pbiggz, on 12 February 2014 - 10:07 AM, said:
What the LBX needs to be is not a halo-style shotgun. It was never that.
In BattleTech, it is (and always has been) precisely that: "an anti-BattleMech shotgun".
"In addition to firing the standard Dual-Purpose Armor-Defeating Rounds,
the weapon may also fire a special Cluster Round that acts much like an anti-'Mech shotgun. After being fired, the round breaks up into several smaller submunitions. This improves the chance of striking a critical location on the target, but also reduces the overall damage done and spreads it out over the entire target area rather than concentrating it in one location." - TRO 2750 (the first book in which the LB-X is introduced to the BattleTech universe), pg. 08
(Identical wording is also used in the original Classic BattleTech Master Rules, the Revised CBTMR, and the original TRO 3050.)
"Natasha's laugh survived computer modulation intact. "Of course. Would you prefer that they use a strategy that makes them comfortable or uncomfortable?"
"Point taken.
This LBX autocannon has Cluster loads."
"
Shotgun shells. It'll sand all the armor off a foe. Once you've softened him up, your lasers ought to cut him to ribbons."
Phelan nodded to himself and studied the auxiliary monitor. "Gauss rifle in my left arm?"
"Great weapon. It uses magnetic currents to launch a ball of ferrous metal about the diameter of a melon. Generates next to no heat and packs one hell of a wallop. The only problem is that its power requirements are fairly heavy. If you try to shoot it and the lasers at the same time, the computer will have to cycle and allocate power, so it will take a bit longer to get your salvo off."" - Natasha Kerensky & Phelan Kell,
Blood Legacy, chapter 19
"Shunting plasma flow from the fusion engine into his jump jet reaction chambers, Doles guided the
Emperor into a ninety-meter spinning flight that landed him directly behind the
Marauder. Realizing his error the Periphery warrior tried to turn into the attack, but too late. Lasers flared ruby energy into its already-weakened rear torso and sides, evaporating any remaining armor it might have claimed and then carving deep into internal support structure.
The autocannon hammered its shotgun-like ammunition into the breaches, each fragmenting piece ricocheting deeper than the one before in search of critical components." - battle between Colonel Warner Doles'
Emperor (firing a LB 10-X) and a Taurian Concordat
Marauder,
The Killing Fields, chapter 36
"As he ran, Jake saw Petra bring her
Stormcrow forward and to the right, closing in on the second
Avatar to bring her autocannon into play. Her opponent took a few steps back and launched a double-salvo of LRMs from its shoulders, following it up with
a shotgun-like blast from its right-arm autocannon. Her speed made her a difficult enough target that the cannon shot went wide, but her
Stormcrow weathered a spread of twenty long-range missiles before she raised her 'Mech's left arm and let rip with the autocannon." - battle between MechWarrior Petra's
Ryoken B and a DCMS
Avatar Prime firing a LB 10-X,
Test of Vengeance, chapter 13
pbiggz, on 12 February 2014 - 10:07 AM, said:
What it needs to be is a Flak gun. A real flak gun.
That means a single slug continuously flinging bits of itself off until it reaches it's maximum range. This is what it was like in mechwarrior 3 and the LBX was a terrifying weapon, even without different ammo types.
Firstly: that description - "a single slug continuously flinging bits of itself off until it reaches it's maximum range" - doesn't really fit any known shell functionality.
Perhaps you were thinking of a
Shrapnel shell - "munitions which carried a large number of individual bullets close to the target and then ejected them to allow them to continue along the shell's trajectory and strike the target individually"?
Secondly: neither the "continuously flinging bits" model nor the Shrapnel shell model is how LB-X ACs are described in BattleTech; they are consistently described as "anti-BattleMech shotguns" that fire a cluster munition whose behavior is modeled after that of
canister rounds like the
120mm M1028 Canister used by the M1 Abrams Main Battle Tank (which "discharges [a] massive blast of fragments
at muzzle exit") and the
grapeshot from which it is descended (and which also "broke up
when the gun was fired, spread out in flight like a shotgun charge, and sprayed the target area")... or like the
shotshells that are descended from both & to which the LB-X ACs are often & repeatedly compared by various BattleTech rulebooks and novels, with "slug" munitions (which were actually explosive
shells rather than true
slugs (which, by definition, carry no payload/warhead); the "slug" designation was very likely selected to reference
shotgun slugs and further emphasize the role of the LB-X as "anti-BattleMech shotgun") that served as its alternate firing mode (which is not (yet?) implemented in MWO).
As such, PGI's "shotgun-esque" implementation of the LB-X cluster rounds is in fact "correct" in that it is true to the descriptions and portrayal of the weapon's descriptions & portrayals in the source material, and reimplementing them as proximity- or timer-detonated Shrapnel shells would be antithetical to that the LB-X is supposed to be.