It happened suddenly. One moment I was lying in bed about to go to sleep, the next I was seated...
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D: At best, they're dangerously unstable. At worst, they're actively malevolent.So what is it about RS-i worlds which make them so despised? Just the fact that the world might be delicate and 'collapse' with all too frequent possibility causing an apocalypse or just straight up killing off the natives?
That is an interesting enough answer to make me want more.D: At best, they're dangerously unstable. At worst, they're actively malevolent.
Well, this combined with how heavily you've gone on the 'don't kill those resisting unless it's what is absolutely needed' (which sadly would have included the majority of the initial military resistance on first strike though that likely rapidly devolved to surrenders and going into hiding to try and pull off a resistance in time) means folks are likely to be very annoyed with Vought and how much collateral damage their efforts are going to cause. Particularly as a bunch of the sueprkids are going to self-destruct explosively themselves without aid of the Garbler, let alone all the other issues which The Boys series shows come with having a superpowered populace and now Vought's not actually trying to minimise the collateral or accidental damage because it's 'just the cost of resistance'.Houston, Texas was just gone after one tyke literally went nuclear as a result of getting Garbled. So yeah, we were really reluctant to do that again. On the other hand, we couldn't just try and talk the kids down since they'd been successfully indoctrinated to attack our assets (Pearlbots included) on sight.
C: We've got plans, sorry.could we suggest world ?,ther is a few one i rarely see in fic that would need help and could,(or not sometime to be honnest) be fun
It happened suddenly. One moment I was lying in bed about to go to sleep, the next I was seated in an auditorium watching an orange-haired catgirl walk up to a podium. To my left and right were hundreds of people in the stadium seating, maybe over a thousand.
Then, the catgirl on the podium spoke.
"For the record, you are all technically dreaming. I am the Architect, an extra-dimensional being looking for volunteers to help unfuck several worlds. Each of you has a red badge pinned to your shirt; if at any point during this presentation you decide you want out, you can simply remove it and return to your regular sleep cycle."
I couldn't help but look down. As it turns out, there was in fact a red badge pinned to my pink shirt. I fidgeted with it a bit, but didn't take it off. I wanted to know where this would go.
"Putting it bluntly, the omniverse as a whole is a lot grimmer than I would like. There are several worlds where entire populations are massacred on a regular basis, and plenty of others that are horrible in other ways. As the omniverse is infinite in scope and my reach is finite, I cannot save everyone. But that doesn't mean I'm not going to try anyway."
...That sounded an awful lot like something I remembered hearing back in school. Don't remember from who though.
"Cutting to the point, if you accept recruitment, your mind will be harmlessly copied. The additional yous will be grouped up into teams of five, loaded into self-replicating machines, and deployed to various worlds in dire need of assistance."
I couldn't help but look around. About one in five seats that had been filled at the start were now empty.
"Now, you may be wondering why I've chosen your world in particular to recruit from. By sheer coincidence, much of your world's fiction almost perfectly matches the inhabited worlds in one of the more troubled multiverse clusters I have access to."
I blinked. I actually hadn't been wondering about that. In retrospect it was an entirely valid question, and though the Architect's answer was definitely weird, it made a fair bit of sense.
"Right, I think it's time to end the monolog. Everyone interested in further details, please stand."
About half the people seated did so, with me joining them after a second. A bit later, I found myself in a smaller conference room with ten other people, counting the Architect.
"Right. You wanted further details, I'm really bad at explaining things but can answer questions. So ask away."
One of the other women at the table asked "What are you, really?" gently fingering her cross pendant.
The architect turned to her and answered,
"Janessa, that's a fair question. Although I don't like thinking of myself that way, I am a creator deity by most sensible definitions. I've made enough universes and civilizations to have lost count entirely, though your homeworld is naturally occurring. I am not the god you worship, nor connected to him in any way aside from hating his guts."
"Why?"
"Have you ever read the tale of Job? According to your own book, Yahweh is a remorseless monster. I have encountered and killed versions of him before, and I have absolutely no remorse about doing so."
"I want out."
Just like that, Janessa vanished. The Architect sighed.
"Thought I'd properly set up the selection machine to filter out the strongly religious; going to need to figure out the source of that glitch later. That aside, does anyone else have questions?"
A young man with Eastern European features and a short haircut raised his hand. "I have several questions."
"Ask away, Fedir."
"Are the missions you send us on going to be dangerous?"
"Yes. I fully expect that you will encounter and combat multiple world-ending threats during the course of your travels across the multiverse. That said, the chassis I'm planning on fitting you with is not only armed, but can produce a self-replicating military-industrial complex that expands at a very fast exponential rate. There will be a training period before deployment to make sure you know how to use it properly."
Fedir thought for a moment, but seemed to have forgotten the other questions he was going to ask. So in the meantime, I put my hand up. A second later, the catgirl turned to me.
"Susan, you have questions?"
I nodded,
"Will we be able to contact our families during the mission?"
That actually prompted a frown,
"I wish that were an easier option. Unfortunately, you are native to a Template Reality. I can't directly interfere with those, with any attempt just branching off a low-amplitude copy of the world. I'd rather not multiply my workload any more than strictly necessary, so the best I can do is regular dream chats with your local versions and loved ones."
I blinked, "Oh."
That... That wasn't what I'd hoped for. Better than nothing, but still. In the meantime, Fedir seemed to have remembered his other questions,
"You already answered how much help you can provide our homeworld; very little. But I would like to know if there are any rules of engagement you expect us to follow."
The Architect nodded,
"Most of it's basic stuff; don't target civilians, don't kill people who surrender without a damn good reason, try to leave people better off than you found them. But there is one thing of note: Unless it's absolutely necessary, don't destroy the local's ability to sustain a civilization without external support. This doesn't mean you need to stay hidden and can't interfere with their culture at all, but I'd ideally prefer not to get stuck propping up an untenable civilization in perpetuity."
The question and answer session went on for a bit longer, before the Architect broke it up.
"Right, I'm going to get you all grouped up into teams now, before sending you to training. This is your last chance to back out, because after this point I will have to branch you to continue."
No-one in the room backed out. In fact, Fedir very emphatically said "I wish to continue."
There was a momentary flicker, before I found myself in a waiting room with two other women, Fedir, and a middle-aged black man I didn't recognize.
The Architect's voice rang out over the speaker in the room. "Right, we're getting training set up now. It'll take a few minutes, so you might as well introduce yourselves."
Fedir went first. "Right, I am Fedir Boyko, Master Sergeant of the Ukrainian Ground Forces. I was sleeping in hospital when contacted, after having been severely wounded by artillery. Before the war, I was a pianist."
One of the other women went next, her red hair combined with a lightly tan skin tone to produce a striking effect.
"I'm Anise Richards-Smith. I worked as a logistics planner for the US postal service for ten years before this. In my spare time, I used to paint. I'd gotten pretty good at it too." She then gestured to me. Oh.
"Right, I'm Susan Chai. I... honestly I'm a massive sci-fi and anime nerd without much in the way of practical skills. Heck, before this I was working as a mechanic. I'm not sure why the Architect picked me."
Fedir thought for a moment.
"I can think of a few reasons. The Architect did mention that we would be sent to universes near-perfectly mirroring fiction, meaning your detailed knowledge of such will likely prove a crucial source of intelligence. Also, being a mechanic is very much a valuable practical skill."
I turned to the black man. "So, who are you?"
"I am Khaled. I was a civil lawyer in Spain for decades, though I retired two years ago. In later years, I started a book club. I do believe there is one more member of our group who needs to introduce herself."
The blonde in our midst seemed slightly nervous,
"So, I'm Janet, no surname. I'd just been hired as an engineer at Raytheon the day before the Architect contacted me. I... I pirated a shit-ton of old video games."
Shortly afterwards, the door opened. A woman with pointed elven ears greeted us.
"Right, I'm Ruby, and I'll be showing you five how to work the equipment we're giving you. Follow me, please."
Multiverse Improvement Foundation - Commander Briefing Document #001
Technology Classifications and Reality Solidity Scale
Due to the nature of the multiverse, not all technology works in all worlds. The Reality Solidity Scale measures the sturdiness of the local physical laws, in order to establish what technologies will work where. This classification scale is only concerned with realities that can support conscious life. Cleaning up those that cannot is not a task for Commander recruits.
Technology Classifications
VIOLET (Mundane): VIOLET technology is guaranteed to work in RS-2 or higher worlds, while usually functioning in RS-1 or RS-0 worlds. This is achieved by being extremely minimalist in terms of the phenomena exploited to function. As such, VIOLET technology is usually used as a framework to build another category of technology on top of.
BLUE (Physical): BLUE technology relies on consistent physics similar to a very common "Base Ruleset" to function. This means that it is a reliable and high-performance option in high RS worlds, but has significant trouble at RS-2 or lower. It cannot be relied on to function consistently in RS-1 worlds, and doesn't work at all in RS-0 worlds.
GREEN (Specialized): GREEN technology requires certain deviations from the "Base Ruleset" in order to function, but these deviations are rather broad and tend to pop up in RS-4 through RS-2 realities with decent regularity. As such, there's an automated system installed in the Commander Unit which will inform you of which GREEN technologies (if any) will function in the current reality.
YELLOW (Hybridized): YELLOW technology works anywhere (aside from certain examples of RS-6), but at a cost: it incorporates redundant VIOLET, BLUE and RED systems built into the same footprint, so that if one cannot operate the others can take over. This means that under most circumstances YELLOW technology is rather inefficient. However, in RS-3 worlds, all subsystems are able to function to at least some degree, giving most YELLOW technology a noticeable performance boost.
ORANGE (Esoteric): ORANGE technology requires an extremely specific set of physical laws to function, and as such only works in a very small number of worlds, universally ranging between RS-4 and RS-2. Given the limitations on its use, ORANGE technology is primarily useful to the natives of a given reality. Co-opting a local ORANGE technology during a deployment is a viable option, but it shouldn't be part of longer-term planning.
RED (Arcane): RED technology functions by "pseudo-magical" principles. It briefly taps into whatever local magic is present on startup, then alters that energy until it is suitable for operating the device. As this requires some form of local magic to function. RED technology cannot operate above RS-3, and doesn't reach peak performance until RS-2.
BLACK (Demiurgic): BLACK technology works anywhere, but not because of compliance with local laws of reality. Instead it forcibly bludgeons the local reality into compliance with its function. This makes BLACK technology incredibly dangerous. As such, its use is tightly restricted; barring multiverse travel and communications, special authorization is required to deploy any BLACK technology not part of the Commander Unit's critical systems.
NOTE: the MIF is not the only source of BLACK technology! If a BLACK artifact of non-MIF origin is encountered during a mission, it is to be immediately reported to High Command! Examples of BLACK technology include Progenitor artifacts, Class P or Class T Mana, and most devices produced by Firmament entities.
The Commander Unit makes use of primarily YELLOW technology in its design. However, the brain, safety ejector, primary fabricator, communications node, and conservation-breaker core are BLACK technology. To prevent damage to realities you are deployed to, critical damage to the Commander Unit will trigger the safety ejector to send the brain back to the deployment hub, followed by the self-destruct of all remaining BLACK systems.
Reality Solidities
RS-6: Restricted: Some realities are extremely firm in terms of disallowing even normally un-problematic technologies, such as basic warp drives and quantum computing. Extremely limited use of BLACK technology is permitted to circumvent these restrictions, though this should be kept to the absolute bare minimum; the sheer rigidity of these worlds' physical laws renders them incredibly brittle. Aside from that, all VIOLET and most BLUE technology will function without issue.
RS-5: Total Physicality: These realities operate under what can generally be described as "base physics", with no exceptions or special privileges. VIOLET and BLUE technology function normally in these realities, though some BLUE technology may need its settings adjusted. Some RS-5 worlds may support certain GREEN technologies, but it shouldn't be relied on.
RS-4: Modified Base Physics: These realities mostly operate on "base physics", but they have some specific exceptions or quirks that allow for otherwise impossible technologies to function. One of the more common inclusions is a coterminous plane that enables the local Faster Than Light engine, often referred to as hyperspace or subspace. VIOLET and BLUE technology function as expected in these realities, and some GREEN technology can be expected to work. Many RS-4 worlds support some sort of locally-specific ORANGE technology.
RS-3: Flexible Physics: The highest RS level under which something reasonably describable as "magic" can operate, these worlds are still largely rooted in physics. VIOLET, BLUE, RED, and a wide variety of GREEN technology work just fine here, though the performance of RED technology is often significantly below peak. An RS-3 world that doesn't have any ORANGE technology is the exception rather than the norm.
RS-2: Partially Physical: At this point, the presence of magic is starting to considerably distort the laws of physics. As such, BLUE technology may prove unworkable, though VIOLET technology is unaffected. Support of GREEN and ORANGE technology is erratic. RED technology is highly reliable and effective in these environments.
RS-1: Narrative/Conceptual Logic: In these worlds, the familiar laws of physics are entirely subordinate to another set of rules, which can generally be described as magical. RED technology is the most reliable non-YELLOW option in these realms. In the event of Narrative Causality rendering mission completion infeasible, the use of BLACK technology to brute force the matter is likely to be authorized.
RS-0: Dream Logic: The absolute bare minimum of reality before a world tumbles into the void, these realms are incredibly surreal from the perspective of individuals from high-RS worlds. RED technology is only reliable if "jump-started" by BLACK devices, and nothing else can be relied upon. Use of BLACK technology beyond jump-starts is to be strictly minimized, so as to prevent long-term dissolution of the world in question.
RS-i: Illusory: These worlds are a special case; for whatever reason, a world at RS-1 or RS-0 is 'pretending to be' a world at a higher Reality Solidity, for lack of a better term. If an RS-i world is encountered, all restrictions on BLACK technology are released for the deployment duration, and all native inhabitants of the world are to be evacuated as quickly as possible, consequences be damned. The world in question is then to be permanently demolished with a Firmament Dissolution Warhead, under direct supervision of High Command. Under absolutely no circumstances are such weapons issued to Commanders.
NOTE: Isolated pockets of low-RS space inside otherwise high-RS worlds DO NOT COUNT as RS-i. Initiating RS-i protocols in these circumstances is grounds for disciplinary action.
D: ...Did you really have to tell us? For that matter, did you have to quote the entire first chapter?This isn't my cup of tea due to the female protagonist, as I can't relate to them. However, I wish you the best of luck with your fic, and I hope you have a wonderful day or night!