![]() Joe Haldeman's The Forever War, was partly a response to or a rebuttal of Robert A. More recent depictions of space warfare departed from the jingoism of the pulp science fiction of the 1930s and 1940s. ![]() Wells' several other "future war" stories included the atomic war novel The World Set Free (1914) and " The Land Ironclads," which featured a prophetic description of the tank, albeit of an unfeasibly large scale. Wells' novel The War of the Worlds inspired many other writers to write stories of alien incursions and wars between Earth and other planets, and encouraged writers of "future war" fiction to employ wider settings than had been available for "naturalistic" fiction. Griffith's last "future war" story was The Lord of Labour, written in 1906 and published in 1911, which included such technology as disintegrator rays and missiles. The inclusion of yet-nonexistent technology became a standard part of the genre. George Griffith's The Angel of the Revolution (1892) featured self-styled "Terrorists" armed with then-nonexistent arms and armour such as airships, submarines, and high explosives. Many such stories were written prior to the outbreak of World War I. Chesney's " The Battle of Dorking," a story about a British defeat after a German invasion of Britain, published in 1871 in Blackwood's Magazine. The first "future war" story was George T. It is the earliest known work of fiction to address the concept. In his second-century satire True History, Lucian of Samosata depicts an imperial war between the king of the Sun and the king of the Moon over the right to colonise the Morning Star. In the Andromeda universe, officers of Systems Commonwealth ships follow naval ranking, but Lancers (soldiers analogous to Marines) use army ranks. In the Halo universe, many of the ranks of the current-day United States Military are used in lieu of fictional ranks. The Colonial Fleet in Battlestar Galactica uses a mixture of army and navy ranks, and the Stargate universe has military spacecraft under the control of modern air forces, and uses air-force ranks. Some fictional universes have different implementations. Naval ship-classes such as frigate or destroyer sometimes serve as marker to show how the craft are assembled and their designed purpose. The United Nations Space Command in Halo fully echoes all ranks of the United States Armed Forces, even the pay-grade system. The former is based on the United States Navy and the Royal Navy. The Federation Starfleet ( Star Trek), Imperial Navy ( Star Wars), Systems Alliance Navy ( Mass Effect), UNSC (" Halo") and Earthforce ( Babylon 5) also use a naval-style rank-structure and hierarchy. David Weber's Honorverse series of novels portrays several of such space navies such as the Royal Manticoran Navy, which imitate themes from Napoleonic-era naval warfare. Naval influences įictional space warfare tends to borrow elements from naval warfare, often calling space forces as space navies or simply navies. The destruction of Alderaan in Star Wars: Episode IV - A New Hope is estimated to require 1.0 × 10 38 joules of energy, millions of times more than would be necessary to break the planet apart at a slower rate. It has been calculated that a force on the order of 10 32 joules of energy, or roughly the total output of the sun in a week, would be required to overcome the gravity that holds together an Earth-sized planet. Main article: List of fictional doomsday devicesĭestruction of planets and stars has been a frequently used aspect of interstellar warfare since the Lensman series.
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