Would a Federation warship like the Defiant out gun a Star Wars Star Destroyer? Who has a bigger armada? Who has the tactical advantage? Don’t forget that The Federation includes the Klingons, who love warfare and have fast, agile, heavily armed ships, with cloaking devices, and the Vulcans with superior logic and tactical planning.

  • Wrench@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Considering the SW universe doesn’t have transporters, it’s probably safe to assume their shields aren’t modulated to block transporters. So they could just beam torpedoes through.

    • Guy Fleegman@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      3 months ago

      Transporters block shields regardless of modulation. You can modulate weapons to penetrate shields, but transporters are trickier. “We can’t get the away team back because shields are up!” would be a non-issue if the shields could be modulated to block weapon fire but allow transporters.

    • darkpanda@lemmy.ca
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      3 months ago

      They don’t have transporters but apparently Jedis can just teleport shit through the Force? Didn’t Rey teleport a lightsaber at some point? Presumably this is a skill that could be picked up by the Empire.

      Yeah, anyways that happened. Somehow, Force teleportation.

  • MrVilliam@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    In case anybody is wondering, yes this is the nerd version of the “my dad can beat up your dad” debates.

  • teft@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    You should be ashamed that you left out the true fighters of the Federation:

    But let’s be honest, the UFP would win. The UFP have that bomb that Soran used to explode a sun in Generations. The Empire destroyed a few planets. Sun destroying civilization beats planet destroying civilization.

      • teft@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        I totally forgot about that scene. But the new empire sucked up a sun with a planet sized base. Soran blew up a sun with a missile barely bigger than a car. I still give the UFP the win.

      • MotoAsh@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        There was a similar weapon in the extended universe, not that Disney cares.

        I dunno’, IMO it’s kinda’ an orthogonal question to both universes.

        Star Wars is about a struggle for what’s right despite what space-fantasy crazyness you’ll have to face. Star Trek is about trying everything short of violence before resorting to violence.

        The overwhelming power in Star Wars is more about opressive threat and allegory (like what’s her face that has to get trapped in a cluster of black holes) than raw power, and in Trek, their extreme ability to do violence is to highlight how important the other options are. They almost always easily win the gun show, but they’re almost never happy for doing it.

        So in the end, they both have very different forms of power represented. Star Wars is probably more capable of destruction over time since it’s always the whole galaxy at risk, but obviously Trek vaporizes plenty of things in one blast in any specific encounter. Hence why the Borg and Q, and shape shifters, and black puddles of sentient death, and such extreme entities have to show up when they want a classic threat to stay a threat.

        In SW, it’s all fantasy that’s powerful. The setting itself is rugged, and only the powerful are powerful, so it has a much bigger hill to climb when pitting the few things with any kind of statistic against each other. Both universes have any number of means to defeat the other depending on what’s available and what actually works, who gets the jump, etc. Some things in both universes are insanely destructive by statistic, so one unarmored turbolaser shot or one full blast, unshielded phaser blast, is taking out an entire ship and then some. In either universe. Supposed to anyways, as much as they downplay turbolaser hits in the movies and games necessarily. Like how Halo would be drastically different if it were designed with any of the stats in mind.

    • Guy Fleegman@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      3 months ago

      Soran’s device was essentially an anti-bomb, based on how Worf described it:

      Trilithium is a nuclear inhibitor. In theory, it could stop all fusion within a star.

      If you shot it at a Star Destroyer I think you’d just give a handful of unlucky stormtroopers trilithium poisoning.

      • teft@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        You don’t shoot it at the star destroyer. You shoot it at the star next to the star destroyer. When you take away nuclear fusion you get a large explosion more commonly known as a supernova. Everything within a few dozen light years is now obliterated. Gotta think like the Emperor if you want to beat him.

        • spittingimage@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          You don’t want to bring real-world physics into this. If you turned off fusion in a star, it would still shine for thousands of years.

          • brianorca@lemmy.world
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            3 months ago

            A star massive enough to supernova, during the final stage, is held up by fusion. Fusion in the core continues to make heavier and heavier elements in stages. The final stage is measured in days. When that stage completes, the supernova initiation is measured in fractions of a second. The resulting shockwave travels faster than 10% of light speed.

            • KidnappedByKitties@lemm.ee
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              3 months ago

              Isn’t 10% of lightspeed something like below Warp 1 in Star Trek, and SW Hyperdrives much faster?

              Seems like it would be easy to outrun for the fleets, and then mostly a weapon for extinction purposes, which UFP seems much more squeamish about than the Empire

              • brianorca@lemmy.world
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                3 months ago

                That was mostly to counter the “it will keep shining for thousands of years” in the previous comment. Yes, a starship might outrun the shockwave of material, but it might not detect the gamma waves until it’s too late, as the sudden influx of energetic light could overwhelm shields, and those do travel at light speed, and could reach the ship before it can jump.

        • Guy Fleegman@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          3 months ago

          Well now we’ve just arrived at MAD, in space. Both sides deploy their Star Killers and both galaxies are rendered uninhabitable.

  • Tippon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    3 months ago

    ‘Captain, scanners detect Palpatine on their bridge’

    ‘Chief O’Brien, program a quantum torpedo with a two second timer and beam it three decks below their bridge’

    ‘A quantum torpedo Captain?’

    ‘You’re right Chief! It’s a Tuesday.’

    ‘Sir?’

    ‘Send two!’

  • nzeayn@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    we talking cross universe or cross galaxy fight? Q likely takes issue with someone coming into his playground if we’re universe hopping. Galaxy to galaxy it’s carnage. As the thread here points out, both can destroy whole solar systems. Sure the federation would be slow to start doing so unless Janeway is still around. But they’d get there. Cloaking and transporter tech can make up for a fair amount of the federation being massively outnumbered. If the empire has to gind through borg territory before reaching federation space, that would balance things out. But really Trek time travels more often than stargate so who knows what madness that leads too. We may discover Sisko founds the jedi, while O’Brian finally snaps and founds the sith after being tortured for the 10,000th time.

  • Admiral Patrick@dubvee.org
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    3 months ago

    I think Trek has better weapons, do they not? I’m not a Wars fan (have seen them each once and “meh”).

    From what I do remember, It took an entire Death Star the size of a small moon to destroy a planet. Don’t most federation ships carry enough armament to easily do the same?

    AFAIK (again, not a Wars fan/expert) but don’t they use mostly laser weapons which are primitive and easily shrugged off by 24th century shields?

    Assuming my memory is correct, then I’m going to say the Defiant itself could probably take out most of the Empire single handedly.

    • teft@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Trek has better weapons

      Star Trek hand weapon effects:

      Star Wars hand weapon effects:

      • mosiacmango@lemm.ee
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        3 months ago

        Isn’t that second gif after like 10-15 min of sustained contact?

        Point that phaser at the door for 15 min and we can see what’s up.

        • Rose Thorne@lemm.ee
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          3 months ago

          That comes into an argument of lightsaber assembly.

          Some wielders prefer to overcharge their saber, while others use unstable Kyber crystals. While it makes for a much more powerful blade, any damage to the hilt makes it even riskier than a standard saber due to the sheer energy output. Hell, it can start breaking itself apart if not built correctly.

          IIRC, in the pre-Disney EU days, there were wielders who still carried around modified power packs, so they could give their saber an extra boost if needed.

          That’s not even taking in the other ways they have been used, like a rifle that uses them as the ammunition. All the power of a focused beam of plasma launched from a snipers perch with pinpoint accuracy.

          • mosiacmango@lemm.ee
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            3 months ago

            Thats good context, but i think “standard” phaser vs “standard” lightsaber is still going to be a weak show for the lightsaber.

            I cant think of any door melting feats for phasers, but they are commonly used to heat up rocks during cave ins, and are shown to heat room temperature stone to red hot in a couple of seconds, likely raising the temps 1000f in that time frame.

            I know those were special super dense blast doors, but I still think the phaser seems to have a much higher energy output.

            Sustain is likely a winning category for the saber, but if the power output discrepancy is on the order of 100 or 1000x, that’s still not really a win.

    • Evilcoleslaw@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Not really. I think the only time in Trek we see a planet outright destroyed by a ship is Species 8472 fighting the Borg. Many Trek ships could maybe render an undefended planet uninhabitable, but not pulverized, and probably not with standard weapons. There are random superweapon techs like the Thalaron Pulse or biogenic weapons that could kill everything on a planet, or the trilithium bomb that Soren used & that the Bashir changeling almost used that can cause stars to go nova.

      Then in Star Wars EU you have things like single star destroyers doing a Base-Delta-Zero where they essentially raze the surface of a planet. The power levels of Star Wars weapons are really kind of all over the place, with many of the old Legends specs having insanely high energy yield for things like turbolasers.

      IIRC some of the “hard numbers” put out would have things like a single turbolaser shot exhausting the shield capacity of a Sovereign-class.

    • Guy Fleegman@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      3 months ago

      Most of the time they’re “blasters,” sometimes they’re “turbolasers” or “lasers.” Star Wars canon is a hot mess but they are most commonly defined as charged particle beam weapons, i.e. they’re phasers by a different name.

  • Stern@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Wars has literally zero defense against their engines being teleported out of their ship. Trek no diffs Wars.

  • Guy Fleegman@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    3 months ago

    It depends on whether you are approaching the question from a narrative perspective or an empirical perspective.

    Narrative: The Federation wins because the Federation are The Good Guys™ and the Empire are The Bad Guys™. The Federation starts out on the back foot and it looks pretty grim in the middle, but ultimately they eke out a win. If this is a TNG two-parter it plays out the way “The Best of Both Worlds” did: engineering prowess combined with timely application of the human factor wins the day. If this is a DS9 arc or Discovery season, then Section 31 does what needs to be done.

    Empirical: The Empire crushes the Federation like a bug. The Imperial industrial base is enormous and their power generation capabilities vastly surpass anything the 24th century Federation can muster:

    • The Death Star could violently destroy an entire planet, reducing it to asteroids. In “The Die Is Cast,” a combined Romulan-Cardassian fleet requires multiple volleys to simply glass the surface of a planet.
    • The Millennium Falcon—a ship a little larger than a runabout—could cross the known galaxy (Tatooine on the rim, Alderaan in the core) in a day. Voyager estimated a similar journey would take 70 years at maximum cruising speed.
    • In the 2360’s the Federation built six Galaxy-class ships and maybe a few dozen more throughout the course of the Dominion war. These are among the largest, most powerful, most advanced ships the Federation can build, yet they are dwarfed by an Imperial II-class Star Destroyer and the Empire built hundreds of these in the mere two decades it existed.

     

    It you could somehow snap these two spacefaring nations into existence and pit them against each other, it would be like late-WWII United States facing off against Napoleonic France. It’s a blowout.

    • teft@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Empirical: The Empire crushes the Federation like a bug.

      I see what you did there.

    • CileTheSane@lemmy.ca
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      3 months ago

      The Empire doesn’t have shield technology. I don’t know if their weapons could penetrate shields, but they definitely have no defence against a teleporter. Yes, their fleet could get to any target faster than the UFP, but as long as the target has a teleporter system they can just teleport the commander into space.

    • samus12345@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Good thing Luke had the power of narrative on his side! Once the Emperor was gone (for now), the entire Empire went with him (for now).

    • KidnappedByKitties@lemm.ee
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      Well put, I’m also missing the Empire’s massive resources/ability to adapt.

      It took them what, months, to produce a platoon of Beskar equipped, jetpack trained soldiers following new doctrine in the Mandalorian.

      The Empire would capture a warp core, some dilithium, or some other tech and have a sizeable force ready to go before the UFP can even warp to the next engagement.

      And having shielded warp core armed tactical bombers would mess up any UFP day, even if there’s only a dozen of them.

  • paddirn@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Star Wars seems oddly backwards for a sci-fi universe (it’s more a fantasy setting with sci-fi trappings), even though knowledge of space travel is as common as knowing about plumbing, technological innovation doesn’t seem to really develop that much, although I guess they did go from starting construction on the Death Star to Star Killer base in the span of ~53 years, which seems like a massive leap (blow up one planet locally (from 77k km) to blowing up multiple planets across hundreds of light years). Otherwise though, had the Republic really developed that much technologically for those tens of thousands of years that they were in existence?

    I feel like the Federation’s shield and transporter technology would give them a huge advantage over the Empire, though obviously space wizards with laser swords and techno-bass bombs would seem to be powerful weapons in the Empire’s favor as well, though the Empire itself only has two space wizards, not counting Inquisitors. I think overall, the Empire may have access to more resources and could overwhelm the Federation via a Zerg rush, similar to what we’re seeing in Ukraine with Russia. Even though Russians are pulling out shitty 50-year old Cold war weapons that belong in museums, but just based on sheer numbers they’re maintaining their advantage.

      • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet@lemmy.worldOP
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        3 months ago

        That would be even worse than paying for a Mike Tyson fight in his prime. It would be over with the snap of Q’s fingers. He can do literally whatever he wants with a mere thought. Shooting lightning and jumping really high doesn’t mean shit against a god.

  • 🇰 🔵 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 ℹ️@yiffit.net
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    I would say yes, since the technology demonstrated in Star Trek seems way more advanced than the technology demonstrated in Star Wars. Even Jedi powers don’t seem particularly strong compared to just the natural abilities of many species that are part of the Federation (and if they seek help outside the Federation, they could potentially have literal gods on their side).

    However, in another thread today I saw a comment saying that hyperdrives are faster than warp drives, and allow people in Star Wars to traverse the entire galaxy in a day or two. Star Trek ain’t that fast so it might be hard to stop a Death Star obliterating all the planets before they can get there and stop it. 🤔 I don’t know how true that statement is though; I’m not nearly as well versed in Star Wars as I am in Trek.

    • CileTheSane@lemmy.ca
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      3 months ago

      Even if hyperdrives are faster, SW ships have no shields. As long as the planet they are wanting to blow up has teleporter stations they can just start beaming officers into space. It takes time to charge the planet killing laser.

  • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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    3 months ago

    Yes and also no depending on who you ask and what they decide about power levels that are never compared in either universe.

  • TipRing@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    It would not be close. Just from a logistics and industrial capacity standpoint. The Federation has around 150 member worlds while the Empire holds more than 1 million inhabited systems. No technical advantage could make up for that discrepancy. The Empire could lose 100:1 and still easily crush the Federation.

    • KyuubiNoKitsune@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      3 months ago

      I don’t buy it.

      Who would win, a star destroyer with laser like weapons that need to be manually aimed, or a ship with a shield, a battery of highly powered missiles and phasers that auto fire at targets?

      Who would win, 100 tie fighters with no shielding that need to be facing the target to shoot, or a few shuttles with shields and phasers that auto fire in almost any direction?

      Shields change the game, also having ships you don’t need to directly face the enemy with to shoot, or manually aim with, makes the empire look like chumps.

      • TipRing@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        I don’t think you are grasping the difference in scale here. Even if you grant the Federation absolute technological supremacy (which is debatable, but ultimately doesn’t matter). The Galactic Empire at its peak has effectively unlimited resources and the logistical capability to build at unimaginable scale. They could park a fleet the size of the entirety of Starfleet over every Federation world at the same time. Even without superweapons they could devastate all those worlds, lose every single ship in the process and still be able to project power.

        Wars are won with industrial capacity and the ability to leverage that capacity. The Empire is perfectly configured to conquer. Their weakness is asymmetrical war from within their infrastructure. The Federation could fight this way, surrender while hiding or scuttling their capital ships, join the Rebellion while bringing significant engineering and technology to bear from within the Empire. That would work.

        But a straight-up conflict? No. It’s not a fair fight when one side can absorb losses of any amount and the other side can’t.