This makes me wonder if this is a battleship from an alternate universe, or HMS being summoned as a battleship or something."A representation of what never was in this cursed world, you are a true aberration."
This makes me wonder if this is a battleship from an alternate universe, or HMS being summoned as a battleship or something."A representation of what never was in this cursed world, you are a true aberration."
I would guess one of the Flutto-class... But considering that we know one of the other choices is an AU that was completed earlier than IRL thus launched by the Germans during WW2, that means any of the twelve Type I or fifteen Type 2 Flutto-class are possibilities due to the former having basically been all launched but not necessarily commissioned by the time of the Armistice, whilst the later were at least laid down.
All five of the King George V ships finished after 1939, which means they don't fit due to only the Submarine and Light Cruiser finishing during WW2. However, the problem is that there was no British Battleship which finished construction post-Escalator Clause yet before WW2.
Can we please get confirmation that we're actually looking for a British battleship @Ojou-Sama ? Because right now, I can not find any British battleship which fits. Hell, I can't find any English-speaking country's battleship that fits. Unless you are playing with technicalities, in which case the USA with the North Carolina and Washington are the only options. Due to how despite being launched in 1940 and commissioned in early 1941, both were before the USA joined WW2 despite the war having already been raging for a year and a half at that point.
Designed and layed down by the Italians. Commissioned and abandoned by the Germans. Raised and repaired by the Americans. What is you home dear Mercurio?
So a fictional class, based on the KGV. With a name taken from 1912. Called "a true aberration".You are looking for a British battleship, and she is based on the King George V-class battleships. As a design post-Escalator Clause, she could mount a variety of weaponry otherwise restricted by treaty - being much larger than the King George's at around 46,000 long tonnes, this could be done without compromising armour protection or speed, giving her a top speed of 30 knots. In other words, she is a consequence of the Japanese and Italians not signing the Second London Naval Treaty, and a much higher British concern for the German, Italian and Japanese fleets with large, powerful battleships and battlecruisers, culminating in an earlier desire to build fast battleships to counter them and more effectively protect British interests - technically breaking the treaty due to construction beginning on them before the Escalator Clause was invoked several months later in 1938.
Thus, design work did not begin around the end of 1938 but instead in 1936, was done in 1937, and with this time advantage, construction could begin much earlier. And regarding her name...well, a certain ship in 1912 didn't get her original name, allowing it to be used later. She was laid down in our timeline, just...much later, and too late to be useful, and eventually scrapped on the slipways.
So a fictional class, based on the KGV. With a name taken from 1912. Called "a true aberration".
Would that make her one of the six planned Lion-class battleships then? Probably the Lion or Temeraire since they had construction begin. Though going by how there was a 1907 battleship called the Temeraire, it'll have to be the name ship of the class, the HMS Lion.I will repeat though, that they are not a fictional class. The Royal Navy in our timeline wanted her built, but had other priorities by the time of the war - construction was suspended, and finally just cancelled altogether. She is not Princess Royal though, nor a Lion-class battlecruiser.
Don't you mean two out of five?
Really playing with the technicalities here, huh? As IRL the Lion was never finished, thus couldn't have construction end during WW2 whilst in your AU it sounds like she also finished right before it, so again fitting in.I can, however, confirm that none of the ships...with the exception of the Submarine and the Light Cruiser...had construction end during the Second World War. In fact, apart from one, construction on the ships had finished in 1932.
Would that make her one of the six planned Lion-class battleships then? Probably the Lion or Temeraire since they had construction begin. Though going by how there was a 1907 battleship called the Temeraire, it'll have to be the name ship of the class, the HMS Lion.
Because frankly: if it's not the Lion, then I give up and will just call her the 'impossible ship' due to being a complete AU.
Which means we're looking for a French battlecruiser built by 1932. We're also told pre-2nd London Naval Treaty so we know that she's pre-1936. This makes the Richelieu very unlikely leaving only the Dunkerque or her sister, the Strasbourg. With the former more likely than the latter. However both ships are post-1932 so that's... a problem.
On the other hand, I legitimately can not find any other possibilities. Because France just did not build capital ships post-WW1. And from what I can find, they didn't even build any battlecruisers before or during WW1. Made a few designs, but nothing actually seriously considered. So the only possibilities are a complete AU, one of the cancelled Lyons but those are much too slow, or one of the three fast battleships I mentioned in the paragraph above.
Sadly, I'm stuck relying on wikipedia for research and finding the cancelled classes can be... problematic. Also, it's late so I'll give everyone else a chance to do some research.Let's see... We have Dunkerque's predecessor designs, the 17,500 "Small" battleship, which to be honest, is more a battlecruiser with the two quadruple 305mm cannons and being armoured against enemy heavy cruisers only. And then there is the monster 37,000 tonne design (for the interwar period that would have been a monster. Not so much later on, though.), three quad 305mm cannons, 33 knots, protected against the 283mm cannons carried by the Deutschlands. Hm. Now, the French scuttled plans for these designs, primarily because they wanted to appease the British in the London Naval Treaty and thanks to certain French disarmament talks in the League of Nations.
Sadly, I'm stuck relying on wikipedia for research and finding the cancelled classes can be... problematic. Also, it's late so I'll give everyone else a chance to do some research.
Which means for the last ship, we're looking for a French battlecruiser preferably built by 1932. We're also told pre-2nd London Naval Treaty so we know that she's pre-1936. This makes the Richelieu very unlikely leaving only the Dunkerque or her sister, the Strasbourg. With the former more likely than the latter. However both ships are post-1932 so that's... a problem.
On the other hand, I legitimately can not find any other possibilities. Because France just did not build capital ships post-WW1. And from what I can find, they didn't even build any battlecruisers before or during WW1. Made a few designs, but nothing actually seriously considered. So the only possibilities are a complete AU, one of the cancelled Lyons but those are much too slow, or one of the three fast battleships I mentioned in the paragraph above.
You are correct - Richelieu, Jean Bart, and everything after them is out, as are Dunkerque and Strasbourg. Now, a theme here between the options: Ships that were never built or completed, had been designed only, or formed the basis for other ships...and suddenly we have options.
Let's see... We have Dunkerque's predecessor designs, the 17,500 "Small" battleship, which to be honest, is more a battlecruiser with the two quadruple 305mm cannons and being armoured against enemy heavy cruisers only. And then there is the monster 37,000 tonne design (for the interwar period that would have been a monster. Not so much later on, though.), three quad 305mm cannons, 33 knots, protected against the 283mm cannons carried by the Deutschlands. Hm. Now, the French scuttled plans for these designs, primarily because they wanted to appease the British in the London Naval Treaty and thanks to certain French disarmament talks in the League of Nations.
All know you as the Pride of the Royal Navy, carrying splendour and authority unrivaled. Once your mighty cannons brought giants to their knees. Will you answer the call and lead the fleet once more Queen Elizabeth?Would that make her one of the six planned Lion-class battleships then? Probably the Lion or Temeraire since they had construction begin. Though going by how there was a 1907 battleship called the Temeraire, it'll have to be the name ship of the class, the HMS Lion.
Because frankly: if it's not the Lion, then I give up and will just call her the 'impossible ship' due to being a complete AU.