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Space engagements carried out by Forerunners and their technologically equivalent contemporaries - most prominently the [[Ancestors]] - were dazzlingly complex yet controlled affairs, involving seamless coordination across large distances as well as weapon systems and defenses extending through higher space-time branes.<ref name="s211">'''Halo: Silentium''', ''pages 211-212''</ref> These battles unfolded at speeds impossible for baseline individuals to follow<ref name="c161">'''Halo: Cryptum''', ''pages 161-162''</ref> and often involved copious numbers of often automated attack craft, with each maneuver adjusted to fit the current tactical situation according to constantly shifting predictive higher-dimensional calculations;{{Ref/Reuse|s211}} biological commanders could effectively contribute to these engagements due to sophisticated neurocognitive enhancement and mind-machine integration, enabling them to simultaneously perceive numerous differing viewpoints.{{Ref/Reuse|c161}}<ref>'''Halo: Cryptum''', ''page 316''</ref> Individual [[Warrior-Servant|Warriors]] would typically command up to a million [[weapon-ship]]s during fleet engagements,<ref>'''Halo: Cryptum''', ''page 174''</ref> while the numbers of attack ships such as [[harrier]]s could easily be in the hundreds of thousands.{{Ref/Reuse|s211}} In addition to physical weaponry, opposing ships also deployed [[AI suppressor|weaponized AI systems]] and [[confinement field]]s against one another with the intent of eliminating the enemy vessel's capacity for resistance.<ref>'''Halo: Cryptum''', ''pages 193-194''</ref> Higher-level [[combat skin]]s such as [[war sphinx]]es blurred the line between infantry, aerial attack craft and space fighters and were used to a great effect in battles waged over planets.<ref>'''Halo: Cryptum''', ''pages 66, 95, 163''</ref>
Space engagements carried out by Forerunners and their technologically equivalent contemporaries - most prominently the [[Ancestors]] - were dazzlingly complex yet controlled affairs, involving seamless coordination across large distances as well as weapon systems and defenses extending through higher space-time branes.<ref name="s211">'''Halo: Silentium''', ''pages 211-212''</ref> These battles unfolded at speeds impossible for baseline individuals to follow<ref name="c161">'''Halo: Cryptum''', ''pages 161-162''</ref> and often involved copious numbers of often automated attack craft, with each maneuver adjusted to fit the current tactical situation according to constantly shifting predictive higher-dimensional calculations;{{Ref/Reuse|s211}} biological commanders could effectively contribute to these engagements due to sophisticated neurocognitive enhancement and mind-machine integration, enabling them to simultaneously perceive numerous differing viewpoints.{{Ref/Reuse|c161}}<ref>'''Halo: Cryptum''', ''page 316''</ref> Individual [[Warrior-Servant|Warriors]] would typically command up to a million [[weapon-ship]]s during fleet engagements,<ref>'''Halo: Cryptum''', ''page 174''</ref> while the numbers of attack ships such as [[harrier]]s could easily be in the hundreds of thousands.{{Ref/Reuse|s211}} In addition to physical weaponry, opposing ships also deployed [[AI suppressor|weaponized AI systems]] and [[confinement field]]s against one another with the intent of eliminating the enemy vessel's capacity for resistance.<ref>'''Halo: Cryptum''', ''pages 193-194''</ref> Higher-level [[combat skin]]s such as [[war sphinx]]es blurred the line between infantry, aerial attack craft and space fighters and were used to a great effect in battles waged over planets.<ref>'''Halo: Cryptum''', ''pages 66, 95, 163''</ref>


The [[Ur-Didact]] devised a well-known strategic doctrine known as "[[star-hopping]]," which involved the selective targeting of strategically significant worlds while ignoring less important targets. This strategy allowed the Forerunners to gradually dismantle the prehistoric human empire piecemeal during the [[human-Forerunner wars]], eventually leaving only their capital [[Charum Hakkor]] as a significant military bastion.<ref>'''Halo: Primordium''', ''pages 187-188''</ref> During fleet engagements, the Didact favored the [[fleet spiral]] formation which enabled a fleet to respond to threats from any direction.<ref>'''Halo: Silentium''', ''page 267''</ref> Late into their war with ancient humanity, the Forerunners took advantage of their superior understanding of [[slipstream space]] to catastrophically increase their human opponents' [[Reconciliation|space-time debt]], effectively cutting the [[Charum Hakkor system]] off from the rest of the ancient human empire. Over three years, the Didact fought the [[Forthencho|Lord of Admirals]]' forces across the Charum Hakkor system in a constant battle of attrition for superior orbital paths and optimal slipspace pathways.<ref>'''Halo: Primordium''', ''pages 239-240''</ref>
The [[Didact]] devised a well-known strategic doctrine known as "[[star-hopping]]" which involved the selective targeting of strategically significant worlds while ignoring less important targets. This strategy allowed the Forerunners to gradually dismantle the prehistoric human empire piecemeal during the [[human-Forerunner wars]], eventually leaving only their capital [[Charum Hakkor]] as a significant military bastion.<ref>'''Halo: Primordium''', ''pages 187-188''</ref> During fleet engagements, the Didact favored the [[fleet spiral]] formation which enabled a fleet to respond to threats from any direction.<ref>'''Halo: Silentium''', ''page 267''</ref> Late into their war with ancient humanity, the Forerunners took advantage of their superior understanding of [[slipstream space]] to catastrophically increase their human opponents' [[Reconciliation|space-time debt]], effectively cutting the [[Charum Hakkor system]] off from the rest of the ancient human empire. Over three years, the Didact fought the [[Forthencho|Lord of Admirals]]' forces across the Charum Hakkor system in a constant battle of attrition for superior orbital paths and optimal slipspace pathways.<ref>'''Halo: Primordium''', ''pages 239-240''</ref>


During the [[Forerunner-Flood war]], the Forerunner forces led by the [[Falchion]] at the [[Battle of the 78th Thema|78th Thema]] used their numerous attack harriers' cloaking capability to catch a [[Flood]] fleet by surprise, utilizing gravity slings to propel asteroids at the arriving Flood ships rather than attack with traceable energy weapons, allowing them to attain victory.<ref>'''Halo: Silentium''', ''pages 212-214''</ref> However, the conventional rules of space combat ceased to apply once the Flood began to use reactivated [[Precursor]] structures to systematically cripple and devastate Forerunner fleets.<ref>'''Halo: Silentium''', ''pages 188-189''</ref> Additionally, the computing power of Flood [[Key Mind]]s allowed the [[logic plague]]—the Flood's information equivalent—to eventually infest nearly any Forerunner ancilla, severely hampering their largely AI-driven fleet operations.<ref>'''Halo: Silentium''', ''pages 214-215''</ref> Because of the Flood's rate of expansion, Forerunner fleets would often resort to triggering stellar collapses once an infestation had been detected in a system.<ref>'''Halo 3''', ''[[Terminal (Halo 3)|Terminal 2]]''</ref>
During the [[Forerunner-Flood war]], the Forerunner forces led by the [[Falchion]] at the [[Battle of the 78th Thema|78th Thema]] used their numerous attack harriers' cloaking capability to catch a [[Flood]] fleet by surprise, utilizing gravity slings to propel asteroids at the arriving Flood ships rather than attack with traceable energy weapons, allowing them to attain victory.<ref>'''Halo: Silentium''', ''pages 212-214''</ref> However, the conventional rules of space combat ceased to apply once the Flood began to use reactivated [[Precursor]] structures to systematically cripple and devastate Forerunner fleets.<ref>'''Halo: Silentium''', ''pages 188-189''</ref> Additionally, the computing power of Flood [[Key Mind]]s allowed the [[logic plague]]—the Flood's information equivalent—to eventually infest nearly any Forerunner ancilla, severely hampering their largely AI-driven fleet operations.<ref>'''Halo: Silentium''', ''pages 214-215''</ref> Because of the Flood's rate of expansion, Forerunner fleets would often resort to triggering stellar collapses once an infestation had been detected in a system.<ref>'''Halo 3''', ''[[Terminal (Halo 3)|Terminal 2]]''</ref>

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