Main-Forerunner.png

Battle of DM-3-1123 b: Difference between revisions

From Halopedia, the Halo wiki

No edit summary
mNo edit summary
Line 23: Line 23:
|casual2=149 captured Forerunner ships. All Flood destroyed.
|casual2=149 captured Forerunner ships. All Flood destroyed.
}}
}}
{{Quote|Enemy forces lacked basic cohesion but quickly gained numerical superiority.|[[The Librarian]]<ref name="T1">'''[[Halo 3]]''', ''[[Terminal|Terminal 1]]''</ref>}}
{{Quote|Enemy forces lacked basic cohesion but quickly gained numerical superiority.|[[The Librarian]]<ref name="T1">'''[[Halo 3]]''', ''[[Terminal|Terminal 1]]''</ref>}}
The '''Battle of DM-3-1123 b''' was a naval as well as planetary battle in the [[Forerunner-Flood war]].<ref name="T1"/>
The '''Battle of DM-3-1123 b''' was a naval as well as planetary battle in the [[Forerunner-Flood war]].<ref name="T1"/>


== Overview ==
[[The Flood]] attacked the planet with 149 captured non-military (civilian, private, or commercial) [[Forerunner]] vessels, and while the Forerunner naval defenses were able to destroy all the Flood vessels with their advanced weaponry, the sole intent of the Flood was not to fight an orbital battle, but rather to land on the surface and disperse their forces to infect the local Forerunner population. While disorganized and lacking unit cohesion, the sheer number of Flood overwhelmed the Forerunner ground forces, and within 32 hours, the Forerunner fleet in orbit evacuated all population centers that had not yet been engaged and infected by the Flood attack, and bombarded the planet from orbit, completely destroying the biosphere of ''DM-3-1123 b'', hence destroying all Flood forces on the ground. The Forerunner evacuation was able to save well over one million people and denizens, but this only amounted to about 0.0006% of the population, which totaled more than 2.25 billion.<ref name="T1"/>
[[The Flood]] attacked the planet with 149 captured non-military (civilian, private, or commercial) [[Forerunner]] vessels, and while the Forerunner naval defenses were able to destroy all the Flood vessels with their advanced weaponry, the sole intent of the Flood was not to fight an orbital battle, but rather to land on the surface and disperse their forces to infect the local Forerunner population. While disorganized and lacking unit cohesion, the sheer number of Flood overwhelmed the Forerunner ground forces, and within 32 hours, the Forerunner fleet in orbit evacuated all population centers that had not yet been engaged and infected by the Flood attack, and bombarded the planet from orbit, completely destroying the biosphere of ''DM-3-1123 b'', hence destroying all Flood forces on the ground. The Forerunner evacuation was able to save well over one million people and denizens, but this only amounted to about 0.0006% of the population, which totaled more than 2.25 billion.<ref name="T1"/>



Revision as of 10:38, July 9, 2013

Template:Battle

"Enemy forces lacked basic cohesion but quickly gained numerical superiority."
The Librarian[1]

The Battle of DM-3-1123 b was a naval as well as planetary battle in the Forerunner-Flood war.[1]

Overview

The Flood attacked the planet with 149 captured non-military (civilian, private, or commercial) Forerunner vessels, and while the Forerunner naval defenses were able to destroy all the Flood vessels with their advanced weaponry, the sole intent of the Flood was not to fight an orbital battle, but rather to land on the surface and disperse their forces to infect the local Forerunner population. While disorganized and lacking unit cohesion, the sheer number of Flood overwhelmed the Forerunner ground forces, and within 32 hours, the Forerunner fleet in orbit evacuated all population centers that had not yet been engaged and infected by the Flood attack, and bombarded the planet from orbit, completely destroying the biosphere of DM-3-1123 b, hence destroying all Flood forces on the ground. The Forerunner evacuation was able to save well over one million people and denizens, but this only amounted to about 0.0006% of the population, which totaled more than 2.25 billion.[1]

Sources