Bandit LOAF
Long Live the Confederation!
One has to wonder what the Behemoth would have been like if the threat of Belarius hadn't forced Tolwyn to rush it through the final stages.
I recall Tolwyn mentioning he thought the Behemoth was all wrong. The weapon should have been mounted on a platform that could defend itself and move and fight. You would think Confed would have put some sort of hangar deck on the Behemoth, it's not like they didn't have the room for it. The race against time condemned it. If only Tolwyn had known about Paladin's project before right?
Belarius (I know it's spelt wrong) was an interesting idea introduced in FC, it's one of those plot devices, along with Murragh that I thought would have been really interesting to see develop in the WCU.
Belisarius, after the Roman general.
I know there's a tiny element of the fandom who obsesses over this... but they somehow forget the actual *point* of the 'conspiracy'. It isn't a serious thing - it's something Tolwyn (and Whittaker) are manipulating to help cover their own terrible plot. From False Colors: "Then there was the constant gnawing strain that the G.E. project, the virus hidden wtihin the bacteria of Belisarius, was perhaps the greatest moral outrage of all. Yet there was no longer an alternative. That was the hidden truth Whittaker had revealed in their meeting, a t ruth which he had kept from Jason. Belisarius was simply the Trojan Horse that would be destroyed, a nd then the real plan would be hatched."
Actually, I thought that the Behemoth was a more viable plan than the T-bomb. It was doomed more by the fact that Hobbes was a traitor, rather than it being unsuitable to perform it's mission.
It's exactly the same plan as the T-Bomb... it just required an several-kilometer long unarmed gun instead of a tiny invsiible heavy fighter for delivery.
I wonder if this ww2 analogy was part of designing the Behemoth and T-bomb (design wise, not in-game universe). It would go along with the idea of WC being WW2 in space.
I'm pretty sure it was - in every conceivable way, from its precise involvement in the war analogy down to the look of the bomb being derived from Fat Man. One of the Privateer 3 scripts drags the Severin-as-Oppenheimer bit even further when it brings him back for a post-war story.
(Colonel Blair certainly felt a lot worse about the bomb in later years than Colonel Tibbets did, though...).