Jonathan_S wrote:quite possibly a cat wrote:Yeah, that's probably a downside. But missiles can go around a wedge, with a loss of accuracy. With a strong enough bubble and shields it wouldn't matter against missiles. Although such a powerful bubble might not be possible
Warning, speculation of future tech advances: However, the lack of a wedge could still matter in energy range. With current technology all a super dreadnought could really do against a theoretical missile proof mobile fort is interpose its wedge and make a run for it. Actually trying to face the fort in energy range would be something like a battlecruiser vs. super-dreadnought.
Well if you can hide behind your own wedge and beat off any missile attacks the missile-proof fort makes you could take it out with a wedge strike.
Even a vastly more powerful that currently (known to be) possible bubble wall isn't a wedge. So the ship wedge would be able to pop it and then shred the fort.
So not necessarily just run away. But a ramming attack is a dicey thing to try
Also David's already told us you cannot run a bubble sidewall and the spider drive simultaneously. So one you throw up the bubble, 2 things happen:
1) you stop accelerating and maneuvering
2) Everyone sees your bubble sidewall.
So while that bubble is up, there is no running and hiding and no hiding. Once the bubble is formed, battle has commenced and someone is going to lose.
One possible tactic I mentioned previously is a combined arms mission with a conventional wall. Pretty much you get your LDs in a system in advance and pre-position them - then you bring in your conventional wall loud and proud, and use it to lead the opponent's wall onto a pre-anticipated vector. At the proper moment, the LD's pop the bubble and ambush the opposition, while the conventional wall circles, not allowing the opposition to escape.
Depending on the LD's actual arms fit, it might be a decent idea - or not.