The Thousand Wandering Tribes (also known as the "Wanderers" or
"Thousand Tribes") were
originally designed as my replacement for the Jindarians (R16.0) in module F1,
which were widely viewed as rather broken (in that there were no
viable tactics other than sit-&-spin). In analysing the problem, I
changed most of the technology and much of the ship design. The
resulting changes were far too extensive for ADB to publish as the
replacement for F1, as they'd need to bin a large stock of counters,
SSD books and so forth. So the Wanderers languished in private
playtest-land for
a couple of years, and here they are, renamed.
Summary
The basic concept is the same as that of the Jindarians, with some tweaks.
The Thousand Tribes use large asteroid ships (except they're bigger, DN-size and up),
and smaller metal ships. Complementing these is a host of "cutters" and "gigs",
essentially lightly-armed PFs and interceptors without warp packs.
Instead of the old direct-fire railgun (E18.0), the Wanderers use a seeking
weapon, the Neutronium Accelerator). This comes in
three sizes and can be thought
of as a plasma torpedo with a bad turn mode. This is backed up by
the Angular Momentum Corrector,
a direct fire weapon which can prevent a
target ship from turning. They otherwise use normal phasers, mostly P2s.
Instead of Jindarian eggshell armour, Wanderers
use normal shields. There is no Anti-Transporter Field.
Wanderer asteroid ships have some special rules, including:
They take half internal damage -
the rest goes on pulverising irrelevant rock. This makes up for some
poor shields.
They cannot HET, Warp TAC or use warp to move in reverse.
This forces them to maneuver.
They get lots of repair capability. They're huge and need it.
Additional Background
For most purposes, Wanderers use Jindarian background and
concepts. For "caravan", substitute "tribe". For "Jinbaro" (the leader
of a tribe) substitute
"chieftain". For "Jindavo" (the captain of a ship) substutute "hetman".
Wanderer culture derives inexorably from the fact that they
live in small groups in extremely hostile conditions. In the cold of deep
space, any mistake could mean a quick death for everyone on the ship.
As a result, Wanderer society is extremely hidebound and resistant to
change. Experimentation is strongly discouraged; this is exacerbated
by the small tribes' lack of research facilities.
The technology employed on Wanderer ships is hard-coded into their
construction robots, and has remained unchanged for countless millenia.
While different ships might use the various items in subtly different
ways, all Wanderer Tribes across known space use exactly the same components.
For most of the Thousand Tribes' long ages in space, they had
undisputed mastery of their mining grounds. Occasional empires such as the
'Old Kings' rose and fell, but the Wanderers could
blithely ignore most of them. Only in later years (Y150 and onward) did
the 'younger' races, and latterly the Andromedans, present any threat
to the Wanderers' control of space. This led to unprecedented changes in
Wanderer technology and society, as hard-pressed tribes found
themselves forced to drastic action: to trade with one of the 'lesser'
races for technology.
After a rare and bitter conference of a dozen leading chieftains, they
picked the Orions, who had a wide range of military technology and few
compunctions about selling it for the right price. As time went on,
this relationship, though frequently very fractious, grew closer and
more common. Many caravans still refuse to sully themselves in this
way, but some of the more adventurous Wanderers have even
joined Orion crews. The change in attitude is best shown by the
unconfirmed rumours of a hetman seeking refuge for his Fujiyama-class
asteroid ship in the WYN cluster in Y177 after a failed coup.