Fleet Communication Protocols

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Fleet Communication Protocols are the standardized naming and transmission procedures used by the Planetary Union Fleet in The Crypt series. These protocols help ensure clarity and coordination during ship-to-ship, fighter, and boarding operations — particularly in dense battlespaces or missions involving multiple capital vessels, voidcraft, and support teams.

Voidcraft Communications

Fleet voidcraft such as the GU-44 Ochthera and U-90 Sentinel follow a standardized comms protocol based on class, origin, and mission type.

Individual Operation Naming Convention

Used when voidcraft operate independently from a single capital ship or base.

  • Format: <class> + <local number>
  • Example: Crawler One (the first Ochthera assigned to the PUV Keeling)

Group Operation Naming Convention

Used when voidcraft operate in task groups or multi-ship operations.

  • Format: <mothership/base short code> + <class> + <local number>
  • Example: Crawler Kilo-Echo-One
    • "Kilo-Echo" is the short code for the PUV Keeling

Mission-Based Suffixes

Suffixes indicate a voidcraft’s specific mission role in complex engagements. These are only used when multiple craft of the same class are operating with differing assignments.

  • Example: Sentinel Alpha-Kilo-Three Razor
  • Format: <base code> + <class> + <number> + <suffix>
  • Example breakdown:
    • Sentinel: Class name (U-90 Interceptor)
    • Alpha-Kilo: Mothership short code for the PUV Akathaso
    • Three: Local assignment number
    • Razor: Mission suffix indicating deep penetration

Mission Suffix Key

These suffixes are only used in engagements with high craft volume or mixed-mission sorties.

  • Noise — Electronic warfare
  • Carton — Troop transport and assault
  • Dump — Mine laying
  • Needle — Boarding troop insertion
  • Blast — Counter-air operations
  • Jolly — Search and rescue
  • Razor — Deep penetration strike
  • Shield — Counter-boarding or defensive intercept

Current Voidcraft Types in Use

Short Code Assignment

Fleet comms assign each ship or base a two-letter short code for quick tactical communication.

  • Example: Kilo-Echo = PUV Keeling
  • Example: Alpha-Kilo = PUV Akathaso
  • These short codes appear in callouts, mission logs, and tactical broadcast ID

Use of Protocols

  • All comms — including verbal, broadcast, and text logs — use this format.
  • Mission suffixes are only included when tactically necessary (e.g., an active carrier group using multiple voidcraft types with distinct objectives).
  • Smaller deployments, like the PUV Keeling with only two voidcraft, often omit suffixes for brevity.

See Also