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Battlecruiser

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A battlecruiser under fire

The battlecruiser is a type of terran capital ship employed in the Koprulu Sector. Battlecruisers were employed during the Guild Wars when space engagements were fought by capital ships and medium-sized gunships. The development of anti-capital ship starfighters, such as Wraiths, did not spell the end of battlecruisers. The large warships adapted to carry strike craft which augmented and complemented the combat value of both. Battlecruisers continue to be an integral part of terran space forces as general purpose warships[1] and command ships during extended campaigns.[2]

While there are many classes of battlecruisers, all are armed with lasers and protected by neosteel armor.[3] Gravity accelerators are also found on all battlecruisers.[4]

Contents

[edit] Classes

Many battlecruiser classes exist. Known classes include;

[edit] Leviathan-class

The Leviathan-class battlecruiser is an uncommon battlecruiser class and although still operating at the dawn of the 26th century, had largely been supplanted by the Behemoth-class variant. The Leviathan-class is capable of traveling through warp space and features ports for transport craft, smaller craft linking into the ship via hydraulics. These ports are located perilously close to the bridge however, making a Leviathan vulnerable to any enemy boarding action.[5]

[edit] Behemoth-class

The Behemoth-class battlecruiser
A battlecruiser orbiting Tarsonis

The Behemoth-class battlecruiser was the most common battlecruiser class and represented the "standard" battlecruiser variant during the Great War. The Behemoth variant is greatly advanced from its Leviathan-class predecessor, featuring the ability to operate within planetary atmospheres and even land on planets.[6] It also features a total of four docking bays (as opposed to hydraulic entry points) which are equipped with force fields, allowing easy deployment of fighters without fear of decompression[7] and greater resilience to enemy boarding actions.[8] Like the Leviathan, it is capable of traveling through warp space,[1] even capable of making jumps within a planet's atmosphere.[9]

Behemoth-class armor consists of the standard neosteel,[10] along with force fields,[4] while armament consists of multiple burst laser batteries (at least 8 around the ship's 'hammerhead')[9][11] and a complement of nuclear warheads.[12] Despite the heavy arsenal, Behemoth armament is slightly constricted in that its laser batteries cannot fire at targets to the side[4] and its warheads are reserved for orbital bombardment rather than space combat.[6] A saving grace for the Behemoth-class exists in the form of the Yamato Cannon.[10] One such use of these weapons is that of carrying out a scorched earth policy.[13]

Fighters are an integral component to battlecruiser deployment and the Behemoth-class conforms to this, capable of deploying Wraiths and scoutships to engage the enemy.[1] It also akin to a terran carrier, capable of housing hundreds of soldiers and hardware[4] and maintaining dropships and shuttles for rapid deployment.[1]

The Behemoth-class battlecruiser's Yamato Gun's primary weakness is its huge energy requirements and while the installation of a colossus reactor allows for increased energy storage, it is not a long term solution. The Terran Dominion's Behemoths required access to physics labs to "power up their weapon systems". Should a fleet commander lose access to these accelerators, an entire Behemoth-class fleet could be crippled.[14]

Despite its shortcomings, the Behemoth-class has proven to be an enduring design, keeping up to date with periodic upgrades while its hammerhead design had provided the basis for future classes. Although more advanced classes of battlecruiser have been developed,[3] the Behemoth-class continues to remain in service.[8]

The Minotaur-class battlecruiser

[edit] Hercules- and Minotaur-class

The Hercules-class and Minotaur-class battlecruisers are two recently developed battlecruiser classes, based largely off their Behemoth-class predecessor. Additional laser batteries have been installed on these ships, allowing for a greater rate and amount of fire.[3]

The Yamato Cannon is still available as an option;[3] the Minotaur-class battlecruiser is equipped with it.[15]

Missile Barrage systems can also be equipped, giving these craft an armament capable of saturating the air with a lethal deluge of fire, ideal for destroying weak spacecraft.[16] Like the Yamato Cannon, these craft need to build up a significant amount of energy before activating this weapon system.[3][17]

The interior of Minotaur battlecruisers are known to feature personal quarters, a brig and mess hall.[15]

[edit] Starcruiser

Main article: Starcruiser

The Starcruiser is an advanced battlecruiser prototype sold by Crazy Bob's Bazaar.[18]

[edit] Appearances

[edit] StarCraft

For StarCraft gameplay information see: Battlecruiser (StarCraft).
For StarCraft in-game quotations see: StarCraft I Battlecruiser Quotations.

[edit] StarCraft: Ghost

Nova with a battlecruiser overhead.

This article or section contains information about StarCraft: Ghost.
The content may be significantly out of date. Please do not add speculation to this article, and remember to cite a published source for details.

In StarCraft: Ghost, the battlecruiser acted as a support unit for Nova. Through targeting, the player could call down a Yamato Cannon strike that dealt damage to all objects in an area.[19]

[edit] StarCraft II

For StarCraft gameplay information see: Battlecruiser (StarCraft II).

[edit] Known Battlecruisers

[edit] Leviathan-class

[edit] Behemoth-class

A stockier Behemoth-class battlecruiser

[edit] Norad-series

[edit] Minotaur-class

[edit] Other or unknown classes

[edit] Known Battlecruiser Commanders

[edit] Images

See: the image gallery.

[edit] References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Rosenberg, Aaron (June 1, 2006). StarCraft: Queen of Blades. Simon & Schuster (Pocket Star). ISBN 0-7434-7133-4.
  2. Underwood, Peter, Bill Roper, Chris Metzen and Jeffrey Vaughn. StarCraft (Manual). Irvine, Calif.: Blizzard Entertainment, 1998.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Battlecruiser-StarCraft II. Accessed on 2008-02-12
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 Neilson, Micky (December 18, 2000). StarCraft: Uprising. Simon & Schuster (Pocket Star). ISBN 0-7434-1898-0 (eBook).
  5. Grubb, Jeff (February 27, 2001). StarCraft: Liberty's Crusade. Simon & Schuster (Pocket Star). ISBN 0-671-04148-7.
  6. 6.0 6.1 Mesta, Gabriel (July 1, 2001). StarCraft: Shadow of the Xel'Naga. Simon & Schuster (Pocket Star). ISBN 0-671-04149-5.
  7. 2007-08-03. StarCraft II Single-Player Campaign BlizzCon Preview. Gamespot. Accessed 2008-02-12.
  8. 8.0 8.1 Golden, Christie (May 22, 2007). StarCraft: The Dark Templar Saga #1: Firstborn. Simon & Schuster (Pocket Star). ISBN 0-7434-7125-3.
  9. 9.0 9.1 Dustin Browder, Rob Pardo. 2008-10-11. Blizzcon 2008: StarCraft II Gameplay Discussion Panel (Part 3). Youtube.com Accessed 2008-10-11.
  10. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named SC1Man
  11. [1] [2]StarCraft II Official Website Accessed 2009-11-21.
  12. SC1 Battlecruiser. StarCraft Compendium. Accessed on 2008-02-12
  13. Corey Konieczka, Robert A. Kouba, Dan Clark (December 17, 2008). StarCraft: The Board Game: Brood War. Fantasy Flight Games. ASIN 1589945034
  14. StarCraft: Brood War. Vivendi Games. Mission: Assault on Korhal (in English). 1998.
  15. 15.0 15.1 Randolph, Grace (w), Nan Kim (art), Matt Dalton (i). "Newsworthy." In StarCraft: Frontline: Volume 2 (paperback binding), pp. 68-121. Tokyopop, January 1, 2009. ISBN 1427-80831-7.
  16. Karune. 2008-06-11. StarCraft II Q&A - Batch 40. Battle.net StarCraft II General Discussion Forum. Accessed 2008-06-11.
  17. Karune. 2008-06-11. StarCraft II Q&A - Batch 40. Battle.net StarCraft II General Discussion Forum. Accessed 2008-06-11.
  18. 2001-18-04, Bazaar. StarCraft Compendium. Accessed on 2008-04-04
  19. GameSpot Accessed: May 22, 2008.
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