Godfang
| Type | Siege-Class Spinal Weapon |
|---|---|
| Faction | Whitok Kingdom |
| Speed | N/A (projectile dependent) |
| Propulsion | Chem-propellant launch with curvine-assisted in-flight correction |
| Armor | N/A (weapon system) |
| Armament | * Fires one massive siege shell per cycle
|
| Hangar Capacity | N/A |
| Notes | Analog spinal weapon mounted in Komodo-class Heavy Cruisers. Designed for close-range ship-kill or orbital bombardment. |
Contents
Overview
The Godfang-class Analog Siege Driver is a 2,000mm caliber spinal-mounted weapon system developed by the Whitok Kingdom for use aboard its capital ships, most notably the Komodo-class heavy cruiser. A devastatingly powerful, analog-only siege cannon, the Godfang is designed to operate in high-STC environments where digital targeting, electromagnetic weapons, and energy-based systems fail.
The weapon’s name—“Godfang”—was coined by Planetary Union analysts to describe its brutal function and its reptilian theming in Whitok doctrine.
Delivery System
The Godfang fires a single, massive shell—typically 1.5 to 2 meters in diameter and 10 meters long—via a reinforced, spinal-bore launch tube that spans nearly the full length of the Komodo’s hull. The shell is launched using a **chemically driven analog propellant system**, reminiscent of World War II artillery but scaled to starship proportions.
- Firing the Godfang requires full mechanical alignment of the ship’s spine with the target
- The Komodo must maneuver to aim; the weapon does not pivot or gimbal
- Recoil dampening is achieved via analog inertial buffers and magnetic bracing
Payload Types
Godfang rounds are modular and analog-configurable. Known payload types include:
- **Kinetic Penetrator** — Solid uranium-jacketed slug for maximum hull punch
- **Fragmentation Burst** — Timed or impact-triggered release of submunitions
- **Thermobaric Core** — Atmosphere-igniting detonation, used during surface bombardment
- **EMP Capsule** — Disrupts digital gear
In-Flight Maneuvering
While lacking traditional digital guidance, Godfang shells can make limited course corrections using **curvine-assisted analog vectoring**:
- Each shell houses **single-use micro-curvines** that activate mid-flight
- Adjustments are controlled by mechanical gyros, spring-based logic timers, or bio-brain targeting modules (e.g., bat-brain analogs)
- Corrections are subtle: deflection arcs up to 10 degrees are possible
- Most effective at short-to-medium range (~2,000 kilometers or less)
Tactical Use
The Godfang is deployed in scenarios where:
- Surprise transdim “surfacing” brings the Komodo close to target
- Enemy ships are distracted, disabled, or dead in the water
- Orbital facilities or stationary ground targets must be neutralized
Firing cadence is low—typically one round every 3–5 minutes—due to mechanical reload systems and barrel reconditioning.
Known Limitations
- Useless at long range unless used for fixed bombardment
- Aiming requires ship maneuvering—vulnerable during repositioning
- Curvine correction offers only modest flight path adjustment
- Enormous STC and thermal signature during fire—cannot be concealed
- If misfired, shell could rupture internal sections of the ship (one recorded incident)