Voidia was not the only one who learned from the Compact War, GASI has also been analyzing the results of the war. This war was different. Any other nation would have snapped, any other nation would have been a speedbump to GASI's advance, any other nation would have crumbled into dust. But not Voidia. This war wasn't a war of strategy or numbers or logistics, it was a war of technology. Voidia's distinct technological edge over GASI made this the costliest war after GW2. Such a disaster cannot happen again, and for this reason GASI is shifting its doctrine and technology use before our enemies exploit this weakness. Gemati strategy was exquisite (Save for Operation Flint that was a terrible idea what kind of imbecile would have come up with that am I right???), it kept the enemy on the defensive, and worked them into a corner, where they would be snapped in half. This plan would have succeeded before the Voidians even had a chance to surrender, if it weren't for the technology. Voidian ships are almost perfectly designed to counteract Gemati ships, good kinetic defense, energy attacks, and specialized in exotic weaponry and protection. Voidia, however, lacks the same capacity GASI has to replace losses, and their ships are more expensive for their class and size, utilizing these fancy systems and all. GASI was able to wear down their warfleets enough for them to be forced to rely on smaller, weaker drone ships which GASI could fight on their own technological field. With all this being said, GASI has been working on adapting. A counter to the potent phaser has not yet been made, but stronger radiation protection, better volatile munition storage, and better systems survivability. GASI's "Zombie Warship" fared well, even against such powerful weaponry, as the Voidians could rip a GASI ship apart all they like, but so long as a few critical and well defended components remained intact the ship would stay functional. GASI has also worked on increasing the modularity of their ships and shipyards, allowing for ships to be refit with new technology and countermeasures faster, repaired easier, and for shipyards to change production faster. Along with this shifting doctrine, GASI has begun developing the Tarroc system heavily, as well as establishing a base for future infrastructure in newly acquired territory.