master into investing way more resources on that front to make the Invid believe two things :
- We are so numerous that we don't care you are turning our troops into zombies.
- We invest at least as much as you do here because we can, and we beleive you'll break first.
The book gives us a picture where the Masters eventually intimidated the Invid into submission, but a a great cost.
Now where were those zentraedi vitrifying qualities when that happened?
Either away, which means they had other threats to deal with.
Or the Master's doctrine is not so eager to have their own shoot friendly fire as you are currently describing.
Seto Kaiba wrote:That's kind of at odds with how they're described in the RPG, which casts most of the majority of Zentradi soldiers as little more than organic robots conditioned to unflinchingly follow orders. There's a bit of jockeying for position and office politics among the commander-type Zentradi, but the only one who exhibits anything like a hunger for glory is Khyron... it's more a hunger for destruction, like he was an adrenaline junkie, and even the other Zentradi commanders think he's a reckless weirdo. We do see Khyron "creatively" reinterpret his orders and try to abuse loopholes, but again he was kind of a weirdo and definitely had a screw loose. He was kept around despite his recklessness making him a liability because he commanded a unit of surprisingly effective assault troops.
The other who have met him personally sometime thinks he is a weirdo. Breetai asked for him specifically, even knowing of his record.
Khyron is in fact still pulling his shenanigans from one side of the galaxy to the other, because his superiors doesn't see him as too much of a threat.
His troops, even his sub-officers, seem pretty okay with following him. And he managed to keep his command despite being a reckless hot head.
He has no problem amassing a whole lot of malcontents once the other officers aren't there.
Khyron makes many remarks to the fact that he is the only "real" Zentraedi around. While we might temper this with reason, even more given his addictions, the fact remains that he wasn't trialled or executed. His paperwork is apparently ordinary enough, so that an officer would still want to call upon him. Azonia and Myria do address him ordinarily enough, despite their general training teaching them that females are superiors. Somehow, even after all his emotional burst and impulsive behaviour, he is still respected. And even after numerous insubordination, he is kept more or less on the front-lines.
All in line with the idea that, Khyron, is in fact doing what he should.
For me, that's as much as saying that Khyron is not weird at all. He might not be the preferable Zentraedi, but he certainly comes from an otherwise very much known, very visible minority. At least so that he'd be considered "yet of acceptable requirements".
If I remember correctly, I think there is traces of the relation between Breetai and Exedore being somewhat unusual though. They are showed as being amongst the few intellectuals / philosophers of their race. They recognize that trait into one another, and prize their friendship because they know / feel they wouldn't have the same chance with another.
This, plus the general way Dolza is presented, give us an Idea that maybe, just maybe, there was more Khyrons than Breetais in the Troodi fleet.
And there is certainly not a whole lot of Exedore, not by any canon.
This might also have been a good idea from the part of the Masters... since, you know, it took a Breetai and an Exedore to plan a coup from mass treason; and succeed.
Seto Kaiba wrote:xunk16 wrote:Since the Invid do not necessarily know how to bait a "distress call", they might possibly just achieve an "unknown" signal. Which would still serve its purpose.
That might work for humans, but what do the Zentradi care? They see the universe in black and white... something is either an enemy or not. Enemies get destroyed, everything else gets ignored.
Not necessarily to the ones they serve though. Especially with protoculture running low and the SDF-1 out of reach.
Seto Kaiba wrote:xunk16 wrote:Hermetically sealed space suits are good and fine... But once into the selected location, they also can't immediately just "fly backwards with their regults".
Yeah, but with a We Have Reserves mentality they're not going to bother trying to extract a boarding force that gets ambushed. Once it becomes clear it's an ambush, they're just going to blow up the entire area to be sure they got the enemy. They're also going to be on high alert the entire time, which makes sneaking up on them pretty unlikely to say the least.
A single scratch by a now confirmed dead invid? Why waste the troops for this little?
Plus, you said it yourself, black and white mentality.
It made it much of a problem to order Zentraedi around to kill other Zentraedi.
They are also most shock to see the humans "ready to inflict huge loss on themselves".
Somehow... I feel the Zentraedi might need a pretty good reason to shoot down one of their own in cold blood.
An Epidemic might do it in time. But it would have to prove itself first.
Seto Kaiba wrote:xunk16 wrote:But you're right that eventually this should fade. Zentraedi do not always wear their suits on their ships... now they would.
Actually, the vast majority of them do... it's just the officers who don't. Even the guards in the corridors are shown wearing their armor in the series.
It'd actually be quite surprising if they didn't, given that they're experts at space warfare where battle damage-induced decompression is an ever-present hazard. Some of them are hardy enough that they can endure a brief jaunt in vacuum, but that's just the commanders.
Well... I don't know how much of an officer's suit Max did steal. (It is sometime referred to as a soldier suit on the net...) But that guy wasn't in a suit at least.
Nor were the whole lot of Zentraedi of lower ranks having a casual conversation about defection.
Nor were Bron, Rico, and Konda most of the time.
I really had the impression only the ones on corridor patrol duty were in suits at all time.
And even then, there was numerous Zentraedi in suits that did have the helmet off.
Or the visor opened.
So if you have a bacteria crawling into a slightly scratched soft seal, using the muck in the ship as a petri dish, then starting to go around the ventilation of the ship... and not showing immediate symptoms... By the time the ones with suit would put their helmets back on, they would already be infected.
Getting the first ship isn't that hard.
It is the reaction time from the Masters to this incident that is of the essence.
Seto Kaiba wrote:Peacebringer wrote:If the Regess can convert her entire civilization into energy, she can convert the entire Zentraedi-armada into energy. I'm just dying to read your response to that.
Can she, though? Is the ability to be converted to energy something she designed into the Invid she commands? You'd think if she could do that she would've used that power to protect the Invid's original homeworld from the Haydonite attack that rendered it uninhabitable or protect their second homeworld (Optera) from the Robotech Masters plundering it and rendering it uninhabitable. She didn't even destroy the UEEF fleet that tried to blow up the planet she was standing on with a black hole bomb, and they were a LOT fewer than a Zentradi fleet.
She is ever evolving though... She might have gained that ability after the defoliation.
And the Invid and Zentraedi are both protoculture imbued... so I guess this could work.
Especially since Ariel could teleport Bernard, which isn't. BUT, Ariel was also in a different stage of evolution from the Regess, so...
She did not use it right from the start on a UEEF fleet that was in great parts shadow camouflaged. Might have been hard to judge the threat.
And once she did manage to sense it, her mind was already made to leave earth.
At which point the damage she inflicted on the UEEF fleet is changing from one source to another... but she did at least get the missiles.
There was probably other attempts to Phoenix her way through a few fleets.
Maybe in correlation with using the "Invid Nebula" as a sensing device.
Those that did not survive to tell the tale were, however, never accounted for in canon.
They still are listed as MIA.
But really I think it is much more simple than this.
Would you leave your millions of children behind, without supervision, if they weren't able to think by themselves?
Especially at a troubling time when your psi tower network is mostly down, some of your brain relays were destroyed, and the kid evolved enough that you'd normally have as Scientist back-up are currently ongoing an unstable adaptation into being able to go against your wishes? (Something that you don't understand?)
It might have been different with the Regent at her side, but alone?
I think she is keeping her strength to save her kids.
Transporting them from one place to another, maybe to mount an important hit and run operation? Why not.
Leaving them all behind while your at full passenger capacity of aliens to drop them unto an unknown world?
And that they might get pummelled in your absence? I think not.
These damn humans and masters and troodies all fold right in your face while you're slurping your flower nectar in the morning.
There is no telling what they would do if you did abandon your kids.
Hell, a few months outside and your favourites princesses already don't acknowledge you anymore.
Seto Kaiba wrote:Peacebringer wrote:Also, according to your posts, the Zentraedi vaporized the surface of the Invid homeworld; yet the Invid managed to conquer the Masters.
... but they didn't conquer the Masters. The Invid conquered Tirol, but only after the Robotech Masters had abandoned the planet and left behind only the sick and elderly (according to Rem and Cabell) with no way to defend themselves. Conquering a literally-defenseless planet is no real achievement.
Peacebringer wrote:The Zentraedi attacked and vaporized the surface of the Earth, and yet, they lost their ENTIRE fleet.
But, explicitly, only because humanity figured out a weird corner case abuse of the barrier system Zor built into his battlefortress... a maneuver that convinced the Robotech Masters themselves that the people who's obtained the ship were as knowledgeable about robotechnology as they themselves were. Had humanity not had the most advanced starship in the universe dropped in their laps, it would have been an easy victory for the Zentradi.
Except the Zentraedi were nowhere near Tirol in general when we saw the whole fleet the first time. So who knows what they are really dealing with out there?
There also weren't any Zent left to acompany their Masters on their journey to Earth.
But he is right though. Sadly, there was only a few bioroids left on Tirol at best.
Mainly because the Tiresian we see are the ones who rejected the triumvir's way of life.
No spending loss on defending political insurgents.
Plus, Bioroids are apparently also affected by speed issues.
Not so bright if the Zentraedi ever lead a revolt.
Peacebringer wrote:And the Xai-Zor is real, I just have to go to another city again to get my old HD. I think I have a pic. of it and some stats, but I can't post stats here.
Well, you can at least show the picture. That way the debate would move into a new stage.
Or... can you describe it from memory?
On the wrong forum, 30 years too late...