Kayoz
Posts: 1516
Joined: 12/20/2010 From: Timbuktu Status: offline
|
quote:
ORIGINAL: jpwrunyan quote:
ORIGINAL: Kayoz quote:
ORIGINAL: jpwrunyan Seriously wormholes would ruin everything. Say an enemy fleet finds a wormhole and then travels back in time and attacks your colonies before you even had a chance to pick your race? How would this alter the timeline? Would you suddenly find yourself limited now to a single slave colony or maybe even now suddenly playing with a new race since your original one had been eliminated from history and wasn't there for you to pick in the first place? Totally ruins the game in my opinion. I think everyone is referring to a wormhole that allows instantaneous traversal of space, not of time, nor of leaping between universes. You do not traverse one without traversing the other. Time is relative and so therefore "instantaneous" is also completely relative. Instantaneous to what point of reference? I dont know what your point is unless its to say that "everyone" doesnt know what a wormhole is. In which case I agree. How many angels are dancing on the head of that pin? A wormhole is a theoretical concept, of which we have no record of existing. You, in taking the position on what it can and cannot do, are arguing how many angels can or cannot dance on that pin-head. Your position makes no sense. I'm also not sure what your confusion is with "instantaneous travel". The generally postulated wormhole "bends" space, so that you can travel from X to Y without having to pass through the intervening space (it's been bent - perhaps even more than a London Met copper) - a cosmic shortcut, so to speak. By "instantaneous", I mean that one passing through a wormhole can proceed from X to Y in one hop, while one traveling from X to Y using conventional means will have to spend whatever duration is necessary to traverse that distance. Not "instantaneous" by strict definition, but you're being pedantic. As for your argument about time travel, I really don't see what your argument is. It's a game. DW has faster than light travel (impossible given our understanding of physics, especially where a significant physical body is concerned, such as a ship). It has alien races that are little more than cosmetic twists on terrestrial animals/insects - an absurdity considering independent evolutions. If you want "hard science", then stay away from games. It's a game - the designers put into it what is in conventional fiction and what works for their game mechanics. Stay away from sci-fi games - you won't find ANY sci-fi game that doesn't involve some element of "creative license" with physics. Anyhow, I'll leave you to count the angels on your pin-head.
< Message edited by Kayoz -- 3/18/2012 3:48:57 AM >
|