I like the fact that this intense situation happened because someone forgot to update the emergency jump coordinates so they wound up jumping to a different location than the rest of the fleet. Nothing supernatural, no alien interference, no time travel paradox, just people doing the best with what they've got and making mistakes under stress.
I hate the fact that they didn't consult an IT person for this... or explain how the hell the colons bridged the air gap... like why weren't any transmitters and recievers physically disconnected? And if they were how did the colons get into the networks?
@@matthewthorpe9641 It's one sad story but that's the way 2020 has been going. I saw there is a GoFund me or some other similar fund created for him. I hope he survives.
Yah. And Kate Vernon as his wife, Ellen... every time they were on screen together, it hurt how believable their actions and emotional reactions were. You just can't properly show the human element alone, but they had it, and they showed it, and it was terrible and it was grand.
I always liked the little detail of when they are breaking the network the camera flashes up briefly and you can see the virus penetrated the fifth firewall. And no one notices because the screen returns to normal when gaeta breaks the network
Yeah.. i renember back when this aired.. when in laters eps it becames evident that there was a Cylon infiltration in Galactica systems some people said how it was posible if Galactica had broken the network and when going back to this ep sure enought the final firewall was indeed breached for a second and its too subtle that you need to look for it to notice..
Always loved this this version. The rumor was that Edward James Olmos read the script and initially he stated he "was onboard" IF-there was no funny rubber aliens-that is-it had to be as real as the nose on your face. One of the greatest if not the best sci-fi there ever was.
After watching the first Battlestar Galactica, I was a little apprehensive when I heard Kate was playing the new Starbucks in the remake; boy was I wrong. It was a fantastic series and she was and is still a powerful actress.
Talk about attention to detail... when Galactica completes her jump at :44, you can subtly see the star pattern is different than the origination point’s star pattern. I love how the show tried to be as scientifically accurate where possible. Galactica isn’t warping through space but taking advantage of the fold in space and time.
Good call. I missed that. Did you notice in the episode "Bllod on the Scales" how the FTL drive looks like a cross between an old steam ship piston drive and a magnetic Casmir Engine? As if you were trying to design something that could create enough negative energy for, oh, I don't know, opening a wormhole...
Lol But the “star pattern” isn’t different because Galactica jumped to a new location. The “star pattern” looks different because the camera angle changed. In fact, when they filmed this scene, Galactica didn’t move at all - they just shut off the camera, moved the camera to a new angle, and then turned the camera back on. Much cheaper to film it that way. Teehee
What they missed though is during the jump, Gaeta and Dualla apparently switch places. Before the jump, Dee is at the FTL console while Gaeta is sitting looking at the DRADIS screen. After the jump, Gaeta was now standing at the FTL console,... What the frak?
I love the attention to detail for those with eagle eyes (or a good PAUSE Button). After Gaeta reaches down to physically break the network connection, you can see that the last firewall has gone red, indicating it was breached.
Snapper314 Yep! I always thought they missed detecting it, but this is even better. There is a reason why we connect and automate complex procedures in real life. It is simply too much to ask of people to keep track of everything in the middle of a crisis situation.
It was breached but he cut the network before anything could happen. Otherwise Galactica could have lost power or life support. Shows just how close they could have come
@@SantomPh It wasn't enough. In the next couple of episodes it becomes clear that the Cylon virus has propagated through the core systems and begins trying to subvert the computer systems and kill everyone. It almost succeeded too.
What makes it work is they still keep the color coding from the original series (Colonial weapons fire is red, Cylon weapons fire is white) so there's a bit of a continuity nod mixed in with the realism.
For me that was the most annoying thing. That meant the combat became completely unrealistic. They could fly and turn fast, which would make it almost impossible to hit with a ballistic projectile. It would be like a WW2 bombing raid, 2000 bombs with just a couple hitting the target. Then instead of using railguns, which would cause massive damage and would be hard to avoid, they used nukes which are almost completely useless in space.
@@DavidPruitt Technically missles are the better long range weaponry, since they can correct course to compensate for evasion. Railguns are just guns with higher projectile velocity, but like in Expanse, they are used for close quarters combat, as on the great ranges the projectile could be detected and avoided. On another hand, the battles feel extremely short range. In reality spaceships would probably try to engage with missles over huge distances, but here Cylons and Battlestars do come extremely near each other. Certainly way closer than a missle range should allow. On the other hand, the ships in BSG seem to be extremely bulky, So maybe that is the justification for projectile weapons - the ships can't dodge due to inertia. In real world we would probably forgo the size in favour of smaller ships that could dodge. Unless the FTL capacity required this massive size.
@@VaniFoxOfficial Well, I for one, firstly would have done away with the narration. Secondly I don't think they should have "decided" to go full Ludite. Instead I would have just had the fleet disappear with no explanation, stranding the survivors on Earth with few tools to colonize the new world. But perhaps the biggest change I would have made for a show that was originally panned for being a Star Wars rip off, would be to NOT end the series with the revelation that it all happened "a long time ago, in a galaxy far far away".
They were stupid for sending humanity to the stone age when a bipolar ai force like the cylons still exist. Let's become vulnerable and forget our history. Good plan.
The way the Cylon Raiders are launched from the Base Ship reminds me of bats dropping from the roof of a cave and taking flight. They even look like bats!
@5:08 Convince me otherwise that RDM & the crew are not major Anime fans of Macross, Gundam, Space Battleship Yamato & others... I'll wait. P.S. Best Frakking show ever.
I have often thought about this as well. Only need to keep the system with Wifi essentially separate. The rest of the systems should be fined networked internally if their is no remote access. The only reason I could think of and is probably why they didn't network computers, is intruders on the ship. Rare circumstance, but if Cylons board and got to one terminal, the ship was essentially there's. I recall reading or hearing this was a tactic in the first Cylon war, board the ship, get to a computer, access the O2 and vent the ship. In this case, just not linking in the coms could have saved the extra firewall's but probably delayed the calculations by a few minutes. Risk vs reward I guess.
I was under the impression the Cylons were not relying solely upon communications systems to disable the Colonial forces. Maybe I'm wrong but it always seemed like they had multiple attack vectors and weaknesses plotted. I don't need to necessarily find an official antenna but any interface I can interact with will do and any vulnerability in the comms system would be quickly overcome. Baltar gave them access to everything and you just need to find a computer terminal that can function as an antenna, regardless of whether it was designed that way. The same sort of speculative backdoor China was accused of by Bloomberg using hardware chips loaded with malware.
@@finscreennameI think if you watch it crashed through the glass open end of the flight pod that was part of the museum it was in the process of becoming at the start of the war.
He would have been had he not taken the time to literally call out the calculations were done, instead of breaking the network and calling out at the same time at least.
The best TV serie i have ever seen, enjoiyed and felt like a aprt fo me. the Music, the acting, the effort on each episode...even the extension of the whole serie is a delight. The whole cast, they put everything into this TV Serie and it yielded one the most amazing sci-fi adventures of this last Era.
I was a kid in 1970ies and watched BSG. I was never afraid of Cylons. They could not shoot think or anything,. This series I was utterly terrified of them.
Lee took all the composure from his father, if I recall correctly his good friend shot his father in the CIC in front of him. After he was made temporary CAG from being put in the brig for mutiny. Zach didn't really make the cut for flight school.
I would agree that it's probably the best sci-fi series. In terms of overall, it would have to contend with The Sopranos, which in my book is a hard fight to win.
Should have rigged switches that could cut the connections and then flipped them the very moment he saw that calculations were complete. By bothering to announce it, waiting for orders to cut the connections and then having to dive under his console to physically pull them, it was just the extra time the Cylons needed to break through the last firewall.
I think that's part of the point. They are all humans doing their best. Many times they make mistakes and fail, but in the end they're more or less okay.
@@blusafe1 yeah, he didn't exactly have a lot of time to set it up. And they were very anti-computer/automation on that ship, because of the previous war with the Cylons. And I like to think he needed the order, because he was too focused on his success.
Well, they had infiltrated the whole defense network before the first strike(through Baltar). So there was no hacking needed, just . send the command, all ships disabled.
Humans created the Cylons. It's the first thing stated on the show. What was covered later on (in "Caprica") was the fact that enlightened Cylons gained sentience and a sense of independence through the dead daughter of the man who created them in the first place. What really fubared the whole situation was monotheistic humans who thought the grass was greener when they brought religion into the Cylon mindset - which literally drove them insane. All they needed after that was the ability to control the defence networks, which was enabled by Gaius Baltar and Caprica Six who between them built a new defence network using a reprogrammed MCP processor - of the same type used as the Cylons' individual central processing units. You know the difference between a physical kill switch and a digital one? There isn't one. With either one you can cripple a communications network with a radio signal to drop a guillotine on a strap of data cables or randomly encrypt a root folder.
The Lords of Kobol know I loved the original BSG. Every Sunday night my 12-year-old butt was planted in front of the TV. But the reboot took things to an entirely new level. The old BSG was, let's face it, kind of a campy show for kids. This version was a gritty, sci-fi drama for the ages.
They should have promoted Gaeta. Dude was OOD whenever Adama or Tigh weren't there, he did all the jump calculations, rarely made mistakes, did a great job whenever he was needed. Adama only ever promoted pilots, most notably his son to Captain so he could be CAG (Starbuck too actually), to Major so he could be XO on Pegasus, and (a brevet commission) to Commander so he could command Pegasus. Literally no other officer got a promotion except pilots (Dualla goes from Senior NCO to Officer after she... marries the Admiral's son). I get why the focus on pilots, but I still feel like Gaeta being promoted to Captain, or Kelly to Major would have been nice to see later on.
Literally another second and Galactica's systems would have fallen to that virus. Should have had someone specifically sitting on the floor with their hands on those plugs ready to rip them out instantly.
Not enough spare hands. At GQ, everyone is supposed to be doing their jobs. The Damage Control crews are the only ones who are really sitting around waiting for the time to do their job.
@@john_molden Yeah, u might be right. But I'm a sucker for anything Galactica related. As a matter of fact, anything scifi related. I appreciate ur input but, we need more of this. :)
With respect, BSG hit its stride perfectly during Season 2 up until the end of the New Caprica arc. After that, it was literally a case of the writers trying not to write themselves in a corner, but keep the show going, as they were running out of ideas. I remember something about a writer's strike around the time The Fleet reached the 13th Tribe's Earth, and found the planet nuked itself. If things went poorly IRL, *That* would have been the end of the show then and there. Luckily things turned out alright, and although many *many* disagree with Galactica and friends finding our Earth in pre-recorded history times and being our ancestors to modern Us, I'd take that ending any day and a solid 4 seasons over anything else.
How the hell do you hack a computer network that's physically connected? Computers on a single vessel with a hard wired network should be immune to this sort of thing.
In a previous scene, they said that networking all of their systems together would significantly reduce the time need to calculate where the rest of the Fleet had jumped to. Unfortunately, this also enabled the Cylons to hack into the network through the Galactica's external comm systems, though they weren't able to instantly bypass its firewall like they did with the rest of Colonial Fleet due to the CNP not being present, therefore the system lacked the back door that allowed the Cylons to disable every other ship.
And no one thought of disconnecting wireless comms from the network. You don't need them to do the calculations. Try hacking a closed system: it's impossible.
The Expanse stands on the shoulders of BSG. What BSG mostly does well is manoeuvring small craft. There’s no banking against air that isn’t there in a vacuum and there wasn’t a lot of that sort of motion realism before BSG. What it doesn’t do so well is explain how Galactica can take so much punishment and damage and still keep operating without a shipyard to do repairs. The Expanse takes the realistic motion a step further and adds G-force consequences to the crews as they don’t have a “magic” anti grav system to keep their feet on the floor. The spacecraft in The Expanse are also quite lightweight similar to real spacecraft. You don’t want excess mass to cart around in space. This tends to make them egg shells armed with sledgehammers which is why the crews always suit up for battle as it’s almost certain the ship will decompress with even light damage.
@@rednaughtstudios couldn't have been said better, thank you! My thoughts on the Galactica and the excessive punishment she takes is that she's built not unlike battleships are built. I'm thinking extremely thick hulls and radiation shielding. I remember a scene in which the Pegasus was in a battle and the dialogue went something like, "roll the ship over so the underside will take the brunt of the incoming fire ". That leads me to believe there are also more heavily armored sections of the ship. Also I like that the CIC is located deep in the ship to protect command and control.
Star trek should be like Star Trek. Naive and optimistic, not gritty grim dark sci-fi fueled by violence and despair that a million franchises have done better.
No it's not. It's just the edgy bois of today want stuff to be daaaaaaaaaark. Light hearted doesn't sell. That's why the second Star Wars trilogy had to be a dark emo fest. Hell even effing Batman is now dark and grandiose. Anyway. That's why Star Trek is now full of injustice, violence, people swearing and so on. The "humanity that made it" that is at the core of Star Trek soul just wouldn't sell today.
The faster you are going when you land, the harder it is to design wheels for. Centrifugal acceleration gets ridiculous pretty quick. It is proportional to velocity squared over the radius of your wheel. Add in impact force from landing as an additional problem. This is actually one of the design limitations on aircraft landing speeds (controllability/stalling and impact/weight are two other big ones). The Concord (and many other early supersonic aircraft) had an enormous amount of engineering put into its landing system and landing characteristics to create economically maintainable landing gear for passenger use. Most jets land between ~140 - 180 mph (185 - 300 kph). It is hard to imagine combat landing speeds for Colonial Vipers being less than 5 times that. With landing speeds five times faster, the centrifugal forces on the wheels would be 25 times higher. It quickly gets to the point where even nano-composite materials like carbon nanotubes would fail. So, skids would be a sensible, if high maintenance way to solve the problem.
They’re not actually supposed to land that hard. The normal procedure is for a pilot to completely arrest his momentum before landing vertically on the flight deck. This procedure is, however, ignored throughout the series because they often don’t have time to land properly.
If only Gaeta wasn’t a prissy, weak, and slow desk jockey, the plan would have worked. My grandma can pull 3 plugs faster if humanity is reliant on it!
3:18 this stock shot from the Miniseries was altered and enhanced. The Missiles now have a blue glow rather than the original red glow. This revised shot was used as early as the episode "33" I think.
I like the fact that even though Lee had just been arrested for Mutiny/Treason, they still let him lead the defense of the Galactica, and the pilots still respected his authority.
@@platiuscyndar9017 That's what the Carom is for, no? Bearing relates to azimuth and Carom to elevation. You can point to any place in a 3D environment with these 2 planes (together with distance when necessary). I still don't see how you can have an azimuth greater than 360°.
@@ArcherAC3 I agree. 0 to 359 for X, 0 to 180 for Y. Z is arbitrary since there is no "up" or "down" in space. Either is relative to the plane of any given star system but doesn't mean much in open space.
@@michaelmorton5698 No, 0 to 359.9999... can determine any direction in a two dimensional plane, taking care of both X and Y. The question then lies in how to define "up", the problem being that navigational conventions and mathematical 3D geometric conventions contradict each other (e.g. navigational angles sweep clockwise-positive from the reference axis, mathematical ones anticlockwise). Given that Galactica has artificial gravity and thus a definite floor and ceiling, it's not hard to choose that direction for practical purposes, at least in terms of bearings relative to the reference frame of the ship. And the reference frame of the ship is what matters when you consider fire control and target tracking.
Got to like Tigh when he said to Gaeta that he would prefer his work over Baltar even if he don't mean it and I think he did he knows it's what Gaeta needed for reassurance
if there's no wifi / wireless then how the hell can anything hack in? especially if you just run data cables the length of the ship. that always irked me in the story since a real military wouldn't be stupid enough to use wireless data for sensitive command and control functions and there are plenty of proper ways to prevent hacking (most of what's seen on the news is due to people being lazy rather than what you see in hollywood hacking)
future tech can do whatever the plot needs, you can technobabble your way through and decide that the Cylons can remotely induce currents in cables with so much precision that they can transmit data into them or you can just not bother to come up with an explanation and decide no one knows how they do it. It doesn't matter in the long run, there are far more unbelievable things in the series than the network security flaws, you just have to suspend your disbelief, except for the fucking shitty shaky cam of course, I'll never understand how they got that past the studio as a good idea, really shows the age of the show and makes it difficult to watch.
Galactica is transmitting and receiving RF (presumably) signals to/from her fighters the entire time. That's one point of entry for sure. Additionally, they have active sensors like DRADIS, which could potentially be another point of entry for a group as well versed in electronic warfare as they Cylons. They're also scoring hits with missiles, whose warheads could have direct EW elements.
@@LN997-i8x There's a couple of different approaches to hacking you can take to avoid it. First of all air gapping, for the equipment that talks to the fighters have that separate from the rest of the command and control functions, you don't need to link them up, just have a display overlay. Next is point to point communications shine a laser across to one or more fighters say a comms fighter and have them relay the instructions via RF to limit exposure and have that comms equipment air gapped from the ships navigation / control so they can't take control of the fighters. Next is the use of certificates instead of passwords and have a time limit between retries of authentication, If I have a super duper computer that can brute force billions of permutations it won't help if I can only try one combination every 30 seconds. Next is log all the attempts, all RF the cylons make to break in then see how they're doing it, then fix any holes that show up on a later retry.
There's always a way in. For instance, dudes found a way to hack in to the brake systems of cars through the tire pressure monitoring system. Galactica could've gotten space-hacked through someones space-dildo recharging for all we know
@@shotguncleric It depends on the level of physical access you have, if you have direct physical access to the hardware then yes, but for wireless then no because of air gapping. For example try hacking the CAN bus of a car wirelessly and see how far you get. Also car's are not built to military standards, every instance of hacking you hear about in the news is usually down to laziness or cheapness, hollywood has taken up on this to make everyone assume that with enough resources or IQ you can magically take over any system like a car with a flip phone or "I'm in" after someone rolls they're face across the keyboard.
What I never understood was how the ships could take hits from nukes but 50 cal (essentially from what we see) guns of the fighters were a danger to ships.
While nuclear weapons do have high energy release you have only ever witnessed the destruction capabilities on earth in atmosphere. Significant damage is caused usually by the shockwaves caused by atmosphere in a pressured environment. In space there is no air forcing the explosive force against the hull, vacuum is far easier for the energy to release too while the hull not only being so heavy fortified would also be significantly surface cool absorbing energy from the blast. If you look at films where an asteroid is heading to earth, they almost all have to drill down to plant the nuclear weapon under the surface rather than launching it direct from earth. That’s the reason why.
I'm not a nuclear physicist but from what I've learned, almost all of an atomic blast's power comes from EXTREMELY intense x-rays. The fireball and mushroom cloud is what you get when those x-rays superheat the air, and that pressure wave from the expanding air is the explosion. Since there's almost zero atmosphere in space, (yes there is a little) then what you mostly have is the blinding flash and x-ray typhoon. This spreads out in all directions, and because there's no atmosphere to interact with, it loses very little of its power over distance. (just the cube law due to expanding distance) So area of effect is much larger in space, but if you can resist the x-rays (ie not get directly damaged by them, and not give them something to heat up) you're good. Holes in the hull, on the other hand, are a problem. Bullets, like xrays, don't slow down in space, and unlike on earth, don't lose any of their potency over long range. A 50 cal in space is incredibly dangerous if you need to breathe or keep your fuel tanks intact and engineering working, There's also a powerful electromagnetic pulse, and honestly I don't think people give that enough credit. And then there's the different KINDS of nuclear bombs. Go google "neutron bomb" for an example of a more purpose-built nuke. It doesn't do much damage, it just KILLS EVERYTHING and ground-zero is usable by the attackers in a much shorter period of time. And there are varieties that are specifically designed to release the strongest possible EMP. Nukes have a lot more applications than simply "blowing stuff up"
@@backupplan6058 Consider the Project Orion nuclear rocket (real). It would have a large, heavy steel pusher plate and a gun for launching small nuclear bombs through the plate, 1 per second. The nuke was to detonate and push on the pusher plate as a very powerful source of thrust. Experiments were done and it was found that the steel plate could tolerate this onslaught quite easily. Think of the armor plating of the Battlestar as something like the pusher plate of Orion to realize that nukes could be tolerated (to a degree).
Presumably both Cylons and Colonials are aware of the limitations of nuclear weapons in space and have designed their weapons to compensate. In real life humans have tested such exotic weapons as shaped nuclear charges and bomb-pumped lasers. As I recall, bomb-lasers are a common weapon in the Honor Harrington book series. They were also featured in "Footfall", by Niven and Pournelle.
There's battlestar galactica deadlock for one. There's also diaspora which is fan made and is therefore not cannon sadly though that being said it's so lore friendly it may as well be (even explains how galactica got a handful of mk7s after all of theirs got destroyed)
Battlestar Galactica Online was shut down a few years ago, but since then a new private server was created. I just discovered it a few weeks ago. They completely rebuilt the game and there are quite a few players duking it out like the old days. The best part is you get essentially unlimited Cubits so you can max you everything you want so you're not getting rekt by P2W players.
It always struck me as odd that the cylons kept trying to use their CNP hack when Galactica had shown repeatedly by this point that they couldn't hack it because nothing was networked.
Why wouldn't they try every engagement? It can't take that many resources to probe their computer systems for weaknesses, even if they've already shown to be defending against that weakness in prior engagements. If you detect that the computers are networked, you divert more power to that task since it is shown as a promising vector of attack.
I like the fact that this intense situation happened because someone forgot to update the emergency jump coordinates so they wound up jumping to a different location than the rest of the fleet.
Nothing supernatural, no alien interference, no time travel paradox, just people doing the best with what they've got and making mistakes under stress.
It was Lt. Gaeta.
That’s what’s great with the BSG series: beneath the very exciting sci-fi universe, there are always very relatable characters and plotlines.
Like we used to say in the Air Force, it’s the little things that will blow you up☝🏾
It's what makes it real. RDM served, and it shows.
I hate the fact that they didn't consult an IT person for this... or explain how the hell the colons bridged the air gap... like why weren't any transmitters and recievers physically disconnected? And if they were how did the colons get into the networks?
For me Michael Hogan was the best part of BSG. His was an acting masterclass - from hated drunk to hero to Cylon.
Absolutely.
He is in the hospital here in Vancouver and it’s not looking like he will get out.
@@matthewthorpe9641 It's one sad story but that's the way 2020 has been going. I saw there is a GoFund me or some other similar fund created for him. I hope he survives.
I do agree 100%
Yah. And Kate Vernon as his wife, Ellen... every time they were on screen together, it hurt how believable their actions and emotional reactions were. You just can't properly show the human element alone, but they had it, and they showed it, and it was terrible and it was grand.
Literally the only time Saul Tigh ever said anything nice about Felix Gaeta, in one of the crucial moments of the show.
Colonel Tigh knew Lt Gaeta from previous experience & had no reason to trust Baltar who was a media sensation.
He only stopped valuing him when he started working for the cylons
I always liked the little detail of when they are breaking the network the camera flashes up briefly and you can see the virus penetrated the fifth firewall. And no one notices because the screen returns to normal when gaeta breaks the network
Yeah.. i renember back when this aired.. when in laters eps it becames evident that there was a Cylon infiltration in Galactica systems some people said how it was posible if Galactica had broken the network and when going back to this ep sure enought the final firewall was indeed breached for a second and its too subtle that you need to look for it to notice..
What systems did the infiltration affected? I can't seem to recall that episode.
I never noticed that detail until you brought it up. Nice.
@@YurkerYT All systems were flashing red on the screen.
@@YurkerYT Valley of Darkness and whichever one they built the Blackbird in
Always loved this this version. The rumor was that Edward James Olmos read the script and initially he stated he "was onboard" IF-there was no funny rubber aliens-that is-it had to be as real as the nose on your face. One of the greatest if not the best sci-fi there ever was.
Yeah, something about him threatening to theatrically have Adama suffer a fatal heart attack on-screen the instant any aliens appear in the show.
Not a rumour, Olmos himself has said it in interviews.
After watching the first Battlestar Galactica, I was a little apprehensive when I heard Kate was playing the new Starbucks in the remake; boy was I wrong. It was a fantastic series and she was and is still a powerful actress.
too much drama for me, but much better then Star Trek Discovery and Star Trek Picard
Even Dirk Benedict got along with her.
Talk about attention to detail... when Galactica completes her jump at :44, you can subtly see the star pattern is different than the origination point’s star pattern. I love how the show tried to be as scientifically accurate where possible. Galactica isn’t warping through space but taking advantage of the fold in space and time.
Nice catch
Good call.
I missed that.
Did you notice in the episode "Bllod on the Scales" how the FTL drive looks like a cross between an old steam ship piston drive and a magnetic Casmir Engine? As if you were trying to design something that could create enough negative energy for, oh, I don't know, opening a wormhole...
Lol
But the “star pattern” isn’t different because Galactica jumped to a new location. The “star pattern” looks different because the camera angle changed. In fact, when they filmed this scene, Galactica didn’t move at all - they just shut off the camera, moved the camera to a new angle, and then turned the camera back on.
Much cheaper to film it that way.
Teehee
What they missed though is during the jump, Gaeta and Dualla apparently switch places. Before the jump, Dee is at the FTL console while Gaeta is sitting looking at the DRADIS screen. After the jump, Gaeta was now standing at the FTL console,... What the frak?
Without spice too.
I always seem to get so into these clips that I forget they're clips and get disappointed when they end :(
Same.
I love the attention to detail for those with eagle eyes (or a good PAUSE Button). After Gaeta reaches down to physically break the network connection, you can see that the last firewall has gone red, indicating it was breached.
Guess they didn't get awfully lucky afterall…
Snapper314 Yep! I always thought they missed detecting it, but this is even better.
There is a reason why we connect and automate complex procedures in real life.
It is simply too much to ask of people to keep track of everything in the middle of a crisis situation.
I so didnt notice that until now
It was breached but he cut the network before anything could happen. Otherwise Galactica could have lost power or life support. Shows just how close they could have come
@@SantomPh It wasn't enough. In the next couple of episodes it becomes clear that the Cylon virus has propagated through the core systems and begins trying to subvert the computer systems and kill everyone. It almost succeeded too.
Always loved that their were using ballistic projectiles instead of lasers and stuff
Yes, I heard that they did that to give it more of a true-to-life military feel, rather than the usual sci-fi cheese laser guns.
What makes it work is they still keep the color coding from the original series (Colonial weapons fire is red, Cylon weapons fire is white) so there's a bit of a continuity nod mixed in with the realism.
For me that was the most annoying thing. That meant the combat became completely unrealistic. They could fly and turn fast, which would make it almost impossible to hit with a ballistic projectile. It would be like a WW2 bombing raid, 2000 bombs with just a couple hitting the target. Then instead of using railguns, which would cause massive damage and would be hard to avoid, they used nukes which are almost completely useless in space.
@@DavidPruitt Technically missles are the better long range weaponry, since they can correct course to compensate for evasion. Railguns are just guns with higher projectile velocity, but like in Expanse, they are used for close quarters combat, as on the great ranges the projectile could be detected and avoided.
On another hand, the battles feel extremely short range. In reality spaceships would probably try to engage with missles over huge distances, but here Cylons and Battlestars do come extremely near each other. Certainly way closer than a missle range should allow. On the other hand, the ships in BSG seem to be extremely bulky, So maybe that is the justification for projectile weapons - the ships can't dodge due to inertia. In real world we would probably forgo the size in favour of smaller ships that could dodge. Unless the FTL capacity required this massive size.
@@DavidPruitt Why is a nuke useless in space?
“Flyboy, shut up and focus. This is not a simulation.”
"All Vipers, weapons free! Open ranks...and engage!"
Great stuff,acting and intensity are off the charts.Wish there had been just a little more after finding Earth.
@@VaniFoxOfficial Well, I for one, firstly would have done away with the narration. Secondly I don't think they should have "decided" to go full Ludite. Instead I would have just had the fleet disappear with no explanation, stranding the survivors on Earth with few tools to colonize the new world.
But perhaps the biggest change I would have made for a show that was originally panned for being a Star Wars rip off, would be to NOT end the series with the revelation that it all happened "a long time ago, in a galaxy far far away".
@@rsrt6910 it didn't happen in a galaxy far far away though? It happened in the exaft galaxy we're in right now…
They were stupid for sending humanity to the stone age when a bipolar ai force like the cylons still exist. Let's become vulnerable and forget our history. Good plan.
Those shots of Galactica jumping away and whatever the Cylons just threw at them blowing through are just beautiful.
The way the Cylon Raiders are launched from the Base Ship reminds me of bats dropping from the roof of a cave and taking flight. They even look like bats!
It's why they're affectionately referred to as "Toaster Racks" in their design commentary.
@@Mobius_118 that’s also a nickname in the lore aswell
We wish you a speedy recovery colonel tigh...so say we all
He's in better shape now. Still has a lot of recovery to do.
One of the Best Shows i've ever seen in my life. genius.
Dat flak barrier though...
At this rate, they'll be uploading the entire series on UA-cam
Yeah. After I spent the money and got the series on DVD
@@the_weed_in_your_garden9319 BluRay here.
I'm cool with that.
Well, the entire show is on Peacock for free
It's available for download via the BBC.
@5:08 Convince me otherwise that RDM & the crew are not major Anime fans of Macross, Gundam, Space Battleship Yamato & others... I'll wait.
P.S. Best Frakking show ever.
You'd think separating the COMMUNICATIONS computer from the rest would be more then enough. Still love these early seasons though :)
I have often thought about this as well. Only need to keep the system with Wifi essentially separate. The rest of the systems should be fined networked internally if their is no remote access. The only reason I could think of and is probably why they didn't network computers, is intruders on the ship. Rare circumstance, but if Cylons board and got to one terminal, the ship was essentially there's. I recall reading or hearing this was a tactic in the first Cylon war, board the ship, get to a computer, access the O2 and vent the ship.
In this case, just not linking in the coms could have saved the extra firewall's but probably delayed the calculations by a few minutes. Risk vs reward I guess.
I was under the impression the Cylons were not relying solely upon communications systems to disable the Colonial forces. Maybe I'm wrong but it always seemed like they had multiple attack vectors and weaknesses plotted. I don't need to necessarily find an official antenna but any interface I can interact with will do and any vulnerability in the comms system would be quickly overcome.
Baltar gave them access to everything and you just need to find a computer terminal that can function as an antenna, regardless of whether it was designed that way.
The same sort of speculative backdoor China was accused of by Bloomberg using hardware chips loaded with malware.
Any sufficiently long cable is an antenna.
@@FeepingCreature fiber optics...
Wow just noticed cylons got past all firewalls as gater unplugged the network
i really like how they reveled the cylon heavy raider
Always loved how this show never had shields like on Star Trek.
Less needed when you have hull armour that can take a direct thermonuclear strike.
@@audience2 and yet a Silon ship can just crash through....
@@finscreenname mass x speed, go fast enough a marble can penetrate tank armor
@@finscreennameI think if you watch it crashed through the glass open end of the flight pod that was part of the museum it was in the process of becoming at the start of the war.
@@linusa2996 So a ship can go faster than a missile?
X to soubt
Man not a single movie or show since this one nailed the tense/realistic tone of combat. I love this show so much
The Expanse came close, but never surpassed BSG.
@@gutspillage I would say that when Rocinante was assaulting the Protogen station along with Fred Johnson's OPA troops was also extremely tense.
@@SternwallJerkson MCRN donnager man...
Freeze-frame at 6:22, the core network is lit up red. Gaeta wasn't fast enough...
He would have been had he not taken the time to literally call out the calculations were done, instead of breaking the network and calling out at the same time at least.
Evidently there wasn't time to take advantage of the breach...
So Say We All!
The best TV serie i have ever seen, enjoiyed and felt like a aprt fo me. the Music, the acting, the effort on each episode...even the extension of the whole serie is a delight. The whole cast, they put everything into this TV Serie and it yielded one the most amazing sci-fi adventures of this last Era.
I hear you brother
The best,...?
It's entertaining, but far from being the best.
They did a great job showing the steady deterioration of Galactica over the course of the show.
"she broke her back, she'll never jump again"
still get a not in my stomach just thinking this one line
You don't notice it that much as you watch, but Galactica in season 1 now looks like a brand new ship, fresh off the assembly line.
I was a kid in 1970ies and watched BSG. I was never afraid of Cylons. They could not shoot think or anything,. This series I was utterly terrified of them.
This entire show was amazing. Top notch acting all around d
The music oh the music and the battle oh oh the battle ❤💙💚💛💜 BATTLESTAR GALACTICA
Not gonna lie... I'm into gals that can spit fire like that flak wall...
when Galactica aims her suppression field its so fucking epic
Lee took all the composure from his father, if I recall correctly his good friend shot his father in the CIC in front of him. After he was made temporary CAG from being put in the brig for mutiny. Zach didn't really make the cut for flight school.
Yeah it was boomer, she was a cylon sleeper agent
BSG= The best TV series of the last 30 years.
Also: probably LAST good one for many years more....
Certainly the best sci-fi series of the last 30 years.
I would agree that it's probably the best sci-fi series. In terms of overall, it would have to contend with The Sopranos, which in my book is a hard fight to win.
“Multiple Cylon Raiders, bearing…”
You can feel “it” in his voice. He’s ready to RUMBLE!
Great acting skills!
Should have rigged switches that could cut the connections and then flipped them the very moment he saw that calculations were complete. By bothering to announce it, waiting for orders to cut the connections and then having to dive under his console to physically pull them, it was just the extra time the Cylons needed to break through the last firewall.
I think that's part of the point. They are all humans doing their best. Many times they make mistakes and fail, but in the end they're more or less okay.
@@blusafe1 yeah, he didn't exactly have a lot of time to set it up.
And they were very anti-computer/automation on that ship, because of the previous war with the Cylons.
And I like to think he needed the order, because he was too focused on his success.
Oh the firewall makes total sense. That's probably how the cylons managed to incapacitate human military vessels during the invasion.
Exactly
Well, they had infiltrated the whole defense network before the first strike(through Baltar). So there was no hacking needed, just . send the command, all ships disabled.
Humans created the Cylons. It's the first thing stated on the show. What was covered later on (in "Caprica") was the fact that enlightened Cylons gained sentience and a sense of independence through the dead daughter of the man who created them in the first place. What really fubared the whole situation was monotheistic humans who thought the grass was greener when they brought religion into the Cylon mindset - which literally drove them insane. All they needed after that was the ability to control the defence networks, which was enabled by Gaius Baltar and Caprica Six who between them built a new defence network using a reprogrammed MCP processor - of the same type used as the Cylons' individual central processing units.
You know the difference between a physical kill switch and a digital one?
There isn't one. With either one you can cripple a communications network with a radio signal to drop a guillotine on a strap of data cables or randomly encrypt a root folder.
I always thought it was kinda funny how with all their technology, their medical bay looked like it was from the 1950s
And their phones. Even on the more modern Pegasus.
The Lords of Kobol know I loved the original BSG. Every Sunday night my 12-year-old butt was planted in front of the TV. But the reboot took things to an entirely new level. The old BSG was, let's face it, kind of a campy show for kids. This version was a gritty, sci-fi drama for the ages.
Such an underrated show
5:25 That's such a fucking satisfying maneuver
They should have promoted Gaeta. Dude was OOD whenever Adama or Tigh weren't there, he did all the jump calculations, rarely made mistakes, did a great job whenever he was needed.
Adama only ever promoted pilots, most notably his son to Captain so he could be CAG (Starbuck too actually), to Major so he could be XO on Pegasus, and (a brevet commission) to Commander so he could command Pegasus. Literally no other officer got a promotion except pilots (Dualla goes from Senior NCO to Officer after she... marries the Admiral's son). I get why the focus on pilots, but I still feel like Gaeta being promoted to Captain, or Kelly to Major would have been nice to see later on.
Im so tempted to rewatch this great tv show.
These clips demonstrate how well it stands up.
Literally another second and Galactica's systems would have fallen to that virus. Should have had someone specifically sitting on the floor with their hands on those plugs ready to rip them out instantly.
They did fall to the virus if you watch carefully you see the breech but to be honest it's easy to miss.
Not enough spare hands.
At GQ, everyone is supposed to be doing their jobs.
The Damage Control crews are the only ones who are really sitting around waiting for the time to do their job.
such a great show. need more like this.
The Expanse is the next best thing.
Gah, that takes me back.
Killer show
how a dozen Vipers returned unscathed from a fight with well over 100 Cylon raiders is a miracle
5:00 Third firewall is down, completion is at 80%... 5:54 Completion is now at 79% (very briefly), lower than it was 54 seconds before in the video 🤔
its a microsoft download timer
Hey the nurse is Jamie Bamber's wife!
Only 4 seasons !? seen them all on comet TV
Just the right amount. I'm glad the show didn't needlessly drag on forever.
@@VaniFoxOfficial True. But we need more of the same...
@@heldermartins8785 the story was finished there was no need for anymore after season 4, that is the best writing.
@@john_molden Yeah, u might be right. But I'm a sucker for anything Galactica related. As a matter of fact, anything scifi related. I appreciate ur input but, we need more of this.
:)
With respect, BSG hit its stride perfectly during Season 2 up until the end of the New Caprica arc. After that, it was literally a case of the writers trying not to write themselves in a corner, but keep the show going, as they were running out of ideas. I remember something about a writer's strike around the time The Fleet reached the 13th Tribe's Earth, and found the planet nuked itself. If things went poorly IRL, *That* would have been the end of the show then and there.
Luckily things turned out alright, and although many *many* disagree with Galactica and friends finding our Earth in pre-recorded history times and being our ancestors to modern Us, I'd take that ending any day and a solid 4 seasons over anything else.
2:54 The Heavy Raider Revealed.
How the hell do you hack a computer network that's physically connected?
Computers on a single vessel with a hard wired network should be immune to this sort of thing.
In a previous scene, they said that networking all of their systems together would significantly reduce the time need to calculate where the rest of the Fleet had jumped to. Unfortunately, this also enabled the Cylons to hack into the network through the Galactica's external comm systems, though they weren't able to instantly bypass its firewall like they did with the rest of Colonial Fleet due to the CNP not being present, therefore the system lacked the back door that allowed the Cylons to disable every other ship.
That Flak barrier..
True, what a character. But Adama......
Galactica can shrug off a nuke, but a damaged raider penetrates without issues
Glass section of the flight pod that was being converted to a museum, not the armour.
I forgot how good this show was
Still nerve-racking to watch!!!
Loved this show. Well, most of it. Can't remember this episode. Good sign it's time for another watch.
And no one thought of disconnecting wireless comms from the network.
You don't need them to do the calculations. Try hacking a closed system: it's impossible.
Tell me a show that handles space combat better than this, I’ll wait
The Expanse is pretty darned good.
Skaggthebassman it’s not bad, but I’d say BSG does better still
The Expanse stands on the shoulders of BSG. What BSG mostly does well is manoeuvring small craft. There’s no banking against air that isn’t there in a vacuum and there wasn’t a lot of that sort of motion realism before BSG. What it doesn’t do so well is explain how Galactica can take so much punishment and damage and still keep operating without a shipyard to do repairs. The Expanse takes the realistic motion a step further and adds G-force consequences to the crews as they don’t have a “magic” anti grav system to keep their feet on the floor. The spacecraft in The Expanse are also quite lightweight similar to real spacecraft. You don’t want excess mass to cart around in space. This tends to make them egg shells armed with sledgehammers which is why the crews always suit up for battle as it’s almost certain the ship will decompress with even light damage.
@@rednaughtstudios couldn't have been said better, thank you! My thoughts on the Galactica and the excessive punishment she takes is that she's built not unlike battleships are built. I'm thinking extremely thick hulls and radiation shielding. I remember a scene in which the Pegasus was in a battle and the dialogue went something like, "roll the ship over so the underside will take the brunt of the incoming fire ". That leads me to believe there are also more heavily armored sections of the ship. Also I like that the CIC is located deep in the ship to protect command and control.
Babylon 5 was pretty good.
go figure peacock has been trying to push all these clips on us.
You say that like it's a bad thing
what I never got was HOW did they cylons know they are networked? are they ALWAYS trying to hack them just in case?
BEARS.BEETS.BATTLESTAR GALACTICA
One you eat, one you fight, one you love. GO.
5:09 That flak is so beautiful for some reason.
explore my guru Paramahamsa Nithyananda
Should have yanked the connection the second he had the fleet position. Tigh would understand.
I like how competently Colonel Tigh handles this engagement. Shows there’s a real officer under the drunk grump motif.
3:45 That music.
Best science fiction show not named Star Trek
The best sci-fi show to date
Why couldn't the new Star Trek be like this..intense, not overdone, great pace...It would have been off the hook
Star trek should be like Star Trek. Naive and optimistic, not gritty grim dark sci-fi fueled by violence and despair that a million franchises have done better.
because like klutzman said himself: "Star Trek is a (propaganda) Platform" .the Corporate Puritans just hijacked the name.
No it's not. It's just the edgy bois of today want stuff to be daaaaaaaaaark. Light hearted doesn't sell.
That's why the second Star Wars trilogy had to be a dark emo fest. Hell even effing Batman is now dark and grandiose. Anyway. That's why Star Trek is now full of injustice, violence, people swearing and so on. The "humanity that made it" that is at the core of Star Trek soul just wouldn't sell today.
Firewall and honeyweb.
Why did they not put wheels on the vipers?
The faster you are going when you land, the harder it is to design wheels for. Centrifugal acceleration gets ridiculous pretty quick. It is proportional to velocity squared over the radius of your wheel. Add in impact force from landing as an additional problem. This is actually one of the design limitations on aircraft landing speeds (controllability/stalling and impact/weight are two other big ones). The Concord (and many other early supersonic aircraft) had an enormous amount of engineering put into its landing system and landing characteristics to create economically maintainable landing gear for passenger use.
Most jets land between ~140 - 180 mph (185 - 300 kph). It is hard to imagine combat landing speeds for Colonial Vipers being less than 5 times that. With landing speeds five times faster, the centrifugal forces on the wheels would be 25 times higher. It quickly gets to the point where even nano-composite materials like carbon nanotubes would fail. So, skids would be a sensible, if high maintenance way to solve the problem.
They’re not actually supposed to land that hard. The normal procedure is for a pilot to completely arrest his momentum before landing vertically on the flight deck. This procedure is, however, ignored throughout the series because they often don’t have time to land properly.
@@ronin3381 I think it's only seen in the miniseries before the war starts
shame they didn't crunch the number with a 486 it would have been done in 30 seconds not ten minutes🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
love it!
I miss this show so much!
Really miss this show......the best sci-fi ever!
If only Gaeta wasn’t a prissy, weak, and slow desk jockey, the plan would have worked. My grandma can pull 3 plugs faster if humanity is reliant on it!
Also the combat nurse performing surgery on Adama is Jamie Bambers wife!
Travel bags 91 eh ports contract? Numbers??
3:18 this stock shot from the Miniseries was altered and enhanced. The Missiles now have a blue glow rather than the original red glow. This revised shot was used as early as the episode "33" I think.
I like the fact that even though Lee had just been arrested for Mutiny/Treason, they still let him lead the defense of the Galactica, and the pilots still respected his authority.
Re looking at this series, makes Game of thrones plae in comparison
How's the Basestar bearing 487 from Galactica, shouldn't it be between 0 and 360?
I refuse to believe they just throw in random numbers xD
3 dimensional space and all.
@@platiuscyndar9017 That's what the Carom is for, no?
Bearing relates to azimuth and Carom to elevation. You can point to any place in a 3D environment with these 2 planes (together with distance when necessary).
I still don't see how you can have an azimuth greater than 360°.
@@ArcherAC3 good point. That said, they might not have the same units as we do…
@@ArcherAC3 I agree. 0 to 359 for X, 0 to 180 for Y. Z is arbitrary since there is no "up" or "down" in space. Either is relative to the plane of any given star system but doesn't mean much in open space.
@@michaelmorton5698 No, 0 to 359.9999... can determine any direction in a two dimensional plane, taking care of both X and Y. The question then lies in how to define "up", the problem being that navigational conventions and mathematical 3D geometric conventions contradict each other (e.g. navigational angles sweep clockwise-positive from the reference axis, mathematical ones anticlockwise).
Given that Galactica has artificial gravity and thus a definite floor and ceiling, it's not hard to choose that direction for practical purposes, at least in terms of bearings relative to the reference frame of the ship. And the reference frame of the ship is what matters when you consider fire control and target tracking.
Do cylons attempt to implant a virus everytime there in Combat?
Got to like Tigh when he said to Gaeta that he would prefer his work over Baltar even if he don't mean it and I think he did he knows it's what Gaeta needed for reassurance
if there's no wifi / wireless then how the hell can anything hack in?
especially if you just run data cables the length of the ship.
that always irked me in the story since a real military wouldn't be stupid enough to use wireless data for sensitive command and control functions and there are plenty of proper ways to prevent hacking (most of what's seen on the news is due to people being lazy rather than what you see in hollywood hacking)
future tech can do whatever the plot needs, you can technobabble your way through and decide that the Cylons can remotely induce currents in cables with so much precision that they can transmit data into them or you can just not bother to come up with an explanation and decide no one knows how they do it.
It doesn't matter in the long run, there are far more unbelievable things in the series than the network security flaws, you just have to suspend your disbelief, except for the fucking shitty shaky cam of course, I'll never understand how they got that past the studio as a good idea, really shows the age of the show and makes it difficult to watch.
Galactica is transmitting and receiving RF (presumably) signals to/from her fighters the entire time. That's one point of entry for sure. Additionally, they have active sensors like DRADIS, which could potentially be another point of entry for a group as well versed in electronic warfare as they Cylons. They're also scoring hits with missiles, whose warheads could have direct EW elements.
@@LN997-i8x There's a couple of different approaches to hacking you can take to avoid it.
First of all air gapping, for the equipment that talks to the fighters have that separate from the rest of the command and control functions, you don't need to link them up, just have a display overlay.
Next is point to point communications shine a laser across to one or more fighters say a comms fighter and have them relay the instructions via RF to limit exposure and have that comms equipment air gapped from the ships navigation / control so they can't take control of the fighters.
Next is the use of certificates instead of passwords and have a time limit between retries of authentication, If I have a super duper computer that can brute force billions of permutations it won't help if I can only try one combination every 30 seconds.
Next is log all the attempts, all RF the cylons make to break in then see how they're doing it, then fix any holes that show up on a later retry.
There's always a way in.
For instance, dudes found a way to hack in to the brake systems of cars through the tire pressure monitoring system.
Galactica could've gotten space-hacked through someones space-dildo recharging for all we know
@@shotguncleric It depends on the level of physical access you have, if you have direct physical access to the hardware then yes, but for wireless then no because of air gapping. For example try hacking the CAN bus of a car wirelessly and see how far you get.
Also car's are not built to military standards, every instance of hacking you hear about in the news is usually down to laziness or cheapness, hollywood has taken up on this to make everyone assume that with enough resources or IQ you can magically take over any system like a car with a flip phone or "I'm in" after someone rolls they're face across the keyboard.
'Will you pray with me?'
'Ha no.'
The expanse was never this good.
Agreed, people that prefer the expanse just haven’t fully watched BSG.
They're both good, they're also both different.
You're correct. It was always better than bsg.
What I never understood was how the ships could take hits from nukes but 50 cal (essentially from what we see) guns of the fighters were a danger to ships.
While nuclear weapons do have high energy release you have only ever witnessed the destruction capabilities on earth in atmosphere. Significant damage is caused usually by the shockwaves caused by atmosphere in a pressured environment. In space there is no air forcing the explosive force against the hull, vacuum is far easier for the energy to release too while the hull not only being so heavy fortified would also be significantly surface cool absorbing energy from the blast. If you look at films where an asteroid is heading to earth, they almost all have to drill down to plant the nuclear weapon under the surface rather than launching it direct from earth. That’s the reason why.
@@backupplan6058 Thanks, that is something I didn't consider.
I'm not a nuclear physicist but from what I've learned, almost all of an atomic blast's power comes from EXTREMELY intense x-rays. The fireball and mushroom cloud is what you get when those x-rays superheat the air, and that pressure wave from the expanding air is the explosion. Since there's almost zero atmosphere in space, (yes there is a little) then what you mostly have is the blinding flash and x-ray typhoon. This spreads out in all directions, and because there's no atmosphere to interact with, it loses very little of its power over distance. (just the cube law due to expanding distance) So area of effect is much larger in space, but if you can resist the x-rays (ie not get directly damaged by them, and not give them something to heat up) you're good.
Holes in the hull, on the other hand, are a problem. Bullets, like xrays, don't slow down in space, and unlike on earth, don't lose any of their potency over long range. A 50 cal in space is incredibly dangerous if you need to breathe or keep your fuel tanks intact and engineering working,
There's also a powerful electromagnetic pulse, and honestly I don't think people give that enough credit.
And then there's the different KINDS of nuclear bombs. Go google "neutron bomb" for an example of a more purpose-built nuke. It doesn't do much damage, it just KILLS EVERYTHING and ground-zero is usable by the attackers in a much shorter period of time. And there are varieties that are specifically designed to release the strongest possible EMP. Nukes have a lot more applications than simply "blowing stuff up"
@@backupplan6058 Consider the Project Orion nuclear rocket (real). It would have a large, heavy steel pusher plate and a gun for launching small nuclear bombs through the plate, 1 per second. The nuke was to detonate and push on the pusher plate as a very powerful source of thrust. Experiments were done and it was found that the steel plate could tolerate this onslaught quite easily. Think of the armor plating of the Battlestar as something like the pusher plate of Orion to realize that nukes could be tolerated (to a degree).
Presumably both Cylons and Colonials are aware of the limitations of nuclear weapons in space and have designed their weapons to compensate. In real life humans have tested such exotic weapons as shaped nuclear charges and bomb-pumped lasers.
As I recall, bomb-lasers are a common weapon in the Honor Harrington book series. They were also featured in "Footfall", by Niven and Pournelle.
Goosebumps when I watch clips of this show and reminisce.
Seeing most of the actors were cylons lol
That is a lot of fraking raiders....
I still hold alot of information to myself.
it would be 10 times more realistic if they leave out that firewall /router hacking nonsense . how to they hack via the ships wifi LOL
They can transfer all of his conscious to a ressurectuion ship.
You think this is more complicated?
Anyone else notice it hit 80% twice
man i miss this show.......
WHERE IS THE PC GAME AT
There's battlestar galactica deadlock for one. There's also diaspora which is fan made and is therefore not cannon sadly though that being said it's so lore friendly it may as well be (even explains how galactica got a handful of mk7s after all of theirs got destroyed)
Ghostx141x Gaming Battlestar Galactica Deadlock
That game was shutdown last year I think.
Deadlock Modern Ships Pack DLC gives you the ships and fighters from this series too 🙂
Battlestar Galactica Online was shut down a few years ago, but since then a new private server was created. I just discovered it a few weeks ago. They completely rebuilt the game and there are quite a few players duking it out like the old days. The best part is you get essentially unlimited Cubits so you can max you everything you want so you're not getting rekt by P2W players.
It always struck me as odd that the cylons kept trying to use their CNP hack when Galactica had shown repeatedly by this point that they couldn't hack it because nothing was networked.
Well, they did end up trying here, because it was networked this time, so I guess it's expected?
Why wouldn't they try every engagement? It can't take that many resources to probe their computer systems for weaknesses, even if they've already shown to be defending against that weakness in prior engagements. If you detect that the computers are networked, you divert more power to that task since it is shown as a promising vector of attack.