Difference between revisions of "Allusion Warships"

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The warships that guard the capitol of [[Samuel Fate]]'s empire. They are large, powerful warships, equvalant to most [[G.S.]] capital-[[Ship Classes|class]] ships. Allusion ships are generational, the soldiers onboard train and drill constantly, throughout their entire lives. Many are born, live, grow old, and die aboard the same ship. Many can trace back thousands of generations of ancestors who did the same.
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The warships that guard the capitol of [[Samuel Fate]]'s empire. They are large, powerful warships, equvalant to most [[G.S.]] capital-[[Ship Roles|class]] ships. Allusion ships are generational, the soldiers onboard train and drill constantly, throughout their entire lives. Many are born, live, grow old, and die aboard the same ship. Many can trace back thousands of generations of ancestors who did the same.
  
 
Because the ships are constantly maintained they are in perfect working-order, despite being tens of thousands of years old. This would eventually be their undoing, as the metal stress and fatigue life of the structural components of the ships was near the breaking point when the final engagment arrived.
 
Because the ships are constantly maintained they are in perfect working-order, despite being tens of thousands of years old. This would eventually be their undoing, as the metal stress and fatigue life of the structural components of the ships was near the breaking point when the final engagment arrived.

Revision as of 22:41, 11 May 2017

The warships that guard the capitol of Samuel Fate's empire. They are large, powerful warships, equvalant to most G.S. capital-class ships. Allusion ships are generational, the soldiers onboard train and drill constantly, throughout their entire lives. Many are born, live, grow old, and die aboard the same ship. Many can trace back thousands of generations of ancestors who did the same.

Because the ships are constantly maintained they are in perfect working-order, despite being tens of thousands of years old. This would eventually be their undoing, as the metal stress and fatigue life of the structural components of the ships was near the breaking point when the final engagment arrived.