This somewhat reminds of the question I've seen posed of how you'd handle ships rebuilt after being sunk, mostly in relation to the USN who named a number of ships for those sunk early in the war. Laffey, Lexington, Yorktown, Wasp, etc where all back within a like two years.
This somewhat reminds of the question I've seen posed of how you'd handle ships rebuilt after being sunk, mostly in relation to the USN who named a number of ships for those sunk early in the war. Laffey, Lexington, Yorktown, Wasp, etc where all back within a like two years.
Most of those American ships were already under construction. They were renamed on the slip before commissioning. (The surviving USS Hornet (CV-12) still has its original name (Kearsarge) on its keel plate.)
This somewhat reminds of the question I've seen posed of how you'd handle ships rebuilt after being sunk, mostly in relation to the USN who named a number of ships for those sunk early in the war. Laffey, Lexington, Yorktown, Wasp, etc where all back within a like two years.
One way to do it is for them to have spare bodies where their souls (or consciousness, whichever the preferred term) would be transferred to when the current body is wrecked or when they decide it's time for an "overhaul". Kinda like how a certain someone in Kara no Kyoukai does it =3.
Include scene where the other shipgirls look on with envy as their American counterparts flaunt their nation's wealth and industry like those irritating rich blondes with croissant rolls for hair =3