You know, all this talk of the beached Tigress has got me thinking about the *alternative* scenario.

Generation ship!

The Tigress misJumps 36 parsecs, J-drive totally shot, M-drive fine.  But in this case there isn't a handy planet to put down on or no emergency requirement to do so.

Knowing they were out on the fringes, and knowing rescue is unlikely, they decide to go home the long way.

Perhaps leaving some crew behind as colonists (either because not everyone wants to go or because of overcrowding problems later on), with 20,000 of them there's plenty of gene pool for both.

This would be an interesting environment 100+ years on either for PCs aboard the ship or for PCs encountering it. (Or both if you're following the model we tried out at TravCon last March!)

While the military discipline might hold things together for longer than otherwise might be the case, I can still imagine quite a 'different' sort of society aboard after a fair bit of time and several generations.  And of course there's always the traditional complete breakdown after mutiny, conflict, disease or whatever if you want to head in a more Metamorphosis Alpha sort of direction.

I wonder if its too late to add this seed to my submission of _Generation X_ to Mongoose?

Consumables would presumably be the biggest problem given the lack of planning for this, perhaps making the journey back even longer as they stop off to replenish and/or drop off more would be colonists.

But is there anything such a 'city' in space would be missing from its initial set up as a military fighting machine not exactly planning for such a trip?  (I'm assuming a normal mixed crew and not a p/matriarchal culture of only one gender in the military).  Or is it self-contained enough that this actually wouldn't be too hard for them?  Or maybe the IN plan for just such a contingency.

tc

On 13 Feb 2016 3:32 am, "Richard Aiken" <xxxxxx@gmail.com> wrote:
On Fri, Feb 12, 2016 at 9:24 PM, Craig Berry <xxxxxx@gmail.com> wrote:
Yep. The Age of Sail provides the only reasonable model for Traveller interstellar warfare . . . and you get a map that's trying to display about nine dimensions of data in two or three dimensions of display. :) I'm sure that learning to read and use such displays takes up a fair amount of time in Naval officer training.

Upon reading Patrick O'Brien's novels, I instantly associated with Traveller those scenes in which Jack Aubrey receives orders from higher authority, stares off into space for a few seconds to calculate in his head how the intervening time has most logically affected matter and then begins snapping out sailing directions.

I found it especially charming how Aubrey is always saying some version of, "Not a moment to waste!" as he sets out to accmplished Whatever, when it's going to be literally weeks until his ship/force can get to Whereever it's next supposed to be. 

--
Richard Aiken

"Never insult anyone by accident."  Robert A. Heinlein
"I studied the Koran a great deal. I came away from that study with the conviction there have been few religions in the world as deadly to men as Muhammed." Alexis de Tocqueville (1843)
"We know a little about a lot of things; just enough to make us dangerous." Dean Winchester
"It has been my experience that a gun doesn't care who pulls its trigger." Newton Knight (as portrayed by Matthew McConaughey), to a scoffing Confederate tax collector facing the weapons held by Knight's young children and wife.
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