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Governor's Gambit - Star Wars SI into Imperial Governor

Chp-101 New
Chp-101

1.12 ABY
Myto Sector
Alvi Mola


Alvi's TIE whipped through the void, engines screaming silently into the black as she accelerated forward.

Ahead, a pirate frigate loomed. A Kaloth Battlecruiser which had seen better days, and wasn't really a battlecruiser, the species that built it had simply named it so.

Laser cannon fire erupted towards her, beams of red promising an easy death. Nimbly she dodged, her Whirlwinds engines twisting and turning, forcing the turrets to constantly rotate angles.

Soon, she spotted a gap in the fire. A single button press had an ion torpedo launch outwards, slamming into the frigate's side as she dove beneath it.

Following close behind, her squadmates launched their own torpedoes, each subsequent blast damaging the target more until something inside gave way and the entire ship was ripped apart in an explosion.

Shoddy construction, Alvi guessed. Common enough amongst pirate warships.

"Overseer, this is Tide Lead. Target is splashed. Requesting tasking."

"Copy, Tide Lead. Playtimes over. RTB."

"Wilco, Overseer. En route."

"Oh, and just so you know, you've got new orders from Command."

"Thanks, Riko." She responded, already having a good guess at what the message would contain. A quick flick of a switch has her on her squads frequency.

"Allright people. Jobs done. Form up on me for the return. I want everything nice and steady, no accidents."

"It was one time!" Cried out Tide 11. He was one of the newer recruits, and while his starfighting was exceptional he for some reason had a spot of trouble with landing.

"No way, I've counted at least five times you've half-botched a landing. Remember when you almost squashed a technician?" Replied Tide 5, voice almost laughing.

"Keep the channels clear of mischief, Squadron. None of us want another lecture from the Comms Officer on radio chatter."

A bevy of affirmatives rang out before she continued.

"Also, I just got word we've got new orders, fresh from Command."

Now a bevy of groans sounded out, and Alvi stopped herself from laughing at them. Sure, she didn't like getting new orders either, it usually meant they had to relocate again, but it was fun listening to her get annoyed.

Not five minutes later, and all of Tide Squadron was docked in the bowels of the Mytoan Pride, an Eidolon-Class that served as part of a patrol team.

The ship had been Tide Squadron's home base for the two months as it dragged them across the sector, from conflict to conflict.

They'd spent the last week in the Bresov system, fighting an increasingly annoying number of pirates while the local Governor scrounged up their PDF forces for an all out assault on the pirates in-system base. Tide Squadron was just there to provide the time they needed.

Now new orders were coming in, and the entire ship was annoyed. New orders meant they'd have to relocate, which meant all the nice restaurants and spas Bresov had were going to be out of reach.

After all, how many times can a pilot in the Outer Rim say they have the chance to take shore leave on a planet with a proper luxury relaxation industry. Sure, Bresov isn't exactly rich but its natural hot springs and amazing scenery, combined with a rich local brewing culture turned it into a soldier's wet dream.

Well, close to one. Plenty had complained about the lack of nightclubs.

Entering the bridge, Alvi made her way to the holo table. Around it stood the command staff, including Captain Brid, her current commanding officer. After all the needed salutes were made, they got down to business.

"Alright people. Words just in from Command. We're moving over to the Jornudgir system. A recent piracy surge there necessitates our intervention."

The holotable springs to life, showing a map of the system. Lines appear, showing the Mytoan Prides trajectory into said system.

"Approximatley 2 hours after we enter the system, we will be meeting with elements of Wulvo Tactical Solutions. They will be operating a Crusader-Class Corvette and assisting us in the approach on the main pirate stronghold in the system."

Projections of the corvette appeared, before minimizing to show the combined forces moving in on a structure on a moon.

"Scans indicate the stronghold is decently fortified, likely due to leftover resources from the Consortium's previous push into the sector. Intel has confirmed at least two squadrons worth of assorted fighters, and an unknown number of larger craft. None larger than a frigate."

It was here Alvi spoke.

"Why are we bringing along the Mandos? Our patrol group has an Eidolon, a Raider and a Nebulon-B. We should have more than enough firepower."

The Captain sighed. "As it stands, orders from up on high are to play extra nice with these mercs. Apparently their ground ops have been doing really well lately, and the higher ups want to keep them around longer. That means we can't just brush them off of a target they were already honing in on."

That ended Alvi's questions, but it still rankled her a tad. She understood full well that the mercenary economy was helpful to the sector, but that didn't mean she had to like it. Especially when she was forced to shack up with mercs to finish a job that likely didn't need more than Tide Squadron an the Pride to finish.

But it was good for the sector, so she supposed that was all that mattered to the higher ups in the end.



Las

I watched with a sense of mirth as Muguffin sniffed around the new office.

BlandBoringBoredHome

"You only say that because your catbed isn't here yet. Once the place gets spruced up, it'll be good as new."

She turned to look at me, eyes narrowing a tad.

Doubt

"Yeah yeah, doubt all you want. I, for one, am perfectly happy with this change."

And I was. The office was around the same size, sure but it was far better defended this time! Hidden behind who knows how many layers of durasteel and turbolasers.

The Golan-II I was now inside of was truly a marvel of protective engineering. Sure, my office had a transparasteel window staring out into space, which annoyed me because I hadn't thought to ask for my office to be dead center in the station, but it wasn't that big of a deal.

See, my office wasn't in the Golans central tower! It was located in a much lower deck, in one of those bulbs that bulged out of the structure. Suffice it to say, it was hidden, it had a great view, and it was well protected.

And the best part? I didn't even pay full price for the thing! No, this was a used station I bought off a Moff from the neighboring Oversector. It cost less to buy and refurbish the thing than it would've been brand new, so I was pretty happy with it.

Now my center of power wasn't literally the capital of the Minda system, but instead a platform meant to defend the Mindan Shipyards. A defender of economic interests.

And what an economic interest it is! After the damaged berths were fixed, production kicked into full gear and hadn't slowed down since. Guild patrol vessels were being replaced, orders were being pumped out, and the money was flowing in.

Combined with the improving state of the sectors bureaucracy, and the fact that my stunt with the slaver Governors had scared a lot of others into properly paying taxes, meant that economically the sector was starting to rise!

As the worker relocation program continued, people were finding their way to places were work was more abundant. Already fleets of shuttles and large transports were carting people off by the hundreds if not thousands to more frontier worlds where farms and mines were missing people.

Of course, this came with its own problem. A lot of people in transit meant a lot of targets for slavers. Thankfully, my stunt with the slavers previously had soured the state of the slave trade in the sector, making it a far rarer occurrence. But it wasn't perfect.

Just a few days ago, a transport carrying 250 new settlers from Dubrillion to Jornudgir had been attacked and many of its inhabitants captured. Thankfully, the slavers weren't careful enough in covering their tracks so forces were already on their tail.

But the entire debacle only exemplified the true problem in the sector. Despite a booming economy, despite a slowly but surely rising standard of living and lowering corruption levels, piracy plagued it all.

Holonet beacons had to always be guarded lest they be attacked and destroyed to cut off quick cries for help or be salvaged. Every single merchant convoy bigger than a smattering of light freighters needed mercenary escorts. And more and more systems were requesting help from rapid response units because pirates kept setting up bases fucking everywhere!

What was with those guys and setting up strongholds? I thought pirates loved moving about and staying nimble!

Sure, Darna, Thorne and HAVEN did what they could, and we used what info we got from Murr to the best effect, taking out the most dangerous and fastest growing gangs. But the problem wasn't any single gang, but that piracy as a whole was getting more common.

And the cause was, in some ways, obvious. More and more resources were being dragged to the Core from the Rim by the Governor-General. This meant that already exploitative sectors got worse, driving more people to desperate means. Not to mention that the galaxy as a whole was less stable.

Trust in the empire had been shaken, and the Mid-Rim Offensive had caused chaos that various syndicates were quick to capitalize on.

Make no mistake, the Empire was still the undisputed top dog of the galaxy. None could truly stand up to them. But that's the funny part, they didn't need to.

They just needed to hit the planets the Empire didn't defend as much. They just needed to waltz around the Empire while it focused on the Rebellion and important worlds. So long as they didn't hit Imperial cargo ships but civilian ones, they were less likely to be personally hunted down.

Suffice it to say, the criminal element had gotten bolder. And it was causing me headaches.

At least the Mando integration was going well. What had started as 3 clans and 500 or so Mando's total had grown to over double that, at around 8 clans and some 1100 total Mandos. Some of the clans were quite small, but they were all highly trained and deadly in their own right.

The initial special Guild contract had been simple. The clans register as a company and get a year long contract. An alright monthly stipend alongside generous bonuses for captured pirates, destroyed bases, etc… The stipend scaled with Clan size, but the bonuses stayed the same.

Now, the contract had evolved a bit as their numbers started to swell. The Clans were allowed some better weapons and ships, and were privy to purchasing those from the Guild at discounted prices. Essentially, they got the perks of being decently ranked merc companies without having to take many months to get anywhere near that.

Of course, they more than proved themselves in combat and their eagerness to take missions was a massive boon.

Sure, some other mercs complained they were taking away jobs, but honestly the merc market was the kind where you made your own fortune. The Mandos were just skilled enough to kick the merc market awake again while being small enough that they weren't going to take the entire market on their own.

Eventually, I settled into my new chair. Well, temporary chair. I was having my old chair brought up, alongside plenty of my old furniture. Sue me, I like it.

Turning around to stare out the window, my eyes raked over the shipyards. Each and every berth lit up, filled with half made hulls and workers buzzing around them.

I spotted plenty of ship types. From Dreadnoughts to Raiders and more. Shal's ISD was currently sitting in a berth, panels being removed so internal inefficiencies could be corrected. Nothing major, just some small streamlining some of the eggheads in R&D had come up with in their never ending chase to make a ship to rival the ISD. In one berth I could even see the skeleton of the very first prototype Arbiter-Class.

I doubted the prototype would be much more than an expensive way for the R&D people to figure out what works and what doesn't, but it was a price I was willing to pay.

If nothing else, the bridge wasn't something we had to produce. The ship was some 800 meters long, meaning we could just buy the bridge for a Victory Class instead and slap it on there. Standardization, baby!

After a prolonged period of 5 whole minutes spent looking out my window, I turned back to my desk. I'd only placed the things I needed there, like my terminal, hot coco machine, etc… But when I checked the time on my terminal, I realized my work day was over.

It was still an odd feeling to finish my work in a day and not have to immediately go to my bed because I had so little free time. Now I had multiple entire hours before I had to catch some z's.

So I booted up my PDA, flicked over to the app store, and started scrolling to see what I could play.

I then found a factory sim game. Suffice it to say, I got little sleep that night.



Yo. Not nearly as proud of this chapter as the last one. Feels more like an excuse to just yap. But I'm tired, and felt like if I didn't do something remotely productive today I would just go to bed feeling like I was wasting my life. Is this actually a productive way to use my time? No, I could be exercising or learning how to draw.

But, I got accepted into a decent college and can finally leave my community college after far too long a stay, so I guess I can excuse myself this once.

Oh, and no baking/cooking note today. Ran out of flour with those last cookies and subsisted off of protein bars and pre-made chicken tikka-masala today (technically yesterday, its 3 AM or so) so no luck this time. Next time I'll make something, promise. Maybe zucchini bread. That shit slaps.

Sonder, fellow strugglers.
-Freefaller
 
Ahead, a pirate frigate loomed. A Kaloth Battlecruiser which had seen better days, and wasn't really a battlecruiser, the species that built it had simply named it so.
So continues the tradition of putting cruiser in the name of the ship to make it sound more intimidating.
That ended Alvi's questions, but it still rankled her a tad. She understood full well that the mercenary economy was helpful to the sector, but that didn't mean she had to like it. Especially when she was forced to shack up with mercs to finish a job that likely didn't need more than Tide Squadron an the Pride to finish.
Think of it as a team building exercise for when things really get chaotic.
The Golan-II I was now inside of was truly a marvel of protective engineering.
Bit harder to glamour up than a planetside palace, but Las doesn't care about that anyway.
As the worker relocation program continued, people were finding their way to places were work was more abundant. Already fleets of shuttles and large transports were carting people off by the hundreds if not thousands to more frontier worlds where farms and mines were missing people.
At the rate a lot of these frontier worlds are going to hit the population of Ugea at the beginning of this fic. That may not sound like much, but the starting population growth is always the hardest.
What was with those guys and setting up strongholds? I thought pirates loved moving about and staying nimble!
Looks at the dozens of pirate bases you raid in Star Wars Galaxies. To say nothing of all the bandit groups you fight in that game.
Sure, Darna, Thorne and HAVEN did what they could, and we used what info we got from Murr to the best effect, taking out the most dangerous and fastest growing gangs. But the problem wasn't any single gang, but that piracy as a whole was getting more common.
At least this is training these pirates to think the safest way to keep existing is to stay small and don't get too dangerous. Keeps them small time until Imperial forces can get around to them.
And the cause was, in some ways, obvious. More and more resources were being dragged to the Core from the Rim by the Governor-General. This meant that already exploitative sectors got worse, driving more people to desperate means. Not to mention that the galaxy as a whole was less stable.
Look at the bright side Las. You are getting people to move in from all the other sectors. Just not engaging in the industry you want them to.
Sure, some other mercs complained they were taking away jobs, but honestly the merc market was the kind where you made your own fortune.
"How dare these newcomers take that gig!" My fellow merc in Mola, the sector is burning. There is more than enough work to share.
Oh, and no baking/cooking note today. Ran out of flour with those last cookies and subsisted off of protein bars and pre-made chicken tikka-masala today (technically yesterday, its 3 AM or so) so no luck this time. Next time I'll make something, promise. Maybe zucchini bread. That shit slaps.
If you are lacking in specific baking ingredients, might I recommend a lemon tart. You can it down to about 5 ingredients at least and besides the sweetened condensed milk most of it can be just eggs, butter, lemons, and graham crackers.
 
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Oh, and no baking/cooking note today. Ran out of flour with those last cookies and subsisted off of protein bars and pre-made chicken tikka-masala today (technically yesterday, its 3 AM or so) so no luck this time. Next time I'll make something, promise. Maybe zucchini bread. That shit slaps.
I was about to say "Baking issues? Just try Hardtack! It's just flour and water!" But then I saw you're out of flour, and that's like, the big baking tool.

So... F
 
As prosperity grows, so does the number of those willing to stretch their dirty fingers to snatch it.

The instability of the canon lore is really starting to pick up, and the noticeable resource drain of Palpy's push for his bigger, second Death Star isn't helping matters.

Good to see he finally got his hands on a Golan, orbital defenses are key to relieving the strain of withholding ships to only a defensive role, where their firepower could be used for short sorties. Let's see if he can get mods slapped onto it.

Perhaps he should have his R&D research into automated defense platform arrays. That could be then fed into the research of making bigger, armed comm buoys to act as the main hardlines under the existing infrastructure. It just wouldn't do if all it takes to silence a place is to essentially shoot down a telephone pole.

Those new buoys can then be written off as government/military use only. Even better if the cost is only to cover the Oversector, then even auditors wouldn't complain if it means cleaner dedicated communications. Even Hiral and Kaine would likely throw money into it, if it means secure comms they can oversee.
 
celebrate this fic hitting triple digits, have the sixth Omake about of the Tak & Garik adventures.

Omake: Battle of Bandit Mine

POV: Lolwin Doolt, indebted Duros mine owner, Bandit Lair/semi-abandoned mine, Minda-4, Minda system, 2ABY

"Lolwin Doolt, this is your final warning! We have you surrounded! Surrender now and this can all end peacefully!"

A feminine voice resounded throughout the abandoned mine as Lolwin Doolt paced back and forth in what was once his office. The days of wrangling workshy miners to find the seams to pay off his debts were long gone. Now there was only compromises, desperation, and a loudhailer signaling his doom.

"Pulgrun what are we going to do? You said this would be a way to clear my debts, not bring the local garrison down on our heads!"

All the Huralok did was drum his fingers behind what was once Lolwin's desk. After the veins in his mine tapped out far too soon, Pulgrun and his crew offered to pay his interest in exchange for use of his mine. They promised him that none of their activities would be traced back to him. A month in and that was proven to be a load of poodoo.

"Now, now Mr. Doolt. Don't go pinning this all on me. They said they were here for you, didn't they? My lieutenant's… exuberance only exasperated a problem you brought on us."

Exuberance was certainly an understatement. Early this morning a sentry caught sight of the Mynock Pailers' BR-23 courier making a combat landing just half a kilometer from his mine. Pulgrun's lieutenant took most of the crew in an idiotic attack against them hoping to catch them mid-deployment.

First sign of things going wrong was when a couple of bandits went down from shots coming from atop a hill. That scavenged droid armor the crew insisted on wearing to adhere to some sort of unspoken theme proved insufficient. The Pailers kept taking pot shots with their Sporting Blasters causing the rest of the crew to hide behind cover.

Then an Advozse in frakking power armor did a one man assault charge while the scattered fire from the crew's outland rifles just plinked off the shield he was wielding. By the time he got close the bandits were already routing and a few more were gunned down or brought down by the mad Advozse. Now what remained of his new allies huddled in his old office looking to Pulgrun for guidance.

"Bah! We can assign blame later! What matters is how we are going to deal with the Pailers knocking at our door before they finished preparing."

After the disastrous battle outside, the Pailers had begun setting up a cordon around his mine. They had brought in 2 Arrow-23 landspeeders armed with laser cannons, a cargo speeder full on infantry, and even blurrgs. For now they contented themselves with watching us from macrobinoculars and making an hourly pass with that starfighter of theirs to see if we escaped through some side passage that didn't exist. However judging by the thinsuits spotted underneath their uniforms, the Pailers wouldn't be going away anytime soon.

"Relax Mr. Doolt. We have time. The Pailers will not assault us so hastily. They most likely worry we have rigged the mine's stores of blaststicks to collapse the tunnels on them, but we can't do that, can we, Mr. Doolt?"

Lolwin blenched at the possibility. Luckily the stores of explosives were the first thing he sold to hold off the mountain of debt. Pulgrun seemed the right type of desperate to consider the option. Lolwin knew enough about cave ins to know they tended not to stop where you planned them to.

"So are we just going to wait around until we starve? We don't have the supplies built up to withstand a siege! Or worse they could be calling in the Imperial Military!"

The former was definitely more merciful than the latter. He remembers reading about how trigger happy the military around here was in the Edin campaign. Base Delta Zeros got a lot more terrifying if there was a chance of you being on the receiving end.

"It will not come to that Mr. Doolt. What I need you to do is get any mining equipment you have left to arm my men. We will need something stronger than our rifles to get through their boss' power armor. As for the rest of the infantry? That is what our "little surprises" are for. Once the Pailers are trapped in melee, we will attempt to breakthrough the cordon and secure our freedom."

It wasn't the best sounding plan to a novice like Lolwin, but he was willing to follow along. Anything was better than being forced to break his species' lending traditions. That would make him a pariah among his own kind as well as in the business world. Nothing was too much to avoid that type of stigma.

——

POV: Garik Malo
RIV: Protector,
Head of Personnel of the Mynock Pailers, a RII: Alliance Mercenary Company
Certifications: Tracker III, Rescuer I


"Right I want this perimeter airtight. Let's not give Tak anything to give a lecture about alright?"

A chorus of chuckles resounded from the Pailers around Garik. They had all been on a receiving end of one of the Head of Administration's lectures. Usually after doing something boneheaded. Just one more thing to unify the Pailers from the ragtag group they started out as.

"Get those Arrows behind those rocks. I want as much of the body behind stone as you can manage. We only need those laser cannons since the blurrgs can handle chasing down any runners."

It was the first time the Pailers were conducting a siege this large. That had surrounded a building before, but nothing of this magnitude. Hopefully these bandits don't have much reserves of food and water. They might be able to ship in supplies with control of the air, but that still won't do much for morale.

"Boss! Sky Pail's RMD-20 spotted a group heading our way! They got some big wooden box being carried by a repuslorlift!"

A box? Why would the bandits haul out a box into an engagement. Was it filled with explosives or a turret they intended to deploy. Either way once they closer he would direct fire to take it…

Brrrrrr!

"Removing impediments. Wooden or otherwise."

Oh frak. Oh Frak! Garik knows the voice that just sawed its way out of that wooden box. The voice of metal monsters from a state long dead and a war long ended. He still has nightmares from that time Tak showed him a documentary on Separatist occupation protocols to explain why they are not going to use battle droids. No way is he is charging into sawing distance of those things even with power armor on. Frak he can't let his Pailers see him tremble. Give them something else to focus on!

"Arrows! Weapons free! I want all laser cannon fire directed at those droids now! Make sure those melee B2s are hobbled before they reach our lines! Infantry! Hold fire until you can get a good shot on those bandits, then open fire! Everyone else, maintain position and get ready to chase down any runners!"

There! Solid enough plan. Everyone can focus on what they need to do instead of looking at him. Garik just hopes he instilled enough trust and discipline into the Pailers to keep their cool. They had the firepower advantage still, and if they could bring that to bear things should turn out fine. He just needs to project confidence and have it stiffen his Pailers' backbone. Just like back at the ring, Garik. Showboat and strut.

These bandits just signed their death warrants. Using battle droids, Clone Wars era at that, was a big no-no in the Minda system. Once word of a stunt like this spread, they were liable to get hanged by the locals before the government could get ahold of them. Before he would be willing to take prisoners. Now there was no need to capture the already dead. No one is walking out of that mine except their target.

——

"Do they always cry like that when you bring them in?"

Garik stared as the Duros led away sobbing and blubbering. A skip tracer, a specialist bounty hunter primarily hunting debt dodgers, had come to the Pailers to subcontract. The owner of this mine had been behind on his payments to his fellow Duros and was caught doing some economic sorcery Tak called "using supernumerary posts to inflate the worth of his company for his creditors". The Draag sent to bring him in had noticed armed individuals patrolling when she reconned the place and asked them to ensure the capture went smoothly.

Tak and him had agreed in exchange for a part of the owner's bounty and any bounties these bandits might have had. The Old Vet had decided not renew the Pailers' contract after it ran out. Dewback Diggers had gotten big and sophisticated enough that the council had decided to raise a local police force rather than rely on mercenaries. Side gigs like this were good for building up reserves while we decided our next move.

"Sometimes. Usually the ones who haven't realized how deep a hole they dug themselves in. Thanks for the assistance by the way. Wasn't expecting so many of them."

Neither had Garik to be honest. That defense was hastily slapped together once a Sky Pail spotted the bandits heading their way. The M.P. Hurt Wagon was still mostly in its demilitarized configuration, which meant it lacked the internals needed to quickly deploy their speeders and mounts in a potential combat situation. Still, the infantry had been able to stick to their training. They had suppressed the bandits and kept their heads down long enough for Garik to get among them.

"I am just glad we managed to get reinforcements and the cordon up before they unleashed those droids. Did you see the chainsaws on those things? Separatists must have been taking Spice when they came up with that."

Thankfully they were poorly maintained which meant sustained fire from the laser cannon on an Arrow was enough to take it down. The bandits probably dug them out of the desert near where the old Munificent wrecks were and reprogrammed them. Garik would have to tell Tak back at Dewback Diggers to send a report to the Imperial government. Make sure they didn't miss any other hardware in the last sweep.

"Quite. Speaking of leftovers, this mine seems pretty well dug. The owner might have been lying about how much it was worth, but it is clear he didn't try and cut corners on the actual mining. Shame the veins tapped out early given how well this operation was done."

Yeah this place does look nice doesn't it? Main entrance is large enough to convert into a hanger. The barracks were relatively untouched despite this place being home to bandits for a bit. Even the utilities were large enough to accommodate the whole company.

Space had getting tight and expensive back at Dewback Diggers. Offers were rolling in for the Pailers' piece of the plateau. A new base out of town would allow for a much easier time expanding facilities, even with the extra shipping. A proper garage for their speeders and a larger stable for their blurrgs would be way cheaper than in town.

"Trying to make sure the owner's creditors get as much of their Credits back as possible? Guessing you get a commission for going above and beyond? Well I'll talk with Tak back in town about it."

Maybe those same creditors would be willing to buy their base back in town? Tak had taught him those kind of additions gave wiggle room to tip a deal in their favor. Not like there was much else of value to extract out of this gig given the bandits only had slugthrowers and scavenged armor. Either way that was for the next company meeting to hash out.

Although Garik had a feeling the town's mood would turn against them if they kept their old place and only used it for storage and training. Space was getting to be something to fight over on the plateau, and the Pailers wanted no part of that fight once the security contract ended. Not like either of them wanted to get into the messy politics of the rental market long term. Better to cash out while the price and goodwill were still favorable.

——

Who here remembers the 2 Munificent wrecks that were found on Minda-4 alllll the way back in Chapter 4? My guess is the government probably didn't find every single piece of battle droid that was scattered during and after the crash. Separatist battle droids don't seem so scary in the movies and cartoons when they are fighting magic monks and super soldiers. Right until you realize their occupation protocols involve fielding legions of killer robots armed with radiation weaponry in addition to the standard blasters. Occupations that are usually conducted against civilian populations. Not to mention the recent reminder from the Scarred Hand's little terror campaign.

Also that "one man assault charge" thing wasn't just a metaphor. The Mynock Pailers' group tactics take inspiration from 18th-19th century infantry tactics, just scaled down to a small unit and using sci-fi tech. Mass rifle fire to kill some of the enemy and suppress the rest as cover for the assault unit to go into CQC to break the morale of the enemy position to end the fight quickly. The melee charge was crucial because neither side in the initial battle had powerful enough guns to achieve decisive firepower i.e. the ability to kill a lot of people fast enough to shatter the other side's morale. In the second engagement the bandit force was small enough and the Pailers had brought enough heavy weapons to just mow them down.

Crossposted on SB and SV
 
A thought came to me

Why not, utilize the game app market for research uses. Factory Sim data for efficient factory designs in various environs, base defense/tower defense games to test weapon array placement under horde conditions to stress test deficiencies in where they fall short.

Business Sims where everyone can try their hands at simulated commerce, only to get ganked by Muun kids trying their hands on business without consequence.
 

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