mike wightman
SOC-14 10K
Has anyone ever toyed with the idea that Lucan wasn't a mustache twirling pantomime villain, but was a legitimate heir and eventually won the rebellion?
Has anyone ever toyed with the idea that Lucan wasn't a mustache twirling pantomime villain, but was a legitimate heir and eventually won the rebellion?
Wounded Colossus was the work of Bill Cameron not Don M.
Here is the freelancetraveller version of it:
http://www.freelancetraveller.com/features/othroads/woco.html
In one hypothetical variant I had in mind, called Sol Invictus, the Solomani steamrolled across the Imperial border once Imperial presence was greatly weakened by the Civil War. They liberated Terra within a few months and eventually re-captured the old Solomani Sphere. They did stop a bit further Coreward as their forces began to be spread thin. Solomani occupation of Imperial worlds varied with the officer in charge of the given planet, from business as usual to war crimes. With forces spread thin, the Party and Solsec had a hard time maintaining uniformity of local policy.The Solomani front is the one I can accept the easiest, once the Solomani see the internal struggle in the 3I, but the fact they were so easily stopped so short of their goals with the IN quarreling among themselves puzzles me, to say the least
The open question is how the Aslan would react to Solomani naval assets being reassigned from the Dark Nebula border to the Coreward front...
So, a Solomani-Aslan treaty... I like that.That's been addressed in canon - IIRC, no official reaction; unofficially, Ihaiti are "invited" to take over the spinward worlds the Confederation "liberates" from the 3I but outside the Solomani Sphere.
...So IMTU, Lucan doesn't start as a twitchy villain type. But he does end as one, growing paranoid and extremist by events as well as the guilt of killing in cold blood to ensure the future of the Imperium (that it was falling apart despite his best efforts made things even worse - he had killed in cold blood for no reason).
That there was a fifth column organization devoted to "justice" called the Brothers of Varian brought Lucan to privately laugh until he cried.
So, a Solomani-Aslan treaty... I like that.
I think the problem with the Rebellion was that it strained credulity, too many implausible things happened.
Dulinor manages to take down the entire Imperial family and escapes.
Varian turns up dead under questionable circumstances.
The Vargr are easily united by a media construct when no one in their history could ever come close to doing the same thing.
Numerous long loyal sectors declare independence because they don't trust Lucan. Mainly because of how he (mis)handled the impossible Vargr.
And perhaps biggest of all, out of nowhere the Imperium is so fragile that it flies apart. Even though it survived a period when Imperial assassination was not at all unusual.
I think the problem with the Rebellion was that it strained credulity, too many implausible things happened.
It does seem implausible when you put it all that way.
Maybe...
Dulinor assassinates Strephon and Iolanthe but is himself killed in the throne room.
Ciceneia Iphegenia escapes the assassination attempt, wounded but alive.
Dulinor's men are all killed or captured.
Now it's Isis Alethian leading the Second Iliesh Revolt against her former friend, Ciencia.
The Iliesh rebels are in a bad position without outside help. So Isis allies with the Solomani Confederation and various Aslan ihaetai.
The Zhodani see what's going on and then decide to renew pressure on the Imperium along their border...
NOTE Forgive my typos. A lot of made-up words in this post.
What about the canonical events that follow strikes you as implausible or un-fun?
What seems good?
But the coup on Capitol fails and he's forced to flee back to his home sector.
I like your alternate timeline idea. Major B
Minor niggle concerning mine--
Dulinor doesn't ally with the Solomani and Aslan. He's already dead at that point, killed in the Imperial Palace.
His daughter and heir, Isis, makes the pact.
Her ideas and personality are somewhat different.
The Sphere will be Whole Again!
The Confederation has been planning and preparing for the past century to liberate their Occupied Territories, and a large scale disturbance in the Imperium would be seen as an opportune time to strike.
A general civil war would make it imperative.
As regards to the plausibility of the Vargr using singing to give their troops a sense of unity:
https://youtu.be/lCVc1X0WI7s?t=780
I have seen a lot of criticism of how the Rebellion history was presented in MT.
Let's grant that Dulinor does the deed. Maybe he's lightly wounded by the Aslan ambassador, but he still manages to murder the Emperor, Empress, and Grand-Princess.
His men kill the Emperor's men.
But the coup on Capitol fails and he's forced to flee back to his home sector.
Okay.
What about the canonical events that follow strikes you as implausible or un-fun?
What seems good?