Alright, I was expecting shuch a harsh response sooner or later, the topic of "battleship" is still a debated
It's still debated amongst amateur enthusiasts, bored people, and officers who are trying to use a unique angle for career advancement because they can't think of anything more original (and that is why they fail at career advancement).
No one else is bothering to debate this.
Let me put it in perhaps the most illustrative yet simple terms I can think of.
The
Schwerer Gustav is the largest "legitimate" gun-type weapon (as opposed to pure fantasy weapons like "V3" and "Saddam's Super Gun") ever constructed, and likely the largest weapon, in terms of physical size, that could even be conceivably carried on a ship's hull period. A single gun carriage weighs literally as much as a typical WWII destroyer - it's conceivable that a twin-barreled armored turret and its barbette would weigh as much as a heavy cruiser, maybe even an early dreadnaught. It could fire a 7,100 KG shell at 720 m/s with a rate of fire that's literally measured by the
day (14, BTW). Let's feel free to be sloppy and say that it takes an hour to fire a single round (it actually took 45 minutes). Its greatest theoretical range is 150 kilometers - and that's with rocket-assisted ammunition (which was never fielded) on a barrel lengthened to 84 meters (which was never forged).
The
BrahMos missile is one of the largest anti-ship missiles currently in service - yet it's small enough to launch off a corvette (the entire ship complete with BrahMos launchers and missiles weighing as much as Schwerer Gustav). It weighs about 2,000 KG upon impact (that includes a 300 KG warhead but we'll ignore that for simplicity). More importantly its impact velocity is
1,021 m/s. Its rate of fire is however fast the vessel's weapons officer can press a button. Its range is 290 kilometers.
So for a raw comparison:
Schwerer Gustav:
1,840,000,000 kilojoules at a rate of fire of 1 shell per hour at a max theoretical range of 150 kilometers.
BrahMos:
1,042,000,000 kilojoules at a rate of fire of 8 missiles per hour (expending a ship's entire armament) at a max practical range of 290 kilometers.
So yes Schwerer Gustav still has an advantage on raw firepower, missile vs. shell, but
BrahMos's per-hour firepower is 8,336,000,000 kilojoules per hour (and really per 5 minutes, though reloading while underway is a pain so an hour is more realistic) vs. 1,840,000,000 kilojoules per hour. That's well over 8 times the total firepower of a single Schwerer Gustav cannon. But what of eight barrels, as would be typical of a battleship?
A single 1,000-ton corvette equipped with 8 BrahMos launchers has equal the firepower of a 500,000-1,000,000 ton battleship equipped with eight Schwerer Gustav rifles. And this corvette can engage the battleship far beyond the range of the battleship's guns. Also, the Schwerer Gustav, even with 8 barrels, cannot keep up a RoF high enough to really hope for any accuracy without some majorly impressive radar guidance. BrahMos, however, happens to have such guidance built-in.
I hope that this finally brings to light why battleships are obsolete. As for NGFS, you don't need a massive ship to bring a massive gun (or even a massive gun - 6-inchers are more than adequate).
EDIT: for an example of how small you can go to carry this firepower: reportedly
MEKO-130 type corvettes are being looked at as possible candidates for BrahMos-launching platforms. The lightest ship I'm aware of that will almost definately carry BarhMos is the
Godavari class frigate which is a good bit under 4,000 tons (and also carries helicopters, guns and at least some MANPADS-type AA missiles). Frigates that currently embark BrahMos and a complete AAW suite (SA-N-6 + long-range 3D tracking radars) aren't much heavier.