Difference between revisions of "Anti-Ship Electronic Warfare Missile"

(→‎Game Notes: its it's fix)
Line 8: Line 8:
 
<div class="gamerules">
 
<div class="gamerules">
 
===Game Notes===
 
===Game Notes===
Each missile takes 6 bomb slots and weights 2 tons. It's cost is 20,000 Cbills, and Tech rating is marked E/X-X-E.  ASEW missiles suffer a +4 modifier to hit targets less than 500 tons, and may not be launched by units within an atmosphere or on the Space/Atmosphere Interface.<ref name=TO358/>
+
Each missile takes 6 bomb slots and weights 2 tons. Its cost is 20,000 Cbills, and Tech rating is marked E/X-X-E.  ASEW missiles suffer a +4 modifier to hit targets less than 500 tons, and may not be launched by units within an atmosphere or on the Space/Atmosphere Interface.<ref name=TO358/>
 
</div>
 
</div>
  

Revision as of 10:04, 20 December 2013

Anti-Ship Electronic Warfare Missile

Description

Anti-Ship Electronic Warfare Missiles, also called ASEW Missiles, were a type of Arrow IV missile mounted on Aerospace Fighters' external hardpoints. The Lyran Alliance began development of the ASEW missile to make up for their small fleet size, however prototypes of these weapons were still undergoing testing at the breakout of the Jihad and never entered into mass production. Unable to be used in an atmosphere or launched from a standard Arrow IV platform, these missiles do not damage a ship directly but instead cripple weapons accuracy, render Naval C3 and Naval Comm-Scanner Suite systems ineffective, and jam a Kearny-Fuchida Drive with electronic static to delay its ability to jump. Despite the missile's rarity, the resistance movement within the Word of Blake-controlled Free Worlds League did procure of a number of ASEW missiles for use in their raids on larger ships.[1]

Notes

Game Notes

Each missile takes 6 bomb slots and weights 2 tons. Its cost is 20,000 Cbills, and Tech rating is marked E/X-X-E. ASEW missiles suffer a +4 modifier to hit targets less than 500 tons, and may not be launched by units within an atmosphere or on the Space/Atmosphere Interface.[1]

Refererences

  1. 1.0 1.1 Tactical Operations, p. 358

Bibliography