Widowmaker1981, on 14 April 2016 - 12:45 AM, said:
No, they dont make sense - because you are trading size for armour, which is a bad trade (better to be smaller and harder to hit with less armour - its more survivable), especially when it also comes at the cost of large amounts of mech tonnage, which is opportunity cost everywhere except the solo queue. Mechs need to bring an amount of firepower that makes sense for their tonnage.
and dont try to say they will somehow be small. They ARE trading size, because volumetric scaling means they will absolutely, definitely, take up the same volume as other mechs of the same tonnage.
Massively overengined mechs are a bad design choice. The Gargoyle is bad, the ice ferret is bad, the Black Lanner will be bad (though slightly redeemed by ECM) and the Linebacker will be bad.
What about massively overgunned 'Mechs?
One could argue that being slow as a one-legged Whale in leg irons is as conducive to an early demise as being bigger than your britches might otherwise warrant. People have long decried the Stormcrow and the Timber Wolf both as being 'over-engined' because they dare to go faster than sixty klicks an hour...but would a Stormcrow with a 220-rated engine be even half the 'Mech the 330 Stormcrow is? Would a Timber Wolf with a 225 be remotely worth driving?
Why do people even want to do those things in the first place? Has not the biggest complaint against the Timber Wolf always been that it is surreally agile for its size and firepower? Isn't the Stormcrow's reputation as a do-everything murderbird that can outrun just about anything it can't outgun sort of reliant on the outrun part?
I get that there are some things that take Big Engine Envy too far. Personally I consider the Linebacker one of them - 97kph at 65 tons is not nearly so impressive as 119 at 55 tons. The Black Lanner might find some interesting niche-y uses as a heavily armored pursuit 'Mech or harasser, while the Linebacker just doesn't gain
enough extra speed to really reap benefit from its big ol' engine. Not compared to available 'mechs that can nearly match it with a great deal more everything-else. But seriously, man...seriously. There
is a range of weights in the middle where you have room for both 'Mechs with big engines and 'Mechs with big guns. It doesn't always have to be about trying for that 90-point alpha you can fire once every forty seconds.
And these days I find there is very little excuse to not at
least break eighty klicks if you're not a full-up fatbro. The rest of the game has gotten much faster since the 50kph Toaster pastry days, and if you don't think speed and mobility can win games, you need to step out of the Fatlas for a little bit, mang.