@darrelplant @simonbp @swope @DmMacniel
The stories almost write themselves, don’t they?
Star map and Atomic Rocket geek. The hard-science SF writer’s tech support. The website is at
http://www.projectrho.com/public_html/rocket/
Refugee from the decline and fall of Google Plus.
In my long and misspent youth I did the artwork for various TTWG such as Ogre, WarpWar, GEV and such.
@darrelplant @simonbp @swope @DmMacniel
The stories almost write themselves, don’t they?
I seem to recall Larry Niven grumbling about his invention, the stasis field. Originally made to solve a minor scientific problem in one story. Turned out to be far too useful. Subsequent stories had to have their problems vetted to ensure they were not trivially solved by the stasis field
I agree with you, that if a science fiction author cannot keep things strictly scientific, the next best thing is to make it internally self-consistent. Yes, this is a challenge. Larry Niven found that out.
@swope @DmMacniel
Alas, I am not on Lemmy, so I never saw the original post.
In this case, I again note that the important thing is to focus on Effects, not Causes.
http://www.projectrho.com/public_html/rocket/fasterlight.php#id–Establishing_Limits
The desired Effect is “intercept / interdict the heroes”.
The proposed Cause of “deploy gravimetric wells” seems to have too many unintended consequences. For starters it can destroy planets.
Perhaps some technobabble that slows down the protagonist’s ship engine?
@darrelplant @DmMacniel @simonbp @swope
Truth is stranger than fiction, because fiction has to make sense