Bandit LOAF
Long Live the Confederation!
Note that medicine has improved by the 27th century, too - Kevin Tolwyn is badly irradiated (400 rem) in Fleet Action but is treated with 'anti radiation' medicine.
Fallout isn't created by the detonation of a nuclear device. Fallout is created when the radiation from the explosion attaches itself to the particles in the ground and air around it when the bomb goes off.
All though Space is not a "True" vacuum in the sense that there are particles out there, the amount of items in the vacuum would not be high enough to create fallout great enough to kill someone.
I think what you meant to say was that you would get an oversized dose of radiation, not affected by the fallout.
Some of the particles would probably settle on your ship
Naturally, the gravity in space would cause them to do this.
Fly-through decks are something of a misconception - a pilot can theoretically 'fly' into the deck of any ship. It's a gameplay mechanic more than it is something that a pilot in the Wing Commander universe might point out existing. The Hakaga did *not* have single decks with two openings like the Yorktown and Concordia-classes, though - in fact, it had a number of separate individual decks that were specially sealed to avoid damaging one another in an attack.
I can't disagree about Bear, but it's definately how he was set up - Tolwyn *loves* the guy the minute he shows up in Special Operations 1.
I believe LOAF is stating that the novelty of such an idea simply does not exist in the 27th century, as all carriers have launch and recovery decks that pilots could fly into. Just with the Yorktown and Concordia classes, these were integrated into one long deck that spanned the entire length of the ship.
The novelty was for the player who could finally navigate over, under, around and even THROUGH the ship in full 3d.
Exactly -- 'ohmygosh, X ship has a FLY THROUGH DECK' is something *we* react to... but you won't find it mentioned in the continuity any more than you would Casey marveling at how much the 3Dfx card helps him see nebulas. It's *not* a particular new type of ship design that reacts to or avoids some particular kind of Kilrathi tactic.
I think some people are probably reacting to it the same way people reacted to the first angled flight decks on modern day air craft carriers, it was a novel new design that changed the way flight operations were conducted.
They're a non-linear design element - they appear on carriers from the ancient Yorktown-class to the new Vesuvius-class, with separate and shared decks appearing between (Bengal, Waterloo, Lexington) and after (Midway) these two.