Great Cylon Turkey Shoot: Difference between revisions
More actions
Cally got out at beginning of episode, but episode ended at least two weeks later |
No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{| border=1 width=300 cellpadding=2 cellspacing=0 align=right style="margin-left:1em;margin-bottom:1em" | {| border=1 width=300 cellpadding=2 cellspacing=0 align=right style="margin-left:1em;margin-bottom:1em" | ||
|+ Battle before: [[Battle of Kobol]] <br>Battle after: ''Galactica vs. Pegasus'' | |+ Battle before: [[Battle of Kobol]] <br>Battle after: ''Galactica vs. Pegasus'' | ||
|colspan=2| | |colspan=2|[[Image:Stuffsgonnasplode.jpg|center|300px|]] | ||
|- | |- | ||
!colspan=2 bgcolor=#aaaaee|Great Cylon Turkey Shoot | !colspan=2 bgcolor=#aaaaee|Great Cylon Turkey Shoot |
Revision as of 22:40, 16 October 2005
Great Cylon Turkey Shoot | |||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Conflict | Second Cylon war | ||||||||||||||||
Date | Roughly two weeks after Day 89 | ||||||||||||||||
Place | Interstellar space, specific location unknown | ||||||||||||||||
Result | Decisive Colonial victory | ||||||||||||||||
|
Battle in which Battlestar Galactica turned the Cylon's own logic bomb computer virus against them to completely power down a massive fleet of hundreds of Raiders and Heavy Raiders in a reverse of the Cylon's use of it in the Fall of the Twelve Colonies.
Galactica began to suffer system failures and malfunctions throughout the ship. Watch Officer Lieutenant Gaeta and Dr. Gaius Baltar determined that the Cylon virus which infected the ship shortly after the fleet reunited (Scattered) and downed several ship functions for a time (Valley of Darkness) had returned. Apparently the virus had a latent element that hid itself, slowly emerging throughout ship computers, testing and probing for weaknesses and vulnerabilities.
Gaeta and Baltar determined that this logic bomb may be a prelude to a Cylon attack. They determined a way to remove the bomb by erasing all ship computer hard drives, then reloading the computers from backups made before the war. The complication was this would leave the ship completely vulnerable for several minutes. If the logic bomb was "detonated", the virus would turn Galactica against itself and her fleet.
Commander Adama elected to use the incarcerated Caprica copy of Sharon Valerii to aid them. She interfaced her body to the ship's mainframe and communication systems via a fiber-optic link placed inside her left forearm. A massive Cylon force arrived to attack, and all Vipers were scrambled. As Galactica erased her hard drives, Valerii apparently copied the logic bomb code into herself and began manupulating it. She released the altered code through the comm channels, transmitting it to the Cylon force. In an amazing turn of historic events, the entire Cylon fleet lost all power as Valerii's version of the virus shut them down in the same way that Colonial ships were shut down during the Fall of the Colonies.
Many out-of-control Cylon ships were destroyed as they crashed into each other.
Commander Adama and Colonel Saul Tigh then ordered Galactica's Vipers to kill each of the Cylon fighters. Galactica's Vipers proceeded to tear through the jumbled Cylon formations, destroying the entire disproporationately larger Cylon force while not losing a single Colonial ship in the process (Flight of the Phoenix).
Notes
- According to Ron D. Moore's podcast for "Flight of the Phoenix", this battle was specifically inspired by the "Great Marianas Turkey Shoot" of World War II. This page is named in light of that reference.
- Number of Cylon Raiders present was given on the Scifi.com official site's episode description.
- Visually, there are at least 42 Vipers on screen, but there is a strong possibility that this is a visual effects mistake: Apollo said in "Act of Contrition" that there were only 40 Vipers left. On top of this, several Vipers have been lost since then (see Galactica). The current count leaves only 34 Vipers: 1 lost in "Act of Contrition", 4 lost in "The Hand of God", and 1 lost in "Final Cut". This doesn't take into account Tyrol's retirement of unserviceable craft, worn down by ware and tear. Furthermore, Galactica is severely limited by the number of pilots they have on hand - in this episode, no more than 22.