My gaming group has always found it questionable whether one regiment of Marines would be sufficient for an entire subsector. Particularly if they all ride around together on a regimental transport ship. If you drop a company on every planet that you care about, a company of battle dress marines is pretty fierce, but a planetary armored vehicle force like a tank company (or, really, maybe something the size of a regiment because you don't get as many tanks in a tank company as you get marines in a marine company) would fight them on more or less even ground. Actually, the tanks might come out a bit better than a battle suit marine one-on-one, depending on which tanks and which TL. A 35mm railgun isn't something you just carry around in your backpack, but it would turn even Battle Dress marines into pink mist, and that's a TL9 weapon.
I do believe Marines form a potent force-at-a-point type group, capable of hitting hard against most targets, particularly with the advantage of surprise. And it's much easier to carry a company of marines than the same number of 55-ton tanks.
Almost certainly not.My gaming group has always found it questionable whether one regiment of Marines would be sufficient for an entire subsector.
The idea that a single regiment (combat strength: 5 ... not 50 or 5C) is "sufficient" for the mobile defense of entire subsector ... solo ... is, to put it mildly, both laughable (on its face) and insulting to the intellect (when rubbing two brain cells together). One of those "have some sense of proportion!" kinds of deals.My gaming group has always found it questionable whether one regiment of Marines would be sufficient for an entire subsector.
Marines aren’t going to be putting out fires anyway, they kick in the door and hold the LZ at best.Almost certainly not.
Here is what the Fifth Frontier War game had to say about the subject:
Assault carriers transporting ground troops could load 6C of troops when undamaged, 3C if damaged (which is Corps to Field Army sized).
Battle ships could load 20 troops when undamaged, 10 if damaged (which is brigade to division sized).
Cruiser squadrons could carry their Defense Factor in troops (typically no more than 8, so in the battalion to regiment size).
Populated worlds on the map tended to have standing domestic armies for defense (and were not mobile).
Fleet mobile quantities of army ground troops ranged from combat strength: 1 (battalion) all the way up to combat strength: 5C (field army).
- Jewell/Jewell had 12C (2+ Field Armies).
- Louzy/Jewell had 20K (40 Field Armies).
- Efate/Regina had 1K (2 Field Armies).
- Menorb/Regina had 20K (4 Field Armies).
- Arden/Vilis had 20K (4 Field Armies).
- Vilis/Vilis had 15C (3 Field Armies).
- Extolay/Lanth had 15C (3 Field Armies).
- Equus/Lanth had 12C (2+ Field Armies).
- Porozolo/Rhylanor had 150K (300 Field Armies , yay balkanized government?).
- Rhylanor/Rhylanor had 5C (1 Field Army).
Imperial Marines unit counters (8 of them) were all combat strength: 5 (regiment), TL=15, grav equipped, 2 of which were elite units ... and were all required to be deployed on the map at imperial naval bases only (a few of which existed outside the imperial borders).
The idea that a single regiment (combat strength: 5 ... not 50 or 5C) is "sufficient" for the mobile defense of entire subsector ... solo ... is, to put it mildly, both laughable (on its face) and insulting to the intellect (when rubbing two brain cells together). One of those "have some sense of proportion!" kinds of deals.
A single regiment (combat strength: 5) can be transported by a single cruiser squadron ... which does not a(n imperial navy) "fleet" make.
That's hardly enough mobile ground forces to put out "brush fires" in a subsector, let alone defend it from an uprising or an invasion.
If the answer is "once every 15 years per world" (almost once per generation) on average ... then the answer to your question is ... 2 deployments per year per subsector, on average.Let's say there are thirty systems in a subsector.
Calculate how many times these systems need a Marine intervention force, per annum.
But there's a difference between having forces to deal with "domestic" problems, and having the Zhodani swarm across the spinward frontier.Point being, you don't "build to meet the average" in terms of response capacity ... instead, you build to meet the surge (so you don't get overwhelmed when the surge demand happens).