I helps with the immersion, and its cool, so long as its done properly. Meaning not like this:
"Romeo, Bravo Mike Alpha Charlie!"
"Romeo, Bravo Mike Alpha Charlie!"
I dont think he out ranks them as much as he asks to do something and they dont say no, and is navy jargen alot diffrent from army?doctorwhofan said:I like it, I understand it, and actually I live it. Well, Naval equivilant. It gives games a feel of authenticity, especially if they get it right.
Still trying to figure out why a Masterchief seemingly outranks all the officers due to his uberness though.![]()
doctorwhofan said:I know, ex-NAvy here. I KNOW Masterchiefs. Let's say, drinking roadkill coffee and able to stand on a ship and drinking it during rough seas does not constitute uberness. I Know mastersargents, they are almost the same. A Master Chief in with Marines? Very common. I thought he should be an officer, but Lieutenant doesn't roll off the tongues as well, and the fact he could be promoted makes it hard to call a character only known for his rank for 3 games.Slycne said:That's actually not as crazy as it sounds. It's not uncommon for a less experienced officer to look towards experienced senior ranked NCOs for advice even if the decision ultimately is theirs.doctorwhofan said:Still trying to figure out why a Masterchief seemingly outranks all the officers due to his uberness though.![]()
SOmewhat. head for latrine, helos instead of choppers, Admiral instead of General. Alot of the forms are the same, and the genral lingo (Bravo Zulu, etc.) Remember-lots of tradional British naval lingo survives in the Navy. I was Avaiation Navy, so my lingo was different than Normal Navy Ones. But a DEck is deck, a ladderwell is a ladderwell, no matter if you are on land or sea.Cody211282 said:I dont think he out ranks them as much as he asks to do something and they dont say no, and is navy jargen alot diffrent from army?doctorwhofan said:I like it, I understand it, and actually I live it. Well, Naval equivilant. It gives games a feel of authenticity, especially if they get it right.
Still trying to figure out why a Masterchief seemingly outranks all the officers due to his uberness though.![]()
I will bow to your Halo knowledge. Though, it's kinda cool to see a Naval enlisted rank large and in charge (sorta) of a video game. A popular video game. NOT in charge of a jet or a boat. But it is funny hearing my hubby (who is still in the Navy) coming home from work and putting on a Halo game, only to chuckle "Chief (insert arse-of-the-week here) was in Halo, he certainlly make a funny, but short lived, Spartan."Paragon Fury said:doctorwhofan said:I know, ex-NAvy here. I KNOW Masterchiefs. Let's say, drinking roadkill coffee and able to stand on a ship and drinking it during rough seas does not constitute uberness. I Know mastersargents, they are almost the same. A Master Chief in with Marines? Very common. I thought he should be an officer, but Lieutenant doesn't roll off the tongues as well, and the fact he could be promoted makes it hard to call a character only known for his rank for 3 games.Slycne said:That's actually not as crazy as it sounds. It's not uncommon for a less experienced officer to look towards experienced senior ranked NCOs for advice even if the decision ultimately is theirs.doctorwhofan said:Still trying to figure out why a Masterchief seemingly outranks all the officers due to his uberness though.![]()
There are only 3 confirmed SPARTAN Officers in Halo canon. Kurt (promoted to be in charge of the SPARTAN-III Program), Kat (the woman from Halo: Reach) and your commander in Halo: Reach.
SPARTANs were technically never supposed to be promoted to officers. I forget exactly why, but it had something to do with giving SPARTANs too much authority while freeing them from the responsibilities of officers, and something about ONI Protocols giving most SPARTANs the ability to ignore anyone who basically wasn't an Admiral or from ONI if they considered their mission more important.
Most epic thread necromancing everDcy said: