47 M1 - Term: 1, Round: 5 (2/2)
”What now?” Stanley asked.
”The exos that M1 Horus are using is the Academy tournament edition from last year,” Cillian.
A furrow creased Stanley's head. He was not pleased. How did this progress cadets learning in engineering? How did this allow the more skilful pilots to advance if they were on the opposing squad? What left his lips was a displeased growl.
”I am interested to see what that PPC does though,” Andre offered. The fact there were four of them was significant.
”I would suggest the miniguns are to keep close and melee range of the PPC detachment,” Stanley said.
Shu squad one loadouts were interesting as well. ”Three photon blade wielders in mesh exos. You don't see that often,” Cillian ventured. ”They are also carrying an assortment of traps.”
”Pistols on their hips,” Stanley pointed out. The loadout consisted of light weapons, giving the cadets versatility. It was the sort of loadout he loved, it allowed the cadet to show what they were capable of not only in terms of skill but tactical thinking and awareness.
The remaining five Shu cadets had an assortment of railguns, long and medium barrel.
”Now I am interested,” Stanley stated.
”hmm?” Cillian enquired, he had no idea what piqued Stanley's interest all of a sudden.
”Shu's loadout,” the Colonel said, ”if the cadets are average or poor it is a terrible loadout. These are all weapons which require skill to deal reasonable damage, where weapons like miniguns or missile launchers do not.”
The two squads lined up at each end of the arena. The landscape was an urban scene which could be the outskirts of any major city in terms of residential apartments, parks and services. The designer went all out with parked vehicles, robot workers and the odd moving hovervan and delivery drone. This would be on another level compared to what an M1 squad would be used to.
Andre stood slightly behind Stanley and Cillian he not only waited in anticipation for the match but also for their input. While the pair were focused entirely on the match his attention was on them.
Stanley was still in top shape. The military must have a strict regime surrounding exercise. He looked like he could run a marathon and fight hand to hand at the end of it. He was not someone Andre ever wanted to mess with, even outside a Mech, he was most likely deadly. Over 1900mm tall with an athletic build, he was the ideal size for a six or twelve metre Mech. A four-metre would fit him like an oversized heavy exo. His dark hair was suitably close-cropped, and he was cleanly shaven. What was noticeable about Stanley was his posture was always superb. He never hunched and rarely leaned.
Cillian was somewhat shorter 1800mm and in his early forties, still young by today's standards. His hair was short, but messy, although it seemed there was some style to the chaos. Cillian notably wore a bodysuit underneath a white coat. The long white coat was synonymous with his occupation. It spoke engineer louder than a sign above his head.
Both of them had gen-three cybernetic implants. Presumably, Cillian's was military grade while Stanley's certainly was. While they were cadets AI nurturing was at a much lower level than it was now, mainly due to the current advancement of cybernetics.
Andre took his attention off the pair, he would record everything they said and turned it towards the match.
The Shu cadets unsurprisingly moved fluidly, with grace and speed. They were not as fast as their counterparts from squad zero, the squad which were current favourites to reach the final as they were undefeated.
”Their exos are different, but they move well,” Stanley offered, and Cillian nodded.
Shu swarmed into two groups, the photon blade wielders split off from the railgunners who began to chase after a height advantage.
M3 Horus had kept together. The cadets armed with PPCs gained height immediately across three buildings in close proximity where the minigunners patrolled the streets beneath. The minigunners attempted to hide their location from Shu, but it would not be hard to deduce they were close to their squadmates in order to provide protection.
One used a parked vehicle for cover. Where the other two kept close to the buildings to their south. They would have to rely on the other cadets to inform when and where Shu approached. They were hidden and in doing so effectively blind themselves.
”Basic tactical arrangement, I see an M1 squad, although talented. Not a practised and experienced M3 squad,” Stanley opined.
”Let's see what those PPCs do. I would imagine that Fortescue has put some resources to ensure the daughter puts on a good show.” Cillian replied.
”What is she ranked in M1?” Stanley asked. He mainly wanted to know her Gauntlet and Obstacle course rankings.
Before the action started Cillian displayed the tables for M1, and it only took Stanley moments to scan the overall, gauntlet and obstacle course top tens.
”I see,” he said non-committedly. Despite all the equipment and preparation, Fortescue gave their daughter she was third at best in most disciplines and overall. Nothing to sneeze at, but surely they expected her to be rank one. Especially since she was using tournament grade equipment.
”First engagement,” Andre warned.
Horus began firing on Shu with their PPC, but only a few blasts.
”Power?” Stanley asked.
”Undoubtedly,” Cillian replied. Which meant that while the PPC may deal high damage, it drained the stored power of the exo quickly. A cadet would have to shoot well and wisely. It also meant that power would not be available for other systems. The trio would not know the details, while they could make an estimation based on their knowledge.
”It won't be easy for them to hit Shu,” Stanley mentioned. The Shu cadets were dodging and weaving into position, and so far the accuracy and anticipation of the M1 squad were not good enough to land a hit.
The railguns began to return fire. The sonic booms were audible in the box.
”Mach four,” Stanley said, ”military grade.” He was able to assess the booms and estimate the speed of the round.
”You're on fire today,” Cillian praised.
”My AI is using the sensors from my suit. Don't give me any credit,” Stanley replied. He was also old school. He used his AI as an assistant but thought of it as a program.
”Military grade railguns versus Fortescue prototype PPC. I told you this was going to be an interesting group. It's not even an inter-Academy match,” Cillian offered.
Stanley nodded. He wasn't going to argue with that point.
Shu's close combat cadets held their position in cover one hundred metres out. They did not charge or engage, they waited.
The spectators waited in anticipation for the first crucial move, successful or disastrous when the railguns and PPCs began to exchange fire at two and three hundred metres range from cover.
The PPCs disadvantage, a slow rate of fire, was overcome with their ability to destroy cover. Where the railguns pure speed meant that dodging a round was nigh impossible however this was of little use when your target was behind cover.
The three photon blade-wielding close combat cadets from Shu began to move. One east and one west, the third stayed hidden in a central location. They were attempting to use width to flank the opposition and possibly draw and waste PPC fire.
Every time a PPC bolt flew towards the mesh exo blade wielders, they dove or engaged jump jets.
”That is excellent coordination,” Cillian observed. Their squadmates were warning them of the incoming shot.
”Most likely from the squad leader or spotter AI directly to CC cadet AI,” Stanley suggested. By CC he meant close combat. ”Verbal comms would be too slow.”
”They are well drilled,” Andre noted.
Stanley nodded. This squad was excellent for M3 Term 1, he would estimate they were as good as their squad zero counterparts. Shu had some gems this year. Stanley had his AI look up details of the Master of Shu M3 while he continued to watch.
”What do you think the draw is on one of those PPCs?” Stanley asked.
”If I had to guess, 1MW. The average storage in a heavy is about 3MW. The tournament edition would unlikely have more, it is designed to maximise armour value, strength and speed. Power storage usually gives way in terms of space while using the best technology available. The most an exo would have is 5MW with the minimum being 1MW. We can calculate the relationship between generation and consumption by timing the shots across all cadets.” Cillian added.
Once the storage was consumed, even partially, the rate of fire was limited by how quickly the inbuilt generator recharged the storage. This would not inform the size of the storage but would give them an accurate estimate of the main limitation of the weapon with extended use.
Suddenly, the stalemate was broken.
”That was bound to happen sooner or later,” Stanley said. Two Shu railgunners took down a Horus PPC cadet when they broke cover to fire.
”That PPC may do a lot of damage, but a double headshot with good railguns will take out any exo,” Stanley stated. An average exo could not withstand a single headshot from a military grade railgun.
”The damage of the PPC is offset by the speed of its bolt and its inaccuracy. The railgun is able to maintain a higher rate of fire, it's harder to dodge due to its speed, and it's more accurate over medium and long ranges. It also doesn't consume all the power from the exo, allowing the cadet to perform other functions which require power.” Stanley gave his assessment of the ranged loadouts after ten minutes of combat.
Horus was being whittled down, they had lost three PPC users and only had one left. Although they were M1, they still only had seven cadets due to being a zero squad.
”This is the endgame now,” Stanley offered his insight.
The Shu close combat cadets began to encroach into the Horus inner zone. From three different directions. The minigunners attempted to engage but were either damaged or pinned down by covering fire from the railguns.
The two flanking cadets closed and then retreated. Horus was busy with the three mesh exos with only one PPC wielder remaining who had to split focus from the close combat and railgun cadets while maintaining cover, trying not to be taken down as their companions were.
The infiltration of the close combat Shu cadets ended up being a ruse. To occupy Horus while three of their railgunners took up better positions to get the minigunners into a crossfire pincer.
”Masterclass of tactical play for the M1 cadets and the Fortescue brat,” Stanley said giving his opinion of the Shu cadets movements. It was a chess game where one player had little experience in chess.
Cillian looked over his shoulder, to see if anyone other than Andre was listening. He didn't mind Stanley calling the Fortescue progeny a brat, but someone might.
As the battle ended with Shu losing no cadets, Stanley looked at Cillian, ”So much for M1s in an M3 competition.”