And, no, I didn't even talk about its capabilities, because the entire Oberth class, with the exception of the title screen Pegasus, were all /painfully/ pedestrian ships. I think they had phasers. Definitely had shields. Neither did a whole lot of good. No photon torpedoes. Maybe a shuttlepod or two?
About the only thing notable regarding them is that they had a nominal crew of 80 but could operate with just 5, and, I guess, if two of you hang out in engineering and the rest run the upper section, that would simplify the whole "going back and forth" thing.
And, as you will note from the photos in the video, OF COURSE the ITT isn't standardized, in any way, shape, or form. There's, like, five different versions of the blessed thing, because NOTHING in the Star Wars universe can EVER be standardized.
As much as I like to rip on the Mon Calamari for producing basically one-off capitol ships, the entire universe has completely buggered their logistics chain.
"Oh, you want parts for an ITT? WHICH ONE?"
I mean, I guess if your entire business model consists of, "Burn planets to the ground, and if your guys die, we'll just forcibly convert replacements from the available populace of the next planet," you're going to build some... interesting weapons.
They work well enough that even non-human advanced species are utterly terrified of them, though, so I guess there's that.
All clips and photos by way of The Chronicles of Riddick - https://amzn.to/3mZJr7j - and you really should watch the entire series of movies.
I have no idea why someone thought a massively overly-complicated, massive pain-in-the-ass-to-maintain monstrosity would make a good startfighter, but here we are.
At least it has a lot of guns?
Many thanks to Deputy Rust - https://twitter.com/DeputyRustArt - for developing the Tomboy Mandalorian.