I can explain this as a member, we don't kill civilians if they don't get in our way, and those who support and supply Crown are not Civilians for us
~Devil
You can ignore reality but you can not ignore consequences of ignoring reality
Gallia could use more full fledged pirates operating in their zone. GRN has enough opponents on the political and military field already.
If the Maquis role allows for it, please do not disregard the opportunity to make strikes on the economy of all that pass in Gallia, to give it some sense of danger.
Raiding Bretonians, raiding Kusarians, raiding Gallic corporations, maintaining some relations with other non-lawful Gallic forces too.
Not sure if the Maquis have some economic perk (unique commodity) or technological perk (unique ships or so), so I can't make suggestions on what to act regarding smuggling and such.
(09-05-2014, 01:50 PM)WPeregrine Wrote: Not sure if the Maquis have some economic perk (unique commodity) or technological perk (unique ships or so), so I can't make suggestions on what to act regarding smuggling and such.
The Maquis have never really had any sort of economic base. They are, as the comparison has been made, the Xenos or Gaians of Gallia, supplied and funded by sympathizers and higher ups (the corsairs.) That said, the Maquis could possibly find a way to get on friendly terms with Corse and attack outcasts in return for supplies and access to trade routes, in addition to making high risk routes from Champagne to Rousillon
(09-05-2014, 01:50 PM)WPeregrine Wrote: Gallia could use more full fledged pirates operating in their zone. GRN has enough opponents on the political and military field already.
If the Maquis role allows for it, please do not disregard the opportunity to make strikes on the economy of all that pass in Gallia, to give it some sense of danger.
Raiding Bretonians, raiding Kusarians, raiding Gallic corporations, maintaining some relations with other non-lawful Gallic forces too.
Not sure if the Maquis have some economic perk (unique commodity) or technological perk (unique ships or so), so I can't make suggestions on what to act regarding smuggling and such.
Thanks for the valuable inputs. We will implement it.
(09-05-2014, 01:59 PM)KaiserDietz Wrote: The Maquis have never really had any sort of economic base. They are, as the comparison has been made, the Xenos or Gaians of Gallia, supplied and funded by sympathizers and higher ups (the corsairs.) That said, the Maquis could possibly find a way to get on friendly terms with Corse and attack outcasts in return for supplies and access to trade routes, in addition to making high risk routes from Champagne to Rousillon
Well Yes, Maquis follows the "Hit and Run". So we don't have a separate economic base or anything, I'm sure we will change some storyline of Gallia
(09-05-2014, 01:50 PM)WPeregrine Wrote: Not sure if the Maquis have some economic perk (unique commodity) or technological perk (unique ships or so), so I can't make suggestions on what to act regarding smuggling and such.
The Maquis have never really had any sort of economic base. They are, as the comparison has been made, the Xenos or Gaians of Gallia, supplied and funded by sympathizers and higher ups (the corsairs.) That said, the Maquis could possibly find a way to get on friendly terms with Corse and attack outcasts in return for supplies and access to trade routes, in addition to making high risk routes from Champagne to Rousillon
The Maquis don't have their own ships (they use Council ones), but their guns are actually pretty nice. As for a commodity, Nuclear Devices are a favorite of theirs.
Kaizer, the Maquis aren't Xenos. They don't have a hatred for foreigners, just anyone who likes the Gallic Crown, and especially the Gallic Crown itself. Gaians ... not really that, either. They're also already on "friendly terms", or actually rather allied, with the Corse, so there's no need to find a way to get there. By lore, the Corse covertly supply them with stuff like Oil and basic repair commodities and they probably coordinate strikes on Solar Engineering/GJ as well.
"You see what your knowledge tells you you're seeing. ... how, what you think the universe is, and how you react to that in everything you do, depends on what you know. And when that knowledge changes, for you, the universe changes. And that is as true for the whole of society as that is for the individual. We all are what we know, today. What we knew yesterday, was different; and so were we."
- James Burke, The Day the Universe Changed (1985)