10-03-2018, 08:51 PM
(This post was last modified: 10-03-2018, 08:59 PM by Frank_Stein. Edited 2 times in total.)
Sec can be fun, but you gotta treat it with a very strict sense of fairplay. You have to know when to let things go stop things before they cross a line. Unfortunately there are a few players that will really test you to do that when you try to get them to tow the line about having their fun at others expense, but it comes with the territory.
That's honestly how I feel about the role and the direction they should go in. These guys aren't the police, they're a crisis management squad. The priority isn't to catch the bad guy, it's to minimize their damage. It's just catching them is a good way to do that.
More related to the idea: I think it would be nice if there was a machine in the Sec Room that was self service
Inserting a Security ID lets you assign yourself a designated role, that gives you a more specialized level of access and abilities related to Sec work.
For instance, a medical, engineering, research, and civilian department Sec that gets Full access to their assigned department, barring Command restricted areas. However, they trade away some of the general access levels they had in other departments.
Maybe they also gain some additional skills related to their specialization, like being able to assess injuries by sight instead of needing a medical scanner
Essentially, the concept of cyborg modules, but for Sec officers
(10-03-2018, 04:21 PM)Superlagg Wrote: Maybe move a lot more of their focus on increased survivability to be more able to help save people than beat up bad guys would be a start.
That's honestly how I feel about the role and the direction they should go in. These guys aren't the police, they're a crisis management squad. The priority isn't to catch the bad guy, it's to minimize their damage. It's just catching them is a good way to do that.
More related to the idea: I think it would be nice if there was a machine in the Sec Room that was self service
Inserting a Security ID lets you assign yourself a designated role, that gives you a more specialized level of access and abilities related to Sec work.
For instance, a medical, engineering, research, and civilian department Sec that gets Full access to their assigned department, barring Command restricted areas. However, they trade away some of the general access levels they had in other departments.
Maybe they also gain some additional skills related to their specialization, like being able to assess injuries by sight instead of needing a medical scanner
Essentially, the concept of cyborg modules, but for Sec officers