I want to make sure I understand this right. My knowledge of physics is about the level of interested amateur, so...
Half value layer for a 100 keV x-ray beam in air is 35 meters. Near as I can tell, ship lasers at TL13+ are x-ray lasers. So, you're landed, you pump 250 MWs into a laser to deal with an approaching APC. Half the energy gets dumped into the air over a 35 meter distance? We just dumped 125 megajoules into a line 35 meters long? That's, what, equivalent to 60 pounds of TNT? Did I do that wrong?

Half-Value Layer - X-rays | nuclear-power.com
The half-value layer expresses the thickness of absorbing material needed to reduce the incident radiation intensity by a factor of two. Half-Value Layer - X-rays
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Half value layer for a 100 keV x-ray beam in air is 35 meters. Near as I can tell, ship lasers at TL13+ are x-ray lasers. So, you're landed, you pump 250 MWs into a laser to deal with an approaching APC. Half the energy gets dumped into the air over a 35 meter distance? We just dumped 125 megajoules into a line 35 meters long? That's, what, equivalent to 60 pounds of TNT? Did I do that wrong?