On Delta Station

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Rules Overview

On Delta Station is a ruleset intended to narratively replicate the naval battles of WWII and later in a science fiction context. As such it operates under several fundamental concepts:

  • Aircraft (or battlecraft as a more general term) are capable of flight ranges significantly exceeding that of any conventional weapon.
  • Long range detection is unreliable, requiring physical scouting with vehicles.
  • Scouting is an integral part of all battles and rules (in a simple form) for it will exist.
  • Weapons fire and scouting becomes more effective as range decreases.
  • Battles do not continue indefinately; air wings will be depleted of munitions (or aircraft!) quickly and warships will eventually find themselves in a fog of particle shells and waste energy.
  • Aircraft and cruise missiles are "alpha damage" units as compared to conventional warships which are "damage over time" units.
  • Battles fought over large distances will have significant downtimes. This allows for both repairs and the opportunity for a retreat.
  • There is space weather.

Battle Flow

  • Step 1: Reduce range band by 1 (first turn: start at value for environment)
  • Step 2: Roll Scouting vs target formation's Fleet Signature. Each faction gets to roll.
  • Step 3: Scout Intercept. A successful scout intercept gives significant bonuses to all further scouting attempts but the target is not discovered.
  • Step 4: If no faction has discovered the enemy, go to Step 1. If an enemy is detected, go to Step 5.
  • Step 5: Launch Strike; strikes may only be launched one per turn.
  • Step 6: Gunnery; Ships may Gunnery once per pulse. Phase count depends on range.

Pulses: Each turn is divided up into one or more pulses. As a rule the closer the battle is the more pulses happen. This represents ships firing more accurately at closer targets, shorter flight time, etc.
Counterpulses: These are pulses that happen when there is no active battling, giving ships (and other pulse units) time to conduct damage control, regenerate shields, etc. Counterpulses happen after each pulse and the number of Counterpulses after each pulse is determined by distance; longer ranged battles have more 'downtime'. If there is no pulse unit action (such a pure carrier strike) the number of Counterpulses equals the band value.

Band

10 - 1 Pulse, 9 Counterpulses
9 - 1 Pulse, 8 Counterpulses
8 - 1 Pulse, 7 Counterpulses
7 - 1 Pulse, 6 Counterpulses
6 - 1 Pulse, 5 Counterpulses
5 - 2 Pulses, 3 Counterpulses
4 - 2 Pulses, 2 Counterpulses
3 - 3 Pulses, 1 Counterpulses
2 - 5 Pulses, 0 Counterpulses
1 - 10 Pulses, 0 Counterpulses

Haze
'Haze' is the general term for the various byproducts of battle such as chaff clouds, expended decoys, scattered blavatsky particle density, electronic interference, smoke from damaged ships, excessive waste heat, space weather and crew exhaustion to name just some. Haze can be considered a battle timer; for a number of turns it will have no effect on battles but thereafter it will steadily increase in effect. The primary effects of haze is command and to-hit difficulties will increase; fighting 'in the haze' is a recipe for chaos.


Units

All Battlecraft are Squadron units, which means they are made up of a large number of individual units. As a squadron takes damage down its damage track, it suffers penalties as it has less operational units. This is called the dropout thresholds. Note that in most cases these penalties are a combination of decreased to-hit and lower maximum hit count, but even one lone striker can still manage to put a torpedo into the keel of a ship and cripple it. It just becomes increasingly more difficult to do so.
Battlecraft that have suffered dropout are not automatically lost. They have a survival chance after battle representing planes forces to ditch ordnance and return home with damage. Some weapons may make this more or less likely; DEMP guns and heavy SAMs for example.

Battlecraft types:

  • Scout - As the old joke goes, knowing is half the battle. The humble scout is designed to collect information and as such they are affordable and can be carried on most warships. As their primary mission is not to fight but to locate and track the enemy they have good base flight range but extremely limited dogfight ability.
    • Swarmer Variation - Short-ranged battlecraft, swarmers are normally drones embarked specifically to provide local cover; they are pure combat and have no real scouting ability.
    • Fighterscout Variation - Effectively a souped-up standard fighter loaded with added electronics, fuel tanking and operating in an element-sized formation like regular scouts. Their performance means they can effectively fight for information, even if on the whole they are less resilient compared to a full fighter squadron. They also make a competent CAP for ships unable to support full squadrons of regular fighters.
  • Fighter - This is the single most common type of battlecraft and the foundation of essentially every aerospace force out there. Armed with a combination of guns and missiles they are built to achieve aerospace superiority and then support the attack. Some are instead built around a single large weapon (bomb or torpedo, generally) in which case they are known as strikers.
    • Heavy Fighter Variation - Heavy fighters are physically larger cousins to regular fighters, trading dogfight performance and speed for improved firepower and survivability. Many of them are deliberately built as 'jack of all trades' capable of delivering heavy firepower against enemy fighters and strike ordnance against ships and ground targets in the same mission.
  • Dominance Fighter (unlock) - The absolute last word in aerospace combat, dominance fighters are the elite of the deep sky. Coming in elements as opposed to squadrons they are relatively fragile as a tactical force but can down several times their numbers in a brawl.
  • Superheavy Fighter (unlock) - Straddling the line between fighters and gunboats, superheavy fighters can deliver inordinant amount of firepower at anything that happens to wander in front of their gunsights. They also carry as many guns in their turrets as most fighters do in toto and are tough enough to withstand significant fire. While quite fast and agile compared to most other craft their size (by brute force if nothing else) they are still no medium fighter. They are also generally too large to be easily flown off most carriers, requiring either modified motherships or fixed bases. Their spacious frames do give them massive endurance though and they make excellent SPA (Space Patrol Aircraft) and raiders that can look after themselves. Able to all but ignore small-caliber flak, if there's one thing a superheavy fighter does not want to run into is it a warship armed with heavy SAMs. Like dominance fighters, superheavy fighters operate in elements instead of squadrons.
  • Bomber - A fairly conventional attack craft, bombers are designed to lug lots of ordnance often over long distances and flatten whatever's on the recieving end. While bombers can fit on regular carriers, they do tend to be a bit of a tight fit.
    • Heavy Bomber Variation - The big brother of regular bombers, heavy bombers are even tougher, carry significantly more ordnance and have improved flight endurance. Even larger than superheavy fighters they are essentially limited to fixed bases but can roam across vast areas of space.
  • Superbomber (unlock) - Aircraft literally the size of a small warship, superbombers are large enough that they can comfortably dock a handful of regular-sized aircraft onboard.


Weight variations are significant differences in individual craft weight while maintaining a broadly similar statline. In practical terms, this has several effects:

  • Dropout thresholds are modified, generally by spacing them out more but making the effects more significant (individual craft are harder to take down but losses are more significant)
  • Damage tracks may be lengthened and firepower may be increased.
  • Dogfight and other defensive values may be decreased.
  • Other effects may apply, such as gaining defensive turrets. (dogfight defense)


Battlecraft Stats and Modifications

Battlecraft are inevitably the result of design tradeoffs. Do we construct them with protective armor or lighten them for increased agility? Do we equip them with drop tanks or gun pods?

  • Range - One of the important values for battlecraft is their range, which is measured in bands. Range is the maximum band value that battlecraft can perform missions to. Having short range means you simply cannot act at longer ranges. As a general rule larger battlecraft have longer base range, though scouts - as appropriate for their role - also have high base range. Having excess bands (ie, excess fuel) provides a small bonus as well, as it means your planes can dogfight harder for longer or keep angling for optimal engagement vectors before hitting bingo fuel and having to return home.

Misc Thoughts

Attacks will be done via difference dice classes, representing gun calibers/power. Provisionally they are as follows:

  • Flak/Small (autocannons, destroyer caliber guns, etc). Default range 1
  • Medium (mid-sized weapons, cruiser guns). Default range 2
  • Large (capital weapons, battleship guns). Default range 3
  • XL (special superweapon type things).

Ships will have different defenses for different weapon classes. For example destroyers might be fairly vulnerable to small-caliber weapons giving them low Flak defense but slow-firing capital cannons would be relatively ineffectual giving them high defense. A heavily-armored battleship would be the inverse.

Using light ships to scout

MPAs

Cruise missile attacks (limited use! no reloads!)