I remember this game!it was good for the time it came out..i love how u could play the humans,the xenomorphs,and the predator.i always played as the predator..
Wrong wording using the term “blast wave” but the shuttle would still definitely be hit by a debris field. Especially with a ship the size of the Marlowe suddenly being blasted apart and its engines going into overdrive.
You can have blast waves in space. If what you were referring to was the main stay, if a planet exploded, it would not move at all from it current point, just start to float slowly apart, a blast wave is different to oxygen which yes is void in space. A sudden release of any type of energy in space would create a force that amazingly would no dispute because of the vacuum of space until it hit something. Believe it or not, Star Trek is closer to actual science than most realise.
@@rickyb1211 Yes but this is a common error on the parts of writers. They don't understand how blast/shock waves in space work, or don't as is the case here. You MIGHT have sufficient air in a vessel to have a slight wave but it would dissipate so fast you'd have to be practically on top of it to be affected. If you're THAT close then the explosion itself would probably get you not mention, as you said, the debris and shrapnel. It's very frustrating because it doesn't take much effort to learn.
@@kdeathwing A wave of energy, such as the energy that is released from the sun, happens in space all the time to varying degrees. A massive release of energy say, by a star going supernova or a neutron star can cause massive damage but in different ways. Stars going nova would release a massive wave of plasma and charged particles that can travel a long way and can affect things even several lights years away if I remember correctly. Physical destruction would be limited by the size of the star. A neutron star can eject energy that could easily cook our planet if one of the poles were to point in our general direction from even several galaxies away. But again, the amount of energy release is MASSIVE and so far beyond the amount of energy released by a critical reaction from a ships reactor. Nukes, even incredibly large nukes in space would do little to nothing to ships even just a few dozen km's from the detonation. Even the EMP released wouldn't have much affect simply because starships would have to be shielded from all kinds of EM radiation that they run into on a regular basis.
I remember this game!it was good for the time it came out..i love how u could play the humans,the xenomorphs,and the predator.i always played as the predator..
aww this bring back some great memories.
Why are you showing the planet Reach from Halo in your background photo?
Ah yes, the blast wave..... In space and therefore a vacuum... Yeah
Wrong wording using the term “blast wave” but the shuttle would still definitely be hit by a debris field. Especially with a ship the size of the Marlowe suddenly being blasted apart and its engines going into overdrive.
You can have blast waves in space. If what you were referring to was the main stay, if a planet exploded, it would not move at all from it current point, just start to float slowly apart, a blast wave is different to oxygen which yes is void in space.
A sudden release of any type of energy in space would create a force that amazingly would no dispute because of the vacuum of space until it hit something.
Believe it or not, Star Trek is closer to actual science than most realise.
@@rickyb1211 Yes but this is a common error on the parts of writers. They don't understand how blast/shock waves in space work, or don't as is the case here. You MIGHT have sufficient air in a vessel to have a slight wave but it would dissipate so fast you'd have to be practically on top of it to be affected. If you're THAT close then the explosion itself would probably get you not mention, as you said, the debris and shrapnel. It's very frustrating because it doesn't take much effort to learn.
@@kdeathwing A wave of energy, such as the energy that is released from the sun, happens in space all the time to varying degrees. A massive release of energy say, by a star going supernova or a neutron star can cause massive damage but in different ways. Stars going nova would release a massive wave of plasma and charged particles that can travel a long way and can affect things even several lights years away if I remember correctly. Physical destruction would be limited by the size of the star. A neutron star can eject energy that could easily cook our planet if one of the poles were to point in our general direction from even several galaxies away. But again, the amount of energy release is MASSIVE and so far beyond the amount of energy released by a critical reaction from a ships reactor. Nukes, even incredibly large nukes in space would do little to nothing to ships even just a few dozen km's from the detonation. Even the EMP released wouldn't have much affect simply because starships would have to be shielded from all kinds of EM radiation that they run into on a regular basis.
The Predator Assembly's showing its fangs.
Wow, this is pretty cool! 👍
thanks🥰
Very Cool 😎 👌🏽
thank you jamal🥰