- Interceptor
- Cutter
- Monitor
- Predator
- Claymore
Ooh, yeah, Cutter and Monitor are much better. I still prefer Predator over the others suggested there, and Claymore. Claymore is a large sword, yes, but in more recent military meaning it is also a large antipersonnel mine. The sense I'm using it in is in the latter.
I'm not sure about the name Cutter to be honest. When I think of a cutter I think of a small, unarmed ship that is housed by a large ship and used to transport people between ships or to land. I know the Coast Guard operates some lightly armed cutters, but they aren't warships. If anything the name cutter would make more sense for interceptors since it suggests a small, lightly-armed ship that is fast and nimble and constantly turning and cutting through enemy formations.
I like the name Monitor, but it seems odd to be used on third smallest ship in the game. Monitors are historically modest sized warships, not things carried or launched by another ship. If I heard about a ship that could launch squadrons of monitors, I would imagine something quite a bit larger than the flagship as it is in the game. That may just be my prior knowledge of naval history talking though so I suppose the name wouldn't confuse everyone.
If I may suggest a more radical shakeup to the list at this point, I am a big fan of the name Claymore. I also like seeing consistent naming conventions with ships so why not name all the classes after swords/blades? For example we could have something like this:
Dagger: small, very fast weapon
Cutlass: bigger than a dagger but still pretty fast and it packs a bigger punch
Rapier: bigger than the previous two, intended for strong thrusting attacks against larger targets but can be overwhelmed by swarming smaller foes
Broadsword: a heavy weapon with quite a punch, but slow to swing with so it suggests a "low rate of fire"
Claymore: works well for me, especially with the double meaning relating to the anti-personnel mine
There are plenty of other nice sword names to if some of the above don't quite cut it. Scimitars, long swords, short swords, falchions. I suppose the naming convention doesn't even have to be restricted to just swords. Since we already have Lancers in the game, why not Scythes?