Captain doh wrote:the britsh ones were 100 almost every countries mow had 100
the ship should have 100
A 'man of war' was ANY large warship : the British called their largest warships 'Ships of the Line'.
You are taking the epitome of wooden warship construction, the 100 gun 1st rate ship of the line, of which the British never had more than 7 in service and only then in the very late 1700's, and making it some sort of standard for all its 'men of war'. The 'workhorse' of the Royal Navy was the '3rd and 4th rate' SotL's of some 40-60 guns. The big 'power' battleships were the 2nd raters of 70-80 guns : Also, dont confuse total guns carried with the number of main ''big guns' in the 'broadside' : It became the practice to include all guns in the count, including short-range close-quarter guns mounted on the upper decks, and the bow- and stern-chasers : also, the overall size and length (thus range, accuracy and power) of the main guns developed over time, making a late-era frigate as powerful as an early era SotL, even though the latter may have carried 'more' guns.
If we are going to get pedantic over this kind of thing, then a sotl certainly needs more than 250 crew to sail and fight the ship. A usual crew was between 500-800 men, of which some 300-400 were needed just to serve the guns in battle... but I doubt there would be much call for that level of realism come daily upkeep time....
and, just for interest :
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uiRbJRNKyv8According to the RN guy who ran that recreation of a rolling broadside ; they used less powder than a single original gun would have used for one shot... scary.