Canon

Ghost of Barolon: Difference between revisions

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The ''Ghost of Barolon'' was named after a feature of [[Doisac]], part of a practice commemorating what was lost during the [[Great Immolation]]. The ship's name would take new meaning after the [[Razing of Oth Sonin]].{{Ref/Reuse|enc22pg462}}  
The ''Ghost of Barolon'' was named after a feature of [[Doisac]], part of a practice commemorating what was lost during the [[Great Immolation]]. The ship's name would take new meaning after the [[Razing of Oth Sonin]].{{Ref/Reuse|enc22pg462}}  


[[Sicatt Workshop]] technicians stationed on the ''Ghost of Barolon'' would break ground with the [[Sicatt Workshop shock rifle]]; achieving a robust production run that could also be charged and maintained at local outposts.{{Ref/Book|Id=enc22pg277|Enc22|Page=477}}
[[Sicatt Workshop]] technicians stationed on the ''Ghost of Barolon'' would break ground with the [[Sicatt Workshop shock rifle]]; achieving a robust production run that could also be charged and maintained at local outposts.{{Ref/Book|Id=enc22pg277|Enc22|Page=477}} A member of the Workshop's [[Alchemy Corps]] who was stationed on the ship, [[Vulcus]], would push the design concept of the rifle [[Purging Shock Rifle|further]].{{Ref/Site|Id=Cfflyme|URL=https://www.halowaypoint.com/news/canon-fodder-fly-me-to-the-blood-moon|Site=Halo Waypoint|Section=Games|Page=Canon Fodder: Fly Me to the Blood-Moon|D=20|M=11|Y=2023}}


In [[2560]], the ''Ghost of Barolon'' was deployed to Suban during a [[Battle of Suban|battle at the moon]] against the [[Swords of Sanghelios]].{{Ref/Site|Id=Season5intel|URL=https://www.halowaypoint.com/news/reckoning-intel|Site=Halo Waypoint|Section=Halo Infinite|Page=Reckoning Intel|D=14|M=11|Y=2023|LocalArchive=Halo Infinite Story & Intel#Season 5}}{{Ref/Map|Id=prism|HINF|Prism}}
Following the [[Battle of Netherop (2559)|battle]] at [[Netherop]] in late 2559, the ''Ghost of Barolon'' was deployed to [[Suban]] to study the [[Subanese crystal|blamite crystals]] on the [[moon]].{{Ref/Reuse|Cfflyme}} The ''Ghost of Barolon'' was still at Suban when [[Battle of Suban|a battle]] broke out there against the [[Swords of Sanghelios]] in [[2560]].{{Ref/Site|Id=Season5intel|URL=https://www.halowaypoint.com/news/reckoning-intel|Site=Halo Waypoint|Section=Halo Infinite|Page=Reckoning Intel|D=14|M=11|Y=2023|LocalArchive=Halo Infinite Story & Intel#Season 5}}{{Ref/Map|Id=prism|HINF|Prism}}


==List of appearances==
==List of appearances==

Revision as of 20:18, November 20, 2023

Ghost of Barolon
The Ghost of Barolon in the map Prism, based on alt text on Halo Waypoint.
The Ghost of Barolon over the skies of Suban.
Ship history
Banished

Class:

Banished dreadnought[1]

Operator:

Banished[1]

Naval architect:

Irusk Workshop[1]

General characteristics

Type:

Dreadnought

Length:

2,665 meters (8,743 ft)[1]

Mass:

127 million tonnes[1]

Maneuver drive:

Three repulsor engines[2]

Complement:

Troops:

Carrying capacity up to "Over ten thousand warriors"[1]

Armaments:

Air wing:

 

The Ghost of Barolon is a Banished dreadnought designed by Irusk Workshop.[1]

Operational history

The Ghost of Barolon was named after a feature of Doisac, part of a practice commemorating what was lost during the Great Immolation. The ship's name would take new meaning after the Razing of Oth Sonin.[1]

Sicatt Workshop technicians stationed on the Ghost of Barolon would break ground with the Sicatt Workshop shock rifle; achieving a robust production run that could also be charged and maintained at local outposts.[4] A member of the Workshop's Alchemy Corps who was stationed on the ship, Vulcus, would push the design concept of the rifle further.[5]

Following the battle at Netherop in late 2559, the Ghost of Barolon was deployed to Suban to study the blamite crystals on the moon.[5] The Ghost of Barolon was still at Suban when a battle broke out there against the Swords of Sanghelios in 2560.[3][6]

List of appearances

Sources

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Halo Encyclopedia (2022 edition), page 462
  2. ^ Halo Infinite, Dreadnought in-game model
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Halo Waypoint - Halo Infinite, Reckoning Intel (Retrieved on Nov 14, 2023) [local archive] [external archive]
  4. ^ Halo Encyclopedia (2022 edition), page 477
  5. ^ a b Halo Waypoint - Games, Canon Fodder: Fly Me to the Blood-Moon (Retrieved on Nov 20, 2023) [archive]
  6. ^ Halo Infinite, multiplayer map Prism