Karoline said:
MILLANDSON said:
Karoline said:
I agree, they are seriously outdated in regards to planets, but in regards to starships and such, they are vastly superior to any other armament currently available. I've a strong belief that we'll see new options with the new source books, but they've made nukes quite powerful, and it might be hard to make something that beats them and yet isn't even rarer without messing with game balance.
I obviously can't talk about what is or isn't in Battlefleet Koronus, since I've seen it's contents, but nukes are meant to be powerful, hence why they are so incredibly rare. They don't get to have the modifiers for quantity, since you can only ever acquire 1 at a time, so you are always at a -50 modifier to get hold of a single atomic, and once that atomic is used, it's gone.
I find that fairly balanced, all in all.
But that's my point. I don't like the fluff because it doesn't say "They are powerful, therefore they are rare." it says "They are weak, therefore they are rare."
The fact that it's original purpose was for planatary assault has nothing at all to do with the fact that they are exceedingly good in ship to ship combat. Thus their assertion that they are rare because noone makes/wants/uses them is entirely illogical. It'd be like saying guns should be rare in modern times because no one makes/wants/uses them because there are nukes. Yes, nukes are better than guns for destroying a large area, but they are far more effective than a sword in personal combat. And because of that, guns are quite common. Therefore you would think that nukes would be quite common (relatively speaking of course), because everyone would want to use them in ship to ship combat.
Well, I think part of the reasoning for the fluff, is that it's always been a sci-fi trope to say "The most powerful weapon of our age is dwarfed by the incalculable power of the most basic weapon in the setting!" and also remember that 40k fluff has always talked more swagger than it brings in fact. It's part of the holdover from the over-the-top tongue-in-cheek days which I actually kind of prefer to the modern fluff, because it helped to hide a lot of bad writing.
In fact, before reading the supplement for the nuke, I had always assumed that the standard, low-grade, macrocannon batteries used nukes as their munitions.
Now, for an explanation of why nukes are "weak" according to the rules as they stand... I dunno. The closest I can see would be a sort of compromise between strength and logistics. If the ship were loaded to the gills with nukes, there not only would be containment issues, but also it would increase the chances that a heretic on the ship would find a way to push the button before the munition was chambered. So you can only carry a few at a time, and that's just not practical in "modern" space warfare, where you could be away from a naval facility for a century, or at least decades. Also, I'm not sure if it is ever stated what fuel the starships run on. Maybe there is competition for a scarce resource. Remember, in our modern times, there's only enough fissionable materials on earth to run our power supply for about ten years, I know the Empire of Man has more than a few mining planets than we have mines, but they also have a lot of energy demands. Also, in the Empire quantity IS a quality. Macrobatteries deal with the vastness of space, and resultant difficulty of hitting something that's moving relative to you, by bracketing the target with massive quantities of munitions. I'd imagine a standard macrocannon battery to consist of at least a dozen cannons (maybe two) firing around once every three or so minutes (or maybe unleashing a salvo of 10 shots each within the first two minutes, then taking 30 minutes to reload). In that case, I'm not sure how a single nuclear warhead has a chance of connecting, under normal (non-PC) circumstances.
I know all those reasons don't really make them "weak", but they sure do make them "antiquated" and "not practical in standard void engagements". Possibly also, their rareness would still exist if they were "stronger" but the fact that they are rarely used magnifies their rarity.