Author Topic: Reign of the Tetakuni - An A Time of War Adventure and sourcebook.  (Read 13826 times)

HABeas2

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Hello, all.

As promised in the Fan Fiction boards, I present here the (officially rejected) Halloween special A Time of War adventure "Reign of the Tetakuni." Written and illustrated almost exclusively by yours truly (aside from some BattleTech-proprietary images purloined from Sarna.net and elsewhere), with player-character concepts helpfully donated by the folks on the Fanfic boards, this adventure is the basis of my "Far No Longer" fan-fiction story series, and has been lovingly crafted to be as complete a product as I could manage.

Indeed, all that this book lacks to differentiate it from the previous adventures I've done officially are proper record sheets, cover art, and the back-cover copy (BCC). Oh, and maybe a price tag, but since Ray passed on this particular project (he has his own standards of what constitutes a good idea for a "gag" product), monetizing this is a definite no-no anyway.

As the full PDF is rather huge for attachment purposes, I will be posting this adventure in sections. This may prove particularly handy to potential play groups and their GMs, as the GM's sourcebook and the adventure tracks each have their own separate sections.

A final caveat of note should be stated here: Although this adventure has been rooted in elements of canon, the whole thing is basically non-official and non-canonical. Nothing expressed or implied within this adventure should be construed as anything more than a fun "what if?" type of adventure, which can be used as a jump-off point for adventures in a VERY alternate BattleTech reality.

Enjoy!

- Herbert A. Beas II

HABeas2

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Section One of "Reign of the Tetakuni" attached.

This includes the opening fiction ("Far No Longer"), as well as introductory material, general world overview fluff, and a cast of characters perfect for default use.

- Herb

HABeas2

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Section Two of "Reign of the Tetakuni" attached.

This covers the four Adventure Tracks and the post-adventure Debriefing.

- Herb

HABeas2

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Section Three of "Reign of the Tetakuni" attached.

This third and final installment is the GM's sourcebook, including new rules, units, and data for both AToW and BattleTech record sheets.

Apologies to players of MW: Destiny and Alpha Strike, by the way; it falls upon you to make any necessary conversions to use this material in your own games.

Enjoy!

- Herb

abou

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Uhm... hell yes!

Luciora

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Neat stuff!

HABeas2

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Thanks! As you see, even your interpretation of a Tetakuni battlesuit made it in!

- Herb

Luciora

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I have to say, I was expecting a mech and not a battlesuit when I kitbashed it.  ;D. Serves me right for failing reading comprehension.  :))

Thanks! As you see, even your interpretation of a Tetakuni battlesuit made it in!

- Herb

HABeas2

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I have to say, I was expecting a mech and not a battlesuit when I kitbashed it.  ;D. Serves me right for failing reading comprehension.  :))

And yet, the very title of your thread showed that you were open to the potentiality:

https://bg.battletech.com/forums/miniatures/far-no-longer-unknown-tetatae-battlemech-battlearmor/

I did consider a ProtoMech version, but by then, I'd fairly well filled out the Proto-level machines, while having only two--of the same weight--in the BA class.

So, yeah. Suddenly, yours became their urban warfare monster.

- Herb

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>Squee!<

New fan project!  Tagged.
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Luciora

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Re: Reign of the Tetakuni - An A Time of War Adventure and sourcebook.
« Reply #10 on: 29 August 2021, 20:17:41 »
I do admit the spikes were a bit over the top  ;D

And yet, the very title of your thread showed that you were open to the potentiality:

https://bg.battletech.com/forums/miniatures/far-no-longer-unknown-tetatae-battlemech-battlearmor/

I did consider a ProtoMech version, but by then, I'd fairly well filled out the Proto-level machines, while having only two--of the same weight--in the BA class.

So, yeah. Suddenly, yours became their urban warfare monster.

- Herb

HABeas2

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Re: Reign of the Tetakuni - An A Time of War Adventure and sourcebook.
« Reply #11 on: 30 August 2021, 00:10:36 »
Maybe, but that extra spikey-ness was what made me give the Pheasants their heavy vibro claws feature. I imagine these are the suits they deploy when they're done screwing around with insurgents.

- Herb

Daemion

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Re: Reign of the Tetakuni - An A Time of War Adventure and sourcebook.
« Reply #12 on: 03 September 2021, 14:03:07 »
I know this is considered mostly complete, but, do you have any Touring the Stars world blurbs to give us an idea of the state of affairs for some of the human worlds, like Terra?

Keep in mind, I'm still reading through these, so, if you've already done so, just say as such.

It's your world. You can do anything you want in it. - Bob Ross

Every thought and device conceived by Satan and man must be explored and found wanting. - Donald Grey Barnhouse on the purpose of history and time.

I helped make a game! ^_^  - Forge Of War: Tactics

Daemion

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Re: Reign of the Tetakuni - An A Time of War Adventure and sourcebook.
« Reply #13 on: 03 September 2021, 14:08:13 »
BTW: Great job on the art.
It's your world. You can do anything you want in it. - Bob Ross

Every thought and device conceived by Satan and man must be explored and found wanting. - Donald Grey Barnhouse on the purpose of history and time.

I helped make a game! ^_^  - Forge Of War: Tactics

HABeas2

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Re: Reign of the Tetakuni - An A Time of War Adventure and sourcebook.
« Reply #14 on: 03 September 2021, 14:43:39 »
I know this is considered mostly complete, but, do you have any Touring the Stars world blurbs to give us an idea of the state of affairs for some of the human worlds, like Terra?

Keep in mind, I'm still reading through these, so, if you've already done so, just say as such.

Nah. Given my propensity for going as deep as possible for maximum playability, while trying to leave plenty of room for GM control and creativity, I opted to keep the maps and even many of the Tetakuni nations vaguely defined. A deep enough dive for TtS-style content would be...oof! How many pages did the likes of Tyrfing, Kaumberg, and Jardine get, each?

BTW: Great job on the art.

Thanks! Still doesn't hold a candle to what the professionals do, but I enjoyed making them, anyway...and I've seen worse from me.

- Herb

Daryk

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Re: Reign of the Tetakuni - An A Time of War Adventure and sourcebook.
« Reply #15 on: 04 September 2021, 20:22:01 »
Jardine at least was only about 13 pages of text (the other 7 being cover, front matter, and maps).

HABeas2

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Re: Reign of the Tetakuni - An A Time of War Adventure and sourcebook.
« Reply #16 on: 05 September 2021, 00:56:50 »
Jardine at least was only about 13 pages of text (the other 7 being cover, front matter, and maps).

Now bear in mind that you'd want more than just one or two planets detailed to give this setting much more depth. Say, 10 planets... x 13 pages.... Yeah, I wasn't about to do that. You'd be talking another 10K words right there. And when you consider one of the worlds HAS to be Terra.... eesh! No way I'd do that justice in 13 pages! Terra's a multi-national mess once again, after all...

- Herb

Daryk

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Re: Reign of the Tetakuni - An A Time of War Adventure and sourcebook.
« Reply #17 on: 05 September 2021, 05:15:36 »
Totally fair!  I was just trying to answer the question about how long the TtS were.  No worries on my end!  8)

Daemion

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Re: Reign of the Tetakuni - An A Time of War Adventure and sourcebook.
« Reply #18 on: 08 September 2021, 13:30:52 »
Well, when I mentioned TtS, I was using that as a concept example.  But, what I was really looking for is what one finds in the house books, which happens to be about half a page of about a couple paragraphs and a stat block.

Kinda what you have for the Tetakuni realms.

It's your world. You can do anything you want in it. - Bob Ross

Every thought and device conceived by Satan and man must be explored and found wanting. - Donald Grey Barnhouse on the purpose of history and time.

I helped make a game! ^_^  - Forge Of War: Tactics

HABeas2

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Re: Reign of the Tetakuni - An A Time of War Adventure and sourcebook.
« Reply #19 on: 08 September 2021, 14:02:43 »
Hmmm. I did consider something like that, but by then I was running out of steam on what, in the end, wasn't going to be a paying project. Don't get me wrong; I *LOVE* making stuff like this, to the point where it was about the only thing I wanted to do at the end of my tenure as LD.

But I couldn't really get too jazzed about detailing human worlds too much. The general gist, if you want an official take, is that few to none of the human worlds under Tetakuni watch are "united." Not only are they effectively cut off from each other without Tetakuni help to travel and communicate between them (all human FTL tech has collapsed; the HPGs never came back here, and the JumpShips were all reduced to equally useless junk until the Ghost of Chuyo came along), but the shuffling of populations and the collapse of interstellar governments has resulted in every world becoming a poly-national, poly-cultural, poly-lingual mess. Those who still make 'Mechs? They use them to beat on other nations they share the same planet with--and the Tetakuni tend to cull these industries if the resultant arms race gets too intense.

Because the result would basically make for me creating a few dozen "new" factions per planet, I just couldn't muster that level of micromanagement, and left it to the GM.

- Herb

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Re: Reign of the Tetakuni - An A Time of War Adventure and sourcebook.
« Reply #20 on: 08 September 2021, 14:53:55 »
That is very helpful. 

Considering it sounds like nation-states fall and rise with regularity, I imagine people can have about as much fun with these as Nebula California.

Okay.  One last thing, if you're up for it:  Your version of Terra in the Fic.

The reason I'm asking is because I may want to visit your version of this reality.  Sure, I can make up my own, but that's easy.  And, it would be easy to rope in the Second Hand Lions history, as well, and call it legit for the adventure in question.  But, it would still be fun to have your take on Humanity's cradle.

 


It's your world. You can do anything you want in it. - Bob Ross

Every thought and device conceived by Satan and man must be explored and found wanting. - Donald Grey Barnhouse on the purpose of history and time.

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Daryk

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Re: Reign of the Tetakuni - An A Time of War Adventure and sourcebook.
« Reply #21 on: 08 September 2021, 17:47:32 »
So... it wasn't a hyperspace problem that ended FTL travel for humans? ???

Giovanni Blasini

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Re: Reign of the Tetakuni - An A Time of War Adventure and sourcebook.
« Reply #22 on: 08 September 2021, 20:26:46 »
So... it wasn't a hyperspace problem that ended FTL travel for humans? ???

See, that's what I thought initially, too, but it's sounding like that wasn't the case, and it was just they lost the ability to repair and maintain JumpShips.

Which...OK, JumpShips predate BattleMechs by centuries, and DropShips capable of interstellar travel predate that.  FTL travel isn't needed to maintain interstellar spaceflight in the Battletech universe - Terra was sending equivalents to Mammoth class DropShips to nearby stars at 60% light speed in the 21st century, with Magellan One launching in 2030.  Slowboat interstellar spacecraft are completely possible in the Battletech universe with early technology, even in the absence of JumpShips, using fusion rocketry and powerplants less advanced than what you see in primitive BattleMechs.

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HABeas2

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Re: Reign of the Tetakuni - An A Time of War Adventure and sourcebook.
« Reply #23 on: 09 September 2021, 05:32:32 »
That is very helpful. 

Considering it sounds like nation-states fall and rise with regularity, I imagine people can have about as much fun with these as Nebula California.

Well, the magic and superpowers wouldn't/shouldn't show up, since that was really a peculiarity with the Nebula itself, but throwing just about any system conceivable with tech about the late Succession Wars would be how I'd approach it. (Again, the Tetakuni keep an eye on their human preserves, and show up to restrict any destabilizing tech, while not-too-incidentally keeping the humans from progressing TOO far as to pose a real threat to themselves.)

Quote
Okay.  One last thing, if you're up for it:  Your version of Terra in the Fic.

The reason I'm asking is because I may want to visit your version of this reality.  Sure, I can make up my own, but that's easy.  And, it would be easy to rope in the Second Hand Lions history, as well, and call it legit for the adventure in question.  But, it would still be fun to have your take on Humanity's cradle.

Terra in this scenario would likely be in a state of roughly Star League-era technology, but broken up into nations along largely cultural bounds. A simplified version of Europe might emerge in which nations with close enough lingual and cultural ties have fused (i.e. Germany and Austria, France and Belgium, a fully united Ireland, multiple Slavic states arrayed in confederations, etc.) with perhaps a more fragmented mainland Asia (break up China and Russia a bit, free Nepal, an independent Kashmir state, all of the southern Russian states broken free, a re-ordered Middle East, perhaps with a free Kurdistan), a more stable and self-defined African continent (i.e. borders no longer defined by wherever some fallen Colonial Power drew an arbitrary line), perhaps more Pacific Rim alliance groups, new Australian and Antarctic nation-states, South American confederations dominating the economic and political atmosphere of the Western Hemisphere, as there is no USA any more (instead, it's a collective of warring states more like we saw in Crimson Skies; the USA collapsed for good back in the early space colonial days--it's just not coming back after millennia of divisions; Alaska may be its own nation, Canada may be broken into at least two or maybe three countries as well).

Then we get into the varied states of Luna and Mars, each divided among three or four major power blocs that may or may not have Terran roots. The Transient States of Venus (now centered around sky-cities that float in the sweet spots above the hellish, high-pressure surfaces a-la a bunch of Bespins), confederations of the Jovian and Saturnine lunar/station-based settlements, and the sturdiest Belter groups.

Human DropShip tech remains in place, mind you, so in-system travel is no problem around Sol here--so long as nobody razes all the ship-builders--meaning that trade and travel to all these fun polities would be doable in your campaign. Just bear in mind that not every faction will have the same level of sophistication; not everyone will have access to BattleMech, battle armor, aerospace, and starcraft industries. The "superpowers" will likely be those that can build both 'Mechs and DropShips alike, while others may be restricted to shuttlecraft and tanks, or battle armor and fighters, or a reliance on bigger allies. And all of it alternating between low-intensity fighting and tense "peacetimes." Think of it all as a microcosm of a late Succession Wars-era Inner Sphere, with the Tetakuni playing the role of a slightly nicer ComStar: a neutral power that meddles in their affairs for "benevolent" reasons.

So... it wasn't a hyperspace problem that ended FTL travel for humans? ???
See, that's what I thought initially, too, but it's sounding like that wasn't the case, and it was just they lost the ability to repair and maintain JumpShips.

Which...OK, JumpShips predate BattleMechs by centuries, and DropShips capable of interstellar travel predate that.  FTL travel isn't needed to maintain interstellar spaceflight in the Battletech universe - Terra was sending equivalents to Mammoth class DropShips to nearby stars at 60% light speed in the 21st century, with Magellan One launching in 2030.  Slowboat interstellar spacecraft are completely possible in the Battletech universe with early technology, even in the absence of JumpShips, using fusion rocketry and powerplants less advanced than what you see in primitive BattleMechs.

Pretty much this is correct: the state of human FTL travel in the Diaspora is a loss of construction and maintenance for JumpShips, along with all the infrastructure that supported it. Germanium reserves--rare, even in the best of times--are likely depleted as well. The same goes for HPGs, though that was as much a result of the Blackout as it was any additional damage from whatever total war reduced humanity to sub-light travel only.

Now, relativistic sublight travel via DropShips IS technically possible, but it should be noted that the 21st century examples of the Magellan Program were all unmanned, and would have needed to cram an immense amount of reaction mass to sustain months or years of steady acceleration and deceleration to any appreciable fraction of light speed between systems. For humans to do it, they'd need life support, enormous food reserves, and ample supplies and space for any medical, sociological, psychological, and material needs--not to mention the capacity to support any potential in-flight population growth. That would likely become nigh impossible for DropShip-scale construction methods as they are--all for ships that could spend two or three GENERATIONS getting to stars that were once just a single jump away...

So no, humanity didn't lose the stars because they broke hyperspace. The Tetakuni, after all, are having no problem with FTL travel! They just beat their own interstellar infrastructure past the point of no return.

- Herb

Giovanni Blasini

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Re: Reign of the Tetakuni - An A Time of War Adventure and sourcebook.
« Reply #24 on: 09 September 2021, 07:25:01 »
Wait, what about Columbia, which was settled by a colony effort secretly included in the Magellan 6 probe?  Or Ross 248/Terrelibre, and the less successful Paradiso and New London colonies?
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HABeas2

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Re: Reign of the Tetakuni - An A Time of War Adventure and sourcebook.
« Reply #25 on: 09 September 2021, 12:05:25 »
Wait, what about Columbia, which was settled by a colony effort secretly included in the Magellan 6 probe?  Or Ross 248/Terrelibre, and the less successful Paradiso and New London colonies?

I suppose it's possible they would have to be made using custom rules, perhaps as WarShips with the KF cores replaced by habitats of equivalent mass or some such. There is also the cryogenic approach, I suppose, but I don't recall offhand how well advanced it was at the time.

Either way, you're still talking about 50+ years to a 30-LY distance. If that's worth it for you, hey, who am I to stop you?

- Herb

Daryk

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Re: Reign of the Tetakuni - An A Time of War Adventure and sourcebook.
« Reply #26 on: 09 September 2021, 16:52:17 »
If they have the tech to build DropShips, I can't see how they completely lost the ability to build JumpShips, really.  Any orbital yard that can build a large DropShip can accommodate a small JumpShip.  The Belters at least would have retained SOME capability.  And germanium isn't THAT rare, especially once you start mining asteroid and Kuiper belts.

HABeas2

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Re: Reign of the Tetakuni - An A Time of War Adventure and sourcebook.
« Reply #27 on: 09 September 2021, 17:33:40 »
If they have the tech to build DropShips, I can't see how they completely lost the ability to build JumpShips, really.  Any orbital yard that can build a large DropShip can accommodate a small JumpShip.  The Belters at least would have retained SOME capability.  And germanium isn't THAT rare, especially once you start mining asteroid and Kuiper belts.

JumpShip yards in the BT universe have long been very limited, perhaps among the rarest of manufacturers in the Inner Sphere, to the point where each Successor State had maybe 2 or 3 tops, as of the 3040s, each barely able to keep up with annual ship losses. Even after the Helm Core was found, recovery still depended on output from ComStar. The Jihad knocked back what production was developed over and above that to support WarShip construction, forcing nearly a century of focus on getting JumpShip production back, while WarShips were basically just maintained, with few-to-none in terms of new builds. By the time of the IlClan, I'd say it was still a very limited industry, ever so close to collapse should another period of total warfare erupt... And now, ComStar was gone, and the Clans weren't likely to be sharing Terra's industrial output with everyone else willy nilly.

So, when total war returned (with MANY more factions than the SWs had in play), and JumpShips, WarShips, and their factories stopped being sacrosanct, about how long do you imagine K-F drive production would keep up with demand? This story doesn't answer that question directly, but effectively presumes that, at some point, it all led to the complete loss of interstellar travel as the factories and repair yards all got destroyed and the ships that remained gradually gave in to the inevitable passage of time and whatever fighting managed to linger.

Also, worth noting: According to Wikipedia, worldwide production of Germanium today is still less than 200 tons per year, with maybe another 125,000 tons recoverable from known zinc and coal reserves. Human production of JumpShips between the 2100s and 2300s, when the big exoduses from Terra occurred that scattered us across a dew thousand worlds, likely consumed all of that PLUS what was most accessible from nearby rocks in the Sol system. And by the time of the Star League, when KF production likely peaked with WarShip and JumpShip fleets (the 2500s-2700s), this probably tore into reserves of Germanium obtained across the whole Inner Sphere. Even into the 3050s, Germanium remained rare enough that finding a planet with good veins of the stuff could fuel the creation of empires--but, again, production of KF drives by then was barely above sustenance level. It is unlikely this would have improved after the destruction of the Clan Wars, Jihad, and the Dark Age--all periods where the rules against shooting JumpShips and destroying KF-producing factories had started to lose their imperative.

I thus feel that a complete collapse of the entire KF industry and resultant loss of interstellar flight over the course of one or two more apocalyptic wars wasn't too big a stretch. Humanity can be quite short-sighted, and increasing desperation can result in increasingly extreme responses once the interstellar empires started falling into their end stages of life.

And so, when the Tets showed up a good thousand years later, to find nobody managed to recover from all that, and instead whole worlds had perished as human trade, law, and infrastructure broke down on a galactic scale, leaving only the hardiest and wealthiest planets to survive... well, they found humans whose focus was more on holding onto what they had left, rather than reaching for the stars again.

But, again, if YOU want to add human FTL back into this setting, that's up to you as the GM. At my table, though, humankind has pretty thoroughly collapsed, and likely won't have much of a chance at recovering their old Inner Sphere so long as the Tetakuni have a say in the matter.

- Herb

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Re: Reign of the Tetakuni - An A Time of War Adventure and sourcebook.
« Reply #28 on: 09 September 2021, 17:54:58 »
I can agree to that... knowledge is much harder to extinguish than ComStar would like, but if it works for your AU, that's your call!

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Re: Reign of the Tetakuni - An A Time of War Adventure and sourcebook.
« Reply #29 on: 09 September 2021, 17:57:34 »
I started to work on a modified Mammoth for interstellar flight before MegaMekLab decided that the keys I clicked must mean I wanted to start a new Infantry unit design, without saving first.  >:(

Anyway, without going over that all over again, you need around 365 burn-days to get close enough to light speed for our purposes, and 57 tons of consumables will last one person 300 years.  On a Mammoth, that works out to around 4000 tons of fuel for the ship itself to get around 800 burn-days (enough to accelerate, slow down, and have some reserves).  You have a crew of 55, including bay personnel, but you'll want to spend tonnage to provide full quarters to the bay personnel.

So, of the Mammoth's 37,248.5 tons of cargo, 3580 tons plus pumps needs to go to fuel bunkerage: let's just round that off to 4000 tons.  Your extra quarters cost another 140 tons.  Consumables for 30 years takes 3135 tons, but let's just round up to 3200 tons, giving everyone around 32.85 tons of food.  Now, go ahead and budget 15,600 tons, or 30% of the ship's mass, for spare parts, machine tools and raw materials for any repairs you might need to make along the way.  That still leaves 14,308.5 tons available for cargo.

With that much cargo left over, we could upgrade everyone on the ship to first class quarters, and still have tonnage available.  That would take up 135 tons.  Adding point defense bays seems like a good idea, so throw, say, half a dozen laser AMS bays forward and aft.  That's another 18 tons, plus two more gunners, so throw in 20 tons for their quarters and another 60 tons each for food, so 140 tons more, and we've still got 14,033.5 tons for cargo.  That leaves us enough to add another 57 crew to the ship, to double up on crew, and also doubling up on their consumables, for another 3990 tons, leaving 10,043.5 tons available, which happens to be more than a stock Mule-class DropShip.

Worried about communicating with your destination or your home?  Throw a single SCL/1 on the nose and aft of your ship, and call them "communications lasers".  That's another 150 tons *2, plus four gunners (1 per gun, 2 spares) and their supplies, so 70 tons *4, so now we're down to 9,183.5 tons of cargo.  Throw a large naval comm-scanner suite on for better sensors, double the 12-person staff, and that's another 1680 tons for crew life support and consumables, plus 500 tons for the comm-scanner.

Final total is 7003.5 tons of cargo, with a few extra amenities, which does put us a hair below the 8144 tons a Mule class DropShip can carry, but is still a respectable amount.

We haven't even discussed adding hydroponics yet, which isn't really something that's covered under the rules, so not something I factored into the above.  But, it shows that there's a reasonable method to transfer cargo between star systems of up to 30 light years away, even if it's not necessarily the easiest or fastest thing to do.
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