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Originally posted by Fleet Admiral Darkk:
Am I going to need to repeat myself until the end of time?
Missiles. Are. Bull**.
They're inefficient and just too slow. Lasers could fire across intersteller ranges (although they'd have trouble hitting non-planet targets at that distance). Missiles are MONUMENTALLY INEFFICIENT because they expend too much energy on propellant. You can shoot a missile down. While you CAN reflect a laser, it's vastly impractical to do so, given that the smallest cracks in your mirror could render it useless.
The only good reasons to use lasers over missiles would be for homing purposes - but considering the acceleration of any theoretical non-faster-than-light engine vs the speed of light, at any reasonable distance, dodging a laser would be impossible.
Oh, and the one-shot-one-kill thing might not be true. Depending on the relative power of the laser and size of the target (as well as how well compartementalized the target is) it might take a little bit of exposure for a fighter's laser to melt enough of it.
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Even if we did have major advances in the energy department, the ratio of damage to energy required for a LASER makes them impratical. Lasers, also, would be limited to light speed, whereas it could be possible to mount a tachyon/warp drive on the missile. Lasers could come in use to melt incomeing missiles that are traveling STL. That would be one of their uses, also Lasers could be used for welding stuff over a long distance, but that doesn't seem to be an advantage unless the enemy ship has their fusion reactor lines open to space.
Hmm, thats anouther idea, if humanity ever discovers teleportation, is warping an explosive charge right into the enemy ships interior. 100% kill rate as there is no way to protect the inside of a ship. That would totaly change the way wars would be fought.
Considering how modern warfare has evolved down through the ages, would you settle for anything that fell short of killing your enemy in the first shot?
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"...yet gradually we recovered, venturing cautiously back into the void of space afraid of what we might find there."