Tenacious-Techhunter
Mongoose
That’s just the thing, though; most deckplan designs are “slapped together” at best; they don’t prioritize functionality at all. They’re either designed after a certain aesthetic appeal, or they were designed around some specific encounter... dramatic firefight, locked room murder mystery, what have you.
By failing to put function over form, they become laughable with regard to their supposed fulfillment of their stated purpose.
When I plan out a ship design, I start out with a simple network map of cabins/compartments/rooms/modules/whatever, prioritizing who should and shouldn’t go where, and minimizing how long it takes people to go to those places they need to go. From there, I consider the mechanical needs of the ship; dividing the maneuver drives and sensors to the extremities of the ship, placing turrets for full coverage with no blind-spots, and so on; purpose-built design requirements are also at this step. Only then should you consider the broader shape of the ship, and whether you can fit the full volume of the required decks into an artfully graceful hull.
By failing to put function over form, they become laughable with regard to their supposed fulfillment of their stated purpose.
When I plan out a ship design, I start out with a simple network map of cabins/compartments/rooms/modules/whatever, prioritizing who should and shouldn’t go where, and minimizing how long it takes people to go to those places they need to go. From there, I consider the mechanical needs of the ship; dividing the maneuver drives and sensors to the extremities of the ship, placing turrets for full coverage with no blind-spots, and so on; purpose-built design requirements are also at this step. Only then should you consider the broader shape of the ship, and whether you can fit the full volume of the required decks into an artfully graceful hull.