Somtaaw wrote:I'd argue that Second Battle of Yeltsin wasn't truly a turning point. Second Yeltsin was Honor in Fearless, versus Sword Simmonds in Thunder of God. You might be thinking of Third Yeltsin, where it was Admiral Hamish versus CNO Parnell in the opening night of the First Haven War.
Or possible Fourth Battle of Yeltsin's Star, between Honor and First Battle Squadron and Admiral Thurston, seconded by Rear Admiral Theisman of the Masada Contingent.
Another really big turning point of the war, would have been the unwritten battle to actually take Trevor's Star, and also the Third Battle of Adler which led to Honor's capture, which was definitely a Havenite positive turning point (although a net negative since it led to many pissed off Graysons).
Second Battle of Sidemore was a turning point, since it confirmed Haven was operating in the Andermani's backyard, which helped bring them into the war they had previously stayed neutral in.
And the biggest turning point, has to be the Buttercup offensive, that nearly drove Haven completely into surrender in bare months, after the decade-plus of constant battles.
I actually considered Trevor's Star as being a turning point. But I can't settle on for whom. It was certainly an important battle. (So important that RFC has deemed it necessary to tease us with it. Possibly until some such undefined later date. For now it is relegated to the annals of the unpublished lost files.)
What was the significance of Trevor's Star? It could argued to be a turning point for the Peeps as well. Because at Trevor's Star, Hamish was the first to find out that the Peeps had gotten themselves "back on balance." They no longer flinched, ran from overwhelming odds or made tactical errors. They tore a strip of white hide off of White Haven.