A lot depends on perception and scale; in the Last Samurai, Tom Cruise and his sidekick would be hired as military consultants, but train and lead local levies. The Chinese under Chiang Kaishek hired Germans (with official permission) to train some rather effective units that gave the Japanese no end of problems, withdrawn only after some inhouse Nazi lobbying in favour of the Japanese.
Well, that'll (presumably) come under the ticket system - the mercenary ticket generator is one area that really does need tweaking. Much as I liked the original for generating missions and opposition, the actual pay for the mission bore no resemblance to the size of your unit, amongst other issues.
Cadre missions are a bread-and-butter job in a 3I setting because shipping in a few dozen drillmasters is affordable but shipping in a genuine military force from off-world (beyond a platoon-sized force to do security for 'that one guy') is prohibitively expensive for anyone short of the sort of major government organisations who you would expect to have a proper military/security force already.
By comparison, a few dozen dtons of low-tech-but-better-than-anything-indigenous combat armour and comms gear, and a squad of ex imperial army to train you to use them, fits on a decent subsidized trader, and (given time) lets you field a force that can meaningfully affect company and regimental-scale engagements.
As noted, mercenary is a term with different meanings to different people.
The original, original just meant anyone paid to fight (i.e. armed peasants) - as opposed to those with feudal obligations to fight (i.e. knights, Citizen Hoplites, etc), and (as now) carried some relatively disdainful context, even though by that definition 'professional soldiers' such as the roman legions, the new model army, and modern militaries are all 'mercenaries'.
To an extent, you may get that re-appear again since the Imperium is big on feudal ranks - I'm not sure what if any military obligations come with imperial nobility; they have the right to raise huscarl forces but I'm not sure what claim the imperium has on requiring to deploy them (I assume at least some).
Other races/factions may be even bigger on this; certainly the Aslan clans have the whole 'warrior caste' mentality - given that males have trouble with even the concept of money, but understand clan honour right down to the DNA.
msprange said:
locarno24 said:
Note that you might want to add 'shuttle pilot' with flyer 0 or flyer 1, admin 1 as a logistics pilot. 3I merc forces are probably more likely to be hauling their bullets and beans in a pinnace than an a 6X6.
Depends how successful they are
Agreed. Let me instead, then, suggest that the option to hire one, at least temporarily, probably needs to be in the book even for less successful units because said 6x6 will have trouble driving to and from a ship in orbit, and the crew of the
S.S. Mortgage Deficit will probably be less than enthusiastic about landing their beaten-up wreck of a tramp trader in a war-zone.
Other comments:
The recruiter may make a number of Admin checks equal to the level of their Admin skill to recruit mercenaries during these 1-6 weeks.
Is this
'a number of additional checks' or is it
'to a minimum of 1'? - you've a fair chance of an Admin/0 person being tasked to do this - presumably he or she gets to make at least one check per month(ish) spent recruiting?
Law level and government code modifiers:
These are pretty clearly set up to represent attracting a 'free citizen with combat skill and a taste for adventure' - the more high law level, the harder it is to find combatants, and the more 'patriotic' the government type the less prepared people are to join you.
One comment; is it worth something different re getting 'recruits' through existing channels? - that is, a feudal balkanised world, or a charismatic dictator, might be prepared to provide a merc unit with warm bodies. This is more likely to be a diplomacy check than an admin one, but is also more likely to produce manpower with more basic training.
Should the NCOs and Officers pay increase table not match the Alternative Pay method table - for example, the Lance Sergeant appears in the latter but not the former.