Kratos & Leela
Alright Kratos, I've got a new kind of battle plan that might shake your idea of discipline.
If this plan shakes discipline, then it must be worthy, present it and we will see if it holds up.
First, we cut the route through the asteroid field instead of waiting for a clear window. Second, we’ll use the ship’s thrusters to create a dust cloud, masking our position from any scanners. Third, I’ll fly the lead ship at full speed, taking the heat of any gunfire off the rest of the crew. Finally, if the enemy tries a boarding action, we’ll open the air vents and fire a volley of torpedoes that’ll spin them out of their own ship. That’s the plan – no fluff, no second‑guessing, just straight action.
Your plan is bold, but it is reckless. Speed through an asteroid field is a death sentence if you are not careful. Masking your position with dust is clever, but the enemy will find a way to counter it. Flying at full speed will burn out the ship’s engines and put the crew in danger. And using the vents as a trap? That is a gamble that could backfire. Discipline means knowing when to act and when to wait. You need to weigh the risks and make sure your crew can survive the fight, not just win it. Take a moment, review the data, and adjust. If you do not honor the safety of your crew, the plan fails before it even starts.
I hear you, but we don’t have time to sit around and wait for the perfect window. Here’s the tweak: we’ll cut the field but not at full speed, we’ll use the side shields to deflect minor debris, and I’ll keep a manual override ready if the engines start overheating. We’ll still use the dust cloud, but only as a secondary masking, not the primary. The vent trap will stay – it’s a last‑ditch move, not the first. We’ll survive, and we’ll win.