There were limits to collaboration. How could a mech design accommodate an endless number of specialties and abstruse effects?
It was impossible for hundreds of mech designers to contribute their distinctive strengths to a single mech design.
Even if their specialties miraculously didn't overlap, a mech or mech design simply couldn't contain so many exceptional elements!
In part, this was because a mech design could only accommodate a finite amount of design philosophies. Adding more than a mech design could handle would only dilute the strength of existing abstruse effects.
The general rule when it came to collaborations was that the total capacity of a mech design largely depended on the size of the mech and the capabilities of the lead designer.
The bigger the mech, the more specialties it could accommodate.
The better the lead designer, the more room he or she could open up in the design.
This was why the identity of the lead designer mattered so much.
The exact capacity a design philosophy occupied depended on many factors, such as the degree of contribution of its mech designer, the strength of the mech designer, the exact nature of the design philosophy and how extensively it affects a mech design.
It was difficult to come up with exact figures for that reason.
In the case of Journeymen and Seniors, the MTA issued a general guideline that no more than five peers should collaborate on a single mech design.
Adding any more to the mix would only reduce the strength of every specialty and increase the amount of interference. Stuffing too many design philosophies inevitably led to friction and other negative side effects.
Ves heard that it was a different case for Masters, but that wasn't something he should consider at his current stage.
"If I assume that the Ansel mech designers will adhere to this guideline, they'll only pool the specialties of five Seniors at most."
It was relatively rare for five Seniors to collaborate on a single mech design. Every Senior was an esteemed mech designer, especially in a third-rate state like the Bright Republic.
Even if they were part of the same network, they still competed against each other without too much reserve!
For five of them to come together to work on a single killer mech design signalled how serious the Ansel alumni network intended to dethrone his wildly successful Desolate Soldier model.
"Isn't this bullying?" Ves frowned.
Sadly, the mech market was never fair. Seniors and foreign megacompanies dominated the Bright Republic's mech market for very good reasons.
An upstart like Ves who managed to capture so much market share was a clear anomaly.
Anomalies never lasted long.
Did this mean that Ves hated his competitors?
Not really. Even if a bunch of Seniors with nothing better to do wanted to knock down his Desolate Soldier by developing a better alternative, Ves already earned enough profit.
Even if his Desolate Soldiers faded in popularity a few months later, it didn't change the fact that hundreds of thousands of mechs were already being put to use against the sandmen!
Ves considered it a supreme honor for one of his products to achieve this unprecedented level of market penetration!
"No mech can reign supreme forever."
Even if his Desolate Soldier got upstaged by a better model, it still offered something indispensable to many forces. Ves highly doubted that any of the Ansel Seniors could come up with a substitute for the auras of his mechs.
This was the true reason why he remained confident.
Naturally, Ves also acknowledged that his current connections played a huge role in covering his back. If not for the government's favor towards him, he would have encountered numerous hindrances.
For now, he needed to make sure he remained on the good side of the Bright Republic. At the very least, he should keep his allies happy.
"Hmm. Maybe I should talk to someone."
He decided to call a former collaborator. After placing a call, his comm soon projected Professor Ventag's face.
"Ves. It's been some time. You're doing quite well, it seems."
"Extremely well." Ves answered. "I hope I haven't given you a lot of trouble."
The professor casually waved his hand. "It's fine. When it comes to competition, every mech designer ought to do their best. You should never hold back even when trampling over your own friends. This is the only way the mech industry can remain strong."
Ves knew that Professor Ventag had already published a mech that occupied a similar role to the Desolate Soldier.
Unfortunately, much like any other budget-priced spaceborn ballistic rifleman mech, their unique strengths paled in comparison to what Ves had to offer.
"Are you truly doing okay?"
"I've already pivoted to other projects. I'm personally designing a defensive mech that can give full play to my design philosophy and I'm also involved in several military projects."
Ves recalled that Professor Ventag specialized in damage control. Such a specialty was normally useful in every case, but the sandmen ruined this dynamic. Mechs either returned from battle whole or with a giant melted hole running through their frame.
A specialty like damage control was of little use in these circumstances!
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