Introducing: Silent Service!

K9 here. WordPress is being stupid and locked me out, so Morgane’s doing the post for me. But of course, you’re not here to hear me rant about wordpress.

Tautog, you’re up!


Huh, wha? An introduction? I didn’t know it was time for an introduction. Give me a minute!

Hiya. I’m Tautog. Today I would like to introduce to you our newest book scheduled for release sometimes early Q2 of 2017. It’s the Silent Service! Focus: subgirls.

This book details the daily lives of the subgirls, and will feature twelve all new original subgirls along with the familiar faces you know from the other Pacific books. If you’ve ever wondered what life is like for us on Avalon, then this is your book!

Since a good number of us will be debuting in this book, we’ll be introducing ourselves, too! Something like this. Here’s a part of the text that’s part of the book.

How’s your day been?

How’s my day been? Fiiiiine.

This morning Tambor decided she wanted pancakes. Tambor then made too much batter and then proceeded to burn every single one. About half of them literally caught fire. Since Trout was off helping you, I ended up cooking for everyone.

My pancakes did not catch on fire. I wonder what’s Tambor’s special trick.

Lori and I went shooting after breakfast. She decided to try my springfield, saying something about how a scope could make her hit things.No guesses on how well she did.

(Lori didn’t hit a single thing. Big surprise, huh?)

I applaud her perseverance, but she’s going to need help. If she practices the wrong things all the time, the only thing she’s going to do really well are, well, wrong things. Anyways, I wanted to make sure she doesn’t shoot herself, so I had to skip lunch. It’s unfortunate.

I went looking to see if there are leftovers in the kitchen. I didn’t find any edibles. I did, however,  end up in the middle of a Pennsy/Sanny fight. Neither one of those two would let you go until you’ve validated one of their beliefs, but I got away all the same. Yay.

After that… For the umpteenth time, Chester tried to convince me to brush aside my hair because I needed to “unleash the powers of the evil eye!” I’m not sure what the hell an “evil eye” is or how to get Chester to shut up about it, but I didn’t unleash said power today.

That’s been my day so far. So things are fine!! Just. Fiiiine. Thanks for asking.

So as you can see it’s kind of a cross between the whimsical nature of OCEAN, the matter-of-fact “reports” of Action Reports, and the profiles found in the Pacific books.

Tell me a bit about your namesake.

SS-199 was one of the most successful submarines in navy history. She was present from the attack on Pearl all the way to the end and sank a grand total of 26 ships. If I remember correctly, it may be one of the highest out of all US submarines. Whatever the numbers may be, she ended 11th in total tonnage sunk.

Hmm, if I was to give her a personality, I’d say she simply did her job and did it well. Not many can contest having scored the first kill during the war, but old Sieglaff always said that it was a torpedoman from Tautog that downed the first Japanese plane at Pearl. Then the ship just went out with her crew and did her thing. Thirteen war patrols. Thirteen missions, accomplished. I think it’s the fact that she was so consistent during the entire war that she ended up with her nickname, the “Terrible T.” Thanks to that, a lot of girls here expect me to work miracles where I think they’d be perfectly capable of doing things themselves. Except for maybe Tambor. Or Chester. Or Laffey. Or Lori when it comes to guns. Or Trout when it comes to taking it easy…

Correction – Most girls would be perfectly capable of doing things themselves.

Oh.  You meant the fish?

…Tautogs are delicious. Very meaty fish if you’re crafty enough to catch one.


Right. I’ll also have my own little mini-show in this book. It’s called Tautog’s Sub Corner! It’s all about submarine stories, facts, trivia, and other fun tidbits. If that sounds fun to you then definitely keep a lookout for that!

Hiya folks, Tautog here. Today I’d like to talk about the two common types of military submarine: Diesel Electric, and Nuclear.

Most, if not all submarines in WWII were run using diesel electric power. These submarines had two engines, a diesel one and an electric one. The diesel engine was for running on the surface, and the electric motor was for going underwater.

One good thing about this set-up is that it’s really quiet when under water. Some modern submarines using this system can be almost impossible to detect using conventional detection methods! (They’re much cheaper to produce too.)

The disadvantage is that you have to run on the surface to charge the batteries, and that these submarines can’t go as far on one tank of gas. Of course, some later designs found ways around it – ask Lori to tell you about the XXI U-boats, for example, but it was a design limitation.

Nuclear submarines are powered (obviously!) using a nuclear reactor. All US submarines in the US navy currently are nuclear submarines. They’re a handful to work with, louder than the diesel powered ones and really, really, really expensive. It’s why you only see major world powers deploy nuclear subs in large quantities. They’re just really costly to maintain. They’re big too! A nuclear attack sub can be 3 to 4 times the size of a WWII era diesel boat, while the nuclear missile subs can be ten times as large!

The advantage to using nuclear is the underwater endurance. These boats can be submerged for months at a time, can go pretty fast, and don’t need refueling for years. You can see why this would be handy when performing missions. Modern diesel electrics have ways of emulating the underwater endurance of the nuclear boats, but they’re still just not as good.

Also, of course, the nuclear-powered submarines don’t have to surface to charge anything. In fact, the only time they’d need to come up would be to replenish their food supplies!

Something like this. We’re going to figure out just how in-depth we want to go, so expect to see everything from simple intros to why subs exist to how sonar works to even life on a submarine!

…Lastly, there’s a bikini calendar.

Dolphin! This is your stupid idea. I’m not explaining it!

WHADDAYA THINK WE’RE PUTTING IN A BIKINI CALENDAR FOR, DEPTH PERCEPTION?

WINNING HEARTS AND MINDS!


[Mail Call] 2017/02/27 – Morgane’s Fireside Chat #1

Sometimes I get very detailed posts and questions that more or less requires its own category. I don’t want to leave any questions unanswered, so anything you see with a “fireside chat” will fall in this category.


“I like this approach. It gives the reader a chance to figure things out by themselves, it’s been fun trying to do that here. Though I’m still eager to see some of your more developed storylines. Getting to know the worldbuilding through the actual story trumps reading about it “encyclopedia style” in my book.”

Part of the fun in writing Pacific is that the stories tend to tell themselves. I would say that from my perspective, I find it far more engaging and interesting to construct an alternative reality through fiction and allow the stories themselves to unfold. Let’s just say it’s what my professor taught me in college, and I think it’s not for everyone, but I find it enjoyable.

“I think it’s understandable why they’d default to these lines of thinking. I don’t really know enough about the culture to make much useful commentary but by reading your posts, my impression is that it has something do with national identity. The war, which Japan has staked much of its existence on has been lost. The role it had wanted in the world order is now completely out of reach and it now seeks to redefine itself in the post-war years.”

Pacific’s world remain completely unchanged in comparison to ours up to 1950. In that sense, it is important to note that Japanese national identity has never really been lost. Scholars do disagree, but I am of the opinion that the cultural infrastructure that lead to Imperial Japan was never dismantled like we did to Germany. I’ve made comment elsewhere and frequently that I think Japan is not anti-war but anti-defeat, and that plays a great part into that. I think (based on my own observations) that Japan has steadily reconstructed its own cultural and national identity as a nation of victims. Certainly when compared to countries such as Germany the role of their own aggression is mostly minimized (and of course, causing great consternation in its immediate neighbors China and Korea) and the “flaws” in allied actions are magnified.

Pacific’s Japan is written largely by Sune under my guidance, and as a self-professed Japanese nationalist (or ultranationalist), the Japanese government in the beginning of Pacific’s timeline is very nationalist, reasonably capable, yet fractured internally like the Japanese Warring States. Power is still concentrated in a handful of military commanders who act as the backdrop to the Diet and the Japanese Congress, and their control of major Japanese corporations (the zaibatsu (large corporations) is alive and well – just in a different form) as well as provinces mean that they might as well be modern day daimyo.

I touch on this a little bit in Action Report #2. Japan redesigned its constitution by stating that no general can command more than a fragment of Japan’s military forces to prevent a military government from appearing. However, ignoring actual rule-breaking, leaders quickly found ways to exploit loopholes in this rationale, and we see a sort of “pledging” of political support just like what we saw in medieval Japan. While the Japanese leadership bicker (like most other countries), there is something that can unite their efforts. Naturally, that threat had to come from the outside, and it isn’t the Abyssals.

So, no. Japan has not lost its national identity at all. In fact, it is well aware of what its national identity and its role is. Japan’s ultimate goal of becoming the hegemon of Asia has not changed – what has, however, is a stunningly revanchist mindset and the extent of which Japan is willing to wait for an opportunity that arrives. Again, this is hinted at through various places across all of Pacific. Japan has not become less prosperous in the timeline of Pacific. Rather, in this timeline, it traded its technological and humanitarian innovations away for industry and national might. Shipgirls play a role in that as well.

However, as Sune often points out, history has a tendency to repeat itself. Japan currently in “modern” Pacific time is restrained and diminished. The Hyuuga Incident that was pre-emptively triggered by overzealous officers resulted in Japan forced to play a hand that was neither ready nor capable. Japan will have to rethink this – and in all honesty, the coming Abyssal War will be a wake-up call.

“The instinct to link shipgirls to elements of Japanese mythology, to me, seems like a natural consequence of that. If we have to reject the present, then perhaps we should make an effort to draw on the past, or some romanticized version of it, and to have such apparently obvious proof of the realness of that past appear would be too tempting to pass up and even more difficult to give up. At least that’s what I think. Though again, this isn’t really something I’m very knowledgable on and I admit I could be seriously misunderstanding something about Japan in general and Pacific’s Japan specifically. My apologies if I did.”

There’s an important detail that I’d like to point out. For some strange reason, Japan has had far more “paper” shipgirls appear than any other country in Pacific. Let me give you a bit of a perspective and you’ll see what I mean.

“You… you aren’t a shipgirl. You aren’t even Japanese! Whatever you are, you’re an imposter! That’s got to be it. Maybe you’re even one of them…

“Hiei, that’s really rude -“

“Haruna, how dare you interrupt me! She’s not a Japanese shipgirl. Never will be! You don’t know where her loyalties lie. She shouldn’t even exist!”

“She just helped us out! Geez~ Do you need your head checked or something-des?”

“Japanese shipgirls are KAMI. They are REAL like the rivers or mountains or forests of Japan. That’s how it’s always been. I know I exist. I know you exist. If I exist then she can’t exist. Gah! How dense can you all get?”

“That aside, there’s also another element to it that I’m slightly more confident on. Part of the reason why the these ideas are so popular in Pacific’s Japan might have to do with just how weird the idea of shipgirls is. The notion of Kami is a way for the Japanese to try to ground it to something familiar. I mean, you could sum up the basic premise as: “WWII warships being brought back as attractive young women to fight an underwater menace” Even if shipgirls were real, I’m certain that more than a few people would look at that and respond with many raised eyebrows and general disbelief.”

Bear in mind that the general populace has no idea that shipgirls even exist, and the impact of this particular theory – which, might I add, is a good one – is considerably less than what it deserves to be.

Sune has dug out some very interesting beliefs that the Japanese held during WW2, and a lot of it went into the inspiration of Pacific’s Japan. Part of it is that a lot more officers are actually willing to believe in things such as the literal divinity of the Emperor. People of that time does (and some still do) take belief very seriously.

I said in my previous post that there is a new school of thought that contend that shipgirls are kami. Let me explain a little about why this is a new development, and one that has potentially far-reaching consequences for matters of faith in Pacific.

In other words, the basic premise is actually closer to “superpowered things appearing like young women claiming to be connected to our great country’s past who appears to be closely connected to our great country’s navy.” You’re right that it’s a bit strange and it’s hard to explain, but think about this for a bit.

“They’re kami!”

“No they aren’t!”

“Well do you have a better explanation?”

*Theological arguing intensifies*

The issue with kami is that kami, within the very definition of shintoism, are of nature and possess a duality of good and evil. They may look or act human, but to flatly side with humanity as the shipgirls claim is a very un-kami like thing to do.

(There are obviously people that doesn’t trust shipgirls, of course – but the shipgirls appear to be largely docile and willing to follow orders, so there’s that. Kami are by nature capricious and whismical and it’s difficult to put on an obedient act for long…)

The fact that everyone can see them also makes the claims to kami-hood a bit shaky, since by nature kami are of a divine nature that cannot be perceived.

Thus, to claim that the shipgirls are kami is analogous to changing tradition that’s been around for thousands of years, and rightfully (or wrongly) this is going to cause disagreements in the religious community. The “hardliners,” however, see this as a matter of political control. To them, like much else, religion and religious definitions are a means to an end – their end.

 

“Even if you take the shipgirls existence at face value, a bunch of other questions pop up. Like, why WWII warships? What is it about this period of history makes these warships uniquely qualified to appear in this form? Most people likely wouldn’t have a clue where to go for answers, afterall not even the shipgirls themselves are really sure.”

This one I’ll save for another update. Specifically, probably one of the books coming down the line. I’ll say that some of the shipgirls are unsure, but there are a few that has stumbled on their creator (well, me, but let’s just say some kind of vague “God” being) has intended. Actually, I think I might have spoilered this one already in vol. 2 with one of the characters.

“Mythology seems like a possible go to for ideas but it isn’t the only one. Science fiction should be fairly well developed as a genre by now and could be another source of inspiration, like it has been for UFO enthusiasts. Both are not usually the first place you’d go to for answers, but given the sheer strangeness of shipgirls they’d probably seem as good a source as any.”

The thing is that you’re right. These aren’t places one go for answers. Furthermore, the one important hint here is that for what’s worth, within the Pacific universe, even the “paper” shipgirls are grounded in reality in some way. That I would say is a key difference between mythology or science fiction and why things turn up.

“Japan draws on its own myths for inspiration, while STEC and others search elsewhere. Where exactly someone looks will likely have a lot to do with their own beliefs and the culture they grew up in, like Maryland’s view that shipgirls are a result of divine intervention. But in the end everyone is just trying to find answers to a completely unexpected and very strange problem.”

Some would say that what matters is not what the answer is, but the journey. 🙂

To answer this, you have to separate STEC’s perspective from each of the girls. The girls have personal reasons for delving into matters of personal identity. STEC, on the other hand, has both an overarching mission and a vested interest in minimizing potential hazards like existential or identity crises. STEC’s approach can really be summed up with the following.

There may not be one single right answer to every question. Sometimes there are, but not always. There are, however, definitely wrong answers and those are the ones we try to weed out.

“With that in mind, I’m willing to make my own guess. Given what I know so far, I’d speculate that shipgirls are the physical manifestations of memories of their crews along with the collective will and desires that led to their creation in the first place.”

This is partly correct from an out of universe perspective. In-universe, an operational theory is that fairies are physical manifestations of memories associated with particular ships. It certainly explains why some fairies literally possess the exact memories of their real life counterparts.

“They certainly couldn’t be the ship, the literal steel ship, incarnated as a human.”

No, of course not. But, as we show in OCEAN, their equipment has the potential to be “literally steel ship” (albeit of a fairy construct).

“That shouldn’t be possible because a ship isn’t alive in any sense. Steel can’t think, it can’t feel and it certainly has no “will” by itself that’s for sure. “Spiritually” it’s basically nothing. If there’s potential for anything beyond that then it lies with its crew. A ship takes on a “personality” and something that can superficially resemble a “life” when there are people working on it. A fully working ship can have a purpose, it can have a “will”, determined by its crew and orders passed down through the command hierarchy. People can experience the full range of human emotions aboard a ship and become attached to it like they can to their homes. These experiences are often shared among the crew and help to give the ship certain “personalities” that tend to stick with them and become part of their histories.

This is an excellent analysis and STEC would approve greatly. However, there are two critical flaws that makes this a solid B+ in terms of conjecture rather than A. It is true that ships do possess “personalities” and that there is a certain culture that exists from ship to ship. However, you dig deep enough, and you’ll find that almost every single ship share universal traits. They’re all “tough.” They’re all “capable.” They’re all “fighting.” They’re in that sense, all full of heroism that at a fundamental level it becomes difficult to distinguish the actions of individual ships when the entire fleet is capable of heroics.

Furthermore, crews aren’t necessarily always with the same ship. Personnel are reassigned all the time to different ships, and sometimes the navy will intentionally cycle out veteran pilots, for instance, onto other ships or place them in leadership roles elsewhere.

Same with commanding officers. Look deeply at US submarine operation records, for instance, and you’ll find that the subs that have a penchant for aggression tended to have a few very familiar names pop up.

“A shipgirl is an aggregate of these memories, emotions, and experiences born into the world as a human. That would help explain their vivid memories of their battles and the actions of their crew during pivotal moments. But since they exist as full humans they aren’t completely dominated by those memories and experiences in the same way we aren’t totally dominated by our biology. Perhaps some shipgirls might even choose to try to reject those memories in some circumstances.”

There are those within STEC that would support this viewpoint. In particular, those that carefully study fairy behavior would argue that shipgirls are literally bigger and stronger fairies.

“Certain aspects of their personalities, and maybe even their physical bodies, are the results of impressions of the crewmembers. Raleigh the ship was never actually sick after all, because the ship wasn’t alive in the first place. But if her crew remembered her as such and to an extent where it becomes one of the ship’s “personality traits” then it too will have an impact on the shipgirl (I’m not sure if her crew actually thought of her like that, I’m just using it as an example).”

Some day I’ll do a special on Raleigh. As we mentioned in the notes of vol. 1, her “illness” is more of a plot-reason than an actual character design reason. However, I will reveal one detail.

While investigating the logs of the Raleigh, I came across an interesting tidbit where the ship was actually damaged during refit. Specifically, contradictory and conflicting orders on the ship itself resulted in a significant delay in her initial exercises, and that flaw never seemed (by the recollection of the engineer that I read) to have gone away until after the Pearl Harbor attack, where it was patched up along with the rest.

Hmm…


“”Paper” ships, assuming my first guess was wrong, could be something like a mimic of actual shipgirls. They’re other entities that have latched onto faint but still present concepts of “ships that could have been” that exist in whatever parallel plane hosts such things, and are born into the world through the same mechanism that allows shipgirls to pass through. Being different on a basic level could help explain why they might possess unique abilities not seen in shipgirls with historic “ship-selves”.”

[Mail Call] 2017/02/27 - Morgane's Fireside Chat #1

STEC Archives, Audio Documentation Division
Curator signature: [Classified]
Format: Audio recording, magnetic sound recording
Object: Interview log of [Classified], # [Classified]
Location (if known): Naval Base Avalon
Time (if known): [Classified]

…opinion on being called “imposter?”

I suppose to her understanding, that is what we are. Imposters. To her understanding, we do not originate from steel or iron, nor were we born as weapons of war. Under her narrow definition of what a Japanese shipgirl is, she’s not wrong, but I would not say she is right either.

How do you mean?

“We are like you, yet unlike you at the same time.” That blonde girl said that and I like this explanation very much. We shipgirls are well, human. I mean,it’s kind of hard to say what a human is and what it isn’t but I suppose if you gotta find a definition maybe our powers make us more than human but you know humanity … bleh. I had a thought going. I lost it. Sorry.

I’m sure you can believe us by now when I say we’re very familiar with shipgirls. Tell us about the circumstances of your appearance. 

Like the numberless stars that dot the night-time sky, your world is not alone. This you already know. In another time, in another place, humanity grew as well. That world was mine. It was a world where the Great East Asia War never happened. In my world, where I came from, humanity grew. We were on the verge of sailing to the stars when they struck.

Given what you know of your country and what you know of the country “Japan,” would you say that they are largely similar or largely different?

For all intent and purposes, my country is Japan. *laughs* Ugh, any more and we get into philosophy. I hate philosophy.

Why is that?

I’m not overly fond of splitting hairs. *laughs* Anyways, I’m sure I’m not here to discuss my political orientation, right?

Right. So, what happened?

In that world, we had become a mighty power through our own efforts. We built an empire on our own, without the assistance or interference of any foreign power. I’m sure the little ones are having fun with my gear right now – trust me, it’s all Japanese. You’re not going to find one bit of the Brits in there. *laughs*

Indeed. The parameters are quite impressive. The analogue to the equipment in which you carry were never completed in our world. 

Yeah. Glasses-pink-hair pointed me to some history books. I think the best way to explain it would be that something like the Cold War happened. Tensions were never high enough to cause open conflict, but everyone was busy building ships and tanks and airplanes. In the deepest of ironies, those stockpiles of arms that all the powers of the world built? Those became our temporary salvation as it delayed the inevitable.

I’m sorry to hear that. 

Don’t be. I would not be here otherwise.

But, yes. We did fall short. There was a battleship – a magnificent one, named Kongou after the great mountain – that was the greatest warship that the country has ever built. The nascent me watched that ship and countless others as they fought to the bitter end.

How long did your people fight?

From the initial invasion to the destruction of the final bastion of humanity, approximately fifteen months. Organized resistance broke down about six or so months in.

And then? 

The Abyssals stripped the planet bare of life within a few days and disappeared to where they came from. The silence after was absolutely terrifying.

So, then…

Like that tiny American carrier girl, I saw things, and I dreamed. Then I was offered a chance to be. Then, here I am.

Yes, many of our girls have described a similar experience to what you had said. Is there anything more you could tell me regarding that?

It’s hard to explain. Back then, there was nothing left that we could do, but then is not now, and now is not then. I think maybe the fact that we experienced the whole thing might have something to do with it.

After all, we were there at the beginning when they invaded, and we were there when humanity finally met its end…

You look like you had a thought to finish?

Yeah. I was going to say that perhaps seeing the extinction of humanity gave us the strength necessary to take form and protect it, but then again, Marby just recommended this book to me and I felt kinda bad for comparing real-life to fiction…

*chuckles* Well, at least you’re getting along well with the others.

Of course! Can we break for lunch now? I’m getting a little hungry…


“Why WWII? because it’s recent, many of the people who served on those ships are still alive and the histories of the ships are still clear in recent memory, anything older has less “presence”.”

This is very off. WWI veterans are still definitely alive during Pacific’s “inception” in 1950, and at least one ship-girl (okay, fine, Petr is a mighty ship-man) comes straight from the WW1 era.

Petr is really … no less powerful than most of the top-tier characters. You’re talking to a man who literally suplexes the Abyssals using nothing more than Slav Super-Strength.

(Soviet Union has no “distance” engagement doctrine…)

“Unknown ships from ancient times, for example, are impossible to bring back since they’re now lost to humanity’s memory.”

I’ve seen interesting fan-projects floating around dealing with this idea. Not in Pacific, and not for this reason. Pacific deals squarely with the themes behind WW2. 🙂

“Why warships? Because humans associate the Abyssals with the ocean and so the “call” resonates most strongly with those entities born from humanity’s attempts to “conquer” the ocean.”

A for effort, but the thing is, the Abyssals are NOT of the ocean. The ocean happens to be where they operate really well in. If anything, the Abyssals are really from beyond the stars.

Furthermore, humanity has never conquered the ocean. Traveled, yes. Used and plundered, yes. Conquer is a very powerful term that isn’t that specific.

There is a very pertinent thematic reason behind “shipgirls” and not “planegirls” or “tankgirls” or “gungirls.” You have to think beyond what a warship is, and think about why we still care about things like the Iowa even to today.

“Why do they appear at all? Because there are bigger and more abstract concepts that are imparted in the ship’s creation that can also get wrapped up in the aggregate. They were after all, built to protect their home nations, their crews, and even more abstract things like ideals. It is the purpose they were assigned by humans and that too becomes part of the shipgirl. It is at least part of the reason why they appear to help defend mankind against an otherwise insurmountable threat, it’s part of their nature.”

Again, there would be folks in STEC who would agree to exactly this theory that you’re putting out. Kudos for thinking very deeply about our mutual hobby.

Ok… That was a lot less coherent than it sounded in my head… Reading through it a few times I can tell that some of it seems pretty far fetched. It’s drawing mostly from several sci-fi and fantasy universes I enjoy (Warhammer’s warp mainly) and a little gut instinct. It assumes that there exists some kind of warp like realm off somewhere beyond our physical senses and that human emotions and memories can affect it.”

Sort of. I do enjoy Warhammer immensely, but come on. I can do better (tighter, more consistent and less prone to retcons) than them. 🙂

I’m well aware of the trope of faith=strength. You know, however, that I tend to shy away from tropes because I feel like it’s too restrictive when it comes to storytelling. For now, think less about emotions and memories, and think about how or why they’re formed.

“It’s basically what I’d probably come up with if you just dropped me, minus my knowledge of KC, into Pacific and asked me to try to explain shipgirls with just what I know at the moment; like how I imagine the researchers at STEC and NKT might have first approached the issue; throw everything at the wall and see how long it sticks. It was also written really late at night and without the benefit of reading through the ARs and Oceans so I’m prepared to be proven very wrong.”

You’re doing a pretty good job, and I think if you worked for one of those organizations they’d be very happy.

As for the identity of the shipgirl in question? You really don’t have to look anymore. Sima’s cleaning her up for Pixiv update at some point, but the picture below should be extremely obvious at this point. 🙂

[Mail Call] 2017/02/27 - Morgane's Fireside Chat #1

 

[Mail call] 2017/02/25 – New York (again)

“Are the girls appearing in 2016 canon as far as Pacific is concerned?”

I really, really feel like I’ve answered this before. In one word: yes.

You may be seeing a New York with a rose in her hand floating around. Trust me, November’s having plenty of fun with the portraits. Here’s actually a sketch version of the New York piece he showed everyone today. We ultimately decided to scrap this one because it made her look a bit too “evil.”

[Mail call] 2017/02/25

As November said, there’s a particular challenge associated with drawing shipgirls. We do want the picture themselves to instantly convey something about the girl that we’d like you to know. For instant, Sima’s Hakuryuu in all of her iterations is really a nice but (klutzy) girl. So we wanted to draw her with a fairly innocent expression, but at the same time, really derpish. For a more recent example, Pam, we wanted to give her a nonchalant look, since she’s laid back and relaxed. You can’t be a lifeguard if you’re tense, after all. Not good for swimming. 🙂

For New York, as I’ve mentioned before, she’s supposed to be a sharp, very capable individual. As we’ve mentioned, she does work in legal, so we wanted to give her a bit of a sly or at the very least “calculating” appearance. Let’s just say a lot of Ace Attorney music was playing while we were bouncing around ideas for how her personality would work.

The ship itself easily fit the bill of a stereotypical New Yorker, too – whether it’s her acing her gunnery competitions in her prime (during WW1, no less!) or that she managed to rush herself out the door within months during a refit after Pearl Harbor. Here, we kept her appearance simple, though. A capable woman doesn’t need to wear heavy make-up to be intimating or powerful, and the goal here is really to make her look like she could look equally at home in Albany or NYC.

Why not short hair? We had a few drafts with her having short hair, but we felt that a tied ponytail just worked better with the personality. Traditionally, short hair is associated with masculinity. That’s not what we want to do with her.


”Why is New York the only shipgirl wearing pants in Pacific?”

Er, she’s not.

Here, let me answer this another way. There is nothing preventing any of our shipgirls from putting on (or taking off) more clothes. In New York’s case she really likes pants. She’s the type who would rather choose a tux over a cocktail dress,m so Chester or one of our usual trolls raiding her closet will probably find 3 or 4 suits for every dress she keeps in there.

Probably a lot of well-ironed dress shirts in there too. Color-coded, coordinated, meticulously organized. Yes, plenty of skirts to go with those. She’s not all pantsuit, you know. 😉

Asking her why and she’ll probably just give a shrug and stare at you. Why is it any of your business in terms of what she chooses to wear?

[Mail call] 2017/02/24 – the Navy Foods book

With the stuff on the front page, I figure I should explain what the Navy Foods book is.

One of our largest audiences happen to be Chinese speakers, and I wrote – almost two years ago – a series of posts on the nature of military food. I mostly used the primary reference “Cookbook of the United States Navy” (you can find this on a lot of sites if you search for that exact title) and gave some fun examples of the different kinds of foods you’ll be able to eat on a ship.

What I did is honestly just explain some basic cooking principles. I like to cook myself (though I wouldn’t say I’m at all good or anything along the sort), and I cook the vast majority of my meals. Coming out of a redneck family helps too, since we did a lot of hunting and fishing and gardening.

For me, I think the interesting here is less the recipes (though of course I think they’re really neat), but rather seeing how different it is that the Asians cook in comparison to us. For instance, I didn’t realize that a baking oven is not as common as it is here. We have very different styles of preparing things like rice (we tend to bake, they tend to steam or use rice cookers), and sometimes even terms with similar meanings (braising) mean different things contextually. Ingredients that we take for granted such as certain sauces are again, very uncommon, and oftentimes they need to get it from western-styled markets if they wanted to try the same recipe.

Fast forward to today, and St. Bernard (one of our artists) liked the idea enough that she’d like to illustrate it. In all honesty, it’s pretty basic stuff. I assume most of us here in the English-speaking countries know how to roast meat or to make pies, so I don’t think we’ll really be localizing it unless there’s demand.

[Mail call] 2017/02/24 - the Navy Foods book

But, I love her art style. It’s pretty adorable and it fits the book really well. So you’ll definitely be seeing more of it.