Adudefromthesea
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Someplace light-hearted, I think. Terrifying for them, but lighthearted.
Equestria confirmed
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Someplace light-hearted, I think. Terrifying for them, but lighthearted.
Imagine being a human in the world of talking ponies. Or worse, being transformed into one. Tattletale would probably throw up from absurdity and weirdness.
Wait, you're saying something as basic as tactics more advanced than "run at the other guys and hit them until they die" is a foreign concept to Remnant? As the author, and not just Jaune being an ignorant teenage civilian?Exactly that.
And on Jaune's end, the last big war on Remnant they were using swords and bows still, and since then the cities never saw large scale urban warfare.
More that the kind of tactics used by a modern military are only really good when used by non-aura'd people vs other non-aura'd people. As a Huntsman Jaune would have no reason to learn about them because he has Aura and therefore has better things to do, and nobody would be dumb but somehow well trained enough to use standard FIBUA tactics against him.Wait, you're saying something as basic as tactics more advanced than "run at the other guys and hit them until they die" is a foreign concept to Remnant? As the author, and not just Jaune being an ignorant teenage civilian?
That…don't make sense to me. Unless you think Atlas doesn't believe in training its grunts to do anything but stand there and look pretty, something as basic as flanking or covering fire is just simple common sense. Basic stuff you could learn in a game of paintball, much less a military training exercise.
You gotta remember, Huntsmen are a minority in the military, not the majority. The rest are grunts with weak Aura that could block a couple hits, and so would need to fight smarter.
Jaune stared in frank disbelief. Did he just unlock his Semblance?
Uh, pardon, but what kind of utter crap was this? What, did Aura have a vector now? People went their entire lifetime never getting their Semblance, and this guy found his in less than a minute of having his Aura awakened! Hacks! Unfair! Sorcery!
"...Good for you," was what he said aloud.
"Without it up and running, I don't think he can even talk. His Semblance seems to be operating off of that network, letting him lock in specific equations and thought processes within his memory to retain a measure of independent functionality, which would free the network to perform other tasks. The Semblance power of Mental Resource Allocation, in essence. So, how close am I?" she asked the boy on Jaune's back.
That's glorious.Or they leave that world never knowing about pokemon evolution. Lisa would mess with the Magikarp for fun, always poking it and calling it stupid. Then one day it turns into a Gyarados on her to make her cry.
The main mission of the Atlas military in Remnant's modern age would be to fight Grimm, or to defend walls. Meanwhile, Remnant has four big cities, and they're not seeing the kinds of conflict that would give rise to the Earth tactics of today. For the most part, those guys are going to be trained to fight outside cities, or at the edge of the city with the goal of keeping things out. They're dealing with generally straightforward enemies, where the solution is putting in more firepower until it's dead.Wait, you're saying something as basic as tactics more advanced than "run at the other guys and hit them until they die" is a foreign concept to Remnant? As the author, and not just Jaune being an ignorant teenage civilian?
That…don't make sense to me. Unless you think Atlas doesn't believe in training its grunts to do anything but stand there and look pretty, something as basic as flanking or covering fire is just simple common sense. Basic stuff you could learn in a game of paintball, much less a military training exercise.
You gotta remember, Huntsmen are a minority in the military, not the majority. The rest are grunts with weak Aura that could block a couple hits, and so would need to fight smarter.
Accelerator's black wings in canon came about due to circumstances requiring that Jaune and Tattletale not be present on the scene to help, since they weren't characters in canon. So the moment they interfered, the scene was shot to hell. It's the consequences of their going into different worlds, and we'll be seeing a lot of that.
That's a fair interpretation. Kind of implies that they really figured out Dust and modern tech in the last 80 years tho.Basically, the soldiers aren't going to operate with the knowledge and mentality of those from Earth, because they aren't meeting the same challenges. Should war break out for them, it's going to look like the earlier days of World War 1, when dated tactics met new technologies.
Dunno.
Dunno.
Got the alert "Your thread Sneaking His Way into the Multiverse (RWBY Jaune, WC-lite mechanics) was moved to a different forum."
Except it looks like the thing's deleted. Someone might have had a problem with it, I guess.
Okay, turns out it was a problem with the title that got the story taken down on Spacebattles.
Ooh, nice guess. I have a particular way in mind for her to gain such a revelation.Question, will Lisa soon will learn and discover the truth about the Worm powers and thus her power, and the whole shebag with alien space whales?
I've started watching "if Pokédex entries were literal" and Pokémon would totally shake their world. https://youtu.be/mHJDelljD-M?si=2jFYyFd8sjtErh-mSomeplace light-hearted, I think. Terrifying for them, but lighthearted.
While I don't deny that Atlas and Remnant as a whole would have some doctrinal growing pains to look forward to in the event of the Great War Round 2, the example from the last chapter wasn't that. Flanking tactics are something we've had for all of history, arguably stretching back to when Grug distracted Ugg so Dug could unga bunga Ugg while he wasn't looking.The main mission of the Atlas military in Remnant's modern age would be to fight Grimm, or to defend walls. Meanwhile, Remnant has four big cities, and they're not seeing the kinds of conflict that would give rise to the Earth tactics of today. For the most part, those guys are going to be trained to fight outside cities, or at the edge of the city with the goal of keeping things out. They're dealing with generally straightforward enemies, where the solution is putting in more firepower until it's dead.
And for the typical skirmishes that the cities would experience, like between law enforcement and gangs, while the Huntsmen are few, I see them as a very useful go-to in those scenarios. When things get tough, why develop new tactics to get with the time, when the person in command could just say "They're too well-fortified in that house. Send in the Huntsman." Which neatly removes the need to form a SWAT team type of unit, along with all the innovations in urban engagements that comes with it.
But let's say Atlas has the mentality of preparing for the next world war with the other kingdoms. The only real precedent they have is the last war, where it was very much waged in a medieval style. Sure, the strategists can get together and hypothesize on how new technology will change warfare, but they're not getting the trial and error experience to refine those ideas down to a doctrine. Chances are pretty good they'd get something that we would look at and think is hilariously flawed in real life.
Basically, the soldiers aren't going to operate with the knowledge and mentality of those from Earth, because they aren't meeting the same challenges. Should war break out for them, it's going to look like the earlier days of World War 1, when dated tactics met new technologies.
Okay, I'm finally getting what's happening.While I don't deny that Atlas and Remnant as a whole would have some doctrinal growing pains to look forward to in the event of the Great War Round 2, the example from the last chapter wasn't that. Flanking tactics are something we've had for all of history, arguably stretching back to when Grug distracted Ugg so Dug could unga bunga Ugg while he wasn't looking.
I dunno, I just feel like it's common sense to have your grunts use their brains when fighting a superior opponent, as opposed to just telling them, 'welp, it's a Huntsmen, and we don't have any, so i guess we just die now'.
If I absolutely had to take a buncha soldiers into battle against an Aura'd up OPFOR, that's how I'd do it. Lots and lots of hard hitting, rapid fire guns from as many angles surrounding a killzone as possible. Divide their focus, spread out so they can't blender you all in one go, and mix in some explosive traps for good measure. I'd expect to take horrendous casualties, and most likely still lose, but at least it'd be something to wear them down. It's better than "CHAAARGE! WE GOTTA MAKE THE PROTAGONIST OF THE SCENE LOOK COOL WHEN HE MOWS US DOWN AS WE COME AT HIM ONE BY ONE!"
I know it's not your intention to do so, but I can't help but feel that explicitly stating Remnant hasn't even managed the absolute basics of squad based tactics infantilizes them a bit.
I see. That actually helps a lot. This was ultimately just nitpicking on my end, so I appreciate the detailed responses.Okay, I'm finally getting what's happening.
"Hound Dog used tactics different to what he knew. Less Huntsman and more militia, but even then, there was something weird about it. They didn't mount a charge, they repositioned. Two squads were moving up, with both of them doing a maneuver where a pair would advance for a short stretch before the next pair went, circling wide to catch him on either side."
"And on Jaune's end, the last big war on Remnant they were using swords and bows still, and since then the cities never saw large scale urban warfare."
You're reading it like it's portrayed Jaune doesn't know what flanking is, while I intend it as pointing how slow and odd he finds their movements as they try to flank. They're not running like this is a battle as he knows it, they're taking turns with each other like it's not going to get them wiped out.
He knows of existing strategies in his world, comparing what he's seeing to how a settlement's militia behaves. He knows what tactics people would do in a battle according to his history. Only, they don't move in a slow, methodical fashion like these guys, because this type of leapfrogging, covering fire tactics doesn't work on Grimm (that just ignores it) which has been pretty much the Enemy that the military and Huntsmen is designed to fight, and in an older battlefield if you're going to flank, you do it quick, in numbers, and with shields up before the other front get overwhelmed. A flanking maneuver in a medieval battle is still a charge, just not charging in a straight line.
With the advent of firearms, squads can afford to become smaller. Small to the point that a dozen or so people can reliably take an objective. Then the battlefield changed from predominantly in the wilderness to predominantly inside cities and that brought more adjustments. Things become more careful, more slow. People spread out, and move in ones and twos, covering for each other instead of forming a shield wall and marching together.
Problem is, Remnant would not have cause to experience the end result of that yet, and that end result would look different from Earth.
Reasons being: It doesn't work on Grimm, again. Then there's no strings of wars and conflicts inside the four cities where people had to figure out what the best tactics are in practice; even the White Fang happens in the last decade.
Bandits? They live outside the walls, dealt with using methods that can be employed in forests and mountains. Indiscriminate and aggressive.
Huntsmen? They don't fight like regular people, fire one bullet and they're running at us, so most cases where we don't want everybody dead, we would need everyone in position and unloading at once in a very short engagement. It's either we're ready for them, or we're scrambling at an extremely fast pace to put things in motion.
Other soldiers? At this point, they can really only simulate because actual engagements aren't happening on a consistent basis considering the state of the world. And even then, for it to end up like the tactics of Academy City, it requires leaps in logic that we are taking for granted, but is not as obvious as we think because we have hindsight and the history of Earth telling us these things.
It requires a person from Remnant to think "We most often fight outside cities, and our enemies are most often outside cities, but how about we train our people to fight their battles inside cities?", "Let's make a rule right off that in cases of a war inside a city, we follow the humanitarian convention of not bombarding an area due to possible third parties unrelated to the conflict, even though the horrors of such a World War scenario has no precedent yet since that hypothetical war hasn't happen, and this means we should train our people to be very surgical and to minimize collateral damage", "We have Huntsmen, but let's not use them", "Why don't we assume that our enemies don't have Huntsmen, either?"
That battlefield is unrecognizable, the result of a person who had imagined a battle occurring on a different world, playing by different rules. It has little cause to become common practice, as opposed to a curious thought exercise about a niche scenario and perhaps a limited experiment if the person is persuasive enough to get it approved by military higher-ups.
Yeah, this is a big thing. Modern military tactics heavily emphasize consistency of fire, where any amount of effective (close enough to the enemy) fire can keep them pinned, so you prioritise always having at least someone firing.Huntsmen? They don't fight like regular people, fire one bullet and they're running at us, so most cases where we don't want everybody dead, we would need everyone in position and unloading at once in a very short engagement. It's either we're ready for them, or we're scrambling at an extremely fast pace to put things in motion.