• SpaceCowboy@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    Yeah they never really use transporters and replicators to their fullest capabilities. Knock out their shields, beam the enemy crew to the brig (if you’re good) or into space (if you’re not so good).

    Why bother with torpedoes? Just teleport bombs right on the enemy target.

    They had self-replicating mines on DS9, why not self-replicating computer controlled starships? Send infinite waves of automated starships at the enemy?

    Have your most elite Jem Hadar squad stand on the transporter pad and beam down infinite copies of them down to the planet. They’re cloning them anyway, doesn’t seem like the Dominion would have moral qualms about this.

      • foo@programming.dev
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        1 year ago

        For a while in star gate Atlantis humans were just teleporting nukes into enemy ships until they mcguffined a solution.

      • SpaceCowboy@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        Yeah that’s trending towards the grey goo scenario, isn’t it?

        But it’s also similar to how the Borg operate too. Also I think the OST had the Doomsday Machine episode that had something about a weapon killing the civilization that made it. I think there was a TNG episode like that too.

        So it’s kinda covered, just not exactly the replicator scenario. But that’s fine, it’s better to have characters as a threat rather than machines. Controversial opinion, but I even found the Borg to be boring after Best of Both Worlds.

      • DarkGamer@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Of course, there’s always the threat of them going rogue or being taken over by someone else.

        In lower decks they explored this a little with the Texas class automated ships. They weren’t self-replicating but they showcased the risks of such a technology.