LosTech

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LosTech simply put refers to Lost Technology. Methods and Machines which were once in regular use but to which the methods of their manufacture have been in one way or another forgotten. The Term has it's origins in Battletech but the basic concept applies to various franchises.

Battletech

After the Fall of the Star League the Five Great Houses decided to have one hell of a fight deploying their fleets against each others worlds and they were not shy about using Nuclear Weapons to get their way. If X planet in the Capellan Confederation had a Battlemech Factory that could make mechs to invade your worlds with which you could not quite capture, you blew it up. Same goes for a shipyard that can make WarShips. Or a factory which made high end manufacturing equipment for shipyards or Battlemech Factories. This was made all the worse as COMSTAR deliberately sabotaged things to prevent the development of certain capacities to maintain a balance of power.

By 3025 many of the Marvels of the Star League had become relics of a different time. The capacity to manufacture Compact K-F Drives was lost and with it the ability to make WarShips while the ability to make new regular JumpShips was substantially diminished. Items such as Gauss Cannons and Double Heat Sinks became irreplaceable.

Warhammer 40,000

In Warhammer 40,000], LostTech is another term for Archeotech, which shares the same basic idea; hyper-advanced technology left over from the Dark Age of Technology, where humanity had attained superscience that let them hold off the pre-Fall Eldar.

Real Life

  • Concrete: Various forms of Concrete using (among other things) cement and volcanic ash were widely made during the Roman Empire, but the methods of producing these were lost in previous centuries.
  • Plumbing: Some Four Thousand Years ago the Bronze Age Indian City of Mohenjo Daro had a complex sewer system. During the Classical Era it became the norm for cities to have sewers and during the Roman Empire public water supplies were fairly common with fountains and private plumbing for the rich. After the collapse of the Roman Empire, both would fade away in Western Europe.
  • Greek Fire: