As part of this not-really-new-just-on-the-forums effort to generate strategy discussion content, I am providing a question to the forums. Do you think about capital ships in your list, and in what way do you approach them, whether in your own list, or across the table from you?
Following the tradition of my previous thread, I'm going to add a little bit of context to my question. This definition is rubbish; so is this one. From an engineering perspective, I'm willing to accept the distinction the latter definition makes, but wonder if perhaps there wasn't a better term (I don't know what it is, but I'm sure it exists). Rather, I mean the naval definition of capital ship, summed neatly in this saying: "If the capital ships are beaten, the navy is beaten. But if the rest of the navy is beaten, the capital ships can still operate. [The other] characteristic that defines capital ships is that their main opponent is each other." If anyone wishes to make a tangent into whether or not Mahan was a crazy old man is welcome (since this is a riff on his theories), but let's PM.
What does this mean to you as an Armada player? Obviously when an Imperial or Home One is on the table, they are a capital ship, but what about other cases? Is there a points requirement after which a ship is so important to not lose it that becomes a "capital ship"? What of ships that are the lynchpin of your tactical plans regardless of actual point value, be they the flagship (flotilla or otherwise), Admonition or Demolisher, or Interdictor with G-8? Perhaps most interestingly, are there capital ships in MSU fleets that rely on swarms of Raiders or TRC90s, and are carriers like the Pelta the capital ships in Yavaris bomber lists? And when you're done answering all those questions, how do you approach your enemy's capital ships? Do you prioritize his points-heavy ships, the tactical lynchpins (sometimes the same targets, sometimes not)? How do you identify them? Discuss! And remember, there are no wrong answers or stupid questions (no comment on askers of those questions
).
Accursed in-text coding by accident