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#1 |
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Oz
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Spoiler warning: if you are going to play in my campaign Red-Blooded Earth-Men, reading this thread will materially diminish your enjoyment thereof.
If you go ahead anyway, please do not convey spoilers to the other players. If you do, your character will be skinned alive, and I will not give you any cheesecake. SPOILER SPACE SPOILER SPACE SPOILER SPACE SPOILER SPACE SPOILER SPACE SPOILER SPACE SPOILER SPACE SPOILER SPACE In September I am going to start running a new campaign inspired by Edgar Rice Burroughs' Barsoom series (especially Master Mind of Mars), S.M. Stirling's In the Courts of the Crimson Kings, Jack Vance's Tschai (Planet of Adventure) series, and the movie Stargate. The premise is that four Australian soldiers are mysteriously transported from the battlefields in France in December 1917 to the habitable, indeed inhabited, surface of Mars. In accordance with sci-fi convention from before about 1970, Mars is going to be an older world than Earth, afflicted by desiccation, inhabited by the decadent remnants of a culture that once had a tech level far higher than Earth has. I think I will place the fall of the last (already decadent) régiváros (technological stronghold) to the barbarians at about the time of the rise of civilisation on Earth. I think that about 1917 that was believed to be about 3200 BC. Surviving examples of the highest tech will be five thousand years old, an must be either extremely durable, very carefully preserved, self-repairing, or self-reproducing. In designing the remaining tech of Mars (or Világ as it in known in the Martian language Szólásmód), I want to achieve the sensawunda of Clarkean magic with minimal strain on players' suspension of disbelief, which means designing the relict technology and legacy biotech in terms that would satisfy the players and then concealing my working to present it as magic to the characters, its mode of operation to be slowly puzzled out. In short, I want the tech to be both plausible and wonderful. So, I'm going to go through Ultra-Tech and sort out what is available on Világ.
Has anyone anything to add? Comments? Suggestions? Specifics about what tech should be in and what out?
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Decay is inherent in all composite things. Nod head. Get treat. |
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#2 | ||
Join Date: Feb 2007
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Cellular radio is right out, the support networks would have been gone for ages...though one might come across fallen transmission towers in the desert that would puzzle the characters, but be recognizable to the players.) Computers might exist built into other machines. Sapient robots might well fit the setting, robots go back to the 19th century as an SFnal concept. But they should be very unlike what we visualize for such... Quote:
Play up what once existed, for flavor. Bridges over vast chasms might still be in use. The players might find one of the machines that dug the old canals, now rusted and ruined, but clearly once hundreds of feet across...fallen buildings that were clearly once miles tall. Etc. Hint that the canals were dug when the Martians were in decline, and imply that once they had even greater powers... Last edited by Johnny1A.2; 08-02-2011 at 10:11 PM. |
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#3 |
On Notice
Join Date: Apr 2007
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You really want to score a copy of the old Space:1889 rulebook, now printed by Heliograph.
Had whole sections on Martian engineering, etc, that you could plunder for your game. Not to mention the flora and fauna...
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If you think an Apache can't tell right from wrong....wrong him, and see what happens. |
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#4 |
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Oz
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I remember Space 1889 from back in the day. It's not the sort of thing I am aiming for: Teslarian superscience rather than Clarkean magic.
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Decay is inherent in all composite things. Nod head. Get treat. |
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#5 | |
Join Date: Aug 2007
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Ob 2 is that plausible in 1917 and 2011 are different things. As an example, magnetic levitation without maglev rails is junk now but prefectly plausible then. I can think of little in UT hard science TL10 that would either be Clarkian or still functional 5000 years later. I can only suggest that things your TL8 players might recognize as "3-dimensional solid state devices" might be taken as "regulating crystals" by your early TL6 characters. I think crystal radios were more than novelties in 1917.
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Fred Brackin |
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#6 |
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Jacksonville, AR
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I'm working on a similar setting and time frame and I'm having some of the relics survive because they are solid state devices encased in diamondoid material. Were there any caches or stockpiles set up to survive indefinitely?
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Travis Foster |
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#7 | ||
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: The plutonium rich regions of Washington State
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You could also run with the implications of teleport gate technology. In ancient cities, perhaps the locals 'ported around much as we today use cell phones. Rooms could be pocket dimensions. Instead of refrigerators, they gate perishable goods into a pocket dimension and then turn off time in that dimension, until they are ready to 'port the stuff back out again. You could keep ancient relics, or even the ancients themselves, inside ancient 'refrigerator' dimensions until your heroes find the activation panel and retrieve them. If you want to keep this as hard science as possible, remember than energy, momentum, and angular momentum are conserved locally. This means that if you put something through a teleport gate, the gate machinery gains the mass (and momentum, angular momentum, and electric charge) of whatever it 'ported out, and the receiving station looses that much mass (& etc.) when it's package 'ports in. If there is not enough mass at the receiving station, either the package bounces back, or goes into holding until the receiving station can acquire enough mass (perhaps by sucking air in, or pumping water through pipes, or some such. Luke |
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#8 |
Night Watchman
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Cambridge, UK
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#9 | |
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: The plutonium rich regions of Washington State
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Solder, mass 100 kg, momentum 0 in Earth's frame of reference Earth-side "stargate", mass 1,000,000 kg, momentum 0 in Earth's frame of reference Mars, velocity 20,000 m/s with respect to earth Mars-side stargate, mass 1,000,000 kg, momentum 20,000,000,000 kg m/s in earth's frame of reference Events: (1) Soldier is standing next to Earth-side stargate. On Earth, the total mass is 1,000,100 kg and the total momentum is 0. On Mars, the total mass is 1,000,000 kg and the total momentum is 20,000,000,000 kg m/s. (2) Soldier steps into Earth side stargate. Earth-side stargate now has a mass of 1,000,100 kg and momentum 0 with respect to its own frame of reference. Nothing has yet changed on Mars. (3) Soldier steps out of Mars-side stargate, with a velocity of 20,000 m/s with respect to Earth, and at rest with respect to Mars. Soldier has a momentum of 2,000,000 kg m/s in Earth's reference frame. Mars-side stargate now has a mass of 999,900 kg and a momentum of 19,998,000,000 kg m/s. Total mass on Mars is still 1,000,000 kg and the total momentum is still 20,000,000,000 kg m/s. Note that energy (mass) and momentum are conserved locally, at each stargate. This is a quick and dirty calculation, to be more rigorous you would treat momentum as a vector, and also include conservation of the angular momentum vector - but it all works out if the stargate you step into gains your energy (mass), momentum, angular momentum, and electric charge, while the stargate you step out of loses those quantities (or gains the negative of those quantities, which makes more sense for the vectors such as momentum and angular momentum). If the soldier steps into a transit gate whose pair mas a mass of, say, 40 kg, then there is a problem because the counterpart gate doesn't have enough mass to accommodate him. But if its started up a fan to suck in over 60 kg of Martian air, it would gain the mass of the air it sucked in. Then it could accept the soldier and give the air to the original gate, effecting a mass swap that makes all the conservation laws happy. There are other peculiarities of this system - the fact that they conserve momentum means you can use them as rockets by sending stuff through at high speed, for example. Luke |
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#10 |
Night Watchman
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Cambridge, UK
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Tags |
mars, sword & planet, ultra-tech |
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