UNSC Prophecy: Difference between revisions

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|battles= [[Second Battle of Harvest]]
|affiliation= [[UNSC Navy]]
|affiliation= [[UNSC Navy]]
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Revision as of 16:49, February 25, 2009

Template:Ratings

UNSC Prophecy
Production information

Class:

UNSC Destroyer

Specifications

Length:

485 meters

Powerplant:

Deuterium Fusion cores

Slipspace drive:

Shaw-Fujikawa Translight Engine

Hull:

2 meters of Titanium-A battleplate

Countermeasures:

Six Emergency Thrusters

Armament:

Service information

Participated battles:

Second Battle of Harvest

Known commanders:

Commander Orez

Affiliation:

UNSC Navy

 

The UNSC Prophecy was a Marathon-class cruiser commissioned by the UNSC Navy [1]. Captain James Cutter refused the position of Commanding Officer of the Prophecy, for the chance to command the UNSC Spirit of Fire.

The Prophecy was heavily damaged during the ongoing battle for Harvest, forcing all its crew to evacuate the ship in lifepods. Unfortunately, the lifepods were caught in the radiation pulse of the ships engines. Half of those were subjected to extreme amounts of radiation, managing barely to survive, while the other half were killed.[2] The lifepods were picked up by the UNSC Spirit of Fire, where the survivors were made comfortable. All died slow agonising deaths, with no spare morphine to ease their pain. Sergeant John Forge was sent aboard the ship in a Pelican with his squad to recover survivors, but was redirected by Serina to purge its NAV database. The ships AI, Fitzgibbon, prevented Forge from accessing the database because of his unprofessional record, but eventually relented when informed that his actions breached the Cole Protocol. Allowing Forge to purge the database, Fitzgibbon then initiated a self-destruct sequence, destroying the ship to deny its access to the Covenant.

An ONI Prowler was present when the Prophecy was damaged, but refused to help because the radiation emissions would have compromised their stealth systems, rendering their only tactical advantage moot. The survivors were also deemed to be a lost cause, the radiation doses they had recieved were too much to survive. Such a callous assesment of living humans greatly upset Captain James Cutter.[3]

Sources

Template:UNSC Destroyers