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24

The Starcaster Chronicles, 11.16

February 27, 2023 by Tim


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wkz
wkz
1 year ago

… the peanut gallery voted NOT to run?

scottsmom
scottsmom
1 year ago
Reply to  wkz

Story would have grown stale fast if they hadn’t.

Kalko
Kalko
1 year ago
Reply to  scottsmom

Are people still voting on the story in a poll on patreon?

The Legacy
The Legacy
1 year ago
Reply to  Kalko

Yup!

Erik B
Erik B
1 year ago
Reply to  Kalko

Yes, we typically get a vote or two every issue or two.

Esc
Esc
1 year ago
Reply to  wkz

Hey look, they’re growing up too!

James Rye
James Rye
1 year ago

Oh thank all the gods that the readers didn’t vote for running away again!!!

Last edited 1 year ago by James Rye
Kenju
Kenju
1 year ago
Reply to  James Rye

Now we get to see the inevitable betrayal ^^

Whatever
Whatever
1 year ago
Reply to  Kenju

On the bright side, maybe we will get to see the starcaster melt a few people. ?

Eldest Gruff
Eldest Gruff
1 year ago
Reply to  Whatever

This comment aged well.

Doom
Doom
1 year ago

And sp the prodigal son returns to the fold. Lets gloss over the fact he was dragged kicking and screaming all the way for the moment

It only took his father’s best friend with a deep personal connection, his newly developed conscience wanting to protect someone who saved his life and an entire battlefleet turning up more or less by accident to do it too!

Yup, it’s time Cort stopped running. I think this bit was written rather well 🙂

A different Tim
A different Tim
1 year ago
Reply to  Doom

I didn’t think it was at all by accident that the fleet arrived, it sounded like they were tracking Starcaster energy use.

Nomx
Nomx
1 year ago

Well the point was they weren’t looking for him, and accidentally arrived in the same system.

Eric the White
Eric the White
1 year ago
Reply to  Nomx

They were looking for him, the Federation just doesn’t know it yet. He fired off a Starcaster a number of times in training. They detected it and though it was the bad guys.

Last edited 1 year ago by Eric the White
CMasta1992
CMasta1992
1 year ago

This is the right play, let’s just hope the majority of the Federation aren’t dicks about it

BlacRok
BlacRok
1 year ago
Reply to  CMasta1992

They’ll be as kind as a military can be against an unaligned planet-destroying power as can be. The federation’s star casters though, may be a different story

Ben
Ben
1 year ago
Reply to  BlacRok

I think the existing Fed starcasters would be all to happy to have backup.
If you had rocked up to the US offering them a free battleship just after Pearl Harbor, they’d have gladly taken it and given you a nicely paid position

Eric the White
Eric the White
1 year ago
Reply to  Ben

Maybe. If you and your parents had both been born in the US but were of Japanese decent , they might have taken your battleship and put you in the Manzanar Concentration Camp.

Last edited 1 year ago by Eric the White
Nightdagger
Nightdagger
1 year ago
Reply to  BlacRok

To be fair, the Federation’s Starcasters would probably want to align him to their side and are in a far better position to teach him how to control that power. And considering that he’s already got really good control over it compared to how some other so-called “experienced” users end up burning the crap out of themselves on use, he might be particularly gifted with it or something, and they would be DUMB to not try and nurture that power towards their own defense.

VibrantEvolution
VibrantEvolution
1 year ago
Reply to  BlacRok

he may not be alligned with the federation but he is against the same enemy. Just cuz he doesn’t trust them doesn’t mean he will be hostile against them.

Shade
Shade
1 year ago
Reply to  CMasta1992

I mean, I figure they’ve got three options. Press-gang him, force him into service. Chop off his arm and give the starcaster to someone who’ll play ball (I don’t remember if this is a viable option, or if it is, the Federation knows 100% it’ll work). Or, station him on a Core World under heavy protections and surveillance, potentially as a last-ditch defense measure.

Dagroth
Dagroth
1 year ago
Reply to  Shade

Or kill him and give the Starcaster to someone they trust. (harsh, but it is an option, and considering what the Starcaster is, I wouldn’t be particularly suprised, if they decide to do that)

Also, when Cort was considering cutting his own arm off, Nyrah told him, that Starcaster would heal it, before he’d even reach the bone. To be fair though, Cort only had a regular knife, if Federation would be going to do it, they’d probably get some better (and faster) tools.

Last edited 1 year ago by Dagroth
Charles Gollmar
Charles Gollmar
1 year ago

Finally a rational thought process from Cort instead of one rooted in panic-based decisions and Han Solo loner-hero aspirations.

Ben
Ben
1 year ago

I totally forgot to vote, but would have been in favor of what the majority chose.

Odds aren’t great with the feds, but I think they’re worse on the run.

That said, I think it would have been best (and still might be) if he could save a city or small moon from destruction before joining up with the feds. Y’know, become popular enough that he’d be be inconvenient to disappear.

ThatMageGuy
ThatMageGuy
1 year ago

….Odds that the Federation is going to screw them all?

Darkhorse
Darkhorse
1 year ago
Reply to  ThatMageGuy

Probably not so much. You have someone with the power of stars strapped to his arm. It is a huge boon to their military. Tactically you want to set these people up for life. In return you request assistance with the enemies and the training it requires.

Even if you want to kill them, as they are a big unknown and maybe a loose cannon, you want to do it unexpected. As little danger as possible to yourself and as quick as possible kill. Probably ambushing with two experienced starcasters will suffice. If one wouldn’t suffice.

GeorgeV
GeorgeV
1 year ago
Reply to  Darkhorse

And even then it sets a risky precedent. If the Federation is willing to betray and attack/amputate Starcaster wielders even when they are trying to work with them, any other or future Starcaster wielder should be weary of them (and probably try to find a less dangerous/untrustworthy faction to sign up with).

Esc
Esc
1 year ago
Reply to  GeorgeV

Exactly. Soft power is built upon trust. Publicizing heroic Cort falling into the fold and willingly helping the Federation and showing how he is rewarded and respected helps further the Federation’s goals, even if done cynically.

Even in real life there is applicability: one of the few strengths Western democracies have over autocratic states is that people are generally much more likely to assume that Western Democracies aren’t rife with corruption so they will do what they say they will do. Not that we hurt that rep every day with shitty politicans, but that’s another matter.

Last edited 1 year ago by Esc
foducool
foducool
1 year ago

“and now I’m in federation jail forever”

Nightdagger
Nightdagger
1 year ago
Reply to  foducool

Not likely. A, you set the precedent to the galaxy of “If you’re a Starcaster user, don’t let the Federation get their hands on you”, and B, antagonizing someone with the literal powers of creation and destruction attached to their arms without first trying everything in your power to either befriend or destroy them would be a rather stupid move.

Scarsdale
Scarsdale
1 year ago

This is going to be tricky, I’m sure some high placed a-hole will come up with “Why don’t we just amputate his arm so we can decide who wears it? There’s plenty of prosthetics he can be using in it’s place.” if not just straight out order him killed for it. That song that goes “I GOT THE POWER” keeps running in my head when I see things like this. But yes it is the best choice, sooner or later they will run out of options or ways to run away. I figured it would knock some sense into him… Read more »

Doom
Doom
1 year ago
Reply to  Scarsdale

Isn’t at least one of the current Starcaster wearers an extra-galatic war refugee who escaped from a previous Dranglex extermination campaign? So why take Cort out when he’s an actual Federation citizen, even if he’s the kind of ex-Marshall embarrassment whom gets booted out of jail with the local cop’s boot imprinted on his butt regularly? Second worst case scenario Cort is too untrained to risk using his Starcaster or simply doesn’t want to. That still leaves the Dranglex with only one starcaster versus two with the threat of it being three breathing down on them Worst case scenario is… Read more »

Crestlinger
Crestlinger
1 year ago

Have to laugh if that blast of his gave the highest-up a mohawk and That’s what started this hunt.

Rolando
Rolando
1 year ago

There are no safe options. All of them involve high risk, indeed. And none of the team’s concerns are invalid. But I do think their odds are better with the Federation. Running away seems like it’ll surely make things worse, by now. We’ll see what happens, when (not if) the Feds try to do something shitty to them. I think it all boils down to that one defining moment. To what the Federations does exactly, and how the team reacts to it. On the one hand, Cort and Quel are better equipped to deal with “the devil they know.” On… Read more »

Last edited 1 year ago by Rolando
Shecky
Shecky
1 year ago

Was there actually a vote here, usually votes and results are mentioned.

Beliar
Beliar
1 year ago
Reply to  Shecky

Just checked. There was one that suggests that it would be about this page. Not sure why the result is not posted.

Erik B
Erik B
1 year ago
Reply to  Shecky

Yes! There was a vote between 11.12 and 11.13. The poll was: To Blast Or Not To Blast “The transponder in Quel’s ship is pinging on a Federation frequency, that has been picked up by the battlegroup that just entered the system. With time to triangulate the signal, it would pinpoint Cort’s exact location on the moon. If discovered, Cort and crew lose control of the situation and Quel’s options for how to handle the wanted fugitives in his company vanish. Option 1: Blast the transponder, killing the signal before it’s too late. Option 2: Listen to Quel. Option 1… Read more »

Erik B
Erik B
1 year ago
Reply to  Erik B

For some context, Tim had mentioned in a comment that the feds just had a signal. Not a location of signal. The poll description said “with time to triangulate the signal, it would pinpoint Cort’s location”. So some people were voting for shoot the transponder, since they may cut it before anyone can find their location, buying more time. Other people were voting in favour of shooting, since they were thinking of Cort’s history involving snap decision choices, not always sensible choices, and were trying to vote him into character moves.