This is relevant for the wiki as it affect how much space we give to explaining what these terms are from the perspective of characters in the universe.
Meta-game: The Adventure class ships is a term used strictly by the player ship-builders. The wiki will have a passing reference in some talk pages and on the meta-data pages. But none of the ship descriptions nor the explanation of other terms will have any reference to ACS, BCS, or related items.
In-game: The "Adventure class ship" is a term used by the characters, the nobility, various members of the bureaucracy. There will be an article or section of an article describing the terms and it's definition. All the ship designs will have this as part of the classification system.
My opinion is "ACS" is a meta-game terms. It applies to the ship builders based upon the design system. The in-game architects have no real idea of the difference between size. Their is no
As an in-game term "ACS" is a official term would not be expanded to "Adventure class ship". It may officially be something else and generally referred this way. So some hand-waving in the explanations would be applied.
Meta-game: The Adventure class ships is a term used strictly by the player ship-builders. The wiki will have a passing reference in some talk pages and on the meta-data pages. But none of the ship descriptions nor the explanation of other terms will have any reference to ACS, BCS, or related items.
In-game: The "Adventure class ship" is a term used by the characters, the nobility, various members of the bureaucracy. There will be an article or section of an article describing the terms and it's definition. All the ship designs will have this as part of the classification system.
My opinion is "ACS" is a meta-game terms. It applies to the ship builders based upon the design system. The in-game architects have no real idea of the difference between size. Their is no
As an in-game term "ACS" is a official term would not be expanded to "Adventure class ship". It may officially be something else and generally referred this way. So some hand-waving in the explanations would be applied.
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