SYSNES2: On the Lathe of Suns

Something we were throwing around in chat as a possible balance on EW was to divide EW score across the number of EW attempts made. This could be done at a flat rate (EW score/EW attempts possible), or for more options, the operator could decide on a number of actions (up to their max possible?) which would divide EW score, enabling many weak actions or few strong actions. This seemed to be more tactically interesting, realistic and balanced than just having all actions occur at full-strength.
 
Just thought of this: you could even just add a severe scaling factor to number of EW attacks, something like ^0.5. That way you can choose to have 10 EW attacks at 405 EW by putting all the broadcasters on one ship, 100 EW attacks at 9 EW attack by putting all the broadcasters on multiple fighters, or anything in between.

Pros I see over the dividing EW option:
- It solves the "threshold problem" (wherein 70 EW might give you 90% chance while 55 EW gives you 0% chance) nicelier in my opinion. Edit: "threshold problem" is a horrible misnomer for the fact that 70^2-55^2 is a much bigger number than you'd think should result from a 25 EW difference.
- It makes for not as harsh a nerf on EW.
- It motivates the expensive refinement of Crypto Modules.
- It's bland.

Cons I see over the dividing EW option:
- It's bland.
- It makes for not as harsh a nerf on EW?


While we're on the subject of EW, something else I had a problem with: aren't Raid Datalinks and Hijack too easy to pull of for what they do (steal tech and e, respectively)? Raid Datalinks especially.

Planetary EW attacks in general do seem a bit too easy to get off, compared to the difficulty of army invasions. You can use ships, armies, and buildings to protect against army invasions, but you can only use ships and tech to protect against EW attacks. Would be nice if there was a way to directly add EW resistance to a planet other than via tech (say, bunkers or/and other buildings adding directly to a new EW resistance stat), but I don't feel strongly enough about this entire paragraph to think the mechanics need fixing yet.
 
Idea that was running around #nes: make EW skill depend on the total computational power on the ship. Add in a scaling factor along the lines of ^MAX(MIN(0.95-G101/50+G89/25,1.05),0.6). This makes practical sense, since you'd expect to need computational power for the harder EW actions, and does something to EW as well (what exactly it does I'm not sure. get close to "fixing" it? over-nerf it?). Symph also pointed out that it synergies with Charm, which is in-theme and also nice since Charm comes with significant EWV.


Thought of mine, one not yet fleshed out enough: allow enough EW or computational power to pierce long-range jamming? Something along the lines of IF EW > 10*(jamming+jamming^2)? Long-range jamming being fairly hard to increase.
My reasoning being that every other attack option can bruteforce its way past its counters. 8 dodge can be countered by tons of int; 1k shields can be countered by 10k catapult damage; 10 security teams can be countered by 50 refined space marines. This bruteforcing is a bad idea, sure, but the option at least exists.
Easy counter-argument is that there's already a way to get past jamming: get into close-range.
 
Computer modules and fancy computer options already assist EW Skill?

Getting past long range jamming via EW skill is silly - it doesn't matter how tricky your algorithms are if they are drowned out by noise.

The EWS having to be spread over every action you make is an interesting idea, though it might make for too much micro during battles. I might do this, albeit with the limitation that EWS can only be allotted in like units of 5 or something.

Raid and Hijack aren't guaranteed to get anything even if they succeed in their rolls if there isn't anything to get. Hijack also needs cargo space to make off with your ill gotten gains, and Raid doesn't give you full techs (that would be dumb). The networks of sprawling cities are easier to slip into than military comms? OUTRAGEOUS!
 
Ok, I am withdrawing from this NES. I looked for an adequate replacement but I've been unlucky so far.
 
I'd like to take the Seffessians at Symph's suggestion. I'll take a proper read of the updates and thread and make it official tomorrow.
 
ChiefDesigner continues to commit to noncommittally taking them.
 

Rise of the Rust Bucket Assassin



UC 4862 – Lena

[tab]The mindless chatter of the machines never really stopped. They whirred and beeped, ticked and chocked, hissed and sighed, consoling themselves that they were performing to specifications on their sojourn through the infinite night. They had no awareness behind their sensory perceptions, no attachment to their mission or their passengers, and no interest in the particulars thereof. Safely ensconced within the well-worn and pitted hull that they shared, Lena found herself hating them, not in spite of their stupid indifference to the universe, but because of it. She was dependent on this dead hulk of metals and composites to bear her along, to keep her alive, and to complete her mission so far away from home.

[tab]She had been trained so well for that last aspect, but training for anathema was woefully underemphasized. Slow-boating on Hohmann orbits via private ion drive out to Adiaphora from Kathekon for vacuum training had been merely an exercise in tedium, easily remedied with patience. It hadn’t been the real deal. The need for constant secrecy had ruled out hot reaction drives on most vectors, but that same need for constant secrecy had compelled the System Security Bureau to break its own rules and send her out here. No one who might talk could know they were here. There had never been any loose ends—there could never be any loose ends—and whatever was required to ensure that was simply the price to be paid. She had already volunteered to do whatever it took, and they kept telling her that she was the best. So they had put her on this ageing and venerable fission-rocket torchcraft of a tin-can, the Essence of Crypsis, and set it on a low-observability brachistochrone burning hard for the smoldering red dwarf of Praxis itself. They had loaded it up with all the guns and gear she had asked for, enough portable valuables to barter for whatever she needed, and her target list. Her only orders had come from the SSB Director himself: “Whatever it takes,” he’d said, after which she’d saluted and shook his hand.

[tab]She found herself staring at her hands often. She avoided the crew, avoided her cabin, and could be found curled up among the humming machinery and pipes that seemed non-hazardous flexing her fingers and clenching them into fists for hours with her skin set to match the baroque mechanical patterns, or treating the cavernous cargo bay like a combination obstacle course and workout room. They had taught her that every weapon ever crafted is merely an extension of the self and yet also discrete from it—the self is the true weapon, the only one that can be improved in the field simply through experience. She spent her time relentlessly honing mind and body, relentlessly not-thinking. The crew had taken to patterning about her—with only the utmost respect, of course—as “the ghost” in their private conversations. So it went for two weeks.

[tab]She had been engaged in her kinesthetic meditation when the jump warning cascaded through the ship with the attendant advisory prattle from the captain. They were by now deep within Praxis’ gravity well and had matched calculated their curvature signatures. The particulars of light-speed jumps had never been of much interest to her. She paused her routine for a moment, recalled the jump distance and mentally adjusted her internal clock. The warning echoed again amongst the clutter, and then precisely nothing happened. She waited a moment and then glanced at the watch strapped to her left wrist. It displayed a blinking synchronization icon before it suddenly shifted its universal date forward 498 standard days. And just like that, she was definitively in the future and 1.36 light years away.

[tab]She noticed her calculation had been only 54 minutes off. As she adjusted her internal clock to match the external she knew she should’ve registered her first out-system jump as a more momentous occasion, but it didn’t feel like one. Just another among the dozens of other unorthodox things she’d already done. She found herself staring at her hands again. In them she could see the only first that really mattered anymore: the one they’d trained her so hard for. Before she returned to her meditation she made a mental note to devour the dossier on the next stage of the mission, which would occur on some mudball named…

*​

[tab]SAF5 II was a cold, windy, toxic ******** of a planet lacking a proper name or proper civilization, but did manage to remind her in the broadest outlines of topside back home—of course, back home everyone had the sense to never go topside, and lacked any reason to do so. The . . . people, if they could be called that (for they were indeed the unfortunately common motley crew of baselines), who populated this slush choked dumping ground had no such inhibitions. Not surprising for a group of thieves, murderers, slavers, pirates, mercenaries, criminals, and whores. Or so the briefing dossier had explained in exhaustive detail. This place was called the Brown Market, and it was clear that at least one other operative had been sent here before, and had not come away much impressed.

[tab]Lena stood on the cargo ramp of the Essence of Crypsis, cloaked in a long, local-looking duster over a sneaking suit, wearing a full-face gas mask, bedecked with guns, and brandishing a pair of ultra-durable transport cases. Surveying what little of the squalid surroundings could be seen through the fine particulate haze and mist, she found it hard to disagree with the dossier. What qualified as a space port was little more than a hastily poured pad of concrete-analogue, pocked and cratered with pools of aqueous crystalline silica sludge and ice. She set one of the cases down and tabbed the gas mask’s lenses over to infrared, scanning for an ambush. The ship had already done the same and found nothing, and she could report no different, but found it better to be cautious. Leaving the infrared on and taking the case back in hand, she dutifully trudged down the ramp and off across the pad, radioing “All clear,” on an EHF frequency once she reached minimum safe distance.

[tab]The response came back already tinged with static, a minimalist “Affirmative. Good hunting.”

[tab]Immediately there came the roar of the Essence of Crypsis’ nuclear lightbulbs thundering to life, their radiant exhaust plasma superheating the local atmosphere in a wash of turbulence. Lena soldiered forward along the dismal path that led away from the pad, back to the heated silicon plumes that enveloped her. She did not look back at the departure of the still blinding heat source, and had already put it out of mind.

*​

[tab]The Brown Market itself was a slapdash smattering of buildings of simplistic but rugged construction, mostly half-sunken domes or half-cylinders that betrayed the mostly subterranean nature of what settlement there was. They sat next to one another comfortably, with no visible real streets or walkways per se—although the footing was solid enough that there was surely some more of the concrete-like material underfoot, all that was visible was more of the ubiquitous silicon dust, well-trod. The buildings tended to be unmarked and what advertisement there happened to be was discrete, both in thermal and visual. There was no one to be seen moving about.

[tab]Slowly tromping along what seemed to pass for the main thoroughfare, Lena found herself drawn to a strange glow in IR down the way. Making her way to it, she found it resolving to an archaic neon “Open” sign. She cycled to visual and found that there were advertisements bolted to the sides of the building—this one shaped something like a breadbox—which, dusted with silicon though they were, showed exotic alien beaches and vistas, with all sorts of rather gauche “Wish you were here” appeals. Looking about she found a sign that proclaimed it to be “Mort’s Travel Agency.”

[tab]She stood in the swirling silicon mist for a minute before making her way to the meager airlock, hoping it had a decon wash integrated in.

***​
 
Code:
------++++priority8propagateALL:
ATTENTION:EDICT(sgALNITAH):VERIFICATION-6399U73395198U225062784

Main:Start

>By the beneficent authority of the Demos of the Apeilic Iris and the will of 
Consul Para Ngenthur

>In light of the unannounced and unprovoked raid on Torpor station, with the
intent to cause economic terrorism throughout the Segmentum, a judgement
of ANATHEMA is placed on the ‘Council of Commodores’
[u][name list attached, known biometrics to follow via data freight][/u]

>Use of lethal force against ships aligned to the Commodores will no longer
receive sanction

>Use of destructive planetary bombardment against cities and stations aligned
to the Commodores will no longer receive sanction

>Confiscation of assets and goods aligned to the Commodores will no longer
receive sanction

>Information related to the movement of listed individuals should be publicly
shared, especially information pertaining to any attempt to leave the 
Segmentum

>Any listed individuals rendered to the Consulate will receive a bounty
[u][bounty for listed individuals attached][/u]

>If such actions conflict with local legal systems or endanger populations
held hostage by the Commodores, that conflict is between the actor and
those claiming responsibility or jurisdiction       

>The state of anathema will be extant until the Commodores command
structure and all listed individuals has been verifiably accounted for or
ten standard years pass

>Failure to propagate this edict to all network nodes and levels
subordinate to the reader’s current authority is a class 2 offence.

Main:End
+++++-----

The gilded doors slide apart as Bo approached and chimed to announce him beyond. That fact filled him with pride as it always did; not even all of the Citymaster’s wives were afforded the privilege of free entry to the Inner Sanctum at any time. The room itself was a little slice of paradise, with groves containing low pools and fountains of warm water artfully separated and hidden by tropical foliage and fragrant flowering bushes. All set beneath a domed ceiling that glowed with the gentle light of some late evening on a garden planet.

Bo found his master in a state of repose on one of the stone benches that lined the paths of the garden, napping with nothing but a white towel wrapped around his waist. A feminine giggle and a splashing sound behind a curtain of red flowers offered a clue as to what had engendered the need for rest, not that Bo would have needed information to make an informed guess. As he reached the five metre threshold another set of chimes rang out and the Citymaster yawned and bestirred himself.

As the great man stretched and sat up, Bo couldn’t help but be impressed as always with the majesty of that heroic frame. The Hammer of Valheim was a name often given to Bo’s lord; in his youth he’d be said to have fought three of the great white freaks at once in a bar room brawl and come away the victor. Though the Hammer’s hair was speckled with grey these days, Bo could well believe the story as he stared at arms that were as thick as his waist and a torso still encased in lean muscle. The Hammer spoke with a soft bass rumble.

“Ah Bo. What crisis has my favourite hoffsjef seen fit to rouse me to address?”
Bo supressed a smile at the compliment, “My lord, I have the statement from the Yanii ambassador on that financial transfer we froze yesterday. It appears the Standardite story is verified – the funds were intended to be passed on and aid what is to be, and I quote ‘our joint operation’”

There was a rumble from the Hammer, though tell if it was mirth or anger was hard to tell. Even Bo, an experienced watcher of his master habits would be forced to guess at both as an answer.

“The fools have listened to the Standardites in truth then…I had not suspected they would be so unwise. We might have acquired rabid curs when we thought we were gaining coursing hounds, but what moron thinks any dog speaks with his master’s voice?”

“Doubtless the Yanii will be putting other things in motion if they believe the Standardites and our own fleets will be attacking Torpor, especially if they are willing to funnel such a princely sum to the primitives” Bo replied, sidestepping the rhetorical question.

“Yes. May Indra’s bolts rain misfortune on the Commodores, trying to force us to move to their schedule! Their ambassador even had the nerve to tell the Great Lords that they were ‘merely hurrying things up’, as if their infantile plan of smashing was ever our intent. I assumed even children would be taught the concept of nerai, but it seems education is yet another Standardite failing. The Standardites will pay for this disrespect.”

“As will Stationmaster Khan?”

“Yes, I doubt their great advocate will show his face in meetings for at least a year after this debacle. Be silent a moment Bo, I must mediate on these circumstances”

The Hammer closed his eyes and furrowed his brow. Despite this theatrical display and the brute strength of the man’s body, Bo knew there was indeed deep thought occurring. Though Hero was as exalted a caste as Bram and Wisdom, it was a rare Hero that rose to such a high office as Citymaster. Despite his appearance the Hammer was a clever politician indeed to reach and maintain his position

As his lord thought, Bo indulged in his own speculations. Though outsiders might see them as primitive and cruel, the Valk understood that a person’s desires were merely an aspect of their undivided being. Provided one married and did their duty towards gods and ancestors, and respected the reproductive sanctity of marriage, and number of dalliances could be entertained outside of the marriage. Bo had married young for just this reason; to a kind woman his parents had found, to whom he had built a strong fondness and affection for despite his passions lying elsewhere. But despite their cultural understanding of such things, there was still the question of station and caste; the dalliance must be initiated by the higher, or they would lose face. As he gazed upon the Hammer, Bo mused at the gulf he longed but was forbidden to cross.

Eventually his lord stirred, “I have mediated on the courses available. I will present this to the other great lords: no good will come to us of revealing their plan before and if it occurs, nor will any good come from aiding them, we must simply shape the resultant flow. The Standardites will be punished for their disrespect in years to come, but the Yanii can be cut at as soon as news from Torpor arrives. Which of the Coran newsgroups are least well-disposed to the Yan Republic in your opinion?”

“Um…CINN, WhiteTower, and that one with the unpronounceable glyph as their name. The latter is probably most influential on the Seat of Light whilst the former two have spread elsewhere.”

“I bow my head to your expertise - prepare an intermediary to leak the details of the Yanii funding of the Standardites to each of CINN and WhiteTower as soon as the news breaks from SAF2. Supply them with full details of the accounts involved to give this the polish of a full truth”

“My Lord?”

“Do not worry Bo, I severely doubt any details of our data practices are hidden from the Corans in the first place”

“Yes my lord. And the Yanii funds themselves?”

The Hammer’s face broke into a wolfish grin.


A Spark of Hope, Burning (UC 4976)

For some temporal and spatial scopes of human affairs, it is possible to point at historical singularities of change, pivot points on which society might unpredictably turn and paradigms utterly shift. One such singularity occurred in orbit of the gas giant Torpor in ’76, and the past and future of the Segmentum turns on this one relatively trivial fleet engagement.

The lead up to this event lies in the deteriorating relationship between the Csserian government and the Standardite Commodores, and the growing chaos within the ranks of the Commodores themselves. The dozen or so Commodores have between them a score of differing viewpoints, and the conflict and confusion this produces creates the erratic actions and terrible policy that has defined the Fleets actions up to now. The two loosest groupings might be drawn between those who focused on development and engagement planetside and the hard core war captains who shriek words of rage at the rest of the Forest. However hard some might decry it, the latter’s authoritarian and decisive actions and their manichean view of the world does strike a chord with many of the Standardite population, who are fine with their government forcing its view on people different from themselves.

The Csserians had increasing trouble navigating this shifting morass of claims and decided to start negotiating directly with warlords and regional leaders; as they had with Typical in the past, and straight up disregard the Standardite Commodores claims to be a united polity. They opened lines of communication to Rico Regular on SAF1I, began supporting the Typical outposts in earnest, and started talking and offering massive (relatively) development deals to Kia Common and the ‘development’ orientated Buxe Boxer faction on Mern. The Csserians also used their influence to placate and hold back the various Mernt factions in the hope of a more reasonable solution in the future. The Standard migration was coming apart at the seams under the torrent of Csserian money, and a vision of weak and scattered polities paying lip service to Larsilla seemed to be in the offing. This was a nightmare to the hardliners of the fleet who, as they had done so often in the past, decided to take drastic and reckless action. The Csserians need to be broken no matter the cost.

The Commodores identified Torpor station as the carotid artery of the Csserian trade network, with over a third of the total Larsilla economy in some way tied up in interests that pass through the station each year, and the volatiles exports it manages being crucial to keeping any Csserian fleet in orbit. Jumping into action they enacted a purge of the fleet captains and forced the Boxer faction out of power. Looting what little resources Mern still had to offer they throw every military asset they had at SAF2, trying to create a dramatic confrontation. They also begged the Valk to intercede and send a war party as well, which the Valk brushed off as more Standardite pontificating idiocy – if taking out Torpor station was ever their intent, trying to do it when you had no follow through as yet set up was pure foolishness, and the Standardites were obviously just trying to wheedle more volatiles supplies. The one exception to the military movement was Common’s army on Oia, which had pretty much stopped listening to the Commodores once they had driven out the Boxers.

In any case the Commodores forces invested SAF2 with a terrible ferocity, and streamed straight at Torpor station on emergence. It was at this point, once they realised war was actually going to be initiated, that the few remaining non-hardliner Captains in the fleet tried to rebel and pull out, decrying the Commodores as madmen and warning the Csserian defenders. It was perhaps ironically this confusion that allowed the Commodores to prevail in the ensuing battle. The Csserians had planned to bulk up their defences of Torpor station, but not all of the reinforcements had yet arrived. The perhaps inexperienced and uncertain Csserian commanders reacted to the confusion of signals from the Commodores and the Rebel fleets with hesitancy, a hesitancy that cost them everything. Holding fire gave the Commodores time to deploy their big beam platforms and utterly vaporise most of the Csserian long range armament in the first few minutes. The Csserian fleet’s apologists point to the poor protection of most Csserian vessels makes them especially vulnerable to such assault rather than poor decision making, but most are unconvinced. With such damage inflicted the Commodores were able to engage in an assault boat dogfight with the Rebels with little further concern regarding the remaining Csserian ships struggling up out of Torpors gravity well. The lack of central coordinating authority on the rebel part now showed as the ships engaged in vainglorious dogfighting trying to bring down the Commodores carrier ships rather than concentrating on taking out the beam platforms. Those beam platforms again proved pivotal bringing down large numbers of the rebel assault boats and almost casually picking off the remaining Csserian fighting ships. In the end the Commodores prove near totally victorious as a single rebel light carrier manages to limp away and the entirety of the Csserian traders were picked off or captured.

Having carried the day, the Commodores claimed the various damaged and wrecked hulks that the battle had produced, and prepared to demolish Torpor station. Perhaps luckily for its workforce the Hankish trading contingent (who probably didn’t feel very lucky themselves) were able to use their contacts among the Commodores to argue for the value of hostages and warn of the dangers of killing civilians of states other than the Csserians. The Commodores ordered the workforce (generally skilled personnel working government assignments) to bail out and be picked up. The Hankish, Csserians, and Praxzens all had a rather strong sense of personal survival and jumped at the chance to live and were soon in chains in the Commodores holds (the Hankish receiving rather better treatment as befits ‘guests’). With the people taken care of the Commodores turned their beam platform on the station itself, reducing it to drifting molten droplets. They didn’t have the time or the firepower to also deal with the Praxzen pumping stations deep within Torpor’s grey bulk, and were preparing to leave when the next wave of Csserian warships arrived. The human shields they had obtained convinced the Csserians to let the Commodores depart in victory, though their ability to bring the Commodores down was pretty questionable given the poor showing earlier in the battle.

Almost as an afterthought, and barely mentioned in the media, was the second grand operation of the Commodores in their attempt to seize control of the SAF2 volume when they sought to break the last Mernt holdouts on SAF2-I. The only Ne’er-do-well Carriers not assigned to the Torpor battle where tasked to carry the main Commodorial army to the small planet, where the massive overkill of assigned forces secured the defenceless towns of the Mernt in mere days. As with the previous Standardite conquests their first order of business was to start evicting the Mernt, but the extreme poverty and the massive disruption to trade and supply routes meant the new refugees often couldn’t leave the planet, instead being herded into camps and wretched ghettos.

The ripples from the battle of Torpor swept out from the event itself, changing and twisting the politics and economics of everything it touches. One the most dramatic change was back on the Standardites of Buxe – when the news of the Commodores recklessness came back there was widespread anger and condemnation. Packing the fleet and army with loyalists cuts both ways, and comparatively fewer of the Commodores followers remained on Mern. When Kia Common’s army arrived from Abell they found a planet ripe for revolution. Common and some of the other dissident leaders had been plotting with the Csserians for some time, but it was only the hardliners push for open warfare that convinced her to fully take up the Csserians on their offer of support. It didn’t help her image to show up on a Csserian transport, but her army had enough strength and supporters to win the ensuing civil war and consolidate the planet under her transitional government. What the intended state she wanted them to transition to was as yet unstated, but it was enough for the small settlement on SAF4-I to declare their support, and of course she had here old stronghold on Oia already in the bag. This left the Commodores with the vast majority of the Standardite military might but only the single meagre world of SAF2-I to support it.

The economic rape by the preparing Commodores and the subsequent civil war has rent Mern’s economic fabric down to the ground, and the Standardite social fabric has collapsed back into atomistic survival mode once again, with near no energy left over for production. This subsistence lifestyle does have the minor benefit of reducing the reformed polity’s resource demands to a manageable level. Common had also managed to milk the Csserians for development aid, which was put to good use by the Boxers, free at last to spend on volatiles extractors and housing. An idea was floated to build a factory complex, but was rejected on grounds of lack of resources and being bloody stupid. Almost as an afterthought of the old regime the astronautical labs in the Elric Mountains built and improved their Bullshark prototype, which was instantly pressed into service as the sole defensive force available at Mern space.

Also in the epicentre of the battles effects are the Csserians. At the beginning of the year the Confederacy was riding high on a tide of optimism; after three years of unprecedented and meteoric economic growth the Leoni government promised a final resolution of the Standardite Question within the near future and even higher growth in the future. The government had been making great strides in treating directly with elements of the Standardite power structure and looked to be on the verge of dividing and pacifying. The inner circle of the government might not have been as confident as they presented however as the also ordered a massive warship building program, even taking a set of massive loans to finance this defence effort. In interviews with former officials who resigned after the Battle of Torpor, it was indicated that this defence effort was more a show of capability directed towards a bogeyman of Valk expansion rather than a coherent military strategy to secure things in case negotiation with the Standardites went bad. In any case most of the new fleet of Shepard warships didn’t make it in time to fight at Torpor, perhaps for the best as their weakness against beam platforms is now painful evident. The Csserian state also busied itself with trade and supply and some basic infrastructural development at home, continuing the ‘hands off at home, promote trade abroad’ strategy that had worked so well in the past.

A great deal of Csserian effort was placed into managing the various minor polities of the Forest. What had been ‘unofficial’ in the past became a policy line when Larsilla started directly subsidising the Standardites of the Great Basin with the understanding they would relocate when a new home becomes available. This seemingly successful plan was extended to the other rogue Standardite warlord Rico Regular, with the Csserians committing to support their relocation in exchange for leaving the Mernt alone and playing nice. Regular’s battered army was barely in a position to disagree, but he did stubbornly hold the Csserians to enacting a measure to protect the Standardite villages on SAF1-I from the Vale’s wrath (who would probably be even more brutal and bloody than the Standards in revenge). The Csserians decided to cut this Gordian knot by enacting an elaborate shell game; the Oiat Royal Army would travel to the Vale to act as peacekeepers, the Regulars would get on the ships and negotiate a peace, and a much expanded Csserian Defence Force would travel down to Oia to secure the hole in the Oiat defensive line in case the Standards do something crazy (how unlikely!). Unlike the debacle at Torpor this juggling act actually went off with nary a hitch; nothing threatened the Csserians (who had the easy job), the royal army might be battered and unhappy but they managed to keep the Standardite villagers alive, and the Regulars were safely detained at the Csserian convenience. The Oiat weren’t really brought in on the planning discussions for all this; becoming increasingly a mere shell pushed by Larsilla’s policies, but those in the army at least were happy to help. Begin deployed as peacekeepers in the war torn Vale certainly helped to season the army and give them a sense of pride. Considering numerous skirmishes with the Vale forces still produced causalities, using the Oiat in this way was seen as a masterstroke as the Vale might not have stopped at all if more foreign peacekeepers were used. With Csserian forces present, their traders were not far behind as Larsilla connected SAF1 up to the Forest’s arteries. Later in the year when SAF4-I declared for the reformist Standardites, the Csserians also set up trade routes to that undeveloped system, as well as sending the first exploratory traders towards Abnab’s small mining communities and a first contact diplomatic team to the Seffassians.

Of cause the most crucial grouping the Csserians tried to influence was Common’s revolutionaries and as detailed earlier it was also the one they were least successful with. Leoni’s government spent an enormous amount of money trying to bribe them, and expended an enormous amount of bluster trying to use their military build-up as a stick. The former backfired in driving the Commodores to desperation and the latter was revealed to be nothing but hot air after the humiliation of Torpor. There was a near hurricane of political fallout from the battle when news got back to the capital and the population and the government were shaken to their core. Buffeted down by blame and up by the natural tendency to rally round the leadership when attacked PM Leoni tried to raise the morale of the city, and promised a massive expansion of the defence forces, retrieval of the hostages, and a severe and terrible punishment to be inflicted on the Commodores. In truth he and his economists were occupied full time in battening down the hatches before the economic collapse hit. And hit it did, as most of the Csserian trading interests in trans-Torpor space crumbled from being cut off (and in many cases were actively removed, see below). The fact that the Hankish had set up an alternative route connecting Abell to the Cathedral (via SAF3) cushioned the blow somewhat in the product supply chains, but shock killed off hundreds of Larsillan trading companies who’d overleveraged in the boom years, and the cascading collapse rolled through the rest of the economy like a black wave. All the futures built on the assumption of the Torpor-pumped volatiles supply also massively devalued. In real terms perhaps 25% of the total Csserian economy was wiped out over the course of the year, and the depression is poised to spread beyond their borders. Though the sharpest losses (the Spinward finance markets) are already gone, most economists predict that a downward economic trajectory will continue for at least half a decade and that strong stimulus might be needed to merely keep things from getting even worse. Though these darkest projections are downplayed by the government, many commentators speculate if social problems will follow the economic down turn. It is easy to get along with new immigrants when everyone is making money hand over fist, but a depression in a city where nearly 40% of the population is foreign born and a potential ‘other’ could be nasty indeed.

At least the collapse has put a temporary end to the talk of the ‘Csserian trade empire’ that worried the powerful of foreign states. The Primate of the Black Iron Republic even made calls for huge multi-party development loan to be issued to the Csserians to rebuild and get them out of their recession before it spreads, receiving interest from the banks and Firzonat. A near completely irrelevant trade agreement was signed with the Corans, spending a heap of words to essentially say each would give one year’s notice before moving on another’s markets. Hilarious as it might be in light of the massive pounding both the Csserians and the Corans took in the markets, many powerful business leaders decry this anti-trade measure enacted at the very time Larsilla’s service industry needed new markets. When Leoni’s government responds with talks about making a ‘friend’ of the Corans, the critics reply with ‘like friends were made with the Commodores?’. The mood in Larsilla is one of pessimism, but at least the tasks of the government are clear; gain a source of volatiles before the three year stockpile runs out, doing anything necessary to stabilise the economy, and break the Commodores. As much as there is criticism at home, the fact that the Csserians are finally committed in the conflict with the Commodores has won them praise from the various Mernt factions, even though most expect them to also take the battle to Mern itself and drive off Common’s revolutionaries.

One step back from the ripples of Torpor is the Praxzen republic, which if anything was taken even more flatfooted and more enraged by the debacle. Perhaps it was the feeling of powerlessness for a culture so enamoured with its own competence, or perhaps the anger over the taking of precious Praxzen lives hostage, but whatever the cause the Praxzen public were seriously pissed off. Unlike the Csserians this anger was rather more directed at their own leaders in a new political system that was less than three years old, who in defiance of centuries of Praxzen experience had chosen to put growth ahead of security. Hawkish isolationists are expected to gain in power at the next elections, but for now President Marius is trying to pre-empt the possible defeat of his ‘Outwarder’ coalition by talking big on defence spending and swift action to recover the hostages.

Prior to Torpor things had been looking well for the Republic; after extensive encouragement spending workers had returned to the ice cracking stations of Adiaphora’s south polar cap, the first forays into large scale added value trading were beginning, and the revamping of the old bureau’s into capitalist corporations was nearly complete. The central government was still having trouble convincing enough people to go into agricultural work and food security might become an issue in the future but otherwise the input resources seemed at an acceptable level. The once hider republic even set up a massive joint venture with a Hank-Sobor subsidiary to promote and enable their planned selling of finance nexus start up packages. Technological development continued at a dizzying pace as the Praxzen poured money into drive and weapon systems – a need that seemed all the more acute after Torpor. Some Praxzen astronautical engineers complain about the central government’s decision to invest in the Csserian Sheep class hauler design rather than a home grown version, but there was more than enough interesting work in other areas to distract them. The Outwarder plans could be seen everywhere; as the Republic reached out the Hankish, the Csserians, and even sent a diplomatic probe to the rumour shrouded world of the Leeni (which some say is also called Leeni – but no race could be that unimaginative!).

Torpor turned all this on its head however, as one of the major underpinnings of the ‘new economy’ was knocked out and things threated to slide back into the stagnation of before. Things weren’t nearly as bad as Larsilla due to the much smaller portion that trade comprised in the Praxzen economy, but they weren’t good either. Some analysts even point to the as yet unfinished transition to a more capitalist model as good thing, for a corporate economy would have been more entwined with Larsilla and more fully share its pain. Unlike the Confederacy the damage has pretty much been done on Kathekon, and the Praxzen can look forward to a period of stagnation rather than more decline, though things might pick up if they can be reconnected with the Spinwards markets once again. Perhaps of a more pressing concern the now isolated pumping stations in the Torpor Atmosphere; the Praxzen in typical fashion didn’t really believe in keeping an emergency maintenance buffer, and unless the supply of goods resumes soon the stations will begin to degrade. On a solid world a graceful decline or even temporary abandonment could take place, but a broken floating station is going to sink out of sight and add its work crews to the tally of causalities of the battle of Torpor. President Marius is going to have to organise a very large number of things in a very short amount of time, as the clock is ticking both literally and politically.
 
The more peripheral polities of the Forest were brought into the web of commerce just in time to feel the ripples of the post-Torpor crisis. The Leeni were contacted by a Praxzen diplomatic team early on in the year. Whilst some might assume that their shared fact of modification from the human baseline might give them common ground, the fact that they have diverged in very different ways and that there is a vast cultural gulf between them has made the going difficult. The Praxzen are certainly interested in the Leeni as unusual hominin specimens, but in an aloof academic manner rather than one of engagement, and dislike the Leeni’s ‘touchy-feely’ attitude and their need to build consensus on everything, or how the negotiators mood alters with the rest of the tribe. It is amusing that both groups’ abilities allow separate channels of communication; meaning meeting rooms often have three different conversations occurring in parallel! The Leeni for their part see the Praxzen as little different to previous cultures they’ve encountered, but appreciate the envoys superhuman precision and efforts at courtesy. They allow the envoys to set up a diplomatic mission, but ask that it be made known to other states that only the Praxzen are currently allowed to visit, much to the disappointment of Larsilla’s financial houses. For the Leeni’s part the post-Torpor world is manifested by a sudden increase in the keenness and pliancy of the Praxzen representatives, as their volatiles and minerals reserves and production is suddenly vastly more valuable in the wrecked and warring Forest subsector.

The Leeni don’t really get up too much on the domestic front this year, as the censuses tries to assimilate the idea of contact with foreigners into their zeitgeist. They do suddenly remember that effectively running complex ecologies in their hydroponics units and ice cities takes a lot more effort than they initially assigned, and they had less researchers and managers for other tasks.

In contrast the Seffassians greeted the Csserian trade mission with rather more warmth after the Csserians convinced them they weren’t more Standardites. The conflict with the Standards had given the Euphorium a greater awareness of the local dangers than perhaps the Leeni possessed, and they were starting from a more friendly (if abnormal) perspective anyway. The Csserian traders were almost licking their lips at the prospect of swindling the vast wealth of the Seffassians; goggling at the fact near every building was encrusted with artfully patterned precious materials. The diplomatic grouping were rather more interested in the Seffassian farms, whose intensely cultivated neo-rice paddies could easily alleviate some of the expensive hydroponics Larsilla was forced to use to feed itself. What the Seffassians wanted from the Csserians was knowledge as they were still nearly entirely bound to a single planet, and lacked even the basic knowledge of spatial transcend physics, and feared they would be prostrate before any threat from orbit. On the domestic front the strong population growth continued with the increased living space nearly filled up. Though the Seffassians don’t mind the crowds (something of an understatement as anyone who has been to one of their multipurpose parliaments/festivals/market/orgies will attest) some suggest an expansion of living space would allow further growth.

In recent years the Hank-Sobor Corporation had involved itself deeper and deeper in the affairs of the Forest, winding tendrils of trade into every major star system. Though rather ad hoc in the past this year they rationalised and reorganised most of their routes for maximum bandwidth and value. However casting such a wide net often means you catch something unpleasant and the ripples of uncertainty from the battle of Torpor are afflicting the Hankish as well. Unlike the Csserian experience there has been opportunity admix the crisis, and since Torpor station did not directly service any Hankish vessels their trade network is intact. The loss of the SAF2 run between Lipsid Beta and Abell was golden for the newly set up SAF3 run the Hankish have set up, and the value of goods passing through SAF3 near doubled overnight. Though these boom times might end when and if Torpor station is rebuilt, the substantial trade for that connection is still expected to flow through SAF3 for the foreseeable future, with traders unwilling to put their eggs all in one basket again. The disarray amongst the major companies at Larsilla also allowed the Hankish (who recovered from their own confusion rather more quickly) to expand their control of the interstellar shipping passing through the Abell system, perhaps as a prelude to pushing deeper into the Forest. The first example of that might be their decision to dip into the Praxzen markets at SAF6 with a small trade fleet, once again displacing the Csserian efforts. Though the Marius government has good relations with the Hankish, the already emboldened isolationists gather support from Praxzen irritated by what seems to be an ever increasing swell of baselines visiting their homeworld.

At the other ends of their trade routes the Hankish are also seeing success; moving in on the interstellar shipping in Lipsid Beta (after receiving an exceedingly polite note from the BIR to not get involved in intrasystem shipping there), grabbing more market control at Glon, and greatly expanding the trade bandwidth connecting the crucial resource producing system of SAH7 with the rest of the Segmentum. For private individuals it seems increasingly if you want to travel interstellar, your best bet is the rough but reliable ships of the enormous Hank-Sobor fleet, and the money is really rolling in. Further expansion of the network is seemingly planned by the board; with the acquiring of the Deluger space station at SAH7, the joint venture with the Praxzen, and rumours of intent to build a wholly owned supply and storage station somewhere in Abell space. Even such skilled traders as the Hankish still make mistakes though, when they set up an investment program into the Deluger Kelp farming industry in exchange for a guaranteed rate on the output. Whilst financial analysts consider that to be a fine idea, they are flabbergasted when it revealed the rate the ‘canny’ Hankish ‘secured’ sees them paying more than double the general going rate for foodstuffs in the Cathedral and five times what wholesalers such as the Zera have offered in the past! At that valuation would have been cheaper to just build the hydroponics themselves and buy the volatiles to run it. Share value in Hank-Sobor would have fallen if they weren’t some sort of weird amalgam of corporation and a state, as it was a bad deal did more than anything else to shake the people’s confidence in chairman Dorner’s leadership.

All is not well with the Hankish though, for whilst the Hank-Sobor executives and moguls cackle about opportunities around distant stars, trouble is brewing in Hanksville. It is in the city itself where the effect of the Csserian crash was felt most keenly, costing a year of economic growth in all sectors but trade and causing anger and spiking cost of living amongst the planet bound population. Perhaps more crucially increasing traffic and population has finally driven pollution beyond the carrying capacity of the arid landscape, and ecologists warn that serious health and environment issues will start cropping up from now on. The poor Csserian showing also makes it appear that zero military spending and trusting other powers to secure the trade routes might be a bit of a silly idea. With all this large numbers of the population are beginning to wander if the Board has any clue what they are doing, or if they are just acting out old behaviour patterns from an earlier time when someone else dealt with the issues of actually running a society and treating everyone else like servants. Pro-democracy and pro-legal codification of business practice protests were soon camping in the junctions of Hanksville’s poorly planned road system. One particularly ardent campaign was a woman named Serney Thoms, whose particular issue was the degrading environment after a dust storm gave most of her family damaged lungs. She went behind the boards back to reach out to the Hearthfire Terraforming Association, who the board had once again started ignoring. They weren’t interested how, as they were literally hopping with rage over the damage that had been done to the polar regions by the Hankish. Some of their more radical members have even started talking about a campaign of sabotage and resistance aimed at the corrupt heart of the Hank-Sobor plutocracy, though it’s somewhat indeterminate what they mean by that.

The Dardareo also find the spreading economic malaise from Larsilla afflicting them via way of the Hankish, though as one moves further from the epicentre the effect is lessened. All the Dardareo saw was a year of growth that was well below projections, but no actual loss per say. The Dardareo otherwise continue on being an excellent economic citizen slinging trades left and right, and even begin to get into the banking trade with issuing a small and experimental low rate loan to the Delugers. This sweetheart deal was probably to say the Deluger negotiators later – the Dardareo certainly don’t intend to pay the price the Hankish do for food. The Dardareo even deploy their meagre merchant fleet to bolster the Sigma Relay<>SAH7 run, and that frontier system now sees scarfed and suited Dardareo traders mingling with their exuberant Hankish, mechanised Ilosians, and damp Deluger counterparts. Domestically as always the Captains keep a tight lid on any deviation or progress and things remain quiet and safe. Strong research efforts are being put towards improving the hydroponics system to reduce the dependence on foreign foods. Several Captains have gotten hold of some Praxzen promotional literature, and estimate if they acquired some of the spoken off ecology management systems they could solve their food problems for decades with no need for additional v inputs. Little known to the Dardareo is that the Leeni could probably provide the same facility and better, but the chance of getting a sales representative from that isolationist world is remote indeed.

At the far end of the Hankish trade network the two Glon powers have yet to really feel any knock on effects from Forest as the waves of the economic crisis take time to propagate. If the Hankish manage to keep their heads above water they probably won’t feel any in the future either, but the Hankish turn out to be exposed to the Csserian depression and subsequently suffer it’s unlike either the Ilosians or the Delugers will get off scot-free (at the very least the Sigma Relay states will have less money with which to purchase their produce).

The Ilosians, considering their more capitalist outlook and their newly set up high capacity shipping line to Sigma Relay, are perhaps the more vulnerable of the two. The Pentarchs pore over every scant news report from events further spinward as soon as the data drones offload it, even though it doesn’t really impinge on the consciousness of the regular Ilosian-on-the-scaffold. This worry has lead them to save up resources whilst times are good; if a crisis hits they can stimulate their way out of it, and if it doesn’t they can spend it on easing their volatiles problem. Despite the opening up of the IX pumping archipelago the Ilosians are still running into shortages, a condition in part self-inflicted due to their delight in selling the ice giants products to the Dardareo the instant they break orbit. To solve this little supply problem they have been examining several other ice giants in the immediate handmaiden neighbourhood to start up a second set of extractors. Some lower down the hierarchy question if they are spreading themselves too thin and leaving their intensely lucrative extraction sites vulnerable to pirates and raiders, but the Pentarchs wave them off for now. Given more serious attention are reports by demographers about the continuing influx of the population to Phaeton. Whilst people spilled out to the remote sites when they were newly established and interesting, the utter lack of facilities or development has been causing a steady stream back to the main orbital station. Without local workers the remote sites will become increasingly expensive and difficult to manage. The penny-pinching Pentarchs are currently unwilling to spend the funds necessary to reverse this trend by hazard pay or improve facilities, even though most of the socio-economists think that the money involved would be quite trivial.

It is not all gloom for the Ilosians though, as after a long lead up time the Pentarchs have decided it’s finally time to start the transition from an autocratic corporate fiefdom into a proper Diamond Network Hub. In the future rather than managing everything directly they intend for the core economic functionality of the polity to split into several autonomous economic organs for a more efficient development of resources and products. The Pentarchs would remain the rulers of the Phaeton holding corporation, which would operate the main habitat and also have sizable interests in the new corporations, but would not instruct them directly in economic matters. Having laid extensive groundwork and possessing a small and tight-knit economic fabric this transition should not take more than a few years, but it provides yet another reason for the Petrarch’s frugality. Some commentators feel that given the expect returns in resource production efficiency from the spin-off it would trivial for the Ilosians to finance it via loans from the many interested powers that would benefit from the flood of minerals and avalanche of volatiles that will soon flow Spinwards.

In comparison the Deluger councils are much more relaxed about the future, and have little worries or plans for future expansion. Even if the economic problems of the Forest spread, the Deluger economy is both strongly isolated and regulated and currently enjoying a considerable boom time. If the guarding walls are breached the tide of prosperity should wash the problems away as several politicians were heard to say. Unlike the Ilosian search for further ice giants the Delugers are quite happy and secure with their current supply on the newly renamed Tiamat, even turning over control of the orbiting station to the Hankish to save on costs. Rather than seeking out markets the Delugers prefer to contemplate the wave and have customers come to them, buy at the pump, and make their own transport arrangements. So far this plan has worked well; with the vast Hankish trade fleets always needing supply and a strong supply contract with the Yanii being hashed out despite the latter’s reputation for erratic behaviour. The Dardareo were also involved in discussions but are currently involved in an arrangement with the Ilosians instead. This is not to say the Delugers were passive in interstellar matters, for they deployed their trade fleet alongside the already thronging traffic connecting Glon and Sigma Relay. With the continued fast resource transfers Spinwards every cargo bay counts, for it would be terrible to fail in a year’s fulfilment due to a mere accident of lack of capacity. The Delugers certainly don’t have any plans to fling a trade network further, trusting the post-Sigma Relay transport to be fully on the backs of their Hankish friends.
 
On the domestic front the Order’s Planning Council has decided to assign the Merew region as a centre of food production for interstellar export. The thick kelp harvests of this region had already produce much of the organic matter sold on to Phaeton, and with the construction of vast sealed growth domes filled with filtered seawater the surpluses were easily doubled in anticipation of the Sigma Relay demand that Hankish and Dardareo buyers were already queuing up to proclaim. Some amongst the council wonder at the wisdom of positioning oneself in such a volatile market as foodstuffs, swept as it is by changing social norms and technological advancement, but after the first amazing guaranteed purchase orders came in most dissent ceased. Even if they never sell a single kelpburger outside of circum-Glon, the hydroponics might still be a good investment to feed the rapidly growing Deluger population at some point in the future, even though the most optimistic projections put their necessity at decades away. It is not like volatiles are expensive on an ocean world after all. The Ecumenical Council certainly feels no small amount of pride in the willingness of others to put their food security in Deluger hands – ‘trust in any community is a rare thing to be treasured and watered’ as the Book of the Tumult states.

The Delugers also send one of their Arks on scouting mission, perhaps in part to also keep the crews from getting bored. They have followed the Ilosians to SAH8, and likewise remain silent on what they have found there.

The grand powers of the Spinwards worlds were also affected by the crisis in the Forest; the economic fallout was minor compared to the size of their large internal economies, but the political fallout has fair stirred the proverbial hornet’s nest. The Valk though they had some foreknowledge of the Commodores plans they had failed to share with anyone else, seemed to have considered the plan too crazy for anyone to actually go through with. Instead they felt it must be a kind of blustering by the Commodores to try and get more resources out of their patrons, something the Commodores certainly have employed in the past. Thus the Valk were caught flat footed and somewhat enraged by the events of the Battle of Torpor, and plot to make an example of the Commodores (and any other Standardites they can get their hands on) of what happens to disobedient vassals. With the Consuls declaration of anathema, there are seemingly few political obstacles in the way of mounting a punitive campaign in the Forest, and ancient manufactory templates on the Grey Castle and in Cathedral space have been reactivated to help supply this potential war effort.

The BIR on the other hand seem more concerned about the potential economic collapse in the Forest nations and the subsequent emergence of pirate havens and cancerous failed states. In the past the plague and lack of traffic isolated the Forest, but in modern times problems deeper in the nebula will only see refugees and criminals flocking to Cathedral space. They were not especially concerned about physical threats however trusting their reputation to keep their assets at SAF2 free from harm. As mentioned previously they have been discussing the possibility of a vast development loan to the Forest powers at low (initial) rates to get them through these times of troubles, it would be wise for any interested state to rush their diplomats to Lipsid Beta in order to get involved in these talks. If the Valk do go ahead with their military action to BIR might also put the development loans on pause due to the risk involved.

But by far the most dramatic change in Cathedral space has been the utter supplanting of the Csserian financial interests with that of the Republic of Yanii. Within hours of the news arriving Yanii commercial interests were initiating aggressive and hostile takeovers of the plummeting Csserian assets and spinning news stories to worsen the latter’s confidence still further. It was obvious to most investigative observers that, much like the Valk, the Yanii somehow knew of the battle of Torpor well in advance. Unlike the Valk the Yanii seemed sure of its occurrence and outcome and had wagered everything on Csserian collapse, a wager that paid off brilliantly as asset after asset tumbled into their hands until the Csserians were all but evicted from Spinwards markets. This was merely speculation until the Valk choose to release the particulars of a substantial payment the Yanii government had tried to send to the Commodores, which the Valk said were a bribe to make the Commodores go ahead with their reckless plan. Naturally Yan retorted that this was humanitarian aid that they had sought to be bundled with the Valk volatiles merely for conveniences sake, but public opinion was split on the veracity of that. The Yanii financial success snowballed and they even managed to wrestle their way into the Coran holdings that were traded in Republic city and gained controlling interest in those as well. Once again more discerning Analysts would question that this success occurred at the same time the Yanii would choose to deploy more emissary vessels to circum-Cathedral space than seems strictly necessary. Catching the Yanii in the act of code breaking would surely turn all the Cathedral states against them, but the Corans have yet to succeed in such an effort.

This is not the only occurrence of the Yanii bearding the Corans on their presumptive home ground. In Lipsid Gamma where such effort has previously been expend on the data markets, the Yanii employed a bit of commercial jujitsu when they conceded the interstellar media and service markets to their Coran rivals and instead furiously expanded in other sectors like shipping and finance. The Corans spent quite a bit of time and money trying to push out the remaining Yanii influence with the Zera; something that could easily have been done with less.

In their own home ground of Lipsid Alpha the Yanii continue their record of commercial success with infilling and diversifying their local economy. The Quasi still have a strong presence in local shipping on the long quiet routes between the binary stars, but bullish Yanii magnates toss around talk of easily out competing them with the support of the government. On Yan itself an utterly massive program of government infrastructural development has occurred in the Glades region, even going so far as to harness that area’s small freshwater seas for power generation simultaneously with allowing massively land grants for privately operated hydropower facilities. Unemployment was negative as workers streamed in from other regions and worlds, the popularity of president Hephoi was at an all-time high, and he’d done it all without raising taxes.

Hephoi was praised from above as well, he was after all backed of a small movement of plutocratic Yanii businessmen and Dathic emigrees; a less than 1% that craved wealth and international power in a neo-Dathic style and really had very little in common with the common Yan citizen. Hephoi had been chosen for his salesmanship and private sector popularity, and also because his status as from an immigrant family would let him reach out of Yanii of all religious and philosophical stripes. A massive media buy had done the rest to propel the man to power, and now his policies were paying off for his backers. The average Yanii may also be benefiting even though all this development is massively stressing the delicate tundra ecology of Yan’s habitual regions, making Yan entirely dependent on foreign imports to meet its primary resource needs, and Hephoi was piling on the debt for future generations to enjoy, as all this growth and financial adventurism was being funded by a massive suite of loans from the LOFG. When criticised about this, Hephoi responded that his government had managed to obtain a quite excellent repayment rate and the future burden would not be high at all. However when one investigative journalist dug into how Hephoi had managed to get such a rate, all hell broke loose. It was clear that whoever the advisor was that had suggested Hephoi for religious reasons was no longer working for the plutocratic cabal of the government, for they had made a quite spectacular blunder – the low rate had been secured by offering up a store of Yan’s priceless relics as collateral. Indeed when indignant staffers leaked the loan agreement it seems the relic wasn’t even properly collateral, but by some indications might now be considered property of the Orion Bank. Finally Hephoi’s charm failed him; and in one fateful press conference he even asked the fateful question ‘what’s the big deal anyway?’. The streets were thronged with rioters in the Homelands and the Valley of the Gods the very next day, though the Glades remained a bastion of Hephoi support. Though still held in high regard by the Atooans and the business community, the common folk are now filled with deep loathing for the Hephoi government, which still has three years left of its term.

Tragic comedy seems to have infiltrated the government that so slickly used the Torpor crisis to their advantage, and the remaining big projects of the year failed dismally. The plans for a vast new high bandwidth line connecting Lipsid Alpha to SAH7 to secure resource purchases for Yan stalled at Sigma Relay when no one had checked who, if anyone, was going to resupply them there. A massive advertising campaign directed at the Forest to encourage immigrants to Yan in the wake of the battle of Torpor was completely stymied when the angry Csserians simply confiscated the materials and locked their nodes against the propaganda, creating a considerable sunk cost that did nothing but further anger the native Yanii. The Glades had received some immigrants this year from Atooa and the Cathedral, but this was tangential to their propaganda efforts. At least several new ship designs were implemented without a hitch, though Atooan consultants continued to question the wisdom of the order of battle they were meant to implement, and if the now deeply resentful common serviceman would be willing to pilot a ship whose mission would be suicide even if everything worked as intended.

The Quasi on the outskirts of Lipsid Alpha find the changes in the Yanii political culture to be increasingly distasteful, but otherwise continue to meander along without direction. The Quasi volatiles reserves could be very valuable to the various Forest powers looking to tide themselves over, and they have indicated they are perfectly happy to sell small units without the need for collateral or diplomatic negotiation.

The Corans, arch-rivals of the Yanii (a position that is likely to have several differing claimants in years to come), have had rather mixed year. They have not yet been seriously affected by the Torpor crisis as of yet, for few of the Forest urban centres have reached a sufficient complexity or cultural level to really clamour for the things the Corans can provide. On the other hand they have been smacked by a rather more local and personal economic crisis when the Yanii leveraged them out of hundreds of markets across the diverse habitats of the Spinward worlds. The Corans had been a bit tunnel-visioned and concentrated all their efforts on the Zeran data markets that they and the Yanii had fought so much over in the past. Indeed they were rather successful there, as they had managed to get the Zerans to agree to a exclusivity deal on all Zeran carriers and broadcasters, and had poured money to replicating and supplanting the current Yanii products to good effect. However the Yanii had been playing a much broader and more valuable game; conceding local advantage for advances elsewhere. In the end the Corans had gained shares at Lipsid Gamma worth a quarter of what they had lost elsewhere, much to the chagrin of the more economically minded Most Light.

Some of the Most Light however have higher things on their minds; and merely rejoice that they now have uninterrupted access to the naïve Zerans, who are just begging to have their souls enriched. Considerable subsidies have still been flowing to the Zeran world, so much so that many consider the Zerans a de facto Coran client state already. These more pragmatic observers underestimate the nuance and care the Corans extend to any potential convert, for if the Corans truly intend to place the Zerans under the yoke they probably would not be taking steps to independently secure their food supply. Whilst many expected the Coran subsidies to be paid back by Zeran farms (indeed even the Zerans themselves talked about as much), the Corans have instead chosen to secure their own food supply with wholly owned farms on the Vineyard (often staffed by Zerans farmworkers anyway) and a massive expansion of their already quite extensive hydroponics facilities on the Seat of Light. Maybe after the battle of Torpor the Corans do not feel safe relying on outsystem food sources, maybe they don’t want to make the Zerans feel obligated to support them, maybe they seem a coming increased demand in the future and want themselves or the Zerans to be positioned to take advantage of it. Only the inscrutable Most Light know for sure. One even more opaque move is the Most Lights apparent plan to begin moving the economic fabric of the Seat of Light towards a set up dominated by a few large corporate entities. This seems very odd considering the collectivist and communalist nature of the Coran ethos, the high degree of economic control the Most Light continue to exert from on high, and the fact the Coran economy is firmly rooted in the tertiary sector and would receive little direct efficiency gains from such move. Perhaps the most important hurdle is that they don’t even know how to begin such a transition, as interstellar corporate economics require a high degree of coordination and mathematical projections. Those lower down in the hierarchy of mind amongst the Corans try to interpret what the Most Light truly mean by these orders, and send the allocated resources to something that will vaguely reach the commanded goal whilst hoping their superiors change their minds.

For their part the Zerans have generally been lying low and keeping out of the public eye after their debacles of yesteryear. After stumbling on the revolutionary idea of not taxing everything their economy continues to stabilise and solidify. The fact that they continue to receive development aid from both the Corans and the Yanii certainly doesn’t hurt either, and for the first time in quite a while the profligate Zeran government is able to put some of their revenue away for emergencies and disasters. Strong investment in network and social infrastructure is helping to lift more Zerans out of their abject poverty, or at least alleviate the pain of that poverty, but the cost of all that is cutting into future revenue even as education levels and technological development rises. With continuing solid population growth some commentators project that the Zerans will be a major interstellar power…in a few decades, and that investors should get in on the ground floor whilst the Zerans are still poor and stupid. These investments are mainly focused in the continental regions of the Vineyard, even as the floating and subsea villages face a continuing housing crisis. Not that the ruling Cabal cares of course, as they still cling to power and focus on the capital even when it was their idiotic mismanagement that caused such utter screw ups in the past. As ideas from the other spinwards worlds filter in and the common Zerans finally are able to look beyond securing their next meal, many start to wonder if setting up an accountable and properly codified government might be a better alternative to the capricious rule of the Cabal. Even a quite brutal regime might be preferable to the current incoherence as long as it provides structure for people’s lives and businesses to operate in.

Constitutional thoughts are not the only ideas to be flowing into the Zera consciousness as Coran precepts on harmony and aesthetics continue to spread at a rapid rate, albeit with a distinctive Zeran twinge. They are not alone however, for despite the Zeran signing over their networks to only carry and facilitate Coran programming and products (in addition to the meagre local Zera media and software of course), there still are a number of Yanii commercial and academic staff present in the Zeran capital enthusiastically spreading a quite different set of values (indeed spread several different sets between the old school Yanii and the new more Dathic Glade urbanite values). These workers are involved in coordinating finance and shipping whilst the Yanii base in the outer system is still under construction. Said base is rather unpleasant and spartan even in comparison to the squalor of the Western Fringe, and despite the Hephoi government tricking a bunch of proles into moving there the professionals prefer to remain on the Vineyard for now. The fact that the Zerans most inoculated with the Yanii values are the ones being educated by the Yanii academics in software and mathematics and going to important positions in the Zeran economy, whilst the Coran message is most being heard in the lower classes (i.e. most Zera), presents an interesting contrast that will surely produce issues and friction down the line. The knowledge transfer between the Yanii and the Zerans is colossal, with the Zeran content leaping ahead a generations worth of development in less than a year.
 
Random Events

Awards and Good Events
  • First Orders: Kal’thzar
  • Best Orders: Symphony D
  • Best Aims: Lord Iggy
  • Good Stories: Thlayli, SymphonyD, alex, Iggy (Iggy’s was okay)
  • A lucky find by a mining robot reveals some long abandoned galleries on Glon I haven’t been entirely exhausted after all (+bonus m on Glon I)
  • Some agronomists, squeezed out of the press of the Labyrinth have decided to set up a new institute in Kathekon’s North Polar regions to develop crops adapted to local conditions, and the region rapidly becomes the new Praxzen breadbasket (+0.6 f development, +base food bonus)
  • This has been a bonanza year for Hankish passenger services, though competition will surely par down margins for now the corporation is making money hand over fist (+55e)
  • With materials freed from the Fleets insatiable demand dumped into the private sector by Common’s transitional government, many clans across Mern take the opportunity to build some decentralised extraction or power infrastructure without care for the environmental footprint (+wind plants and a pumping station on the Old Continent).
  • Csserian weapons research receives a flood of interest this year for ‘no’ discernible reason (+50s to weapons).
  • As the new government continues to pull things together for the Leeni, knowledge once horded by some tribes is shared with all (+very small development bonus to all development values)
Problems and Bad Events
  • Last Orders: Seon (shakes fist)
  • Most irritating orders: alex (Thlayli’s whilst annoying, were mercifully short)
  • A unique and unstable mental stimulatory program makes the rounds of several Coran universities, and several promising students burn their brains out before public data hygiene measures can be implemented (-1 talent).
  • A meteorite shower on Heya knocks out a number of solar power plants on scattered Csserian mining operations, giving the government yet more damage control to deal with (-1 solar plant).
  • A small earthquake cracks some of the thermocline cables that supply the Labyrinth of Kathekon with electrical power, halving output for the next year (-2 power at the Labyrinth)
  • A small fire in a Quasi data store wipes out a vast array of organisational data, everyone who runs stuff is going to have to work pretty hard to make up for it (hit to net s)
  • A mudslide in the crowded slums of the Western Fringe sees several districts collapsing into the sea (-1 urbanisation, social infrastructure).

Random Stats

Top 10 processed Goods Lines moved by Interstellar Shipping
  1. Kompact Kelpburgers [Delugers] “It’s Food!”
  2. Larsilla Light Shuttlecraft (Business and Professional classes) [Csserian] “Fly in style”
  3. BLPD Hair and Beauty Cleansers [Praxzen] “For that natural shine and softness!”
  4. BLPD Universal Waste Solvents [Praxzen] “For all your industrial scouring needs!”
  5. Mr Pea’s Comedy Compilation [Corans] “You’ll laugh yourself silly. Available in all cultural formats”
  6. Kila Distillery medicated craft Brandies [Csserians] “Hey average Forest Dweller, why not take the edge of your sucky day? I mean you have a lot of them!”
  7. Ultrafine focative iridium-doped silio-carbon UXCV45 [Ilosian] “Anyone who doesn’t know what this is already isn’t going to persuaded by a trite sentence”
  8. EnHiSO interactive formatting assistant v5.6 [Coran] “The latest and greatest thing in interstellar communications ontology management”
  9. Saccharomyces 89736475rATATGACCCGTACCG [Praxzen] “Reduce sulphur and phosphor build-up in your mycoprotein vats by 7% or your money back!”
  10. 1Dhanu-78 Bolter (handheld RPG/micromissile variable payload weapon) [Valk] “Whether anti-air, anti-tank, anti-personnel, crowd- and fire- suppressants, the Dhanu will ensure your ordinance will reach its target all day every day”

On-going Agreements
  • BIR-Coran supply pact: BIR guarantees to fulfil up 55 m per year to the Corans, at 1:1 v:m, 2:1 f:m, and 2:1 e:m. Failure of a year’s fulfilment will result in the following year being free. Either party may end the agreement with one year’s notice.
  • Valk-Coran supply pact: Valk guarantees to fulfil up 25 v per year to the Corans, at 1:1 e:v. Failure of a year’s fulfilment will result in the following year being free. Either party may end the agreement with one year’s notice.
  • Ilosian-Deluger Pact: Waffle about damages in the case of conflict, guaranteed transfer of 60m per year to the Delugers at Glon, 53f and 16v to the Ilosians at Glon. Failure of a year’s fulfilment will result in the following year being free. Ilosian specialist at Deluger disposal to teach Maths if possible, Deluger specialist at Ilosian disposal to teach Propulsion if possible.
  • Hankish-Ilosian Trade Deal: Hankish can station a commercial agent on Phaeton. 50e exchanged for 25m per year. Failure to fulfil means free next year can be cancelled by either with one year’s notice.
  • Hankish-Deluge Treaty of Friendship: Super vague mission statement with no indication of what happens with failures. Hankish give Delugers a cargo ship (done). Delugers let Hankish get ALL TRADE in Deluger space. Statement of co-operation regarding SAH7 IX or VIII (which one not mentioned) to build a space dock and atmosphere station respectively, splitting costs 50:50 and v extraction 35:65.
  • Treaty of Torpor (Csserian-Praxzen): Each agrees to fund a space station and atmosphere pump at SAF2 IV (now Torpor). Csserians run the station, Praxzen the pump. 50:50 splitting of ownership and v output of the pump. Also agreed on most favoured nation, channels for dialog and mediation, quid pro quo exchange of experts for teaching. Commitment to co-op militarily and defend each other against ‘unprovoked’ aggression.
  • Deluger Pledge: 3:1 f:m or 2:1 f:e deals available to the Glon miners in perpetuity.
  • Coran-Zeran agreement: In exchange for loans the Zerans will grant the Illuminate the Northern Isles, and allow unlimited penetration by Coran missionaries and commercial interests.
  • Treaty of Kathekon (Coran-Praxzen): rigorous defined specialist exchange program (Analyst for Biologist). Coran analyst has fulfilled treaty obligations, Praxzen Biologist still traveling to the Cathedral.
  • Ilosian-Deluger Arrangement One: Delugers purchase 2 Baldric haulers on behalf of the Yanii. Delivered, Delugers still fulfilling on e debt.
  • Ilosian-Deluger Arrangement Two: apportionment of SAH7’s ice giants, Deluger experts will survey them both, Delugers can use the Phaeton Shipyard for construction with one year’s notice, swap Deluger Designers for Ilosian Analysts on request.
  • Ilosian-Dardareo Supply Pact: Ilosians will provide the Dardareo with supply at SAH7 and 35m and 55v per year, Dardareo will provide supply and harbour at Sigma Relay and 100e per year. 5 years duration but rolling renewal, fulfilment failure means free next year.
  • Coran-Csserian Trade Agreement: Pretty damn meaningless, will respect each other’s markets, but since they can end it at any time with but a years notice…meh.
  • Excelsior JVG: A joint commercial venture between Hank-Sobor and the Praxzen. Terms.
  • Hankish-Deluger investment deal: Hankish gave the Delugers 45e for hydroponics so they can buy food at the utterly absurd rate of 2f:3e. Delugers will return 15e in each of ’77 and ’78.

Loans
  • Ilosian-Dardareo Loan: Ilosians agree to borrow 150e from the Pavonis Bank (underwritten by the Dardareo) at 250e repayment within 6 years (Repayment Pending).
  • Csserians: 150 from LOFG @ 5.5% in '75. Interest to be paid: 15/10/10/10/10 beginning in '75 ending in '80.
  • Praxzen: 500 from LOFG @ 5% in '74. Interest to be paid from '78 to '86 at rate of 85 p.a.
  • Hankish: 100 from LOFG @ 5% in '73. Interest to be paid from '74 to '80 at rate 20 p.a. (2 payments made)
  • Yanii: 100 from LOFG @ 10% in '73. Interest to be paid from 76' to '77 @ 50 and 100 respectively.*
  • Knights: 100 from LOFG @ 7% in '73. Interest to be paid once someone connects SAF1 to the trade networks at 10e p.a.
  • Delugers: 100 from the Dardareo @ 4% in ’76. Interest to be paid from ’77 to ’81 at rate of 26 p.a.
  • Csserians: 350 from LOFG @ 5.5% in '76. Interest to be paid: 30 p.a.
  • Yanii: 900 from LOFG @ 5.0% in '76. Interest to be paid from '80 onwards @ 50 p.a.

on-going Conflicts
  • Commodore-Csserian War: Csserians and Praxzen engaged in conflict with the Commodore Loyalists
  • The Laying of the Crusade: Knights, Lyst, Minor Mernt declare undying hostilities till Standardites are driven from Mern.

Open Market Trades
  • BIR: 2 lots of 50m for 120e @ Lipsid Beta
  • Valk: 5 lots of 80v for 120e @ Lipsid Beta
  • Ilosians: 3 lots of 50m for 80e @ Glon
  • Quasi: 10 lots of 10v for 15e @ Lipsid Alpha

New Technologies Discovered
- NA -

Population Growth Payments
  • Corans have to pay 8e and 5s
  • Zera have to pay 18e and 10s

Changes
  • Combat rules now changed: carriers unload ships into the same close range instance as themselves if they don’t have catapult launchers. Thus they cannot engage other close range instances till the second round.
  • Revamped Gas Rockets; more powerful and more cooling effect, greater v cost and back to being a ‘one of’
  • Tungsten armour reworked somewhat – now much stronger but massively m expensive
  • Scanners reworked and an explicit scanner level now added to stats
  • MATHS 5 has retroactively gained a new ship component – ‘Deep Scanning’ a software component which allows specialists on ships with a comp module and a scanner of level 2 or higher to survey from orbit (with a slightly reduced survey chance), gives an EW boost based on scanner level. Also helps you find stealthed armies on a planet.
  • Power armour attributes and components now harmonised across armies and ships – refining one will refine the other. Several other things also harmonised in this manner.
  • EW for ships strongly reworked: A. EW broadcasters no longer provide stacking benefits to EW Score. B. EW Skill values and EW Vulnerability values for lots of components are reworked. This means the scores for ALL ships are likely to be changing, but I haven’t gone through and done each ship class yet. C. Since that %@&# qoou only wants this change because he plans to make a swarm of EW craft and desires the EW buff to individual EWBs their lack of size and mass when refined is now revoked :3.
  • Elite Training now reduces EWV
  • Damage control now revamped, most options scale with ship size and offer percentage based healing rates that scale with certain tech fields.
  • In a change to ship combat rules, jamming can now be active from the start of a battle if the jamming player has not been surprised.
  • Comm&Tech for armies now provides diminishing benefits from being taken multiple times in most attributes (exceptions are EWS and EWV). Additional Comm&Tech does not provide additional actions.
  • City EWS is buffed across the board by 50%, in addition Analysts now have a new ability to buff the EWS of the region they are in (domestic or foreign) by an amount based on their owners MATH level (+10% per level). They cannot do any other action if they are buffing EWS.
  • The way crowding stress is calculated has been altered, the curve is much smoother now and hopefully will produce more equilibriums and less bouncing. Some peoples new social stress is indeed a bit lulz. A number of other under the hood changes have been made to the movement calculator as well.

Notes
  • When you want to spend money to make people move to a region, you need to spend enough to get it into the same range of attractiveness as your better regions if you want a sure thing. For example the Praxzen spent 10e on Adiapora, temporarily boosting it from 18 to 28, however since their best region is still 39, moving to a 28 still makes migration a low probability. Spending money on encouragement is a relative system not an absolute.
  • Remember to check your building cost modifiers :<
  • [alex] Do your damn resource movements separately like I god damn asked
  • [Thlayli] Let this be a lesson to you: orders are what you want to happen, not a place where you write a script of what will happen in a happy easy magical land where you get everything at no cost and also a pony factory.
 
Of course by one hour I mean 3!

Network Map Y6
Spoiler :
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Trade Map Y6
Spoiler :
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PLANET IMAGES ARE STILL IN THE PROCESS OF BEING ADDED

System Chart: ALNITAH Y6
Spoiler :
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System Chart: SPINWARDS Y6
Spoiler :
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System Chart: HANDMAIDENS Y6
Spoiler :
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System Chart: FOREST (PART1) Y6
Spoiler :
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System Chart: FOREST (PART2) Y6
Spoiler :
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System Chart: CLOUDBANK Y6
Spoiler :
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Economy Display (PART 1) Y6
Spoiler :
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Economy Display (PART 2) Y6
Spoiler :
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Economy Display (PART 3) Y6
Spoiler :
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Data Images Y6
Spoiler :
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SPREADSHEET FILES Y6

Economics
Army Designer
Ship Designer
Techs
Images

BATTLE CALC RELEASE 1
(It has been slightly updated)

Next Orders Due - 10am GMT Saturday 6th October (though I would like them in earlier)​
 
Excellent update Dis!

Time to figure out how to make my government stop being junk, and how to work with the Dardareo to make Hearthfire actually able to sustain life in 20 years. :p
 
The government of Yan is hereby opening a legal case in Larsilla courts against the Csserian Republic for the illegal seizure of Yanii property and assets. We are prepared to negotiate a private plea bargain if the Csserian Republic does not wish to go to court over this blatant disregard of private property.

Signed,
Haoi "Muscles" Ayuao, Advisor to Harus Hephoi and Chief Csserian Diplomat

Edit: The case has been settled out of court.
 
The government of Yan is hereby opening a legal case in Larsilla courts against the Csserian Republic for the illegal seizure of Yanii property and assets. We are prepared to negotiate a private plea bargain if the Csserian Republic does not wish to go to court over this blatant disregard of private property.

Signed,
Haoi "Muscles" Ayuao, Advisor to Harus Hephoi and Chief Csserian Diplomat

Edit: The case has been settled out of court.

The case has not been settled out of the court. The case was thrown out of court due to the misinformation received by the Yanii parties involved in the litigation.

OOC: Fun stuff dis. I enjoyed it immensely :)
 
It seems like Supply Sections are a thing that should be noted in the Loadout & Notes section of current designs.
 
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