For trips to Mars there are only 14 launch days in a MLW every 26 months, not 200 per year, and probably fewer depending on the weather and alignment of the Earth and Mars orbits. Launching from land or sea does not matter. So let us go with your six ships per day from four towers and add on 10 sea launch platforms (not yet in existence), they would give 196 launches every two years or 168 launches if they are down to 12 days per window. Those capacities do not yet exist. There is another tower currently being built at Starbase with two more planned - Canaveral and Kennedy. Without the sea launches then in full use when completed they would provide 42 launches per MLW.
I then look at other things such as the Starlink HLS (Human Landing System) and a Moonbase. NASA and its partners (SpaceX, ESA, JAXA etc.) are hoping to build a Moonbase by 2031 ish but they have not landed any humans back there as yet. The next humans to land on the Moon are hoped to be there in September 2026 on a mission not dissimilar from Apollo. A Moonbase only five years later looks a tough call. Artemis hardware is already seven years in the making, how long has it been ongoing in the background?
To get people to and from the Moonbase there are a number of phases. Firstly an HLS, a Starship variant, will be launched into orbit atop a booster. Once it is in orbit it will be refuelled by Starship tankers, more launches, with SpaceX claiming 10 launches per HLS. Then, off it goes to the Moon to enter orbit. Meanwhile, using NASA's space launch system (SLS), a crew will be sent in an Orion capsule to rendezvous and dock with the HLS. HLS will then set them down on the Moon and, hopefully, sometime later, take them and Orion back to the SLS and home. The HLS will never come back to earth with a crew it will be more a shuttle between Orion capsules and the Moonbase.
This is going to take years to perfect and is a clear example of just how difficult getting on and off another body in the Solar System will be.
A Marsbase (a city!) in 30 years time; you're having a laugh. And, BTW, I am still waiting for solutions to the air, water and magnetosphere problems.
As for fibre, I am happy with it. It is way faster than I will ever be, mind you so was dial-up.