QUOTE (DarthKev @ Aug 23 2010, 10:47 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
Whoa, whoa, whoa! By 'floating cities' I didn't mean cities in the sky, I meant cities floating on the water. ...
Another possible source of power is wind power. Since Earth is now a giant ocean and more or less 'flat', there's nothing obstructing wind currents.
In a steam-punky world, floating (sky) cities could easily be added. So could floating sea cities - to address
QUOTE (Spartan Jai @ Aug 23 2010, 12:00 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
...Seeing as the earth is UNDERWATER, I'm still in favor of Sky Cities. Or else waves would sink the city, as the waves would be insanely large. ...
I'm pretty sure that waves are in fact primarily caused by interaction with landmasses and the shifting gravity of the moon. So if there's not much (any?) land, the waves might not actually be that bad. Anyway, even if the waves were terrible, you can build your city suspended from the surface 40-50 feet and be completely isolated from waves (water under the surface doesn't move much). Blimps, jet engines, and helicopter-blades can (fictionally) create a sky-city.
So could anti-gravity devices:
QUOTE (Coraxus @ Aug 23 2010, 10:52 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
Question, for aircrafts that are not designed to "float" in air like dirigibles ... I imagine it would look weird if you for example, disable a B-17 bomber and it just ends up floating in midair without power.
If you replaced the propellers with nuclear-powered AG devices, your aircraft could float in the air disabled. So could your sky-cities. Props could be used for standard travel, since they're easier to produced than jets, which would be the fastest but most expensive tech (The AG devices became standard and well-understood because they use few parts. Nuclear became well used because of necessity. Jets weren't necessary, and there are few who understand them).
QUOTE (Spartan Jai @ Aug 23 2010, 10:25 AM)
... Meaker, the world is under water. You are in the sky, so seeing aircraft carriers through miles upon miles (maybe not miles) of clouds would be difficult. As for the rigs, not needed anymore. See comment on solar devices. That bomber though, looks awesome. Since that would be an old WWII plane as you stated, maybe you should start out with that, seeing as it's old and decrepit...
It'd be easy to make aircraft carriers or other "sea" based Spobs visible, if you're going for accuracy, by making them smaller. It's also easy to say that the ceiling is not that high - commercial airliners fly at 30,000 feet and you can see a surprising amount of detail on the ground. Most small aircraft fly lower than that - I would imagine that in a post-apocalyptic water world people would be far spread and few, so small Cessna's, Auto-gyros, Ultralights, and the like would be the main types of flight - and not too many of those can get nearly as high as any commercial plane. I would actually be very adverse to using a B-17 as your first plane - in real life there are (sadly) only a few dozen left (Flying or otherwise - out of the 15,000 or so built to win WWII). It's also a relatively massive plane, with a crew of 13-15 and max load out of 65,000 lbs. Starting the player out in a single seater biplane, a Cessna, Autogyro (Google it), or an Ultralight would be much more reasonable.
And finally, it might be useful to kick back into the more steam-punky-post-apocalyptic mood and set the whole thing up as an alternative history:
CODE
1949: The year the Soviets first tested their own nuclear device,
"Joe-1," in Khazakstan.
1953: The year the third, and final, world war began.
It started with the Soviets launching nuclear devices against the United States,
in an effort to protect themselves from the newly-developed anti-gravity weapons
the US Was in the process of constructing. This prompted immediate international
action, and while the US tried to defend itself- launching the anti-ICBM "minutemen"
missiles, not nearly enough of the warheads were stopped, and they were forced to
play their hand by using the newly developed energy weapons to ...
... In a last-ditch effort, they launched the only Anti-Gravity Bomb that had been
constructed, but not yet tested (as had the AG generators which had been powering
most motor vehicles and aircraft for nearly 6 years). The weapon, upon detonation
over Stalingrad, did something that no one expected - it cracked the crust of the
planet and crumbled the continents. ...
Now, 25 years later, society has become harsh. While many have found ways to
make their living in the sky cities and the old converted warships and platforms,
you are not satisfied to lie idle. You wish to fly the clouds, risk life and death at
the sword or sidearm of the many pirates that ply the jet stream, all for the
sake of adventure...
There, now you can do anything you want. Anyway, the idea is that it's supposed to be somewhat cheezy, somewhat ridiculous, and somehow end up awesome. You're not going to make a "realistic" TC using aircraft as a model - but then you wouldn't make a truely realistic TC in space either (Only one ship in space? And one station? And you use all your money just to refuel? And you have no weapons? And all the missions involve fixing the hubble telescope? Yeah, no thanks). While I realize the idea is to get a reasonable amount of realism, and I'm a fan of it in many instances, the bigger idea is to make the game fun without making ridiculous-sounding unexplained statements. For example, I shouldn't just leave the disabled aircraft floating around, but if I say "they've all got helium in them and it lets them float," most people will be happy with that. If I go farther, and say "they have anti-gravity," it makes more people happy but now they're upset that they have anti-gravity. If I explain "they invented AG on accident, when trying to develop a way to control sheep with radio waves to free up shepherds for the cat-herding that needed to take place because of all the stray cats left masterless after the war; an incident involving the combination of those same radio waves, twelve AA batteries, a fan, and a Frank Sinatra album took place which ripped the building off it's foundations and shook it up and down based on what note Sinatra hit," people think it's funny and stop worrying about it and just play.
Last thought: The airplane I showed you was taken straight from the Google warehouse. I didn't do anything to it. I found 2,950 results for "airplane," ~300 for "WWII airplanes," and ~100 for "WWI airplanes." In You'd have no problem populating a TC to the limit of the engine with all new, completely unique craft using the warehouse.