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Really? I don't. They're humorless.Victor_D wrote:I get now why the Barsam seemed to be so "amused" by the existence of Humanity.
Yup, the Nibiren most certainly are the Barsam's template species like humans are (supposedly) to the Loroi. It is safe to assume that the Neridi also have a naturally evolved template somewhere but they are either not a local species and have't been found yet (they could, for all we know, live inside the Umiak sphere of influence) or they have went extinct. It's the Soian MO - they explore the galaxy, find a species, animal, plant, doesn't matter, with a desireable trait and make their version of said species for own use.boldilocks wrote:So are the nibiren to the Barsam what humanity is to the loroi?
Ie, visually similar but with different biochemics?
It seems weird that this should happen not once, but twice.
By analogy with known hermaphrodytic species (e.g. snails) he should become pregnant by asexual reproduction. It might be that the Soians have put safeties in place to prevent this though, again, to keep the barsam population under control.Jericho wrote:I might just regret asking this... but what happens if a barsam eats his own sack?
I think it would vary by subculture, but I can imagine a ceremonial feast.Dorfington wrote:How ritualistic (If at all) is the process of sack swallowing for the Barsam? Are there varying cultural traditions associated with the process?
There were/are both Dreiman and Soia artifacts in the Agumo (which still has largely unexplored sections) in addition to the structure itself, some of which are well-preserved. However, it was discovered c.1300 CE, when the Barsam were already at TL10+, and so the Dreiman relics (which are lower-tech than the Soia artifacts that the Barsam had been studying on Justa for millennia) are more of archaeological interest than of technological interest. Studying the structure probably did help with Barsam materials science, which is at a high level compared with the rest of the Union.GeoModder wrote:A question linked to the Agumo.
Did the Barsam discover usable relics in this megastructure, helping their technological advancement?
And if so, how did this affect their technology compared to nations that advanced through the discovery of Soia relics? Was it as a result markedly different from the other races in the region?
[cinemasins]Roll credits.[/cinemasins]It goes something like this: the world is eternal, but is one of many worlds managed by an order of angelic beings of light known as the "Gatherers" who dwell in some otherworldly plane of existence that is roughly analogous to Heaven, connected to our world via a radiant portal called the Well of Souls.
Yes, the Agumo is one of the several spaceborne Dreiman relics that provides evidence of their physical habitation. However, only a very small portion of the megastructure seems to have been inhabited, and there is no evidence of Dreiman settlement on the surface beyond the infrastructure at the base of the orbital elevator. This is a common characteristic of the Dreiman megaworks: they terraformed planets and built orbital megastructures, but then did not appear to have used them. The current cities on the surface were built by the Barsam.Mr.Tucker wrote:The Agumo is described as a Dreiman-era megastructure. Is this where those remains of Dreiman living/working space were found? (I'm talking about the ones that gave the size of the Dreiman themselves)
Did those soaring cities on the surface also have Dreiman relics? Were they established at the bases of the orbital elevators that connect the planet to the ring?
Here's where my initial concept and the old piece of artwork I fished up to illustrate it don't quite match. The former was envisioned as a sort of backbone with connecting spots and a few attached "ribs", while the artwork depicts it as a tube (presumably with the backbone inside). Ideally in the future I'll redo the illustration to fit more of what I had in mind, but the scale should be that the tube is around 50-100 km in diameter, and the radius of the ring is probably about 20,000 km (Armis being less massive than Earth and rotating more rapidly).Mr.Tucker wrote:How big is the Agumo in terms of thickness? It's described as being a skeleton upon which shipyards were built, so it does not seem very big. More like a wispy wire. How big is the planet?
The Barsam were certainly interested, and studying the structure of the ring helped to advance Barsam materials science, but most of the objects that they found were comparatively ordinary compared to the Soia relics that they had been studying for about a thousand years, and were built for creatures much, much smaller than the hulky Barsam.Mr.Tucker wrote:Why would the Barsam not be interested in Dreiman relics? Sure, they may not be as advanced as the Soia ones, but they still be miles ahead of what the Barsam have. And their lower technology level may make them easier to reproduce.
Impressive. I was mentally scaling the ring to about 100m dia, but that's probably because I'm thinking about what current-tech OTL Humanity could do if we really wanted to.Arioch wrote:...but the scale should be that the tube is around 50-100 km in diameter, and the radius of the ring is probably about 20,000 km (Armis being less massive than Earth and rotating more rapidly).
Our many and varied religions might be quite interesting to them.icekatze wrote:Hmm, things aren't looking up for humanity. Here's another major race/culture in the Union who probably aren't going to be very interested in human entertainment as a trade good. We'd better hope the Neridi have a cavernous appetite for cheesy human romance novels and hollywood action flicks.![]()