Bump.
While doing some Wiki-adding, I realized that there's another mercenary group out there - the SEBureau. What's going to happen to them once the Boskone War is over? Normally, I'd let the person who came up with the group make the decision, but Griever hasn't been around here for a half-decade or so...
These guys are not the type of mercenaries who can adapt easily into either the regular forces or civilian society. (Trigon is amongst their number, as is an AI patterned after Harley Quinn. So is "N," the biomod victim who shapeshifts into whoever the person (s)he's touching thinks is an ideal mate.) They aren't part of a group that's large enough to keep them as "internal security" or any of the other dodges the factions use to maintain their factional cadres. They're definitely anti-Boskonian, so they aren't going to turn pirate.
My first inclination is to say "war's over, we won, cashier the troops and start telling stories about how they have trouble in post-war life"... but that's rather dystopic, considering who's involved.
Any ideas?
--
Rob Kelk
"Governments have no right to question the loyalty of those who oppose
them. Adversaries remain citizens of the same state, common subjects of
the same sovereign, servants of the same law."
- Michael Ignatieff, addressing Stanford University in 2012
While doing some Wiki-adding, I realized that there's another mercenary group out there - the SEBureau. What's going to happen to them once the Boskone War is over? Normally, I'd let the person who came up with the group make the decision, but Griever hasn't been around here for a half-decade or so...
These guys are not the type of mercenaries who can adapt easily into either the regular forces or civilian society. (Trigon is amongst their number, as is an AI patterned after Harley Quinn. So is "N," the biomod victim who shapeshifts into whoever the person (s)he's touching thinks is an ideal mate.) They aren't part of a group that's large enough to keep them as "internal security" or any of the other dodges the factions use to maintain their factional cadres. They're definitely anti-Boskonian, so they aren't going to turn pirate.
My first inclination is to say "war's over, we won, cashier the troops and start telling stories about how they have trouble in post-war life"... but that's rather dystopic, considering who's involved.
Any ideas?
--
Rob Kelk
"Governments have no right to question the loyalty of those who oppose
them. Adversaries remain citizens of the same state, common subjects of
the same sovereign, servants of the same law."
- Michael Ignatieff, addressing Stanford University in 2012