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Royal Rumble, Eve Online v Star Trek v Star Gate v Star Wars!!

Author
Rogue Lawyer
University of Caille
Gallente Federation
#21 - 2013-06-16 20:53:15 UTC
Teinyhr wrote:
Of course, if James T. Kirk or Jean-Luc Picard are alive, every other universe loses automatically.




Yeak Kirk and Jean Luc kill it, May Fave was Jean Luc, I grew during his run of Star Trek.
Cyra Mangeiri
Republic University
Minmatar Republic
#22 - 2013-06-20 14:22:18 UTC
I would add WH40k/Battlefleet Gothic to the mix. Can't go wrong with priests chanting healing prayers for failed equipment (isn't that how Amarr ships work too?).

'course, Necrons or Tyranid fleets would probably beat the living **** out of any EVE ship.
Untanas Volmyr
Perkone
Caldari State
#23 - 2013-06-20 17:06:10 UTC  |  Edited by: Untanas Volmyr
Spaceballs anyone? Would be nice to upgrade my pod to an RV. With cable and a fridge. Also would like to mention Hitch Hikers Guide to the Galaxy. That improbability drive would be amusing.

Murphy's Technology Law - If your not thoroughly confused. Then you were not thoroughly informed.

Rogue Lawyer
University of Caille
Gallente Federation
#24 - 2013-06-21 20:17:10 UTC
Cipher Deninard wrote:
Rogue Lawyer wrote:
Interesting, totally forgot about that one, but thinking about it the ships in Battlestar Galatica would probably get owned.


They would, but only because the Battlestar ships tend to be more "realistic" than other sci fi series. No lasers or shields or anything like that. Star Trek or Star Wars ships would probably win based on how both were constructed with infinite resources and neither have the limitations of physics... (I haven't seen all of star gate yet so excuse my lack of knowledge on that subject)



Yeah true, the BSG ships also tend to use fighters as a huge part of their offensive strategy, much like carriers in the game, which means that they would be very slow to mount an offensive, as opposed to instant offensive abilities of the other ships.
Vipre Morte
Team JK
#25 - 2013-06-24 15:27:07 UTC
Desuke Aramaki wrote:
I'm afraid star trek loose badly since cheese (yes cheese thats how ridiculous star trek tech is) and computer virus create chaos onboard star trek ships that can lead to their destruction.

Like other biological forms, gel packs were susceptible to bacteria and viruses. As such, heating them could remove such infections. (VOY: "Learning Curve")
◾ They were infected with bacteria due to cheese created by Neelix. (VOY: "Learning Curve")
◾ A gel pack in the mess hall was infected with a macrovirus, and led to an outbreak when it ruptured. (VOY: "Macrocosm")
◾ During a voyage through a Mutara-class nebula, the gel packs began to fail due to subnucleonic radiation. (VOY: "One")


http://en.memory-alpha.org/wiki/Bio-neural_gel_pack

After arriving to Iconia, the Yamato received an Iconian software transmission and was unable to continue the investigation due to random system failures, later on discovered to have been caused by the software. An engineering team of 18 personnel were killed when the force field in a shuttlebay was shut down. The Yamato left Iconia to rendezvous with the Enterprise-D to solve the malfunctions and convince Captain Jean-Luc Picard to continue with the exploration of Iconia. The IRW Haakona under cloak detected the Yamato and copied its log transmissions to the Enterprise-D, while it was traveling to the rendezvous.

After the Yamato had arrived closer to the Federation side of the Neutral Zone, a position twelve hours and sixteen minutes away from Iconia at warp 8. The Iconian software caused an antimatter containment failure. The magnetic seals around the dilithium chamber collapsed, and the computer initiated the emergency release system to dump the Yamato's supply of antimatter. However, the program caused the release to halt with antimatter remaining within the ship, resulting in a warp core breach. While the saucer section was thrown free of the breach, the hull disintegrated, exposing all its decks to space. The Yamato was lost with all hands. (TNG: "Contagion")


http://en.memory-alpha.org/wiki/USS_Yamato


I'm re-watching Voyager now, and just wanted to point out that Voyager was the first starship of its kind to use bio-neural gel packs in place of traditional isolinear circuitry. It also wasn't a Galaxy class starship, which is what I usually think of when comparing the "best" ships from Star Trek, though the best for warfare might be the Defiant-class, or non-federation ships like Cardassian cruisers or Jem'Hadar fighters (and those super-fighters!).
Rogue Lawyer
University of Caille
Gallente Federation
#26 - 2013-06-24 15:30:41 UTC
Vipre Morte wrote:
Desuke Aramaki wrote:
I'm afraid star trek loose badly since cheese (yes cheese thats how ridiculous star trek tech is) and computer virus create chaos onboard star trek ships that can lead to their destruction.

Like other biological forms, gel packs were susceptible to bacteria and viruses. As such, heating them could remove such infections. (VOY: "Learning Curve")
◾ They were infected with bacteria due to cheese created by Neelix. (VOY: "Learning Curve")
◾ A gel pack in the mess hall was infected with a macrovirus, and led to an outbreak when it ruptured. (VOY: "Macrocosm")
◾ During a voyage through a Mutara-class nebula, the gel packs began to fail due to subnucleonic radiation. (VOY: "One")


http://en.memory-alpha.org/wiki/Bio-neural_gel_pack

After arriving to Iconia, the Yamato received an Iconian software transmission and was unable to continue the investigation due to random system failures, later on discovered to have been caused by the software. An engineering team of 18 personnel were killed when the force field in a shuttlebay was shut down. The Yamato left Iconia to rendezvous with the Enterprise-D to solve the malfunctions and convince Captain Jean-Luc Picard to continue with the exploration of Iconia. The IRW Haakona under cloak detected the Yamato and copied its log transmissions to the Enterprise-D, while it was traveling to the rendezvous.

After the Yamato had arrived closer to the Federation side of the Neutral Zone, a position twelve hours and sixteen minutes away from Iconia at warp 8. The Iconian software caused an antimatter containment failure. The magnetic seals around the dilithium chamber collapsed, and the computer initiated the emergency release system to dump the Yamato's supply of antimatter. However, the program caused the release to halt with antimatter remaining within the ship, resulting in a warp core breach. While the saucer section was thrown free of the breach, the hull disintegrated, exposing all its decks to space. The Yamato was lost with all hands. (TNG: "Contagion")


http://en.memory-alpha.org/wiki/USS_Yamato


I'm re-watching Voyager now, and just wanted to point out that Voyager was the first starship of its kind to use bio-neural gel packs in place of traditional isolinear circuitry. It also wasn't a Galaxy class starship, which is what I usually think of when comparing the "best" ships from Star Trek, though the best for warfare might be the Defiant-class, or non-federation ships like Cardassian cruisers or Jem'Hadar fighters (and those super-fighters!).


Don't forget the Sovereign-Class which was a beast and the Prometheus Class with its multi-vector assault mode.
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