Arilias Arilias

Upon a Sea of Stars

Upon a Sea of Stars

Prelude
CITY OF CHICAGO, EARTH, UNITED EARTH ALLIANCE
22:00, DECEMBER 14TH, 2224, TERRAN STANDARD TIME

Nothing lasts forever.

That was something that Alan Bradley, President of the United Earth Alliance, knew all too well. Stability was an illusion – the universe was in constant shift, constant change, constant chaos.

In the beginning of the third millennium, the leaders of the West thought that their position as masters of the world was unassailable. Then the Third World War had erupted. Millions had died in a conflict that had reduced the Earth nearly to rubble.

Only Arthur Devereaux had been able to drag a new world out of the chaos. The signing of the United Earth Treaty, and the discovery of cold fusion, had brought an end to a war that had raged for almost a century, and started to rebuild a world left in ruins. Everyone had thought that the hard times were over, that the Alliance would last forever.

Then the Arcean probe had crash-landed in the Sahara. Alliance workers had recovered it, learned its secrets, reverse-engineered the hyperspace communications relay, and said to the galaxy, "We are here."

That change had brought more changes – a steady cascade of new and frightening developments. Contact with the Arceans, and, through them, the Altarians, the Drengin, the Yor, and the Torians. The founding of the United Planets. The plans for the great Terran Stargate.

And the Lunar Revolution.

Bradley remembered the horrors of the Revolution. Human against human, brother against brother, the worst and bloodiest war in the history of humanity. The wreckage from the battle still orbited the planet, to heavy for Terran junkers to clear away. His own brother had died aboard the UES Destiny when it had self-destructed to stop a Lunar fleet from destroying a convoy of refugees.

It was only in the past few years that the smoke had cleared. Humanity had once more nearly destroyed itself – and once more come out alive. The world was slowly being put back together. The loss of infrastructure was tremendous, the work would take years – but it could be done.

And now Bradley held in his hands the final change. The discovery that would change humanity’s fate. No more would the United Earth Alliance exist on the fringes of the universe, barely holding itself together. The time had come for a new revolution. Earth’s time had come.

It was time. He stepped forward into the Chamber.

* * *

In the darkest reaches of the universe, something stirred.

Something had changed, it realized. Something phenomenal. Something it had been waiting for, for over a million years.

It reached out. This was its chance.

It reached out, and touched the universe.

* * *

CHICAGO, EARTH, UNITED EARTH ALLIANCE
22:02, DECEMBER 14TH, 2224 TERRAN STANDARD TIME

"Master!"

Techer, First Class Henry Williams spun his hoverchair around.

"What is it, apprentice?"

"There’s something with the hypernet," Apprentice Techer Hans Geitrich replied, "I’m not sure, but there’s something a little… off, about the packet logs."

"Can you trace it?"

"Sorry, master. It’s so small I’m amazed I was able to even pick it up. It’s… it’s probably nothing. ‘Nets naturally fluctuate, right?"

"Bullshit," Williams said, "I’ve taught you better than that. You know damn well whether it’s a random fluctuation or something unusual."

"Sorry, master, I just…"

"Lying to one’s self is the gravest crime a techer can commit, Hans. Now, let me use your terminal. Let’s see what the problem is."

* * *

The Senate Chamber took up the majority of the Hall of Legislature. A hundred seats lined each wall, and in each one sat a member of the Federalist Party.

It was a shame, Bradley thought, that the Senate had become nothing more than a tool of the Presidency. But it was necessary. Democracy was fine, but until the world was put back together, it would only get in the way.

He looked out over the Senators, and, in the galleries, the others who had gathered to watch him speak. The time was now.

"People of the Alliance," he began, "a new age is upon us. Tomorrow, the sun rises on the first day of humanity’s ascension to the stars!"

* * *

"Alright," Williams said, "you’re right, there’s something wrong here. I’m not sure what."

"Do you have any ideas?"

"I’m going on a little bug-hunt. You stay here."

Geitrich nodded, and sank back into his hoverchair as Williams’ eyes assumed the characteristic glaze of the Trance.

* * *

"The gift our allies in the Arcean Empire have given us is beyond even what they intended. One of our own, the brilliant Doctor Rebecca Marshall, has combined the Hyperspace technology of the stargate they showed us, with our own cold fusion technology. People of the Alliance, I give you…"

Bradley keyed button on the lectern, and a holographic image sprung to life above it, a beautiful array of wireforms and numbers that would reduce any techer to tears.

"…Hyperdrive!"

The ovation was enormous. Bradley reveled in the applause, watching as each Senator realized the implications of the word. The ultimate advantage for humanity – the ability to travel between any two stars, faster even than a stargate could bring them.

The future.

Doctor Marshall made her way towards the podium, ready to accept her reward. She stepped up next to Bradley.

And then everything went black.

* * *

Williams’ eyes were glazed over. His fingers danced on the keys like leaves on the wind. He saw not through his eyes, but through his fingers, through the screen, through the terminal. He saw the data, not as a graph on the screen but a real, tangible thing. He was in the Trance.

Nothing escaped his notice. Everything was taken in, processed, and dealt with in an instant. It was the mark of a techer, the ability to transcend the interface and deal directly with the data. The screen and the keyboard were nothing more than nerves.

He stood in a sea of data – the mighty Hypernet, linking every relay on every planet in the known galaxy, traveling on its own through hyperspace. All around him drifted other users, the packets of information drifting in tangible form.

He concentrated. He was here to hunt.

The data twitched. The sea rippled. Something had changed something else.

He moved towards it. Whatever this thing was, he had to confront it. He could see what was happening, knew that it had taken something.

He shot towards the disruption like a bullet through the air, propelling himself forward. It was in his reach. He could catch it.

Something changed. An explosion. An explosion of information. Everywhere, the same message, the same piece of data.

Williams swam through it. He had to reach the end. He had to stop this thing.

Then he saw it, and he knew he would not survive.

* * *

"Goddamit!" Bradley shouted, "What the hell is going on?"

"Mister President! Mister President!"

Bradley looked up. It was a marine, one of the honor guard who’d be assigned to the ceremony, gripping a light source.

"What is it, private?"

"Sir, it’s Master Williams. He’s gone into catatonic shock."

"Sir!"

Another marine rushed in behind the first.

"Sir! We’re receiving reports of power failures throughout the city. We’re receiving nothing over the hypernet. The techers say the damned thing is down."

"Down?" Bradley shouted, "The entire hypernet is down?"

"Yes, sir. There’ve been reports of machinery malfunctions throughout the city, as well. And there’s… something else."

Bradley rolled his eyes.

"Go on, private."

"Sir, it’s hard to tell without appropriate communications, but we think that just before the ‘net crashed, the hyperdrive specifications were sent out."

"To who?"

"To everyone, sir."
38,486 views 52 replies
Reply #26 Top
make sure to research the economy techs, they aren't too expensive and they can really save your economy.

P.S. Keep up the great work on the gameplay example.  
Reply #27 Top
Yep couldn't agree more....If at all possible i get to banking centers as soon as i can the extra cash really helps in the colony rush.

Iv'e said it before, this is a great read...keep it up!
Reply #28 Top
I am enjoying this story too...

as far as your economy... here's my 2 cents....

you mention your approval ratings in the low 60's right now. why???
for me i have found this is too high early in the game.

at the start of the game, i keep my approval in the mid 40's and tax as much as possible. you don't have elections, there is no enemy threat or influence, take advantage of that facts.

as you research the government techs, you do have to switch back to at least where you are, so you can win elections and take care of those bonuses too. but for now, squeeze every last credit out of your people.

my early distribution for the economy is also something like 25/25/50 or 20/20/60
(military/social/research)

Glad to see Destiny back in once piece. Get them to some non-wormhole anomolies and maybe pick up some quick cash, that never hurts either!    
Reply #29 Top
Mainly it's because in order to get my ecomomy to a point where I'm actually making money, I have to reduce my approval rating to somewhere around 24 percent. That's a guaranteed rebellion right there.

Additionally, while I am losing money, it isn't a crisis yet - I still have over two thousand bc. That's more than enough time to research the required economy techs, which I'm hoping will improve things overall.
Reply #30 Top
Arilias,
I get what your saying and you are correct, 24% moral is not good.
All I am suggesting is raising your taxes to say 60-65% keeping your moral around 45%, or in the yellow (I will not play w/ moral in the red). This will increase your income, but may not stop deficit spending. It doesn't need to at this point in the game. In fact, if you are comfortable with a 35bc per turn loss, then increase the spending slider too. The more money you are pumping into your economy the faster things are built and research is completed. These are the goals and again w/ no elections right now use the lower moral/more money. There is a time and a place for happy citizens. Right now isn't it.   
Most of my games have been against normal AI, so you should be able to do this and not hurt yourself. And my reason to mention it is that I think it will help your cause.
Anyway, hope that helps. Now, I will wait for more story!      
Happy gaming and thanks again for the story.   
Reply #31 Top
I am loving this story. It's clear you put a great deal of thought and care into every chapter and I look forward to reading more.
Reply #32 Top
Arilias I would endorse people's earlier comments about popularity-it really isnt important at this stage-what works for me playing on difficult with intelligent aliens is a real push for the economic advances whilst keeping a weather eye out for basic military research-when you have the Galactic Stock exchanges and lots of trade routes then hammer the military (providing you dont have the rapacious Drengin near you that is)

A strong economy drives a strong military-it cant be the other way round

Just my 2 pennies worth fella

(loving the story)
Reply #33 Top
I'm not dead yet!




Chapter 5

UES DESTINY, DEEP SPACE
9:32, SEPTEMBER 3RD, 2225 TERRAN STANDARD TIME

Yu leaned over Tanaka’s shoulder and looked at the frequency graph again.

“You’re sure it’s alien?” he asked.

“Absolutely,” Tanaka replied, “specifically, it appears to be the hypernet frequency associated with the Torian Confederation.”

“Ah, the Torians,” Bradley interjected, “always liked those guys.”

There was a brief, but active pause. All eyes were suddenly on the helm officer. Bradley looked around, confused.

“What?” he asked, “They were nice guys! It was a novelty to talk to an alien who didn’t act like he wanted to eat me.”

“Why were you talking to the aliens at all?” Truman asked.

Bradley opened his mouth to answer, but was almost immediately interrupted.

“New orders!”

Eyes shifted to Cain as he entered the bridge.

“Yes!” Bradley shouted, “Yes! New orders! Pay attention to them!”

Cain glared at the lieutenant, then turned to Yu.

“Sir, we’re to investigate an anomaly about six parsecs to the galactic south.”

“That’s well inside the sphere we’ve identified as Torian space,” Yu pointed out.

“The Torians are out here?” Cain asked.

“Oh, let’s not all start this again,” Bradley interrupted, “I’ll set the course, Truman will navigate, and you three can go back to doing… er… whatever it is you do.”

Yu rolled his eyes and shook a hand in Bradley direction.

“Get to it.”

* * *

CHICAGO, EARTH, UNITED EARTH ALLIANCE
15:20, SEPTEMBER 15TH, 2225 TERRAN STANDARD TIME

“Mister President!”

Bradley shoved the report on the colonization of Evenstar II aside as Isaac Simons entered his office, another man trailing just behind him.

“Isaac,” the President said, “good to see you.”

“It’s good to see you as well, Mister President. I… have something I need to talk to you about.”

“If it’s about the money problem, we already have a plan.”

“We have a better one,” Simons’ companion said.

“I’m sorry?”

Simons sighed.

“My mistake, sir,” the Director said, “This is Giovanni Scipio, one of my staff members. He has a plan he thinks will work better than our current one.”

“Oh, really?” Bradley asked, “Let’s hear it.”

Scipio placed a report pad on the desk.

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Proposal for New Domestic Policies, September 15th, 2225, United Earth Alliance Directorate of Finance

Bradley examined the proposal, then looked back up at the two Finance agents.

“You want me to raise taxes to forty-nine percent.”

“Yes, sir.” Simons said.

Forty-nine percent.”

“According to our estimates,” Scipio explained, “it’s the highest we can go without serious risk of a rebellion.”

“Forty-nine percent.”

“I think he’s in shock.”

Bradley shook his head.

“This nation does not have a command economy,” he said, “What was it Devereaux said? People don’t care about their political power, as long as they can keep their money?”

“Actually,” Simons corrected, “It was, ‘People don’t care about the government, as long as the government gives them the basics and leaves them alone.’ And he also said that sometimes doing unpopular things was necessary to achieve popular results. Sir, we need this money. With the increase in spending, we should be able to speed up our research into interplanetary economics as well.”

Bradley shook his head.

“I still don’t like it.”

“Sir, we really don’t have any other choice. Our economy can barely support our infrastructure as it is. We need this.”

There was a long silence. Finally, Bradley nodded.

“Go ahead.”

* * *

MINGHAO, EVENSTAR II, UNITED EARTH ALLIANCE
8:32, OCTOBER 8TH, 2225 TERRAN STANDARD TIME

Manning the Minghao Spaceport Communications Tower had to be, Huang Li thought, the most boring job in the universe. The newly-colonized planet had no particularly attractive features except for the exotic mineral deposits in the Yan-hai region, and this combined with the planet’s position as the youngest of the Colonies meant that virtually no-one felt it necessary to go anywhere near the place.

“…et…est tu…”

Li shot up from his dazed state. He could’ve sworn he’d heard something.

“Smetz Keala…”

Okay, he’d definitely heard that.

He adjusted the frequency slightly. There!

“Smetz Keala: et kula drinena est tu estharwa!”

“Er… Excuse me, do you speak English?”

“Smetz Keala: et kula…”

“Nǐ huì shuō Zhōngwén ma?”

Still no coherent response.

Parlez-vous Français? ¿Hablas Español? Parlate Italiano? Sprechen sie Deutsch?”

“Smetz Keala…”

“Oh, for god’s sake,” Li muttered. He turned on the viewscreen. Maybe if he used sign lang….

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First viewscreen capture of a Thalan, United Earth Alliance Archives

“Woah…”

* * *

CHICAGO, EARTH, UNITED EARTH ALLIANCE
10:52, OCTOBER 8TH, 2225 TERRAN STANDARD TIME

News traveled fast with the hypernet available. By the time President Bradley had called the Cabinet to session, the news had already gone past rumor and become common knowledge.

The aliens were here.

“So,” Bradley said, “what do we know about these guys?”

“Well, I’m not sure, sir,” Marshall said, “these creatures don’t look like any of the alien civilizations we knew of prior to the Crash.”

“What do they look like?”

“Bugs, sir. Big freaking bugs.”

“Well, what are we waiting for?” Kuperman said, “Let’s blast the damn things.”

“Why does everything have to have a military solution with you?” Simons asked, “I think the solution is obvious.”

“Yes,” Kuperman replied, “the solution is to vaporize them before their babies eat our faces and burst out of our chests.”

“I highly doubt that that’s their intention,” Bradley said, “Isaac, any ideas?”

“As I said,” Simons answered, “the solution is obvious. We’re need money. They, presumably, have things that they want. Obviously the best way to keep them from eating us is to sell them those things.”

“You’re proposing trade?” Bradley asked.

“Yes. Not only will it improve relations between us, but it will go a long way towards filling the treasury.”

“But we don’t speak their language,” Ford pointed out.

“Oh, that,” Marshall said, “that’s going to be problematic. Even if they were in the translation database – which they aren’t – the software was wiped out in the Crash.”

“Do you have a solution?”

“Yes, Mister President, I believe I do.”

* * *

CHICAGO, EARTH, UNITED EARTH ALLIANCE
16:23, NOVEMBER 8th, 2225 TERRAN STANDARD TIME

Bradley was reading the report on the colonization of the planet Muad’Dib when Marshall entered. Whoever had named the third planet of the Leto System certainly had an appreciation for the classics.

“Mister President?”

“Ah, Rebecca. You have something to show me?”

“Yes, sir. These are the results of our research into xeno economics. We expect the results to be highly useful. However, this past week we derailed the economic research briefly to look into something of great value to the Alliance.”

“Oh, and what would that be?”

“Have you ever heard of the Reinhart Hypothesis?”

“I’m afraid, not, no.”

“Well, in a nutshell, it states that all thought is identical. There is no difference in the actual patterns of electrons being used between someone who speaks English and someone who speaks Mandarin.”

“Wait… you’re saying…”

“Exactly sir. We’ve created a universal translator.”

* * *

CHICAGO, EARTH, UNITED EARTH ALLIANCE
16:38, NOVEMBER 8TH, 2225 TERRAN STANDARD TIME

The offices of the Directorate of Foreign Relations had been quiet in the months since the Crash. Apart from a brief few days of activity after the discovery for the Precursor artifact, there had been almost nothing for the civil servants who worked their to do.

As such, they were caught entirely by surprise when the entire complex rung with a joyous shout:

“I finally have a job!”
Reply #34 Top
Kepp em coming dude!
Reply #35 Top
I love this stuff!

I especially like the part about the Reinhart Hypothesis!
Good Work!
Reply #37 Top
superb as always Arilias-shame there arent more posts from you though lol
Reply #38 Top
Just wanted to say I am riveted! Can't wait for the next installment.

Great Job!
Reply #39 Top
Hello, i understand there are far more important things in life than this game but is there anymore to this story at all?
Reply #40 Top
a good story is a good thing

i awaite the next update
Reply #41 Top
I'm NOT dead. I've just been very busy for the past few weeks, and I'm afraid even this isn't really my finest work. However, I am back to working on this, and I hope that my writing quality returns to its usual standards.




Chapter 6

PLANET ALIA, LETO SYSTEM, UNITED EARTH ALLIANCE
13:43, DECEMBER 8TH, 2225, TERRAN STANDARD TIME

“So I’m focusing on Jake, and I’ve got him on the ropes, but I see that I’ve got someone attacking me. So I look back, and Rick’s got two cities set up on my island!”

“You’re joking.”

“No, seriously…”

Isabella Alvarez shook her head and concentrated on flying the shuttle. She must have annoyed the captain somehow, because he’d stuck her with these two idiots, chattering in the back about some game.

“Hey! Would you two quiet down?”

They ignored her. She rolled her eyes and tried to concentrate on flying the shuttle.

“…so I move in to finish him off and then… what the hell is that?”

There was no mistaking it. Spreading out below them were the orderly, checkered fields of farmland.

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The indigenous population of Alia

* * *

CHICAGO, EARTH, UNITED EARTH ALLIANCE
8:02, 2225, TERRAN STANDARD TIME

Sergeant-Major Suzanne Dupree had come to the conclusion that eight o’clock in the morning was far too early for anyone to have to deal with Emily Kazol.

Guarding the Presidential Palace was usually an easy job. Wake up at seven – a welcome respite from the Corps’ five o’clock reveille – stand outside the President’s office for an hour, salute when he came in, then leave again at eleven. The Palace was an easy post, for new recruits and hardened veterans. Dupree was the latter, but even she had to admit that Director Kazol had a certain… presence.

“Listen, ma’am,” Dupree said, “the President gave me very specific orders not to let anyone disturb him.”

Kazol glared at her.

“I understand, but this is important, sergeant.”

Dupree gulped. She’d fought in the Lunar Revolution. She’d seen things that would’ve made a lesser woman keel over in despair. But she simply was not prepared for the sheer, raw psychological power of the Stare.

“Yes, ma’am,” she said quickly, “of course, ma’am.”

Dupree’s left hand dropped to the keypad behind her. She hastily keyed in the entrance code.

The Stare was turned away from her. Dupree sighed.

“Sergeant! What the hell do you think you’re… oh crap.”

The President stopped just short of the door as he saw who was waiting on the other side.

“Emily… what a… pleasant surprise…”

“Likewise, Mister President.”

Bradley pulled at his collar.

“Right. Yes. Come right in. Sergeant, if you please.”

Dupree closed the door behind her as the President and Director Kazol stepped into the office. She let out a sigh of relief. That woman was scary.

* * *

“Right, Emily,” Bradley said, wishing he had papers he could shuffle, “What brings you here?”

“Leto II,” Kazol said, “the aboriginal issue.”

“Right, yes, that,” Bradley nodded, “actually, I’ve already reached a decision.”

“Without consulting me?”

Bradley detected the telltale hints that Kazol was about to unleash the Stare, but he’d experienced it so many times back in high school, and then at the fledgling Terran Academy, to build up something of a resistance.

“Yes, Em. Without consulting you. But I’m willing to let you review the decision.”

He grabbed a pad from the burgeoning file of electronic reports.

“We’ve decided to move the indigenous population into a central area,” he said, “it’s good PR, and it frees up some of the land for industrialization.”

“Are you sure we really need the land more than they do?”

“Em, our budget is in the cropper right now. If we’re going to turn Earth into a force to be reckoned with in this galaxy, we’re going to need to money. And lots of it.”

“In other words,” Kazol said, “you want us to repeat the exact same mistake our civilization made the last time it encountered an aboriginal population. I’d hoped humanity would have matured somewhat in the past five-hundred years.”

“No, the last time we slaughtered them.”

Kazol shook her head.

“Well then, Mister President, if you reconsider your decision, tell me. Now, if you will excuse me, I have to go open diplomatic relations with the Thalans.”

She rose from the desk and briskly strode out the door.

Bradley let out a long sigh of relief.

* * *

CHICAGO, EARTH, UNITED EARTH ALLIANCE
19:54, FEBRUARY 31ST, 2225 TERRAN STANDARD TIME

The Directorate of Foreign Relations’ Hypernet Center was a marvel of modern engineering. An enormous holo tank, twenty-five meters in diameter, capable of rendering photorealistic images in three dimensions. Not only was it enormous, but it was also beautiful – the hand of the Guild could be seen in every crenelated projector column, every carved ledge along the ceiling. Were it not for the gunmetal gray shade of the walls, the Center would have seemed right at home amidst the ancient temples of Europe.

President Bradley, Director Kazol, General Kuperman, and Doctor Marshall stood at the center of the chamber, facing the holographic image in front of them. It was a giant insect, roughly six feet tall, with five legs on either side of its body. Its forelegs rose up above its head, ending in a pair of mantis-like scythes, and just below its head a pair of mandibles ended in three-pointed claws.

“Any advice, doctor?” Bradley whispered.

“Don’t try to kill it,” Marshall replied, “no matter how incredibly disgusting it is.”

“Thanks. That really helps.”

Bradley stepped forward.

“For the United Earth Alliance,” he said, “President Alan Bradley.”

The creature hissed, a series of clicks and recognizable, but incomprehensible, sounds emerging from the area around what Bradley assumed to be its mouth. As it spoke, he heard a pleasant human voice in his head, repeating the statements in English. Good. The universal translators did work.

“For the Thalan Empire, Queen Hithesius.”

With the formal introductions made, the administrative computer took control.

“The first meeting of the United Planets,” the computer announced, “is now in session.”

Another holographic image appeared between Bradley and the Queen. At first glance, it appeared to be a fairly ordinary star system – a red sun, with two planets in orbit, their surfaces dominated by heavy volcanic activity.

“This is the Ares System, near the Terran planet of Gabriel. Recently, Thalan orbital surveys detected a major climate change on Ares II. After years of volcanic activity and atmospheric change, the planet has blossomed into quite a suitable living environment.”

The image zoomed in on the planet’s surface, slowly rotating.

“In the interests of fairness, we have come together to collectively decide who should oversee the colonization of this ripe new planet.”

One of Hithesius’s scythes tore at the image.

“This world was discovered by the Thalan Empire,” she stated, “and I will not allow it to fall into the hands of the Warbringers.”

“Warbringers, Your Majesty?” Bradley asked.

“This “hyperdrive” was the creation of your people, President,” the Thalan spat, “the chaos is at your feet. The Thalan Empire claims this world, with all twenty-eight thousand votes allotted to us.”

“We can’t allow this world to fall into the hands of the bugs, sir,” Kuperman whispered, “it has a vital strategic location.”

“Relax, general. I have everything under control.”

Bradley turned to face the Queen.

“The United Earth Alliance claims the planet in the name of Earth, with all thirty-six thousand votes.”

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First meeting of the United Planets, January 1st, 2226

“The voting is complete,” the administrative computer announced, “the planet Ares II, now owes its loyalty to Earth and the Alliance.”

* * *

CHICAGO, EARTH, UNITED EARTH ALLIANCE
24:57, DECEMBER 31ST, 2225 TERRAN STANDARD TIME

The Devereaux Promenade was almost empty. Most of the citizens of the capital were at the New Years celebrations. Fireworks exploded in the skies, in honor of the new year and of the triumphs of the Alliance.

Only two figures walked the stonework of the walkway. Alan Bradley, President of the Alliance, and Emily Kazol, Director of Foreign Relations.

“It went well,” Bradley said.

“Yes,” Kazol agreed, “the computer assigns votes based on a large combination of factors, but so far, it seems like Earth may well be in the running to become the most powerful nation in the galaxy.”

“We don’t even know where the Thalan Empire is,” Bradley pointed out.

“Oh, there’s a long way to go, of course,” Kazol replied, “but we’ve made it this far. We may not be out of the woods, but at least we have a few resources on our side. And Rebecca says some of her xenopsychologists have ideas on how to better facilitate trade negotiations. Hold up, this is where they’re launching the big one.”

The two stopped and looked over the edge of the railing. Below, they could hear someone counting down.

“Five… four… three… two… one…”

Five rockets shot out from the streets below, twisting around each other in a tight knot as they rose into the sky. Bradley and Kazol craned their heads upward, following the rocket trails until the fireworks exploded into a shimmering green, white and blue sphere, beneath two glittering silver words:

For Earth.

* * *

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The United Earth Alliance, as of January 1st, 2226
Reply #42 Top
Tahnk you Arilias: I tried to use another utility to get back to you but it did't work so here I am. I like the game so far though. Please forgive me for I'm from the old school of "Pong" What about autopilot, how do you get the ships that are too far from home on autopilot so that you can use them. and how about resourses, I get alot of thinge in resourses but do not know how to use them. can you help? I was going to buy GalCiv2 but if I can't use the first them it would be a wast of money to buy the secound ed.
cye1can@yahoo.com

Reply #44 Top
great story i would love to see this aar completed and read your other storys (if there are any)
Reply #45 Top
I have good news, and I have bad news. The bad news is that I'm discontinuing the AAR. The good news is that it will be reborn once I get Dark Avatar.

There are a few reasons for this. I never felt comfortable starting the AAR when I knew Dark Avatar and hundreds of story-improving features were coming just around the corner. I was very worried about where the current game was going. I lost my notes for the past game year. I'm getting a new computer for Christmas, and will have to abandon my parent's, the list goes on.

Thank you all for reading, and sorry about the delay.
Reply #46 Top
Hope to see all the characters return next season. Happy Holidays!
Reply #47 Top
what a shame    but we are looking forward to the return of the game soon. you will have to abandon your parents huh? just how old are you? amazing writing skills.....  
Reply #48 Top
Yeah i defiantly agree, I enjoyed this little piece of work you made. I look forward to a continuation of this or another story.
Reply #50 Top
Hithesus is a girl?!?


Way, waaay back, there was a debate about how there seemed to be no female characters in GC2. The debate was finally settled when someone from Stardock said, "Fine, the Thalan ambassador is female."

It's not much to go on, but a lot of elements of the AAR are based on minor things like that. Ford, Kuperman, Kazol, and Marshall, for example, are all named after governors from the original Galactic Civilizations.