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UNSC Insertion Protocols: Difference between revisions

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{{Era|UNSC|HCW|Post}}
{{Era|UNSC|HCW|Post}}
The '''UNSC Insertion Protocols''' govern the deployment of [[Orbital Drop Shock Troopers]] via [[Single Occupant Exoatmospheric Insertion Vehicle|drop pod]]. These protocols dictate that officers' pods accelerate faster than those of their enlisted subordinates, stemming from the belief that officers should lead rather than follow.<ref>[http://www.bungie.net/projects/odst/guide.aspx '''Bungie.net''', ''ODST Field Guide'']</ref>
 
The '''UNSC Insertion Protocols''' govern the deployment of [[Orbital Drop Shock Troopers]] via [[Single Occupant Exoatmospheric Insertion Vehicle|drop pod]]. These protocols dictate that commanding officers' pods accelerate faster than those of their enlisted subordinates.<ref name="ODSTfieldguide">[http://www.bungie.net/projects/odst/guide.aspx '''Bungie.net''', ''ODST Field Guide'']</ref><ref name="Theflood">'''[[Halo: The Flood]]''', Chapter 2, ''page 47'' (2001 paperback); ''page 53'' (2010 paperback)</ref>
 
==Reasons==
The reasons for this rule include the strongly held belief that commanding officers should lead rather than follow, should be willing to do anything their troops are asked to do, and should expose themselves to the same level of danger as their subordinates.<ref name="ODSTfieldguide"/><ref name="Theflood"/>
 
The most compelling reason, however, is the need to collect, sort, and organize the troops the moment their boots touch ground. Experience demonstrates that whatever the ODSTs manage to accomplish during the first so-called “golden hour” on the ground will have a disproportionate effect on the success or failure of the entire mission. The commander’s pod is equipped with a lot of gear that the regular “eggs” are not, including high-powered imaging gear, tactical sensors, and the ability to hold a 4th generation [[Dumb AI|"dumb" AI]], most notably a class C military AI.<ref name="ODSTfieldguide"><ref name="Theflood"/>
 
==Usage==
During the [[Battle of Installation 04]], [[UNSC rank structure|Major]] [[Antonio Silva]] followed the Protocol, holding a class C Military AI [[Wellsley]], as it was vital for the human forces as [[Installation 04]] was a potential hostile location.<ref name="Theflood"/>


==List of appearances==
==List of appearances==

Revision as of 09:55, May 23, 2018

The UNSC Insertion Protocols govern the deployment of Orbital Drop Shock Troopers via drop pod. These protocols dictate that commanding officers' pods accelerate faster than those of their enlisted subordinates.[1][2]

Reasons

The reasons for this rule include the strongly held belief that commanding officers should lead rather than follow, should be willing to do anything their troops are asked to do, and should expose themselves to the same level of danger as their subordinates.[1][2]

The most compelling reason, however, is the need to collect, sort, and organize the troops the moment their boots touch ground. Experience demonstrates that whatever the ODSTs manage to accomplish during the first so-called “golden hour” on the ground will have a disproportionate effect on the success or failure of the entire mission. The commander’s pod is equipped with a lot of gear that the regular “eggs” are not, including high-powered imaging gear, tactical sensors, and the ability to hold a 4th generation "dumb" AI, most notably a class C military AI.<ref name="ODSTfieldguide">[2]

Usage

During the Battle of Installation 04, Major Antonio Silva followed the Protocol, holding a class C Military AI Wellsley, as it was vital for the human forces as Installation 04 was a potential hostile location.[2]

List of appearances

Sources

  1. ^ a b Bungie.net, ODST Field Guide
  2. ^ a b c d Halo: The Flood, Chapter 2, page 47 (2001 paperback); page 53 (2010 paperback)