Jason: No! Divert all energy to the armor!
According to Tim Taylor Technology, all you need to do to enhance a system is pump more power into it. But where do you get that power?
Diverting Power is what happens when Tim Taylor Technology runs into a limited pool of power. If the extra power to pump into something is not readily available, that power must be reclaimed from somewhere else, usually by shutting down or reducing power to one system to power up another.
Played well, this can add extra tension and interest. Buffing up one aspect of something can expose a Logical Weakness in another aspect. An observant hero might use this to dodge the extra danger of one foe powering up an aspect of himself by exploiting the aspect he left vulnerable. Or a Wave-Motion Gun might be enough to end a battle in one shot, but doing so requires that the user power down all other systems and leave himself vulnerable, thus justifying why he does not use it all the time.
Note that most of the uses of this involve technology using presumably electrical charge or Minovsky Physics. However, this trope can also apply to something using steam pressure, Functional Magic, or other similar concepts, depending on how they are handled in the context of a particular setting. See also Uninhibited Muscle Power for when it's the character's body diverting power from other places internally to turn them into a temporary powerhouse.
Examples
- Parodied in Sev Trek: Pus in Boots. Gaudy notices that his console is beginning to spark, so he quickly "reroutes" the explosion to the expendable ensign's console.
- In Apollo 13, Ken Mattingly and John Aaron are trying to come up with a startup procedure for the command module using only the CM's batteries, which had been partially drained in the disaster before the CM was shut down. Unfortunately, there just is not enough power in the batteries to perform any viable startup. Mattingly gets the idea to get the extra power from the lunar module's power systems, via a linkup normally used to transfer power from the command/service module to the lunar module. It's not very energy-efficient when used in the reverse manner, but it gets them the few extra amps they need to get the CM up and running—and thanks to the earlier power conservation procedures used with the LM, there's power enough to do this.
- The Meg: In order to descend faster for his deep-sea rescue mission, Jonas diverts all non-essential power in his one-man minisub to the motors. One would think ballast, buoyancy, and water pressure were more crucial factors when descending.
- Passengers (2016): A Sleeper Starship is damaged by a small meteorite fragment that becomes lodged in the engine core. The ship's computer responds by diverting power from the other systems in order to maintain life support, but this slowly but surely causes a cascading effect where more and more systems across the ship start to malfunction due to lack of power. If it is not fixed in time by our leads, this will inevitably lead to total system failure and everybody on board dying.
- Used offensively in Star Trek: Generations when the Enterprise is locked in a duel with Klingon Bird-of-Prey owned by the Duras sisters. Having been able to bypass the Enterprises' shields, they need a quick solution. Data figures out some Techno Babble that can force the Bird-of-Prey to go into cloak. Since cloaking requires that a ship power down its weapons and shields (see Star Trek under "Live Action TV" below) this allows the Enterprise to render the Bird-of-Prey defenseless for a brief window that they can use to hit it with photon torpedoes. Being a much smaller ship, it cannot take nearly as much hull punishment as the Enterprise and is destroyed.
- Star Wars:
- A New Hope: Before the final battle over the Death Star, the Rebel pilots were ordered to "Switch your deflectors on double front" (i.e., switching the deflector shields to increase forward deflectors at the expense of the rear ones). Once the TIE Fighters show up on the scene, the pilots are ordered to stabilize their rear deflectors, now that they are being chased as well as being shot at by their target.
- The Empire Strikes Back: Han Solo orders all power to the forward Deflector Shields before charging the Millennium Falcon straight at an Imperial Star Destroyer, since he knew he would not need to worry about firing coming from behind as he was planning on parking his ship on the rear side of their command tower and out of their sensors' scope.
- This ends up killing Ax in Animorphs: his ship is investigating what appears to be a derelict Yeerk ship, and he joins the boarding party while his own ship is diverting power to the scanners. On figuring it's a trap, he tells his ship to send full power to the shields, but it's too late.
- Bolo Series: In "The Last Command", after the last battle against the enemy, Bolo unit LNE (Lenny) is deactivated and sealed underground. Many years later, he's awoken by the detonation of explosive charges and tries to escape his confinement. He activates his forward scanners and shunts power to his I-R microstrobes. He channels all available power to a single ranging pulse in an attempt to figure out where he is. Near the end, when his old commander tries to convince him to not drive into the human city nearby, LNE shunts power to his forward scanner again in an attempt to verify the commander's identity.
- Cibola Burn: Discussed when the Rocinante is forced to operate on battery-power. The ship's keel-mounted railgun has its own very substantial set of batteries and capacitors which were already topped off, and they have to consider tapping into those to keep other systems powered. However, the power is only designed to flow into the railgun system, not back out of it into the rest of the ship (for cogent safety reasons) and they do not have the time to effect a workaround, so they abandon that plan in favor of a different solution using the railgun.
- Sherlock Holmes claims that this is the reason he rarely eats while on a case: blood sent to the digestive system could be put to better use by his brain.
- Comes up on occasion in the X-Wing Series, which borrows several elements from the X-Wing PC games. The X-Wings are capable of diverting power between several subsystems, most commonly the shields, engines and guns.
- Blake's 7:
- In "Mission to Destiny", while piloting the Liberator through a meteor shower the power starts to fade. Zen gives them a choice between diverting to the drive units (risking destruction) or the forcewall (protecting the ship, but stranding them in space). Blake chooses the drive units. Fortunately, they're almost through the storm.
- Averted in "Volcano". With the Liberator's power banks drained and Servalan's battlefleet bearing down, Avon calls for the emergency circuits to be activated. They don't work, and only a convenient Earth-Shattering Kaboom saves their lives.
- In "Terminal", the Liberator's hull is breaking down after being infected by some kind of enzyme. Villa orders Zen to shut down the auto-repair systems as they're fighting a losing battle and draining the power banks, and instead divert all power to maintain the Master Computer so it can analyze the infection and find a solution. Unlike other examples of this trope, it doesn't work, and Liberator is destroyed.
- In "Games", Avon has all power except that which is necessary for life support diverted through the weapon system.
- Parodied in the Community episode "Basic Rocket Science", which affectionately spoofs The Right Stuff and Apollo 13. The gang, sans Abed, are trapped on a space exploration simulator and have no clue as to where they are. Abed and a few others at Greendale are tasked with finding the gang and bringing them back to the school. About halfway through the episode Chang comes running to Abed with a plan.
Chang: I've worked out a way to reroute the RV's power from the auxiliary battery!
Abed: Reroute to what?
[Chang wordlessly backs out of the room] - The Cowboy Bebop (2021) episode "Binary Two-Step" has a variation: the Bebop is Coming in Hot, causing the engine to overheat and burst into flame, so Mel and Faye plug the coolant into the sprinkler system.
- Doctor Who: In "Resolution", the Recon Dalek diverts all the power in the UK to send a signal to the Dalek fleet, knocking out the internet in the process. We then cut to a BUFFERING symbol on the screen, as if the Dalek has managed to stop the episode as well (at least for those watching on their computers instead of TV).
The Doctor: Whoa! That Dalek just shut down the whole of Britain's internet.
Graham: What, on New Year's Day, when everything's shut and everyone's hung over?
Ryan: What a monster! - Star Trek:
- Throughout the franchise, activating a cloaking device requires that a ship divert power away from its weapons. In the original series episode "Balance of Terror", in which the cloaking device was first introduced, it literally uses up too much power to run both it and the weapons system at the same time. Later instances seem to have gotten around this particular issue, but new issues come up that still keep the trope enforced. The writers described it as being akin to an arms race between cloaking technology and sensor technology, and any advantage one gains over the other is only temporary until the other side figures out a work-around. This then keeps cloaked ships as the equivalent of "submarines in space", having to reduce all the emissions that might give them away when they go into cloak.
- This happens on a regular basis during space combat in Star Trek: The Original Series.
- The Romulan ship in "Balance of Terror" has to turn off its cloaking device in order to fire its plasma weapon. Also, Kirk orders all power diverted to weapons before making the final attack on the Romulan ship.
- In "The Changeling", while Nomad is attacking Enterprise, Captain Kirk orders evasive maneuvers, but the ship can't perform them because Scotty has diverted warp power to the shield to fend off Nomad's energy bolts. Kirk approves the action when told that they can't outrun the bolts anyway.
- In "The Apple", Scotty diverts everything except life support to the impulse engines, though he warns that it's dangerous to do so. Unlike other examples where this is done with a push of the button, it takes eight hours to make the necessary modifications.
- In "Catspaw", Assistant Chief Engineer DeSalle orders power diverted to the hull in an attempt to escape their imprisonment.
- In "Journey to Babel", Spock's father Ambassador Sarek requires a very difficult operation to save his life. At the same time, an unknown starship starts attacking the Enterprise. With the shields weakening, Kirk orders auxiliary power diverted to the shields — and finds that Dr. McCoy is already using it to keep his equipment running.
- While inside the giant space amoeba in "The Immunity Syndrome", Spock diverts his shuttle's secondary power to the shields.
- In "The Tholian Web", Spock orders all but emergency maintenance power to be diverted to the shields to resist the Tholian attacks.
- Star Trek: The Next Generation:
- In "Q Who", the Borg have knocked out the Enterprise's shields, so Geordi LaForge and Ensign Gomez try to get them up again before the Borg repair their own ship.
LaForge: Divert power from anywhere you need it. Anywhere except for life support.
Gomez: No, it wouldn't help. The circuits which control the shields, they've been fused.
LaForge: If you can't reprogram, then reroute. - This nearly proves their undoing in "Hero Worship", in which dumping more and more power into the shields to increase their power also increases the power with which they're routinely hit by that week's Negative Space Wedgie. It's explicitly mentioned they dump the Warp power into the shields at one point, at which point things really go From Bad to Worse.
- In "Q Who", the Borg have knocked out the Enterprise's shields, so Geordi LaForge and Ensign Gomez try to get them up again before the Borg repair their own ship.
- Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: In the pilot episode "Emissary", Chief O'Brien says he can transfer all available power to forcefields around critical areas, but that leads the docking ring vulnerable. Major Kira has Odo evacuate the civilians from that area, but some are still injured by Stuff Blowing Up.
- Star Trek: Voyager:
- In the Action Prologue of "Caretaker", a Maquis ship is being hammered by a much larger Cardassian cruiser. B'Elanna Torres transfers all power from the weapons to the engines so they can make it to the Badlands. When Tuvok questions losing their weaponry in the middle of a battle, she points out that their weapons aren't powerful enough to get through the cruiser's shields anyway.
- In "Cathexis", Captain Janeway has all power diverted to the engines including life support, so they can escape before hostile aliens break through their shields. Wouldn't that include the power going to the shields?
- In "One Small Step...", a 21st-century space explorer is trapped in a Negative Space Wedgie. After several failed attempts to escape, he reroutes power from life support to the scanners, using everything his ship has left to gather data rather than waste resources on himself.
- In "Collective", the Borg attempt to tear off Voyager's deflector dish by force with a Tractor Beam, so Janeway orders all power diverted to structural integrity, but B'Elanna says it will only give them another minute at most.
- Averted with the holodeck, whose energy system is incompatible with that used by the rest of Voyager, so they can have holodeck episodes despite being on a ship that's so short of power they need to ration their food replicator use. So why can't the Gadgeteer Geniuses of Starfleet jury-rig a means of transferring power, given how often they can easily integrate parts from alien spacecraft?
- This is a standard spacecraft function in the Stargate-verse. They typically switch between Deflector Shields and engines.
- Titans (2018): In "Ghosts", Dr Light channels the power of the entire city through the stadium lights so he can absorb it. It also lights up his location like a neon sign, but he's expecting that.
- Arkham Horror:
- Investigators have scores in three pairs of skills: Speed/Sneak, Fight/Will, and Lore/Luck. They have a limited ability to adjust those scores each turn, but increasing a score in one skill requires an equal decrease in its paired skill.
- The Supernatural Martial Artist Investigator Lily Chen has the unique ability to adjust her Hit Points and Sanity Meter in the same way, representing her body and mind reinforcing each other through her training.
- Champions: The multipower framework in the Hero System works like this. For a lower point cost than buying all the powers in it piecemeal would entail, the character instead gets a total point pool that can be split up between them — a classic example would be a character who can have flight, a force field, and an energy blast, but can't have them all running at full power at the same time.
- In Dungeons & Dragons 3.5, the incarnum subsystem (presented in Magic of Incarnum) expands on the body slots used to equip magic items, most notably by allowing characters to enchant these slots with pieces of spectral equipment known as soulmelds. Incarnum-wielding characters gain a limited pool of "essentia" which can be invested in soulmelds (and certain other abilities) to increase their power, and which can be reallocated between them from round to round. A number of classes have bonuses and Super Modes which either increase the maximum essentia capacity of their soulmelds, or cause soulmelds to function at maximum power without any investment.
- Mutants & Masterminds: this is what the dynamic arrays are meant to represent. Unlike regular arrays, which are a set of alternate powers only one of which is active at a time, powers in a dynamic array all draw from a single pool of power points, which can be redistributed across its dynamic powers once per round. A common use for a dynamic array is a Powered Armor fueling multiple of its systems, such as flight, protective force fields and super strength, from a single battery output, which the wearer can redirect on the fly.
- Since Star Fleet Battles is based on Star Trek: The Original Series, one standard technique during combat is to move around your ship's available energy to where it's needed.
- In Traveller, Jump drives use so much power that many older ships have to divert power from nearly everything (leading to the tradition of "jump dimming").
- In Alien: Isolation, power switch boxes can be found all over Sevastopol, and because the systems are usually operating at only nominal capacity at best, Amanda often has to switch various systems on an off to gain access, evade hostile security, make distractions, or any number of other things.
- One of the tasks in Among Us is to divert power to a room of the ship, requiring the player to go to one panel to increase the power to a room, then go to that room and accept the diverted power by flipping a switch.
- Artemis: Spaceship Bridge Simulator, being heavily inspired by Star Trek, naturally features this. However, it adds the twist of having a finite amount of coolant as well. Systems with extra power but not enough coolant will overheat.
- In Battlestar Galactica, the player's missile racks can be configured to fire swarms of weak homing missiles (Number/Homing axis) or a single high-powered torpedo (Damage/Radius axis) by fiddling with the PS2's D-pad. The weak, accurate homing missiles are great for the Zerg Rush of fighters, and the torpedoes are for the base-star bosses and other emplacements.
- Elite Dangerous has a simple three-way split between SYStems, ENGines, or WEPons. Diverting power to Systems increases the damage resistances of your shields, and means that they can come back up faster once fully depleted. Diverting power to Engines increases your maximum speed and allows you to boost more often as your drive energy recovers faster. Finally, diverting power to Weapons increases the effectiveness of their cooling systems, allowing you to fire for longer without experiencing Thermal Load.
- This is a core mechanic in FTL: Faster Than Light. You'll never have enough power to operate every system in your ship at full capacity, even after upgrading the reactor several times. Therefore, it's imperative to adjust power distribution wisely according to the situation at hand.
- Halo:
- Most Covenant vehicles after Combat Evolved allow the player to "boost" by diverting power from the weapons to the engines, granting temporary extra speed but rendering you unable to shoot while doing so.note
- There are several times in the games where Cortana has to use the Chief's suit's reactor to overload some sort of power system; doing so usually temporarily depletes the Chief's energy shields.
- Halo 4 has a specific example. At the end of the third mission, "Forerunner", the Master Chief and Cortana must escape a Collapsing Lair on a Covenant Ghost. Given that they need even more speed than the boost would usually give them, Cortana diverts power from the Master Chief's Deflector Shields to the Ghost's engines. This does leave him vulnerable, but any Covenant he encounters along the way are too busy running for their lives to try shooting at him.
- To progress through the Bugbear Mothership in Kingdom of Loathing, the player has to deal with various things diverting power from the elevators. KoL being KoL, this is eventually lampshaded.
A computerized voice says, "De-Evolution Detected in Galley. Rerouting Power From Elevator To Food Replicators."
WHY IS IT ALWAYS THE ELEVATOR? - In Mass Effect 3's multiplayer mode, certain classes of Geth characters can enter "Hunter Mode", lifting the Power Limiters on their weapons to fire them with greater force, diverting power to their synthetic muscles to handle the recoil that would break an organic's arm. However, this power is drawn from their Deflector Shields, reducing them to half strengthnote while this mode is engaged and turning the Geth into a Glass Cannon.
- Legacy of the Void: Turned into resource management gameplay between missions: the Spear of Adun has limited Solarite stores (increased by fulfilling bonus objectives) that can be used to boost various aspects of the RTS gameplay (such as improved resource gathering or which Support Power to use during a mission).
- Star Trek:
- Games based on the original series often allow the player to do this. For example, in Super Stellar Trek and Apple Trek, the player can transfer energy from reserve power to the shields and back again. Energy in the shields can't be used to fire phasers or move the ship.
- Star Trek Online has power distribution as a major mechanic in space combat. Ships have 200 points of power (160 for Romulan ships, whose power plants grant several special abilities) to be distributed between weapons, shields, engines, and auxiliary systems. Most ships grant bonus power to one or more systems, and player character skills or ship equipment can also increase the amount of power available.
- Star Wars:
- X-Wing helped popularize this trope. This is actually done on several levels: besides allocating power consumption between engines, lasers, and shields, you can also switch your shield priority (forward, rear, or balanced) to provide more protection where you need it, and your firing pattern (single, double, or quad) to tweak fire rate vs. damage done at once (assuming that every laser hits the target, of course). In a pinch, you can also shunt power between beams and shields, draining one for a quick recharge of the other. Another bonus, starting from TIE Fighter, is that some craft get a beam of some variety (such as a tractor beam to hold targets in place) with its own power supply that can just as easily be turned off to give further increased power to the others, e.g. boosting your laser recharge rate without impacting your normal top speed. Effective power management is essential to surviving the harder missions.
- Star Wars: Squadrons, being a Spiritual Successor to the above-mentioned X-Wing series, incorporates this into its gameplay as well, albeit streamlined. Diverting power to shields increases their recharge rate, diverting power to thrusters increases maximum speed and allows for boosting, and diverting power to lasers increases their recharge rate and attack power. Most Imperial fighters don't have shields and instead compensate by allowing for "power shunting", allowing more energy to be diverted between lasers and thrusters.
- Tachyon: The Fringe allows you to divert power between your forward and aft shields, and between your engines and recharging shields, guns, and afterburners. Excess power to a fully charged system is automatically diverted to other systems.
- In Uprising, that's how the Wraith's Power Triangle works. You can allocate power to speed, shields or weapons, depending on the situation.
- The X series has a minor example, allowing you to switch sets of guns on and off. This can conserve power, but it's more commonly used to swap between weapons for specific targets (such as switching to a low-damage, high-ROF gun to Cherry Tap enemy fighters in the hopes the pilot will bail out).
- X-COM: Interceptor allows you to adjust your power load between shields, engines and weapons. However, in practice, combat is generally over so quickly that shield energy isn't needed, and with few exceptions, fighters are fast enough with minimal power to engines, so diverting maximum power to weapons is idealnote . Weapon energy only affects the speed at which your energy weapons regain energy, and has no effect on missiles and their refire rate.
- El Goonish Shive: This is how Elliot's "Cheerleadra" spell works after the un-change
. The spell has seven "stats" that represent different powers he can gain while in Cheerleadra form (Super-Strength, flight, etc.), each of which can be assigned a score between 1 and 3 (higher scores obviously giving more and better powers). But Elliot only has fourteen points to spend, so if he wants to max out some stats he has to weaken others.
- This is effectively how Maxima's powers work in Grrl Power. She has superhuman strength, speed, and invulnerability as well as flight and energy blasts. She typically keeps a balance between them, but when the situation calls for it, she can switch power from one ability to another; for example, she could lower her Super-Strength to improve her invulnerability in anticipation of a powerful attack. Word of God is that she normally keeps a moderate amount of her total ability allocated to each of her powers, with a significant chunk that's not allocated in case she needs to instantly boost one. And also that her "minimum" setting is still superhuman, so she can't actually turn any of her powers completely off. When fighting a supervillain who's stronger than her and uses an electrical attack while he's grappling her, he mistakes electricity for her weakness because he notices that her strength decreases when he shocks her (as she'd devoted as much as she could to invulnerability in order to withstand the attack).
- Star Wars Downunder: Jedi Knight Merve Bushwacker's spaceship can divert all power to the beer fridge in case of emergency.
- Discussed in the Dexter's Laboratory episode "Overlabbing". Dexter explains that he shielded his lab in response to one of Mandark's schemes, and Mandark immediately investigates.
Mandark: You must take me for a fool! Rerouting power from the deflector array?
Dexter: I guess that is a little cliché. - Star Trek:
- In the Star Trek: The Animated Series episode "The Lorelei Signal", Spock orders the ship's energy to be diverted into the Deflector Shields in an attempt to block the titular sonic Mind Control attack.
- In the Star Trek: Prodigy episode "Starstruck", the heroes' spaceship is caught in the gravity of a collapsing star. As part of his frantic attempts to escape, Dal orders all power diverted to the impulse engines. This includes the shields and brig forcefields, releasing Gwyn to cause trouble while the ship is now vulnerable to debris.
- Star Wars Rebels: In "The Siege of Lothal", the Ghost has Lord Vader in a TIE fighter on their tail and a couple of Star Destroyers up ahead, so Hera orders all power to be diverted for a Hyperspeed Escape, including the power to the rear gun turret where Zeb is desperately trying to blast Vader before he does the same to them.
- Young Justice (2010): This is how Bumblebee eventually takes down the Warworld. She's trying to Cut the Juice, but its power source adapts to every attack, so she reroutes the power to Mongol's control room and overloads it.
- Very much Truth in Television for steam-powered ships as steam is directly used to power the engines, generators, and, in colder climates, heat the ship. Under normal conditions, a ship can generate enough steam to run all at top speed, but warships often didn't operate in optimal conditions. Therefore, there were indeed instances in WWI and WWII when a ship diverted power from the weapons (or rather, the generator that powered the motors turning them) to the engines.
- Like the above-described steam powered warships, the RMS Carpathia used this tactic to gain speed as it rushed to the distress call of RMS Titanic. The Carpathia diverted as much steam as she could to away from the ship's heating and hot water systems to run the engines as fast as possible. Carpathia's crew managed to get her speed up to over 17 knots during this stint, a full two knots faster than what was considered her maximum theoretical design speed beforehand. Unfortunately, this still was not fast enough to save to bulk of the Titanic's passengers.
- Satellites and space probes, especially older ones that might not be generating optimal levels of power, will keep unneeded modules dormant most of the time until they are needed. They then shutdown other parts of the craft when they are.
- When the Tesla electric car was released, a bug in its systems resulted in the vehicle moving perceptibly slower if the climate control was on. It was compared to diverting power from the engines to the life support in Star Trek.
- In many aircraft, especially jets, compressed and heated air is bled off from the earlier stages of the engine to operate systems like the cabin pressurization system and the deicing systems. This is literally diverting power from the engines, but typically by such a small amount relative to the engines' output that it's not noticeable. This also has the bonus effect of saving weight and complexity by not needing to install separate air compressors or heaters to run these systems. Some smaller propeller-driven aircraft, such as the Cessna 172, use carb heat instead, which works by diverting hot air from around the engine's exhaust manifold into the carburetor to eliminate any icing. This actually doesn't divert power from anywhere (it relies on waste heat), but it does reduce power because it reduces the air density inside the engine. Since icing in the carburetor also reduces icing, pilots are taught to watch the tachometer to see if the power starts rising again after it initially drops, as this will show that there was ice and it has been removed.

