SkyShips

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Revision as of 20:33, 27 June 2012 by CourseDirector (talk | contribs) (In Cannon)
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The term SkyShip is used off and on throughout different books in the series and is largely self-explanatory, with one key thing to keep in mind: the difference between a SkyShip and an AirShip.

A SkyShip always has to fly. It may hover close to the ground, but it *cannot land. An AirShip is capable of landing. This is roughly analogous to the difference between a boat and a ship.

  • Reasons why SkyShips cannot land very heavily from ship-to-ship: in some casses the ship cannot land because the airframe is to week. Others lack landing gear or ar simply to big to land anywhere. Obviously they have to have been built somewhere and then launched, and to be fair most do have limited landing capability, but the key is whether or not it was designed to stay aloft indefinitely or land.

Skyships are mostly found within the Mage Wars RPG on the MRPG SkyShips page.

In Cannon

In the Cannon storyline, skyships were used extensively throughout the Mage Wars, and saw the heaviest production and use during the late Dynastic Period. Production was somehow lost towards the end of the Dynastic Period, as the use of skyships declined very sharply shortly before the start of the Second Chaotic Period.

So sharp was the decline, in fact, that the Gudersnipe Foundation does not believe they existed. No sightings were made, reconnaissance footage captured, or other proof found. This, despite extensive fighting on both sides of the Barrier Range, where skyship use was said to be the most prevalent.

The ships themselves, being made mostly out of lightweight wood and fiberous materials, were easy to destroy, tended to burn when crashed, and decomposed quickly. Even operational frames required a great deal of maintenance and upkeep.

Most evidence for the existence of skyships was lost during the Golden Age when historical revisionists, unable to find support for the historical accounts, simply wrote the skyships out of history. In some stories, the massive armadas of aerial juggernauts were replaced with dragons, which led to a wide-spread idea that dragon-slavery was common during the Mage Wars(It was, in fact, extremely limited).


Historically, SkyShips were of refereed to as Vails, because of the many vale-like wings and sails.