Satan n stuff, on 10 September 2015 - 11:18 AM, said:
Are you telling me that effectiveness should scale linearly with tonnage/slots invested? Because that is exactly how you get overpowered minmaxed loadouts. There is a reason nearly every game or game system there is gives diminishing returns the more you invest in a particular item.
I'm saying that the LRM-20 has worse spread, worse refire, worse ammunition efficiency, worse accuracy/tracking, worse weight, worse critslots, and worse durability than the equivalent of four LRM-5s. It has absolutely no area whatsoever in which it stands out or even competes, save that it uses a single hardpoint rather than four. Given the fact that
absolutely no one with a brain in their heads uses the LRM-20, clearly this is an insufficient gain in light of the weapon system's multitude of penalties.
Your claim that diminishing returns are necessary for larger weapons is
what leads to boating, not the other way around. Smaller weapons being more efficient per ton/crit means that carrying large numbers of smaller weapons gives you much better return on invested equipment. With the other weapon classes, there are mitigating factors to stacking lighter weapons - 'light' autocannons are not actually that much lighter than heavier guns, lightweight lasers have significantly less range than larger energy, etcetera...but in the case of LRMs?
The LRM-20 has, very seriously,
no redeeming qualities whatsoever when compared to four LRM-5. If you have the hardpoints for it, it's 100% superior to take quad 5s over a single 20. If you don't have the hardpoints for massed LRM-5s, guess what?
You don't take LRMs at all. The larger launchers are
that disastrously inefficient and lossy compared to the smaller launchers, and it renders singleton missile hardpoints which might otherwise comfortably add to a 'Mech's capabilities with larger LRM racks essentially worthless. It's completely ridiculous and it needs to be corrected. Perhaps not as much as other, more egregious balance issues, but it does, in fact, need to be addressed.