[Mail Call] 10/06/2017 Site slow-down

Sorry guys. Still can’t figure out what’s wrong with the site background. Worse, the site was super slow for me yesterday. We’ll probably be spending the weekend to look into it now.


What determines which shipgirl gets emojis?

Mostly random. I think I’ve answered this question before. Generally if the creative bug hits we’ll pick a particular shipgirl and have some sort of expression drawn.

When is Silent Service coming out?

Soon (TM)

Do you guys have any plans to come to _________

There’s about 4 or 5 different books I’m working on. Multiply that by two (and a half, since languages + translations). Then it’s typically busy season for us around October to the end of the year (in my real life business). Add the fact that we’re finally starting to release stuff thanks to printers coming online again, and you can see things get complicated.

The question’s better directed at Zero, if anything else.

Why have subgirls-related content taken over the site? What are the other girls doing?

Personal interest. Team interest. Also, I wouldn’t call it “taken over the site.” It’s more that the other characters are slowly getting worked into the setting of Silent Service, and that in other Pacific-related works plenty of characters show up. Basically the only characters that don’t get screen time are like, cruiser girls from vol 1 and 2, and even then, well. Chester’s a regular fixture in shenanigans (because she’s fun to write) and Phoenix our people just like.

Specifically, the reason is that we thought it would be good to draw people’s attention to a relatively neglected part of the war. KanColle and the assorted games haven’t really focused on submarines at all, and in all honesty, subs contributed a whole lot to us winning the war.

That, and the submarine is something of a unique beast among all naval ship “types.” It’s still relevant to today, but the submarine itself went through some rather remarkable transformations. K9 already mentioned it in one of the sub-corners earlier.

Besides, from our perspective, we’re keeping it as a hobby project. You can see that Silent Service gets “article”-sized updates basically every week, and there’s a healthy smattering of content already. As the book comes to completion we’ll probably still update Silent Service, but well, let’s just see if I can get it done first. x)

[Mail Call] 10/04/2017 Site-stuff & more history edition

Hi all,

Phoenix still have the website to herself at the moment. Zero’s looking into it now, but we’re as puzzled as you are. We’re neither sure of how the bug got there, nor are we entirely positive on how it should be removed.

All books are still going according to plan. So that’s that.

And now, for some lore-related matters…


In regards to the beginnings of Pacific history… Were the other nations all contacted together at once or on a separate basis?
Which countries were given this information, and why? To whom was this information given to?
On a separate basis. Truman immediately arranged for contact with the Prime Minister of Britain (yes, it’s still Churchill in Pacific’s timeline) to speak privately on the matter. Contact to the USSR occurred sometimes after.
In the 1950s knowledge of the Abyssals were limited strictly to the heads of state of the non-US countries. It is unclear whether or not Stalin disclosed this information to a handful of trusted generals and advisors, but STEC’s own opinion is that if any of the “old guard” knew about it, they certainly kept it a secret. Soviet counter-Abyssal operations did not take off until Petr appeared, at any rate.
Truman’s decision was pretty simple. After conversing with Iowa, he had reached the conclusion that the “shipgirls” are likely to originate from countries with strong naval traditions. Britain was the logical choice – it’s a US ally and have the most to lose from an Abyssal invasion. At the time, Truman did not think to ask if Iowa had recalled meeting any non-Allied shipgirls. While no harm was caused in the context of this erroneous assumption (though, hilariously enough, the Japanese were in for a nasty shock when they realized that Japan wasn’t the only country with shipgirls sometimes later in the 60s) the US seriously pondered the possibility of well, applying shipgirls to contemporary politics. The temptation of having Iowa go public and shock the Soviets was very strong, after all.
It was for this reason that Stalin was not informed until around the end of the Truman presidency. The first was that Truman had to balance the benefits to the US to the world at large. The second was that the Korean War was in full-swing, and Stalin – while curious about this particular matter – did not seem at all interested in communicating with the US directly. Given that the USSR does not have a strong naval tradition (and again, Iowa did not recall meeting any Soviet shipgirls, but she remembers plenty of American and at least a few British and other Allied ones), Truman didn’t really push, either.
(I should note, from a creator’s purpose, that choosing for Pacific’s timeline to begin during the Truman presidency is very, very intentional. Specifically, many shipgirl works or shipgirl type works like to take their tales towards the route of high fantasy-super hero fiction. Shipgirls – if they are in possession of innate powers or even very high tech equipment – tend to play the role of something like the Justice League. They become the drivers of world politics and the entire world’s spotlight is on them. Through that, I often see the creation of some remarkably idealized societies, where the existence of shipgirls seem to solve a lot of problems as if by magic. The alternative, and you see this quite a bit as well, is that shipgirls become something like a type of doomsday weapon. Politics are decided by shipgirls. World events are influenced by shipgirls to a gigantic degree. In some works I’ve even seen shipgirls “dueling” each other, and resolving thousand-year long ethnic or national conflicts with a simple trial by combat.
I am not particularly interested in that particular type of world-building. To me, the interesting thing is thinking about how historical figures may have responded to changes (thanks to the Abyssals), and my shipgirls and other characters only play a role in it. I also feel like simply using shipgirls to solve all international disputes or national problems is … too simple of a solution. It undervalues the extremely difficult questions leaders have to ask themselves, and reduce any potential complexity down to a JRPG-esque “who has more power” or “who has a higher power level.”
So, towards that end, Pacific’s atmosphere is strictly one where shipgirls are behind the scenes. Spy-flick. X-COM. Intrigue. I’ve heard all of these terms used to describe Pacific, and they aren’t wrong. However, in order to achieve something like this, I need to create a credible precedent. After all, much like the above situation, the readers (and I) are likely to ask ourselves: why set the story in this way?
Enter Truman.
From Truman’s perspective, the atomic bomb played an integral role in the development of his worldview. The newfound power of matters nuclear really, really gave him a perspective on leadership that no other US president to date has had to face. Quote below, from a State of the Union.

We have no reason to think that the stage we have now reached in the release of atomic energy will be the last. Indeed, the speed of our scientific and technical progress over the last seven years shows no signs of abating. We are being hurried forward, in our mastery of the atom, from one discovery to another, toward yet unforeseeable peaks of destructive power.

Inevitably, until we can reach international agreement, this is the path we must follow. And we must realize that no advance we make is unattainable by others, that no advantage in this race can be more than temporary.

The war of the future would be one in which man could extinguish millions of lives at one blow, demolish the great cities of the world, wipe out the cultural achievements of the past–and destroy the very structure of a civilization that has been slowly and painfully built up through hundreds of generations.

Such a war is not a possible policy for rational men. We know this, but we dare not assume that others would not yield to the temptation science is now placing in their hands.

To Truman, the Abyssal threat represents something very similar to the powers unleashed by the atomic bomb. He is acutely aware that he is a man of an era past, and he is living to see the end of his era – the era of himself and Lenin (in the same speech he comments to Stalin that Lenin wrote before the nuclear bomb) – and the beginning of a new one.

The solution to new problems and new threats that arise will not be through technology or superior force of arms. Rather, as Truman stated…

Our ultimate strength lies, not alone in arms, but in the sense of moral values and moral truths that give meaning and vitality to the purposes of free people. These values are our faith, our inspiration, the source of our strength and our indomitable determination.

We face hard tasks, great dangers. But we are Americans and we have faced hardships and uncertainty before, we have adjusted before to changing circumstances. Our whole history has been a steady training for the work it is now ours to do.

No one can lose heart for the task, none can lose faith in our free ways, who stops to remember where we began, what we have sought, and what accomplished, all together as Americans.

I have lived a long time and seen much happen in our country. And I know out of my own experience, that we can do what must be done.

When I think back to the country I grew up in–and then look at what our country has become–I am quite certain that having done so much, we can do more.

Much like how a nuclear bomb will not and cannot solve all of America’s problems, Truman believes that shipgirls cannot be the one-stop solution to America’s problems either. If America is to survive, then, we must come together.

Subcorner 20: Geneva & the beginning to London

Is Marby part of sub-corner now? 

N’est ce pas… She’s not even here is she? 

*munch munch* I like your snacks Dracha –

HEY! I MADE THOSE FOR MIKE! 

Yeah I know. He gave them to me after eating one. Said he doesn’t want to eat too many sweets. 

If it makes you feel any better is not your fault. Kandiezucter is like rest of German cuisine. Bland. Unimaginative. About as tasty as British cooking.

Just what the hell did the Brits do to you anyways, Frenchie? 

Sorry I’m running late! Geez. We’re here to talk about history so let’s leave your biases at the front door, okay?

Yeah. I read l’article and is not impressed. Is clearly biased against France!

You keep this up and I’m cutting you from the book! I am not being biased. I’m simply stating what happened historically!

USA! USA! USA! 


… Okay. So. Last time, we talked about how Geneva was basically at a standstill. Today I want to briefly explain a little about why it came to a standstill before diving into the bulk of the London Naval Conference.

The reason? (Also, why Marby is here…)

Cruisers.

The three countries that mattered in things naval could not reach an agreement on how cruisers are supposed to be built. The US really did not want to have less cruisers than the British. However, the US was also unwilling to admit that it needed cruisers. Basically, we took a look at the world map and decided that most of our cruisers are going to be operating in the Pacific. This means anything sub 10,000 tons was going to be not very useful.

The Japanese, on the other hand, didn’t focus on range much. They wanted firepower, and didn’t mind sticking to a proposed 10:7 ratio (British-Japanese) in the hopes of sticking it to the westerners. Just as a reminder that the Furutaka and Aoba classes were both “officially” listed as around 7000 tons in displacement. Japan could build twelve of these big gun cruisers and potentially develop tactics to overwhelm their opponent’s capital ships.

Now, comparatively, we really didn’t want that many cruisers. The royal navy called for seventy, remember? We wanted maybe about 25 treaty-types of about 10,000 tons. If we count the Omahas which were already being built, we only really need something like 320 thousand tons. Translated into British terms, however, this would only be enough for 38 cruisers. The Royal Navy could not accept this because it would mean that the Royal Navy would only have 15 8-inch gun cruisers compared to our 25.

So, we said, okay. Let’s deal. We’ll bump it up to 400 thousand tons in total. Give us out of that 250 thousand tons so we get our 25 big gun cruisers. You guys do what you want after that.

HONHONHON BRITISH SAID, NO. SHOULD HAVE TAKEN THE DEAL WHEN THEY HAD CHANCE HONHONHONHONHONHONHON –

Yeah. Arguably, the only thing that we learned from this after the British turned us down flatly was that we probably needed to get to building more cruisers. The navy basically went to Congress and said, hey, loooooooook here, we need to start building these things since everyone else is building them, too. They were successful at getting the funding, too.

Now, originally, at Washington, we agreed on trying to limit the amount of ships everyone is building. However, by now it’s pretty clear. While the big ships are getting limited, no agreements can be reached on destroyers, cruisers, and submarines. Since nobody can agree on this, this means that countries are more or less free to do what they please. This is bad for a number of reasons, but the biggest one is an arms race.

Remember. Geneva was in 1927. Yet a mere two years later, the Labour government took power in the United Kingdom, and Ramsay McDonald was intent on preserving British power by international diplomacy. In fact, he ran on cutting the Royal Navy’s size and funding! This was because the British were on the verge of bankruptcy and had no more money to commit to building their navy. The seventy-cruiser plan ended being only a mirage. Instead of building the cruisers they had wanted, they only ended up putting down some experimental cruiser types. Even this – the Leander, with much smaller guns, cut into the destroyer build-up.

Thus, the new British government, coupled with the stark realization by the Admirality that they had no money to build new ships, quickly tried to get everyone together for a new naval conference. Here, the United Kingdom basically went a 180 and wanted to limit the other countries’ naval development instead.

Here is where things got interesting. When McDonald approached us, we were more than happy to negotiate. Hoover was definitely on board with the idea of limiting naval build up, and we even managed to wrangle the Japanese along.

Actually, weren’t the Japanese just here to see if they can wrangle all of us into letting them cheat?

Sort of. But they were prepared to negotiate. The only one who showed up to this with a legitimate bone to pick was France –

Zut alors Tautau! Do you KNOW what the British put France through with Washington conference? Washington Treaty – with help from Americans I might add! – put France naval asset below that of Japan! We were only allowed five to Japan’s nine capital ships! 

Do you know what this mean? It mean we were on the same with Italy. France was also empire! Why does everyone forget this? We are also major European power! We need control of Mediterranean and Atlantic to maintain security interest. France had colony in Africa, Indian Ocean, Southwest Pacifique, Asia! How are we to maintain naval presence against not only Italian but also Japan in Asia and the British in Atlantic? 

Is betrayal and bullying by the perfidious Albion. Plain and simple. Entire country of France saw this as great humiliation! 

Well, Surcouf. The floor’s yours. Give us the French perspective, and I’ll drag Edda along or something to offer the British counterpoint.

D’accord! So. France is at fundamental opposition with the British. Britain want extension of ratio proposed at Washington. This mean instead of just limiting capital ship, limit also go to other ship-types. Remember France had many innovative design during this time. For instance we design contre-torpilleurs which are something like a very powerful, big destroyer design to fight things in bigger tonnage. We have massive sous-marine building effort to counter British. So we see this for what it is right from beginning: is Anglo trick to try to suppress Marine Nationale and make sure France is permanently inferior to that of England. 

 So we approach this with plan in mind. French politician suggest alternative. That is to say, instead of limit by ship type, limit by total tonnage. That way we can build what we want and the other countries build what they want. 

We also went to conference with firm goal in mind. We must have more tonnage than Italy. Unlike the British we are on European continent. Germany might go Nazi or Communist. Soviet Union is growing strong. Anschluss may happen between Germany and Austria and Germany may ally Italy. If Italy ally with Spain? What if Poland side with Germany? Most of France’s trade is reliant on sea. Thus is is absolutely, absolutely, absolutely important that we get a bigger naval presence. After all France is likely to fight both Germany and Italy at the same time – if British do not choose to betray us at the time as well.

Which … brings us to one of the big issue at hand. Submarines.

You see, the smaller countries such as France or Italy spent a lot of resources developing and designing not-capital ships. This led to some pretty runaway innovation on submarines, cruisers, and destroyers. Surcouf already mentioned the contre-torpilleurs, but if you look at how big submarines were getting, things are definitely of concern. The Japanese were building submarines twice as large as the WW1 ones. We had our V-boats that approached 3,000 tons (remember how big destroyers are. That’s twice as big as a Farragut and one and half-time as big as a Fletcher!) and then you have monstrosities like the Surcouf that was over 3,000 tons.

Britain really hated submarines. They tried to ban submarines at Washington, and you will see next time, they tried to do the same thing here. Again, I can totally understand their reasoning. If I was English, and I had experienced the suffering U-boats inflicted during WW1, I would absolutely want to do the same.

The problem here? France was not going to stand for it. Neither will Japan or Italy. They spent a lot of money on submarines and built many of them already. This leaves us with the only other power that might have sided with Britain, and we – well, look at all my previous sub corners! We were already recognizing the usefulness of the submarine in the first place, and our fleet already had plans to integrate submarines as an important part to deter Japan’s imperial ambitions.

So. As a quick recap. Geneva didn’t go through. British disagreements on cruisers were a big part of why it didn’t go through. Later on the the British do a 180 and decide that it’d be a good idea to limit everyone’s naval build-up. We go along for the ride. That’s where we’re at today.

Yeah. I know a lot of you are here for cute shipgirls doing cute things, but this stuff is really interesting too. Not to mention? It’s pretty important. History’s good to learn. 🙂

HEY! FRENCHIE! WHAT’S A SOLE WALEWSKA?

I see you have found the  opening menu to the London Naval Conference. It’s a French way of cooking fish. Very tasty. Pinnacle of French haute cuisine. Think truffles. Lobster chopped up in a rich white sauce.

GREAT. I’M HUNGRY NOW. CAN WE GET FOOD?

ME TOO!

Are you not going to translate the menu Tautau?

Kinda no point if I can’t cook them myself, no?

(No Title) [[Because Phoenix can’t into computers]]

Hmph. Tautog gets her Sub corners… Prisse snuck in her SBD carrier corner… Marby’s right. We should get some more love for cruisers.

Oh, heeeeeeey. Tautog forgot to log off of the main computer terminal. >:3

*Click Clack of computer keys*

Now… how do I post this thing? Why is this website all in Chinese?

*Mouse clicking*

No… that’s an image upload –

Do they not have a non-cutesy image of me? Hmph. I should get more art. I do look cute though…

*Mouse clicking*

Huh. The page isn’t working. I wonder what’s going on.

*Mouse clicking*

Uh oh.

*More frantic mouse clicking*

I-is this supposed to happen?! Halp! I think I broke the site!


Ya see? This is exactly why people who don’t get technology shouldn’t be touching technology! And Phoenix’s got the gall to complain. She’s actually showed up in updates before.

Well, what about Lulu, huh? None of you remember Lulu is still around! The cruiser girls get like, next to no love as it is. But let’s count down the list. Ms. Goody-too-shoes is often used to illustrate Christian ethics and values. She shows up fairly regularly behind the scenes. Chester is resident screwball and everyone likes her because she’s fun. Houston’s got a Chinese following because Chinese food, and also, there’s an entire book on her by a great historian. She’s even showed up in the navy foods book because Texas BBQ. Even Chicago’s gotten more attention than me!

I don’t wanna be too negative or anything. I get it. The girls are all different. Different people like different people … types… like people. Something! We can’t get the spotlight all the time! But it’d be sure nice if one of you can remember that I still exist!

But can I be cute for once? I wanna show up in a side book too! I can be cute! I’m smart! I know plenty about American history and politics! I can even be sexy if that’s what it takes. Is that how we do things now? Bikinis? I’ll have you know that one of mine got banned in three states because –

LULU! ARE YOU DONE WITH MY UPDATE YET?

Tog, come on. I’m working on it! You’re asking me to squish in twenty years of heavy cruiser development UNDER five hundred words! I can LIST all the cruiser classes and you’d get close to that!

This is to say nothing of the accuracy! Tarnation, ya ever think that primary documents aren’t the best of ideas? I mean look at this. I’ve been neck-deep in papers and stuff coming from the 20s and 30s. Then we get to the actual wartime reports and things get downright hilarious.

Pretty sure we sank this one. Up to 6 hits from the Midway strike group’s dive bombers. Wasn’t listed as a combat loss. Nagumo didn’t even report it in his writing, preferring to “omit” surface losses. How am I supposed to talk about cruiser doctrine when some countries literally pretend ships that sank aren’t?

I thought I outsourced Japanese cruiser doctrine to Zao… Also, who told you 500? I said 50,000! Under 50,000! We’ll cut it after!

Your note said 500!

Waitaminute. Ew. Someone bit off the end of my note. Who the hell would do that?

Also, Zao writes in LITERAL haikus. Like, look at this. I asked her to provide some comments about the design of the Mogami class, for instance. This is what she wrote back.

electric welding
result in many leakages
water make boat sink

T-that’s … well. That’s true. But isn’t that more of a case-by-case thing, oftentimes involving Japanese politics? The Kumano and Suzuya had a lot less problems comparatively, right?

is fault of army
bad design on occasion
navy can do no wrong

Er…

torpedoes explode when shot at


Note from Sune:

Zao has an antiquated mode of speech when trolling. It’s like YE OLDE SHAKESPEARE but after consulting with the rest of the team we decided haiku is more fun.