Rhodes Project

Revision as of 20:43, 3 September 2023 by DragonoftheRust (talk | contribs)

The Rhodes Project was a Republic of the Sphere miltary development project, to create combat-ready Ultraheavy BattleMechs.

History

Sometime after the Blackout, when chaos erupted across the Inner Sphere, the Republic of the Sphere was forced to militarize themselves to survive, as they were attacked across all their space by multiple factions. One of his mainstay characteristics was the use of the most advanced technology available, and the creation of new weapons or upgrading of old ones. The most characteristic investigation program was to create a BattleMech bigger than any other, a real mobile fortress. Though it wasn't a new concept: two centuries before, Stephan Amaris attempted the same, with what later was called Amaris' Folly, the Matar (BattleMech), which became a total failure. However, the concept has success probabilities: the Clans later used the Matars plans to create the Stone Rhino, a incredibly powerful 'Mech. Later, the Blakists, during the Word of Blake Jihad refined it more, with the Omega (BattleMech), an impressive war machine, though it didn't survive the Jihad.

The Republic charged the project to Rhodes Foundry, located on the planet Devil's Rock. The first attempts, like the Orca, failed, and even the Poseidon, the first really successful Ultraheavy, only saw limited use. But the final version, the Ares, was the only real one produced in masse, though it failed to prevent the Republic's fall during the Battle of Terra. However, it still was the biggest and most powerful 'Mech ever created to the date.[1][2][3]

Rhodes Project BattleMechs

Gallery

References

  1. Technical Readout: 3145 Republic of the Sphere, pp. 44, 46
  2. Technical Readout: 3145 Republic of the Sphere, p. 44, "PSD-V2 Poseidon"
  3. Technical Readout: 3145, pp. 18, 25, 182, 184
  4. Technical Readout: 3145 Republic of the Sphere, pp. 44–45, 126: Poseidon - Background
  5. Technical Readout: 3145, pp. 18, 25, 182, 184

Bibliography