You have to interface it with your nervous system. I think it would be best done in the flesh as it were. Either way, you would likely be in mortal peril
The Space War Thread
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Re: The Space War Thread
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Re: The Space War Thread
This solves a key problem for me in sci fi, which is a preponderance of aliens.TheReal_ND wrote: ↑Mon Oct 28, 2019 11:04 pmYou have to interface it with your nervous system. I think it would be best done in the flesh as it were. Either way, you would likely be in mortal peril
Yes, there are 200 billion galaxies each with 200 billion stars, so there are aliens, mathematically there has to be.
But space-time is so vast, the odds of meeting one are infinitesimally small. It's not just distance, it's time.
So whenever alien creatures are thrown in willy nilly, I just roll my eyes.
However, bio-engineering allows for aliens to be made by man, or for man to become alien like.
So rather than aliens, I prefer engineered monsters.
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Re: The Space War Thread
Well typically everything is limited to just our own Galaxy because the distance is just too vast even with warp travel to contemplate intergalactic travel. It is usually hinted at being possible like in Ian M Banks' The Algebraist or in WH40k where rogue traders are rumored to attempt the voyage or the tyranids are suspected to have done so already to reach out Galaxy.
I think the Galaxy is big enough I don't find it necessary to include other ones.
I think the Galaxy is big enough I don't find it necessary to include other ones.
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Re: The Space War Thread
In WH40k it's suspected that most of the currently existing races were engineered during the time of the war in heavens between the old ones and the necrontir and their katan, which were essentially sentient star parasites that were given metal flesh. At any rate that whole thing caused the warp to become chaotic and gave rise to the old gods or rather, demonic entities that have existed since the beginning of time paradoxically
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Re: The Space War Thread
Well I'm sure they are lots of slugs and shrimps and centipedes and whatnot, but not Klingons.TheReal_ND wrote: ↑Mon Oct 28, 2019 11:15 pmWell typically everything is limited to just our own Galaxy because the distance is just too vast even with warp travel to contemplate intergalactic travel. It is usually hinted at being possible like in Ian M Banks' The Algebraist or in WH40k where rogue traders are rumored to attempt the voyage or the tyranids are suspected to have done so already to reach out Galaxy.
I think the Galaxy is big enough I don't find it necessary to include other ones.
Alien flora and fauna is probably quite common, alien intelligence not so much.
More plausible is that people become alien to one another by transhumanism
So when we meet the aliens, it's actually us
We just don't recognize them anymore, because they've engineered themselves.
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Re: The Space War Thread
I prefer more plausible than that.TheReal_ND wrote: ↑Mon Oct 28, 2019 11:18 pmIn WH40k it's suspected that most of the currently existing races were engineered during the time of the war in heavens between the old ones and the necrontir and their katan, which were essentially sentient star parasites that were given metal flesh. At any rate that whole thing caused the warp to become chaotic and gave rise to the old gods or rather, demonic entities that have existed since the beginning of time paradoxically
I don't need it to be absolutely hard sci-fi, but if you deviate too far from hard sci fi, if you jettison plausibility, it becomes fairy's and unicorns by default.
It's like the Matrix, superman is totally implausible, ah, unless it is all in VR, now it makes sense.
If it doesn't make sense, if there is no plausible basis to it, my eyes glaze over.
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Re: The Space War Thread
WH40k is basically fantasy carried over into space opera in a way. Mind you it started as a table top miniature wargame based off of Warhammer, a high fantasy themed war game. It was supposed to be a one time spin-off and was supposed to be ironic, "look at these fascist religious zealot humans going around hammering everything" but it became unironically cool. The people that started Games Workshop are a bunch of leftist atheists from Britain. The whole thing was supposed to be like a judge dredd spoof, a grim dark future full of ignorant people, backwards theology and war. These creators are still around and post on social media. The WH40k community is really exceptional. They are die hard fans despite games workshop. GW goes out of their way to try and make it more sjw but the fans just keep trucking on and play up all the stuff that was supposed to be ironic. It's ironic to the creators but the fans subverted them. It's up to the fans going forward to subvert the WH40k universe into being the right wing reactionary space opera everyone loves it for.
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Re: The Space War Thread
I like it, but not really my style.TheReal_ND wrote: ↑Mon Oct 28, 2019 11:58 pmIt's ironic to the creators but the fans subverted them. It's up to the fans going forward to subvert the WH40k universe into being the right wing reactionary space opera everyone loves it for.
I can get with the epic conflict of space opera, but I still lean more towards hard sci fi
I like the sci, I like my science fiction to be scientific.
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