It's actually in the MT (Mega), not MgT (Mongoose) where that use premiers. In the PM weapon tables for starship weapons.I don’t know every iteration of sand, but first I read the sand as shotgun rule was MgT.
It's actually in the MT (Mega), not MgT (Mongoose) where that use premiers. In the PM weapon tables for starship weapons.I don’t know every iteration of sand, but first I read the sand as shotgun rule was MgT.
No, it first appears in CT Striker.It's actually in the MT (Mega), not MgT (Mongoose) where that use premiers. In the PM weapon tables for starship weapons.
I've seen this in both for dealing with invisible creatures.I'm not sure if it was superheroes or fantasy, but there's the option of coating a target with something sticky and visible, making it easier to hit.
And dive bombing at adjacent range.
Note that, as long as the particles are larger than the wavelength, and dense enough to significantly impair the apparent cross section, the albedo (reflectivity) can be 0 to 1 (none to all).I know that it is some sort of canister shot that launches and spreads pellets of a certain size and that's it. Range is short but even that is unclear.
I don't remember the version, but one edition had ferrous particles that could be dragged magnetically a little while. You still needed one 'shot' per combat round to be of any use. Enough for colour, not enough to muck up play balance.To be fair, I'm not quite sure how you can maintain a cohesive magnetized cloud travelling alongside a constant accelerating spacecraft.
I am looking at a sandcasters like the 20th-century version of a smoke missions which was basically oil with a reflective obscurant poured on a hot plate to cover a battlefield. It defeats or degrades enemy electro-optical (EO) systems. In general, use screening smoke to attack enemy target acquisition and guidance systems by placing smoke between the friendly unit and the sensors. FM 3-101-1 provides the guidelines of a smoke platoon in a chemical company.I think of Sandcasters as similar to chaff/decoys that modern fighters carry. Certainly though, lasers can cut a mirror in real life, it's mostly in movies like James Bond where they reflect.