Infojunky said:
aspqrz said:
steelbrok said:
This isnt an original observation but given that Traveller has extensive free trade then TL is really a measure of a soceities wealth.
The TL is better thought of as the level of technology generally affordable by a planet's population and hence *easily* available to visiting PCs
Indeed, you are entirely correct. But I think that this should be
explicitly stated.
For any planet with a Starport of any sort other than X the planetary TL is substantially and essentially meaningless as long as they are within "reasonable shipping time" from a High Tech world.
AT LAST!.... Some people who get innately what TL actually represents, the local infrastructure not what is available locally. Guys this has been the case all along, in later editions of the LLBs and in Journal there was the relative credit value table which gave the relative cost of an item locally as compared to it's TL.
Another "problem" is the ridiculous pricing of many items. Things get more expensive at higher tech levels ... when all the experience we have to go by in the real world is the
exact opposite.
Think Cars. Pre-Henry Ford they cost several years wages for a skilled tradesmen. By the time the Model T had finished its production run (in the 1920's) they were selling for, IIRC, 10-20% of a years wage.
Computer prices have gone much the same way, but, of course, the relative computing *power* of computers has gone down far faster. When I bought my first Apple IIe in 1980 or thereabouts, the whole system (the Computer with 48k of memory, and including Green Screen monitor and Epson dot matrix printer, and external 5 1/4" single sided floppy drive) cost me A$2000 approx.
In an advertising flyer dropped in the letterbox yesterday I could buy a Toshiba laptop with 4 gig of memory, 512 meg dedicated graphics memory, a 500 gig hard drive, and a DVD burner ... for $500 more.
In those c. 30 years, of course, starting salary for teachers has gone from c. A$10000 to c. A$50000.
So, from 20% of starting salary to 5% for a computer far more capable? Can you replicate this in Traveller? Not as it stands, yet the Imperium is explicitly a state whose existence is based on the existence and encouragement of high volume interstellar trade!
Then there's the patently ridiculously ... silly ... statement in the equipment chapter ...
"A simple computer system might sell for a few hundred credits on most worlds, but on a backward TL6 world where the computer has just been developed, then purchasing it might require the equivalent of millions of credits"
No matter how you cut it, that's a ludicrous statement. The locals will order it through a mail order catalog for (retail price on world of production) + (shipping/handling costs) + (local taxes) .... in an Imperium that is trade based and trade encouraging.
Sure, the cost relative to local per capita GDP will be *much* higher than it would be on the world of manufacture ... but the characters are not likely to be *from* the world where it's being sold, and will be purchasing it from a salary background (or expected salary background) of the world of production.
That is, putting it another way, the local per capita GDP on the TL6 world may be (say) 500 Cr per annum, and the per capita GDP the characters are used to may be (say) 10000 Cr per annum. The computer (TL15, 5000 Cr) is ten years average earnings for the TL6 worlder but only 6 months earnings for the characters (and, of course,
per capita GDP is
averaged so even on the TL6 world there will be many people who will not balk at a 5000 Cr cost, even adding in shipping and taxes).
However, in an Interstellar trading society where planetary tech levels are, essentially, meaningless,
because of trade
and which has existed for around 1100 years, most of those low tech worlds will simply be worlds that have a non-manufacturing economy and which trade services or raw materials (like, say, Australia, where I live) and use the money to buy the manufactured high tech goods from overseas. Sure, the cost of those imported goods is somewhat higher than where it is manufactured, but we don't necessarily have a per capita GDP in only triple digits, either :lol:
There are serious problems of lack of vision ... partly because of the assumptions that seem to have been integrated with the original design, but at least as much because of assumptions many GMs/Players have put
on the original design but which may not actually have been intended.
It really needs to be addressed. Perhaps in Book #X "Merchant Prince?"
One hopes so ... against hope, based on previous experience, sadly.
Phil