To be fair, even in the initial playtest version, it's no job at all to keep track of. It's just one more number. You add to it when the crit table says so, and (hopefully :shock: ) reduce it in the End Phase (or else reduce Damage and/or Crew). Really easy. The problem is not bookkeeping, it's whether you want yet another way to lose a ship...Right Hand of God said:ncie idea but to much paper work and too much faff. in all of the games I have played where fire on board ships is used it becomes a nightmare tracking it
Cerebral Cortex of the Da said:I voted no, only for the reason that putting vacuum to the place on fire would rob the fire of one of the 3 elements it needs to burn, Oxygen. Submaries will flood a space, even with crew in it, if it means saving the sub over the lives of the crew. So a major file that would need to be controlled could easily be extinquished by removing the air from the space.
I would also think that most ships would run in vacum during combat anyway, to keep the exposive decompressions down.
CCotD'
Yes, I think a lot of people are forgetting hat there would be one HELL of a lot of oxygen on any spacecraft, whether for use by the crew or the engines (assuming fuel-burning engines). If the fire is in a LOX tank, you'll need a lot of vacuum to put it out...Reaverman said:Actually all you would need to do, is seal off the bulkheads. That would starve the fire, bear in mind that if the fuel has oxygen in it, then it still will not go out.
CBD! already affects fires by preventing the damage that causes them. All Hands on Deck! will also be useful if fires go in.lastbesthope said:I've voted no, but if it does ge put in, then I thoink that the close Blast doors SA should have some effect in nullifying the fires.
You mean, you put them completely in theme, and necessary for accurate depiction of the subject material?Nomad said:Vacuum and inert-gas fire suppression on a warship should be able to put any fire out rather rapidly. While the series' SFX guys really liked the image of burning spaceships, I'd tend to put that in the same place as the micro Olympus in ITB, and crews going into battle in shirtsleeves rather than pressure suits.
You mean, you put them completely in theme, and necessary for accurate depiction of the subject material?
Actually any O2 tank for making sure the crew is able to breathe