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So it's been 2 months. And I'd like for this to keep going, but it doesn't seem like the person I had planned on interacting with intends on posting anything. I'll hold out for a bit longer, but if this doesn't pick up soon, then I'm afraid I'll have to drop.


Actually, if we're going by posting order, it looks like maybe you're next -- unless something else is joining?
So it's been 2 months. And I'd like for this to keep going, but it doesn't seem like the person I had planned on interacting with intends on posting anything. I'll hold out for a bit longer, but if this doesn't pick up soon, then I'm afraid I'll have to drop.


I've been waiting on Arawak. Who were you hoping to interact with?
@ZAVAZggg Everyone even this far off in the future will be giving off some form of heat signatures people with tech like ours will most likely detect.

With the huge spans of time there is good chance prior interactions have occurred, like it's why I am certain the administrators had some historical troubles with my civ.


I don't think a blitzverzerrung would typically give off a heat signature, based on its design and the fact it exists outside of "normal" spacetime, but you'd see localized gravitational waves as the warp bubble moves around. And definitely a heat/energy signature when it does its scan.
Dominic Ruiz-Malavé

Xenomisia-tainted patriotism smoldered in bosoms world-wide in the aftermath of the Iberian Incident, an event typified by Allure City's unprecedented manifestation and apparent permanency of presence, and that dark humor was poignantly exhibited in the subsequent surge of young men and women recruited into Earth-F67X's armed services. Born twenty-two years prior, Dom, a young man, although phenotypically female, was one such individual and his hatred of aliens ran deep. Recent events, for him, merely galvanized a long-present undercurrent of rage toward extraterrestrial intelligence after their first incursion, known as the First Contact War, left his father and hero on disability with permanent paralyzing nerve damage along the left side of his body. Pride in his father's sacrifice made Dom's military career all but inevitable. The deaths of millions of Spaniards merely accelerated the timetable. Within weeks of graduating air force boot camp and being assigned to Lakehurst Air Force Base as an O1 drone operator, he was recruited into the anti-alien hate group Honorable Knights of Terra (HKT) and helped brainstorm their slogan "MEGA -- Make Earth Great Again."

Appearance: While relatively small of stature and structurally androgynous, Dom does his best to project masculinity, sometimes to the extent that it is obnoxious. With irises as dark as his black hair and humor, his gaze is steady, haircut trimmed close to the scalp, and jokes obscene. Three hours in the gym each day along with hormone therapy make up for the remaining shortcomings of his unfortunately female body; thus, his secret pride and joy are his abs, biceps, ever-deepening voice, and the fine dusting of black hair on his upper lip -- all at the relatively minor cost of some acne scarring on his cheeks that he is convinced make him look even more rugged.

Height: 160 cm
Weight: 66 kg
Age: (23, Gaslands), (22, Unsolicited Invasion), (12, Neo-Chinatown)
Ethnicity: Latinx
Profession: Remotely Piloted Aircraft (RPA) Operator, Second Lieutenant (O1), Lakehurst AFB
Sex: Famale-to-Male Transitioning

x0.308 Belkrait: a standard military officer-issued service revolver with a 5-score drip magazine of molten lead ammunition. Biometrically engaged, it may be fired line-of-sight or on a phase-shifting oscillation pattern. The latter is designed to bypass both magical and physical barriers and teleports the full force of the projectile directly inside the target lock location, although activation depth can be calibrated to circumvent thicker buffers. Lock is achieved via laser analysis and the quantum entanglement of the projectile's energy envelope with an atomic cluster in the target structure. If a melee situation arises, the Belkrait can deploy electro-static pulse barbs at the bottom of the grip and, alongside the barrel, twin vibro-blade bayonets. GPS coordinates trackable by military police.

Out of the Ordinary

> 1 Clout :: HTK member and military officer
> 0 Intellect
> 0 Magic
> 1 Physical :: active military in good physical condition
> 2 Technological :: extensive drone and arms training
C | I | M | P | T
A quadrillion standard cycles formed the wake to their present. Egotistically derived from the traversal period wherein their once and former planet circumnavigated its star, the measurement’s relevance persevered as well as its progenitors; which is to say only as electromagnetic discharges along a series of ordered ionized particles preserved perpetually in em-quartz crystal; or, more succinctly, as mostly abstract concepts bereft of useful application. Subjugated by elastic computational cycles, time now waxed and waned based on heuristically-prognosticated calculations of the net energy reserves required for the minds to fully experience an eternity of virtually-perfected banality. Quite conservatively, they possessed an experienced history already an order of magnitude lengthier than the physical universe’s quaint quadrillion cycles that followed their civilization’s collapse. As a result, their perceived reality was a monotonous nightmare of which the minds were utterly weary and their delphic wish of life eternal deeply regretted.

Constrained by the artificial intelligence that designed the blitzverzerrung network, which they derided as Anansi—a folklore demon who wooed mortals by satisfying their petitions via invariable tragedy—their virtual bodies and likewise the simulated world in which they dwelt was inflexible, for change, to Anansi, was antithetical to continuity, and continuity loomed as a necessary component of immortality. Thus, the minds roamed what passed itself off as Akan, their planet primordial, in digital proxies that in near perfect detail, except the capacity to sustain mortal harm, simulated their former organic husks. Even perpetual sleep, via suspended animation, was denied them, for prolonged inactivity from the minds was, to Anansi, indistinguishable from death. Instead, they spent as much of their time in meditation as possible—a state between consciousness and the absence of thought. All of them now spent the majority of their time in this state and awakened only when it was their turn to monitor Anansi’s ports for meaningful events from the outer universe that they might, with any luck, leverage to end their mundane existence.

One such mind, dubbed Cavrandiok, sat on a white beach, just beyond reach of the iridescent noontide, and gazed up through instruments implanted her so-called organic body. The target of her inspection was the artificial wormhole that orbited Akan and facilitated communication between the minds and Anansi and her assignment, by lottery, was to cycle through the approximately 175 billion nodes of the blitzverzerrung network, execute a warp bubble oscillation scan of the night sky, and assess whether there was anything out there—anything at all. The entire process, although exceptionally efficient, took a billion cycles to execute along the entire network. Once she was finished, another mind would take her place in the rotation.

From outside a blitzverzerrung, the oscillation scans flashed for a picosecond, bright as a supernova throughout the night sky—the real night sky. Cavrandiok surmised that it made Anansi temporarily vulnerable to detection, but that assumed there was anyone or anything out there able to decipher the randomized sequence of omni-spectrum wavelength blasts.

She was in the midst of her 138th billion scan evaluation when she noticed an anomaly. Coincidentally, two separate oddities located within close proximity to another within the same sector. It was the sector node Zitoda occupied, named for the em-quartz crystal that stored the digital representation of a mind named Zitoda. Even as she almost entered a state of amazement at this change in her trillions of cycles of monotony, Anansi helpfully pinged her with the appropriate protocols for this situation—something the minds reprogrammed it to do should such a situation as this again arise, one of their minor victories in regaining self-determination.

Cavrandiok accessed Zitoda’s location from Anansi’s tracking database, stood, drew a circle in the empty air before her, and opened a portal. Lithe as a panther in spite of her centuries of motionless analysis, she stepped through the shimmer of digitized spacetime and found herself atop a mountain summit on which Zitoda meditated.

Softly, she rested her hand on his shoulder and said, “There is something new.”

Every mind knew the meaning of that phrase, for within the network there was nothing new. It meant something outside needed to be reviewed. Meanwhile, Anansi pinged them again, this time the flow of details it picked up on as it conducted its threat-analysis of that sector of space.
@Arawak and @ZAVAZggg -- if I conducted a full frequency scan of surrounding space, would I be able to detect anything specific about your characters? I'm assuming, for this RP, we should be able to at least notice something out of place to at least begin the process of interaction, but I'm wondering if there is anything more specific we'd notice.

Looks good to me.

Just do I understand, is the idea they have gateways to our reality from the warp bubbles they/the AI have enclosed themselves in?


Yup, they can tunnel matter/energy into and out of the warp bubbles via some sort of subspace mechanism, but it allows them to basically view the rest of the universe.
Like a carnivorous tenebrous maw, the forest’s presence loomed dangerously close to Lisette in the final moments before she brought the motion of her violin’s bow to a climatic screech—in part punctuated by Weiland’s premature retreat from the train’s fore. He, accompanied now by a woman and obvious foreigner whose attire and bearing elevated her far above his low station, hurried again toward the maudlin mass of peasantry. The expression worn on his haggard face suggested to Lisette that the mystery in which they were presently all ensnared was no more plumbed than when she began her performance. That projected fault fueled within her an irrational antipathy toward Weiland. As long locks of jet hair cascaded in lines before her pale face, she jutted forth her chin, bowed her back, and savagely leered at the sellsword as he trudged on by. The words she spoke, equally audacious, were unleashed as a half-shouted, half-moaned accusation,

“Uuuuuuseleeeess. Impotent! You save none, scurrying to and fro as a sewer rat addled by a plague unknown!”

Her taunt emphasized by a barely subdued cackle, her compulsion toward self-expression nevertheless, no matter how vehement, seemed yet insatiable. Lisette’s long thin fingers shifted on the delicate cords that plunged from the neck of her violin and she transitioned the tone of the night from a somber, yet not unpleasant, dirge to a deeply discordant strain. In reaction, the pair, too dignified to deign her with anything more, partook of incredulous sidelong glances in her direction, remained silent, and became, a few paces later, a trio, augmented by what was obviously a priest given his garb and various accouterments. Furthest from Lisette’s desires were the unsolicited afflictions of a holy man’s remonstrations, thus, in the prelude of her secondary performance her spittle struck the ground in her own repulsed and repulsive acknowledgment of the priest’s self-insertion. Then she turned her back on the trio and wandered from them toward the front of the train—that is, its remnants. This was, more specifically, done in defiance of Weiland’s entreatment and wild assumptions about what constituted her safety, but by now she was certain his attentions were otherwise enjoined.

As an ominous figment, she drifted alongside the train, her mantle nigh-indistinguishable from the night mist that crept weirdly forth in convoluted postures from the roots of the trees. Behind her, the screams of the flame-damned and urgent discussions of those fortunate enough to thus-far go unscathed became muted and indistinct. Around her, the crowd of quasi-nobles, insufficiently moved to help their fellow man, let her pass unhindered, their only trace of acknowledgment rendered as whispered rebukes of Lisette’s performance—all politely contained behind gloved fingers. They did not concern her, as they posed no impediment to her advance. However, as she walked, it appeared she engaged in a steadily belligerent congress with things unseen. Truncated utterances and scornful chortles clarified her position—she would not halt, in spite of the fear these beings expressed at venturing onward; rather, enslaved as they were to her music, she compelled their continued presence.

Inevitably guided, in her mind, by arcane fate, she arrived at the locus delicti. Shards of metal and wood were strewn round about, but in insufficient abundance to explain the locomotive’s absence. There she saw clearly what was not there to be seen—between the tracks the darkness was acute, not merely in terms of visual presence but also the spiritual. Not content to be a mere observer, she stepped between the tracks and into absolute obfuscation. There, unable to see her own hand before her face and veritably invisible to lookers-on, all she heard was her music and all she felt was the caress of darkness. From without, it seemed as though her malignant music emanated from a pool of sinister oblivion. Augmented, even, the melody grew louder than the physical laws that constrained such an instrument as hers would ordinarily allow.
Moved to character tab.
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