So, in the same vein as my Type-S scout design, I tackled another of the standard ships that bugs the heck out of me - the Yacht.
Yachts - ah - the playthings of Nobles and the mega-rich. Sleek and elegant, designed to be something to that inspires lust in the onlooker (sometimes, literally). Except...the classic Traveller yacht illustration looks like a refinery that ran into the back of a giant mosquito :?
So.. I thought I'd sex it up a bit. The inspiration here is unashamedly the ocean going vessel from which this ship class takes is name. In fact, these ships probably spend almost as much time bobbing up and down on the gentle waves in some ultra-exclusive, sun drenched marina as they do gliding between the stars .

Get the original file here
I've shown a couple of shots along side the Type-S I did for size comparison. The Yacht has a dorsal and ventral hardpoint (un-used in this illustrations). The deck features a landing pad for the launch, which can then be drawn inside it's bay and the door closed (to preserve those stylish lines of course).
The M-drive is neatly tucked away on the ventral surface, again preserving the stylish lines - when floating on water it sits invisible under the waterline.
Perhaps I pushed to analogy to modern day yachts a little too far - but, heck - I WANT one of these !
Yachts - ah - the playthings of Nobles and the mega-rich. Sleek and elegant, designed to be something to that inspires lust in the onlooker (sometimes, literally). Except...the classic Traveller yacht illustration looks like a refinery that ran into the back of a giant mosquito :?
So.. I thought I'd sex it up a bit. The inspiration here is unashamedly the ocean going vessel from which this ship class takes is name. In fact, these ships probably spend almost as much time bobbing up and down on the gentle waves in some ultra-exclusive, sun drenched marina as they do gliding between the stars .






Get the original file here
I've shown a couple of shots along side the Type-S I did for size comparison. The Yacht has a dorsal and ventral hardpoint (un-used in this illustrations). The deck features a landing pad for the launch, which can then be drawn inside it's bay and the door closed (to preserve those stylish lines of course).
The M-drive is neatly tucked away on the ventral surface, again preserving the stylish lines - when floating on water it sits invisible under the waterline.
Perhaps I pushed to analogy to modern day yachts a little too far - but, heck - I WANT one of these !
