JohnRoth wrote:What's ludicrous about it? Tube-fired missiles have to clear the sidewalls and spread out before they fire up their own wedges. If you're going to fire them from the opposite broadside, then those missiles are going to have to flip 180 degrees, spread out so they can go around the ship while avoiding its wedge, cancel the momentum that's taking them in the wrong direction and somehow keep up with the original broadside when all that maneuvering probably takes up a few seconds.
I can very easily see missile designers not putting all that capability in missiles when every cubic cm counts and everyone knows that you need to get into energy range anyway for a decisive engagement. It only becomes important after the development of missile-heavy tactics.
Which answers the other question. Haven sector navies have it, the rest of the navies (including the ISLN) didn't read the memo before filing it.
Just a minor point: there's no reason for the missiles from the opposite broadside to flip 180 degrees - all the firing ship has to do is roll 90 degrees, and the missiles only have to change heading 90 degrees. Or, if something like Keyhole or other sensor platforms that are outside the wedge aren't available, just point your ship at the enemy and fire both broadsides - they still only have to change 90 degrees, although there's that slight issue of crossing your "T" if you don't have the extra range of DDM/MDM missiles or bucklers/forward sidewall.