thespaceopera: (dial tone)
Voices from Heaven ([personal profile] thespaceopera) wrote in [community profile] driftfleet2017-10-16 06:59 pm

it's gonna rain - and it never ends

[ It's midday, or close enough to it that the sun is blazing red hot above the planet. Everything seems ordinary - for disturbing, red-tinted values of ordinary, anyway. But the normalcy doesn't last for long.

Without warning, an explosive sound shocks through the jungle. It doesn't come from any one central point, but rather several points, scattered throughout, strategically placed to the advantage of someone. And from those massive shocks rises a wave of missiles - large, fast, and apparently, freely flying. They're guided, and they've locked onto their target: any foreign ship that is currently within Lato'li's atmosphere.

There's no way to mistake it. They're headed right for the Fleet.

The first wave feels a bit sporadic - timings might be off, but the missiles are still deadly, and if they hit, they hit hard. Shields might withstand this wave, but ships without shields will take direct hits. The ability to stay airborn is very, very quickly lost.

The second wave is much more precise, expertly timed and executed by whomever is firing from below. Even smaller shuttles get caught in the crosshairs, and those ships that lasted through the first volley will take a few more shots. If shields saved you before, they will fail here, giving out under the strain.

And the third wave comes, a little bit longer after, to finish the job. There are more of them, and they are far more advanced - they make the previous two volleys look like warning shots. This time, it's all missiles launched, all targets acquired.

Seven Fleet ships - and many, many shuttles - fall out of the sky, headed straight for the surface at alarming speed. Only four ships manage to escape the assault and exit the planet's atmosphere, retreating to orbit as fast as possible. Those lucky enough to have been in orbit can only watch as all of this happens.

But the missiles aren't the only thing up their sleeve. Just when the dust settles, while the network is surely lighting up with activity, attempts to contact one another and check on the status of fellow ships and crew, A loud, quick, terrible screeching noise shocks the network. It drowns out all communications on any connected devices - ship or personal. Ships in orbit will see all on-board systems flicker, then fizzle out, all non-emergency systems have gone completely down.

And with that.. there's silence. Perhaps too much silence. No matter what you do, no matter which buttons you press, which channels you try, there is no connection. Those who have dropped to the surface are entirely radio silent, and those in orbit have been reduced to the barest of abilities and life-support, with the bare minimum of contact.

So... What can you do now? ]


(( ooc: Feel free to use this post as a mingle for all your crashy or missile-dodgy needs!

• The following ships have been shot down: Bishop, Bloodsport, Blue Fish, Goldstone, Heron, Tourist, Twin Roses.
• The following ships are now in orbit: Blameless, Caprine, First Breath, Huntress, Iskaulit, Red Fish, Starstruck, Vanquish, Wonderduck

Good luck, Dear Fleet...~ ♪ ))
candothat: ((◞‸ლ))

[personal profile] candothat 2018-02-04 03:32 am (UTC)(link)
[Another thing Chekov forgets: he and Felix were joining very different organizations. He entered Starfleet to be at the forefront of scientific advancement, not to fight anyone.

He peers over the console to shoot Felix an incredulous look.]


None of them? How did you relay coordinates to your pilot or monitor the status of your engines?

[Efficiently, anyway. On the Enterprise, information could be shared near-instantaneously. No one needed to tell Chekov when the ship was ready to warp or how damaged it was in a fight because he could see for himself and change his plans accordingly. Not being able to do that...]

Someday, I would like you to tell me what that entails. The other you that I knew was never able to explain your means of faster-than-light travel or the way courses are calculated to my satisfaction.
scanninggaydis: (Default)

[personal profile] scanninggaydis 2018-02-09 06:48 pm (UTC)(link)
[The look on Felix's face is wry when he answers.]

Primarily by running around the CIC a lot. We had the capacity to network our systems if necessary, but considering our enemies it wasn't a good idea.

[BECAUSE....HE TRIED ONCE....AND FRAKKED UP....

Chekov's request gets a small nod.]


I'd be happy to.

[He's not going to ask, but he kind of wonders if this other version of him just held back more. Felix can't think of any other reason to not have explained everything properly.]
candothat: ((´-`))

[personal profile] candothat 2018-02-11 04:23 am (UTC)(link)
I suppose that's an effective way to incorporate cardio exercises into your daily routine. [Clearly joking (not that he'd be entirely opposed to putting his sprinting skills to use during regular shifts).] They were cybernetic, correct? Your enemies?

[Also not a topic that Pavel has really gotten into with a Felix. He feels like he knows this one well enough to ask.

The Felix Gaeta in Marina had really been uninterested in making friends. Chekov didn't even know if Gaeta was his first name or last for a month or so after meeting him.]


Thank you. I know that jumping and warping are very different processes, but I imagine that the calculations are similar enough.
scanninggaydis: (the long awaited answer)

[personal profile] scanninggaydis 2018-02-14 07:43 pm (UTC)(link)
They probably are. I don't know that much about the theory behind warp drives either.

[Luckily for both of them, probably, this Felix has spend the last four years slowly learning to rely on other people again.

He even smiles at the joke about cardio, though it's accompanied by a shrug.

That smile drops a little when he responds to the part about the Cylons, but he doesn't get upset. It would just be weird to be smiling while talking about them. And of course, it puts him in a slightly more serious mindset.]


And, robots with varying levels of advanced AI, yeah. Not being networked made it that much more difficult for them to hack into our ship and take control.
candothat: (( ˘_˘))

[personal profile] candothat 2018-02-16 04:21 am (UTC)(link)
I can tell you more than you want to know! But you can't let anyone who is affiliated with Starfleet [so Kirk, even if Kirk barely counts] know that you know. Technically there are rules against sharing information about our technology, although I think many rules lose their relevance once other universes are involved.

[Pavel climbs back up from the under console, ostensibly to do some work on the main board. That he can better monitor Felix's reactions in an effort to not overstep any bounds is just a bonus.

He matches his tone to Felix's. It's not a light subject, obviously.]


That kind of enemy poses a very different threat from anything we've faced at home. The closest thing would have been Krall's swarm--thousands and thousands of networked ships operating cohesively. They made no attempt to interface with our ship's computer, but they were able to destroy it.
scanninggaydis: (epiphanies)

[personal profile] scanninggaydis 2018-02-23 05:54 pm (UTC)(link)
[Felix just nods at that first part even though...honestly, you would think that there wouldn't be a problem talking about FTL technology with someone whose society already has similar technology. Maybe they'll come back around to that.

The latter part of what Chekov says is a bit more attention-grabbing. That sounds...overwhelming. Even the baseships hadn't been in the thousands, even if the Cylons were plentiful.]


Were they all manned?
candothat: ((._.))

[personal profile] candothat 2018-02-24 01:46 am (UTC)(link)
[The Federation is remarkably reserved when it comes to sharing technology with outsiders. There are a number of tactical reasons for it, but it would never occur to Chekov to withhold something like useful knowledge. It would be a short conversation!

He fiddles with the console's unresponsive display.]


By drones--humanoid, but incapable of independent thought. Probably they were left on Altamid by the planets's previous inhabitants... we had no time to learn about them, and then they were all destroyed. I would have liked to know what their original purpose was and what happened to their creators and if their ships were a part of them.
scanninggaydis: (the long awaited answer)

[personal profile] scanninggaydis 2018-03-06 08:57 pm (UTC)(link)
Were they operating on some sort of autopilot when you encountered them? Or being utilized by something else?

[Since Chekov mentioned previous inhabitants.]

If you have any idea.
candothat: ((˵•́ ‸ •̀˵))

[personal profile] candothat 2018-03-08 03:15 am (UTC)(link)
They were being controlled by a being--formerly a human, a captain of a Federation ship--named Krall. How he found them and learned to use them, I don't know. It was all very strange.
scanninggaydis: (for you I'd do anything)

[personal profile] scanninggaydis 2018-03-12 03:01 am (UTC)(link)
[Okay well that explains the name Chekov gave him a little better.

Also, a little part of that catches his attention and even though he suspects he will not like the answer, he asks:]


"Formerly" a human?

[Felix is so ready to judge.]
candothat: ((._.))

[personal profile] candothat 2018-03-12 02:12 pm (UTC)(link)
[No, Felix, you will not like the answer.]

He and his crew also found an energy-transference device on Altamid that allowed them to... drain others is the best way I know to describe it, to prolong their own lives. It seems that the process changed their biology in some way. They took on the traits of the beings they killed. [He doesn't much like this either, but he's more sad than judgmental.] Over the century that they were stranded on the planet, they gave themselves different names, created a new language. Krall thought that humans had given up on saving him and his crew, and so he gave up on being human.
scanninggaydis: (we all begin with good intent)

[personal profile] scanninggaydis 2018-03-17 06:41 pm (UTC)(link)
[Thanks, he hates it.]

Oh.

[Felix stiffens as Chekov explains that, because that's almost worse than he was expecting. His expression shutters. Not outwardly angry, just...controlled.]

That's one way to survive. I guess.
candothat: ((・_・)ヾ)

[personal profile] candothat 2018-03-20 05:54 am (UTC)(link)
Not really. I think that survival isn't worth that.

[You know, Chekov suspects that this isn't the right topic to explore at this moment.]

Fortunately, we won't have to consider doing anything like that to survive here.