I've been assuming wankciv vs star wars, more or less, based on my skimming of the teo thread. Star Wars is very, very, very, very, very, very small compared to even the smallest wankcivs.RogueIce wrote:But you're still assuming the STL civilization was doing all this endless expanding and got to this "unreachable" point by the time they meet the FTL civ. And that the FTL civ...wasn't just doing the same thing in their corner of the universe?
But, let's assume all things are equal, with the only exception of FTL. Does it actually matter? The answer may surprise you.... it does not directly matter. The only thing FTL can help with is avoiding the carrying capacity wall en-route.
Suppose both sides start with a colony ship of 100 people. The FTL side does a hyperjump and arrives on the target world in no time at all.
The STL side builds a big generation ship and slowboats it there, taking 100 years.
Does the FTL side have an advantage? No! The generation ship and the seed colony grow *simultaneously* during the STL ship's journey.
After 100 years, assuming again all other things are equal, including birth and death rate, the FTL ship's colony has a population of about 5500 on the planet.
...then the generation ship lands. Boom, the STL side *also* has a population of about 5500 on their planet, because they had all those babies shipside.
The travel time mattered as much to the generation ship inhabitants as the Earth's orbit around the sun matters to the planet inhabitants. They are both moving... but it didn't affect their lives.
(We could tilt things by saying a FTL ship is cheaper to build than a generation ship, but that's a whole different matter, it has nothing to necessarily do with speed. Though I'll grant that building a generation ship is going to be a difficult task; it has to carry its energy with it, which might give the FTL guy a head start. But on the other hand, a FTL engine might need antimatter production too or whatever, so this is just bullshit that goes whatever way you want based on made up details.)
What about war? Well, the FTL advantage here is much more clear, at least for a shooting war. If the resistance is nonviolent though, it depends on how the people think. Will they be terrorized into submission via FTL shock and awe? Depends, but this is a non-tech debate.
Which brings me to the last thing: why are you assuming hard sci fi citizens, who've lived they way they've lived, presumably happily, for like a thousand years are going to just drop everything and convert to FTLism at first sight of a starship?
They might, of course, but it isn't a given. Even if they are fascinated by the science, that doesn't mean they are willing to join your empire. Maybe they're proud nationalists who will go on general strike the first time you make demands of them... you can't break a strike with FTL engines.