DivineEvil, on 28 June 2016 - 05:21 PM, said:
Arrow-IV is a lock-only weapon. It's basically an LRM/20, that fires one large missile over pretty much any distance in MWO. It would, of course, require an unparalleled reloading time and ability to use several AMS systems to shot down the missile in order to keep them balanced. Long Tom Cannon, on the other hand, would probably require a separate tracking mechanism, that would give you a visual or audial clue when the selected target is not moving, which would guarantee a direct hit, but otherwise would get a high chance of missing and causing only middling splash damage.
Incorrect. Arrow IV's can be fired like any other artillery weapon, and only the TAG-guided version is a "lock-on" type of weapon (with a more focused detonation to reduce collateral damage). They're also immune to AMS.
They'd certainly have one of the slowest reload times in the game, though, not to mention AC/20 levels of ammo, and deal their damage in 5-point hits rather than the full damage to a single location. They aren't LRMs- you don't have random amounts of damage hit the target, nor will the full damage fail to actually damage the target (depending on range).
Far as aiming one, it'd likely be one of the few cases where third-person view would be handy- hold down the fire button, you see a firing arc that increases in distance. Release to lock down range, hit fire again to launch the shell/missile.
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Besides, very few mechs, like Catapults, Thunderbolts and Stalkers would be able to mount either of those anyway, and we're talking about the heaviest weapons mechs can carry, that would occupy almost the entire side of a mech on their own.
Let's just ignore the Clan
Naga, which is actually built to handle a pair of Arrow IV launchers then. In-timeline, the
Catapult-C3 is the most notable Arrow IV 'Mech carrier for the IS, though the -C5 is more likely what MWO versions would end up closer to given the usual upgrades. Arty cannons don't end up standard on anything, while mortars fire like artillery but use standard ballistic hardpoints.
It'd definitely be a limited number of chassis, though. They'd have to specifically be given an "artillery" hardpoint for most arty-type weaponry.