A cover for a collection of Isaac Asimov's short stories by Peter Elson
TL;DR Summary
- Discord chat for brainstorming and questions.
- Science Fiction setting; a just-colonized planet
- Inspired by Isaac Asimov, Robert Heinlein, Frank Herbert, Philip Dick and Peter Hamilton; all sci-fi authors.
- The colony is just getting set up; soil detox, water purification and building homes, as well as prefab buildings.
- Rip van Winkle themes; the colonists have been in suspension way longer than anticipated due to unforeseen difficulties. Some of them died in the tanks due to mechanical failure.
- Characters should have useful skills and trades that would come in handy in a working, self sufficient colony. They are trained to be frontier people, to set up the colony for later. There are relatively few military types, though they have a militia-type familiarization with personal weaponry; these are engineers, farmers, electricians, technicians of various sorts.
- Technology level is roughly equivalent to what was shown in the Aliens movies, though there is AI, AI-assisted auto-fabrication and other advanced technologies.
- Several NPC's and semi-PC type characters, or even a second character. Multiple characters beyond the main.
- When the colonial ark arrives, the characters are thrust into roles of leadership due to starship damage suffered in transit; the senior leadership are dead or comatose. Our characters inherited the role by attrition and are facing a monumental task.
In Character Info
In 2182, Voyager Industries offers a new life to the bold and the intelligent, the cream of society; others have to pay companies to take them to a new life on an established planet or buy criminals or hire the desperate as slave labor to hack out the wilds and turn them habitable for follow-on colonists, but Voyager instead looks for people with the right skills, talents, fitness and psych profiles to staff their colonies; it's a long term investment. The colonists come to the new planet, carve civilization out and earn their keep as workers, using their industriousness and natural talent to set up the planet for those who come afterward. They are not paid wages, but are given a stake in the planet's profits, a hefty incentive that brings the best and the brightest marching for Voyager's offices.
The trip is supposed to be decades long in stasis tanks in ships called 'colonial arks' but at the end of the voyage is a new world. That goes horrendously wrong; the logs show, partially, a heroic struggle on the part of thawed out maintenance techs to fix an emergency situation and get the ship so that it can limp along in the void. The colonists emerge on their new planet, expected to build the fundamentals of living with their equipment; set up sustainable food, power sources, habitation and terraforming. They also have to figure out what's happened to Earth and make contact with humanity somehow.
That, of course, is only the start of the surprises.
The trip is supposed to be decades long in stasis tanks in ships called 'colonial arks' but at the end of the voyage is a new world. That goes horrendously wrong; the logs show, partially, a heroic struggle on the part of thawed out maintenance techs to fix an emergency situation and get the ship so that it can limp along in the void. The colonists emerge on their new planet, expected to build the fundamentals of living with their equipment; set up sustainable food, power sources, habitation and terraforming. They also have to figure out what's happened to Earth and make contact with humanity somehow.
That, of course, is only the start of the surprises.
Out of Character Info
The characters will be colonists on this new planet, very bright, accomplished people (probably young and just finished their educations for the most part, people that have the physical strength and mental adaptability to hack it in the wilds, but with some very accomplished/experienced people to round it out) and then trained by Voyager in basic survival skills, including how to operate weaponry (just in case.) It is almost like military training, but it's more oriented toward how to build and repair things, how to dig ditches and encampments, and the fundamentals of sanitation and so forth. People would come in with skills and educations in various areas, but they'd also be cross-training to learn how to do the jobs of others; the idea is to set up a colony that can sustain itself while expanding for follow on colonists. It is a first; colonies have never been established so far out in space before; most of the colonies are closer to Earth; this colony will be fare more autonomous.
The colony isn't just about survival, of course, it is about marketability; they are trying to make a nice place to live, a space colony version of the surburban American dream, a place you want to spend time, a lifetime, living in. The idea is to provide good jobs, a nice environment, amenities, comforts and the sort of society they want to live in. It's an attempt to create an ideal place to live for their sort of people. The idea is to also find and capitalize upon what native resources exist to replenish their initial stocks of food, medicine and technological equipment. Agriculture, manufacturing and production of biotech are prioririties. But the technology Voyager provide and the skills of the settlers should be sufficient for the task and then some; it is expected that there will be coffee shops with wireless internet within the first year of operation, if all goes according to the plan; yet the expectation is that the colonists will move ahead of schedule, because these are energetic and educated people, the cream of the crop, deliberately recruited for their motivation as much as their skills. They are also being assisted by the most advanced computer to ever be constructed on Earth - VICTOR.
They're highly educated people, most of them anyway, with magna and summa honors from graduating college, probably with some postgraduate degrees, possibly doctorates, and they largely are fleeing Earth's bullshit and are trying to start over. Colonization by this sort of person is viewed as a slightly innovative concept, or one doomed to fail. Most colonies are started with industrial goals in mind, such as mining, as in the case of Mars, and the colonists are often deportees and otherwise signed under duress rather than a sense of adventure -- troublesome political groups, ethnic/religious groups and outright criminals are often your typical colonists in the first wave, worked under what amounts to slavery conditions, again like Mars. Voyager's concept is different, billed as the way forward and much rides on the success of this colony.
Of course, there is a twist. The colonists are several hundred years out of date when they finally do land; the trip was supposed to take decades, but there was a miscalculation in navigation; an asteroid or other anomaly got in the way of the ship and the navigation computer automatically corrected course to avoid this, throwing off the ship's arrival time...and disabling some of the drive systems in the process. They arrived with dead crew; the maintenance shift that was on duty when the disaster happened died and made emergency repairs and gave up their lives fixing a threat to the colony ship. The ship arrived pretty battered, but managed to survive intact enough to do its job. Not all the leadership survives, so the role falls to some shoulders that might or might not be ready for it.
What the colonists know when they land is that they gotta get to work and wait for the follow-ups, the contact from Earth, to find out what is actually going on with Earth. They aren't even sure of how much time has actually elapsed. The job is still the same; build the colony. It's a hard, spartan life akin to that of colonists on Earth's North American continent in the 17th century, making something out of a wild and untamed land, living rough and making do without a lot of the creature comforts of modernity. They signed on for a different life, out of a sense of idealism.
As it turns out, that idealism is out of date and they are an anachronism.
The colony isn't just about survival, of course, it is about marketability; they are trying to make a nice place to live, a space colony version of the surburban American dream, a place you want to spend time, a lifetime, living in. The idea is to provide good jobs, a nice environment, amenities, comforts and the sort of society they want to live in. It's an attempt to create an ideal place to live for their sort of people. The idea is to also find and capitalize upon what native resources exist to replenish their initial stocks of food, medicine and technological equipment. Agriculture, manufacturing and production of biotech are prioririties. But the technology Voyager provide and the skills of the settlers should be sufficient for the task and then some; it is expected that there will be coffee shops with wireless internet within the first year of operation, if all goes according to the plan; yet the expectation is that the colonists will move ahead of schedule, because these are energetic and educated people, the cream of the crop, deliberately recruited for their motivation as much as their skills. They are also being assisted by the most advanced computer to ever be constructed on Earth - VICTOR.
They're highly educated people, most of them anyway, with magna and summa honors from graduating college, probably with some postgraduate degrees, possibly doctorates, and they largely are fleeing Earth's bullshit and are trying to start over. Colonization by this sort of person is viewed as a slightly innovative concept, or one doomed to fail. Most colonies are started with industrial goals in mind, such as mining, as in the case of Mars, and the colonists are often deportees and otherwise signed under duress rather than a sense of adventure -- troublesome political groups, ethnic/religious groups and outright criminals are often your typical colonists in the first wave, worked under what amounts to slavery conditions, again like Mars. Voyager's concept is different, billed as the way forward and much rides on the success of this colony.
Of course, there is a twist. The colonists are several hundred years out of date when they finally do land; the trip was supposed to take decades, but there was a miscalculation in navigation; an asteroid or other anomaly got in the way of the ship and the navigation computer automatically corrected course to avoid this, throwing off the ship's arrival time...and disabling some of the drive systems in the process. They arrived with dead crew; the maintenance shift that was on duty when the disaster happened died and made emergency repairs and gave up their lives fixing a threat to the colony ship. The ship arrived pretty battered, but managed to survive intact enough to do its job. Not all the leadership survives, so the role falls to some shoulders that might or might not be ready for it.
What the colonists know when they land is that they gotta get to work and wait for the follow-ups, the contact from Earth, to find out what is actually going on with Earth. They aren't even sure of how much time has actually elapsed. The job is still the same; build the colony. It's a hard, spartan life akin to that of colonists on Earth's North American continent in the 17th century, making something out of a wild and untamed land, living rough and making do without a lot of the creature comforts of modernity. They signed on for a different life, out of a sense of idealism.
As it turns out, that idealism is out of date and they are an anachronism.
Colony Profile
Voyager Incorporated started in the early 2100's as a communications satellite manufacturer using the latest in materials and communications technology. However, in 2164, a team led by Dr. Neill Scott used original work by the young MIT graduate to create the Nagashima-Ashley-Scott Communications Array (NASCA) that stretched the boundaries of viable communications between colony worlds of Earth, at the time limited to Mars and the Solar System and very nearby stars, for which communication, limited to light speed, was viable. The technology was initially meant to enable faster communications uplink between extra-solar probes and Earth, but also, as a consequence, made colonization beyond the Solar System viable.This did not speed up the ability of ships to arrive on new planets and return to Earth, but it did allow for faster communication once those links were made.
Before, colonization beyond Pluto wasn't happening because of the loss of contact, but now it was possible...though colonization focused on buying convicts and undesirables from various regimes in an attempt to gain cheap labor that no one would care about, disposable people. Only a few really worried about the welfare of convicts, for the most part, or really concerned themselves with the conditions they worked under in these mining colonies. But what did rankle, particularly in the scientific community, was that their innovations were taking convicts and corporate suits to the stars and benefitting the suits, but the rest of humanity was generally stuck on Earth, or maybe the Lunar or Martian colonies, or perhaps the Jupiter or Saturn moons. The main adventure, colonizing an actual planet on the fringes that could support life, seemed unlikely.
Voyager was doing well though; it monopolized communications technology through NASCA patents and an army of the sharpest lawyers on Earth, and it managed to spin off technologies allowing limited use of faster-than-light travel derived from the initial breakthrough in order to create probes that could stretch further out into space, and report back. When a suitable planet was discovered, with a very primitive plant and insect life only and a soil type that could be made compatible with Earth plants after processing, the Aeneas project was announced, fueled largely by the passion of Dr. Neill Scott, who very publicly signed himself on as the first colonist and took on the role of the Executive of Aeneas...to the secret relief of much of the board of Directors.
Scott, always the visionary, announced the following: Aeneas was a colony by scientists for humanity, a better way forward than sending slaves into space to finish out their lives mining out of some airless rock, and that the Aeneas Project would return on investment immensely by facilitating research beyond Earth's wildest dreams of what could be accomplished back at home. It was a one way ticket, but it brought the idealists marching; there was risk, but the prospective colonists reckoned the price worth paying for a variety of reasons. They had a chance to leave Earth, with all its man-made discontentments and problems, there was the chance to make a better society away from it, the opportunity to engage in unparalleled research and make exciting new discoveries, a sense of mission in one's life work, a sense of calling in finding and taming a new place. That idealism infuses the scientific side of the venture. Even some of the people on the corporate side are buying into the party line, though the company sent minders to keep the project on task. So much was invested in the project, because Scott was a heavy hitter in not only the company, but as a stockholder and to the scientific community at large; he used his influence to purchase the development projects he needed, the technologies he wanted and saw use for. He drove Aeneas from a pipe dream and steered it into a reality.
With great fanfare, a sleepship, a particle sail-driven colonial ark, propelled with technology derived from the NASCA team's breakthroughs and which would carry the colony in stasis, was launched with a cargo of Humanity's best and brightest, its adventurous idealists who were willing to translate word and thought into deed and example.
And it was never heard from again.
Before, colonization beyond Pluto wasn't happening because of the loss of contact, but now it was possible...though colonization focused on buying convicts and undesirables from various regimes in an attempt to gain cheap labor that no one would care about, disposable people. Only a few really worried about the welfare of convicts, for the most part, or really concerned themselves with the conditions they worked under in these mining colonies. But what did rankle, particularly in the scientific community, was that their innovations were taking convicts and corporate suits to the stars and benefitting the suits, but the rest of humanity was generally stuck on Earth, or maybe the Lunar or Martian colonies, or perhaps the Jupiter or Saturn moons. The main adventure, colonizing an actual planet on the fringes that could support life, seemed unlikely.
Voyager was doing well though; it monopolized communications technology through NASCA patents and an army of the sharpest lawyers on Earth, and it managed to spin off technologies allowing limited use of faster-than-light travel derived from the initial breakthrough in order to create probes that could stretch further out into space, and report back. When a suitable planet was discovered, with a very primitive plant and insect life only and a soil type that could be made compatible with Earth plants after processing, the Aeneas project was announced, fueled largely by the passion of Dr. Neill Scott, who very publicly signed himself on as the first colonist and took on the role of the Executive of Aeneas...to the secret relief of much of the board of Directors.
Scott, always the visionary, announced the following: Aeneas was a colony by scientists for humanity, a better way forward than sending slaves into space to finish out their lives mining out of some airless rock, and that the Aeneas Project would return on investment immensely by facilitating research beyond Earth's wildest dreams of what could be accomplished back at home. It was a one way ticket, but it brought the idealists marching; there was risk, but the prospective colonists reckoned the price worth paying for a variety of reasons. They had a chance to leave Earth, with all its man-made discontentments and problems, there was the chance to make a better society away from it, the opportunity to engage in unparalleled research and make exciting new discoveries, a sense of mission in one's life work, a sense of calling in finding and taming a new place. That idealism infuses the scientific side of the venture. Even some of the people on the corporate side are buying into the party line, though the company sent minders to keep the project on task. So much was invested in the project, because Scott was a heavy hitter in not only the company, but as a stockholder and to the scientific community at large; he used his influence to purchase the development projects he needed, the technologies he wanted and saw use for. He drove Aeneas from a pipe dream and steered it into a reality.
With great fanfare, a sleepship, a particle sail-driven colonial ark, propelled with technology derived from the NASCA team's breakthroughs and which would carry the colony in stasis, was launched with a cargo of Humanity's best and brightest, its adventurous idealists who were willing to translate word and thought into deed and example.
And it was never heard from again.
Significant Expedition Events (Timeline)
- Day 1 - arrival near the planet Aeneas, systems working on backup, many systems are down and on backups. Due to damage to systems, auto-wakeup crew are activated immediately; the return from stasis to normal functioning takes seven days with computer systems monitoring it.
- Day 7 - the first technical and survey teams are woken up to establish the colony. Medical and Emergency Technical specialists quickly try to fix what is broken to stabilize the colonial ark for subsequent operations.
- Day 15 - surface landings and exploration of potential colony sites begin.
- Day 32 - the colony begins building on-planet, once surveys are completed. Construction rapidly progresses through pre-fabricated units.
- Day 140 - half of colonists thawed out and put to work. As the construction progresses, more units within the colony start their work.
- Day 212 - VICTOR, the colony's AI, is brought online.
- Day 223 - satellite net deployed, sending communications back to Earth with progress reports to Voyager Inc.
- Day 267 - agricultural self-sufficiency through hydroponics, including water purification and geothermal/solar power.
- Day 345 - No response from Earth. Worries mount.(First day IC)
- Day 7 - the first technical and survey teams are woken up to establish the colony. Medical and Emergency Technical specialists quickly try to fix what is broken to stabilize the colonial ark for subsequent operations.
- Day 15 - surface landings and exploration of potential colony sites begin.
- Day 32 - the colony begins building on-planet, once surveys are completed. Construction rapidly progresses through pre-fabricated units.
- Day 140 - half of colonists thawed out and put to work. As the construction progresses, more units within the colony start their work.
- Day 212 - VICTOR, the colony's AI, is brought online.
- Day 223 - satellite net deployed, sending communications back to Earth with progress reports to Voyager Inc.
- Day 267 - agricultural self-sufficiency through hydroponics, including water purification and geothermal/solar power.
- Day 345 - No response from Earth. Worries mount.(First day IC)
Martian Intervention of 2178
Always plagued with labor relations problems, Zhang-Frost-Kunkel Incorporated, the management company in charge of the Martian Commercial Authority, used a more draconian model of strike-breaking by sending mercenaries to assassinate labor leaders. As things escalated, the ZFK Security Forces used lethal force to make laborers work and the company itself started selling anyone that they suspected of being involved in anti-Authority labor groups to penal colonies in the asteroid belt, illegally. Through the work of a number of reporters, ZFK's activities were exposed, but when told to cease and desist, their response to the UN was a "we have more troops than you do and are too big to fail."
During the course of several years of dispute, UN negotiators were sent in to try to resolve the situation, but they delivered an ultimatum and Governor George McKenzie had the negotiators ejected without having the legal mandate to do so; something went wrong during the arrest attempts and diplomats were killed, creating a considerable cry back on Earth to bring Mars to heel. Military experts warned that the fight would be too bloody to be worth it as the Martian forces were dug in and too numerous for a conventional force to defeat. There were far more forces on Mars working for ZFK than the UN could really control without bombarding with nukes from orbit, and the UN mandate did not allow for that. ZFK was confident that the UN would back down.
UN forces were equipped with a new generation of NASCA drive ships and powered combat armor derived from asteroid mining suit technologies developed during the decade-and-a-half-long standoff when Mars was cut off from the latest tech; the forces arrived faster than expected and more capable than expected despite the smaller numbers. This unexpected technological advantage shifted the outcome in favor of UN forces, though the intervention did not do much to save those laborers caught up in the dispute.
During the course of several years of dispute, UN negotiators were sent in to try to resolve the situation, but they delivered an ultimatum and Governor George McKenzie had the negotiators ejected without having the legal mandate to do so; something went wrong during the arrest attempts and diplomats were killed, creating a considerable cry back on Earth to bring Mars to heel. Military experts warned that the fight would be too bloody to be worth it as the Martian forces were dug in and too numerous for a conventional force to defeat. There were far more forces on Mars working for ZFK than the UN could really control without bombarding with nukes from orbit, and the UN mandate did not allow for that. ZFK was confident that the UN would back down.
UN forces were equipped with a new generation of NASCA drive ships and powered combat armor derived from asteroid mining suit technologies developed during the decade-and-a-half-long standoff when Mars was cut off from the latest tech; the forces arrived faster than expected and more capable than expected despite the smaller numbers. This unexpected technological advantage shifted the outcome in favor of UN forces, though the intervention did not do much to save those laborers caught up in the dispute.
E-VICTORExperimental Virtual Intelligence, Colony Total Operations Routine
E-VICTOR is basically a highly experimental program designed by Voyager to help make the colony quickly self-sufficient; it is designed to assist in all facets of government, though it is dependent on human input to expand its knowledge; it operates with all departments as an advisor. The facilities that hold Victor were brought along in huge cargo container by ship and were installed deep underground with a geothermal plant supplying the power, which was a necessary step in order to power the massive equipment that houses Victor. The interaction is simple; you speak to Victor as if speaking to a colleague.
VICTOR is, at the time of launch, Earth's most efficient and advanced supercomputer intelligence, and sending it along with the Aeneas colony is part and parcel with Voyager's intention to create a new type of colony, a more productive colony that generates profits for the company. Victor is at the heart of the colony in that it assists in the ability to quickly crunch numbers and assist the colony's specialists in their work, drastically speeding up the collection and analysis of data as well as being able to make projections. It is not particularly mobile outside of a certain range of the colony, except via special links to certain types of vehicles, such as the shuttles or various ground vehicles, and it depends on humans for input. It is, as yet, a very new AI, just unpacked in the colony, so it is still finding its feet here. With human guidance, it is expected that VICTOR can quickly design prototypes and assimilate research into its memory banks and expand its knowledge base, among other things. While some colonists may joke about "The Overlord" the reality is that VICTOR's design is such that it depends on humanity to act as its eyes, ears and imagination.
VICTOR is more than just a highly capable personal data assistant; he controls the autofabricators on the planet. The system, still in prototype development, is the key to Voyager's anticipated market share in colonization; he is able to rapidly adapt the machinery to put out what is needed with enough raw material to work with, and that is after assisting humans with the design of the equipment according to a specification that VICTOR can develop. This is the true heart and center of the Colony in that regard, what makes it viable. What is installed on the Colony is merely the start; VICTOR is designed to expand considerably as needed.
- Runs the fabricators; VICTOR essentially configures the system rapidly to produce equipment as needed. While it is not a mass production facility, he is capable of overseeing an expansion of industrial equipment for the purpose.
- Augments the research projects, VICTOR is more like a partner than an assistant to the researchers in regards to developing new technology; his full-spectrum research capabilities greatly streamline the process.
- Assists the directors and Security.
- Functions as a general diagnostic tool and manages the various base electronic functions of the colony, helping to drastically increase the efficiency of work in the colony.
E-VICTOR is basically a highly experimental program designed by Voyager to help make the colony quickly self-sufficient; it is designed to assist in all facets of government, though it is dependent on human input to expand its knowledge; it operates with all departments as an advisor. The facilities that hold Victor were brought along in huge cargo container by ship and were installed deep underground with a geothermal plant supplying the power, which was a necessary step in order to power the massive equipment that houses Victor. The interaction is simple; you speak to Victor as if speaking to a colleague.
VICTOR is, at the time of launch, Earth's most efficient and advanced supercomputer intelligence, and sending it along with the Aeneas colony is part and parcel with Voyager's intention to create a new type of colony, a more productive colony that generates profits for the company. Victor is at the heart of the colony in that it assists in the ability to quickly crunch numbers and assist the colony's specialists in their work, drastically speeding up the collection and analysis of data as well as being able to make projections. It is not particularly mobile outside of a certain range of the colony, except via special links to certain types of vehicles, such as the shuttles or various ground vehicles, and it depends on humans for input. It is, as yet, a very new AI, just unpacked in the colony, so it is still finding its feet here. With human guidance, it is expected that VICTOR can quickly design prototypes and assimilate research into its memory banks and expand its knowledge base, among other things. While some colonists may joke about "The Overlord" the reality is that VICTOR's design is such that it depends on humanity to act as its eyes, ears and imagination.
VICTOR is more than just a highly capable personal data assistant; he controls the autofabricators on the planet. The system, still in prototype development, is the key to Voyager's anticipated market share in colonization; he is able to rapidly adapt the machinery to put out what is needed with enough raw material to work with, and that is after assisting humans with the design of the equipment according to a specification that VICTOR can develop. This is the true heart and center of the Colony in that regard, what makes it viable. What is installed on the Colony is merely the start; VICTOR is designed to expand considerably as needed.