Topic: EVE Online: The Great Unknown

Speculative fiction about what's really out there in the wormhole realm. Feel free to leave comments inline - don't need to bother with a new thread.

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How long had he been inside this madhouse?

Regulus glanced at the chronometer. YC 121, Month 11, Day 22. This was his forty-second consecutive day alone in uncatalogued Sleeper-held space.

His beloved ship, the Tengu-class UES Richard P. Feynman, hovered translucent in front of his view. At least, while the ship was cloaked, he could ignore the gaping holes in the hull disgorging smoke and plasma from within. Somewhere else in his mind, he moved his scanner drones about in a three-dimensional cross formation, tracking down what looked like it could be a connecting wormhole.

His directional scanner had been silent, save for that annoying blip being caused by a navigation beacon anchored by the last passer-by. That had set him on edge the first time he had seen it, unmistakable proof that someone had been here before, even out here in a system so remote it didn't even exist in the J-system registry. Yet, apart from the skirmish group that had ambushed him two weeks ago, he had not seen another living soul. Of course, there could be a hundred scouts sitting around cloaked, but there was no way to tell, what with the lack of functional communication networks in the region.

Moving from wormhole to wormhole, never quite knowing who was watching, mental finger on a trigger that would unleash a torrent of Scourge-pattern kinetic missiles on a truly doomed target, hoping against hope that the time to use it would never come.

In the back of his mind, he heard the Sleepers whispering to him.


Like all capsuleers, Regulus had dreams of empire.

Ever since before his corporation, Rigel Division Industrial Services, had put its first starbase online in Caldari space, he had had aspirations of carving out a section of space for his own. He envisioned being at the head of a massive interstellar conglomerate spanning a hundred constellations, imagined nearly unlimited resources at his disposal, imagined being able to direct a fleet of hundreds of capital ships with a wave of his hand.

He knew, though, as well as anyone, that building an empire was no easy task.

Capsuleers are aloof people, he understood; they act strictly in their own interests, and no one else's. To build the empire he sought, he would have to convince hundreds, if not thousands, that he fought for a cause worthy to them, that his success, so dependent on their avid participation, would bring them untold wealth and glory.

The thing was, he had heard that line from legions of other corporations, and he knew it was all a lie.

His corporation therefore set its sight a little lower. Instead of seeking to become the dominant spaceholding power in the Outer Rim of New Eden, he instead decided that they would take up residence in wormhole space and settle down.

The planning phase had worked out well right up to the point where he had been violently flung outside the domain of the standard Juliet database.

Now, he only hoped he could keep the ship together and find a way back to space he understood before the madness claimed him.

Proud user of Ubuntu 11.10 / 12.04 LTS

Re: EVE Online: The Great Unknown

Look forward to reading it big_smile

I'm going to be nicer promise

Re: EVE Online: The Great Unknown

YC 121, Month 10, Day 11

"This one's occupied," Regulus Bloodmoon said over the comm. "I'm picking up two starbase towers, both online."

He could hear his brother Matthias sigh in frustration. "How long have we been at this anyway?"

"Three weeks," Regulus said tonelessly. "I'm starting to believe that every catalogued system in wormhole space is occupied."

"Somehow, I'm not surprised," came the response.

Another voice chimed in. "What if we found a lightly defended starbase and took it down by force? That wouldn't take too long. We have a fleet."

"We need fifty battleships working for two hours to pull that off, Evelyn," Regulus snapped back. "We have a fleet, sure, but we don't have fifty battleships, and if they're any degree of competent we'll need a huge stack more. Have you seen how much difference even a single turret gunner makes in a starbase-"

"Check, check," Matthias suddenly shouted. "I'm picking up something really odd. Unknown-class signature, but not a wormhole."

"What?" Regulus said in surprise. "That's impossible."

"Bringing it to 100%... Signature resolved, it doesn't have a name... holy crap, my shields are dropping, what's going on...?"

"Matt!?" Regulus barked. "What's going on?"

The sound of screaming. Then, static. Regulus barely had time to note the cutoff of the static as Matt's signal left the comm network before his mind was filled with the sound of klaxons.

He turned his view, his ship's advanced sensor network illuminating the space around him, just in time to see space shatter all around him like broken glass.

Proud user of Ubuntu 11.10 / 12.04 LTS

4 (edited by [RPA] Matthias Bloodmoon 25-Oct-2011 22:54:23)

Re: EVE Online: The Great Unknown

He had a bit of a complicated relationship with his ship.

When it was in working order, he was happy with it. He was always careful to treat it well whenever he could, making sure the complex network of fluid routers within stayed in alignment, making sure the engines and sensors were calibrated, making sure the launch mechanisms would operate like clockwork when he needed them too.

When it didn't work for some reason, he would curse at it.

Having a hull riddled with holes did not fit his idea of 'working order'.

The shield generator was still fully operational, which would be useful in case some surprise happened; it had already come in handy when he had been ambushed a couple of weeks back by some pirates who had been as equally lost as he was. He was tempted to engage some of the Sleeper drones he knew were patrolling the long-dead installations in the system, but he knew that he ran the risk of alerting reinforcements. It would be hard enough to tackle them by himself with a fully-repaired Tengu; he stood no chance with this plasma-spewing bucket of bolts.

He had not thought to bring an environment suit onboard for himself - not that it would have been useful. The cataclysmic event that had brought him here had left his minimal crew dead and the ship's interior wholly uninhabitable save for the compartment that held his pod.

Even if he had had the insight to attach manipulators to his pod before he had last left spacedock over two months ago, the pod eject mechanism had been damaged too badly to operate in space.

It seemed remarkable, then, that the probe launcher and cargo recovery system still worked. Thank goodness for redundancy and reinforcement - at least, where shipwrights had thought they would really matter.

A blip informed him that the signature he was tracking had been fully resolved - a wormhole, like the ones he had traversed a hundred times already, with no rhyme or reason as to how they appeared or disappeared, never leading to catalogued wormhole space, always going to somewhere named "Unknown System", always telling him "System Is Not Recognized In The Database".

He remembered he hadn't yet bothered to try to triangulate his physical position from the positions of the stars. Was that even still possible? He reflected momentarily. If the scan probe launcher was still operational, then so was the rest of the onboard scientific package.

Two hours later, he frowned. That couldn't be right. If he was where he thought he was, then evidently the Sleepers had expanded much further than the small star cluster that New Eden pilots had access to.

What were the Sleepers doing all the way out _here_?

Proud user of Ubuntu 11.10 / 12.04 LTS

5 (edited by [RPA] Matthias Bloodmoon 08-Oct-2011 06:40:07)

Re: EVE Online: The Great Unknown

YC 121, Month 10, Day 11

It had all happened so fast.

One moment he had heard his brother Matthias wiped away by some unknown cataclysm; the next his ship had been caught by something that should not exist. It was being torn every which way, being blasted by energy from what must have been a stellar core, being ripped asunder by meteoroids the size of golf-balls moving at half the speed of light. He was fighting to keep his mind in control, never mind his ship, as he was assaulted by images of phenomena that had no right to exist.

The ship jolted sideways suddenly, flung with incredible force like a plastic toy, soaring through one of the rapidly-changing, rapidly-evolving cracks in the seams of reality.

And suddenly the anomaly had faded away and he was somewhere else. Not yet ready to come to grips with the fact that he had just narrowly escaped being blown up, he glanced at the system name. "Unknown System".

He looked frantically for the J-number. There was none.

He tried to bring up an information listing. "System Is Not Recognized In The Database."

He reached out for the corporate commlink. It was silent.

He stared at the words. They stared back at him.

For the first time in his career as a capsuleer, he was truly lost. He was truly alone.

Proud user of Ubuntu 11.10 / 12.04 LTS

Re: EVE Online: The Great Unknown

Damn that was suprisingly good.  Keep em coming please.  I don't spend much time in WH's but you seemed to have captured the feel of being alone there.

I'm going to be nicer promise

Re: EVE Online: The Great Unknown

[I spent two weeks in wormhole space doing what Regulus was doing before he got tossed beyond the known world - I would know what it's like tongue]


The ship shook more than usual as it hurtled through the warp tunnel. It looked kind of like a piece of space junk hurtling through a planetary atmosphere, he thought to himself, trailing plasma and smoke in its wake, hurtling towards an uncertain future.

He glanced at the ship status display with the two threatening-looking red arcs, and then the numbers beside them. Shields: 100%, 4187/4187. Armor: 0%, 0/2812. Hull: 0%, 3/2076.

The hull had taken so much damage, it was now rated at a measly three standard integrity points. By all rights, his ship should not have been spaceworthy at all. It was a testament to the strength of Caldari engineering that he was still flying with a fully working afterburner.

His ship slid out of warp as ungracefully as it had entered it, careening wildly as the warp drive's drag on spacetime slowed it to a halt. The wormhole lay before him, type name 'Unknown Wormhole'. He pulled up the information listing. On the verge of dissipating into the ether, not significantly disrupted by ships, leading to an unrecognized star system. Using what computing power the ship had left, Regulus saved a map of the stars around him, then fired up his engines and jumped through.


The wormhole faded behind him the moment he was through, and he immediately got to work locating himself in the galaxy. It was painstaking work, for him and for what remained of his ship's sensor suite. Gathering light from distant stars was not an easy task even for a dedicated science vessel, which, despite all of its advanced electronics, the Tengu was not.

It was pretty evident even before he started, though, that he had been displaced at least several thousand lightyears by the jump, because the stars were definitely in different places from where they had been.

While the ship computers conducted their positional analyses, he launched his constellation of scanner probes, inflating their coverage to capture the entire solar system, making sure to cloak up before the probes flew away and did their work.

Three signatures: the wormhole he had just come through, an unidentified cosmic signature, and an unidentified structure.

He frowned and blinked, looking at the scan report again. There it was, a signature listing as an unidentified structure thousands of lightyears beyond the known world. He brought his Sisters-pattern combat probes in closer, trying to glean more clues.

25% resolution. It was a structure all right.

50% resolution. It was located close to the third planet, somewhere above the planet's north pole.

75% resolution. As with everything else, his ship's exploration database had no records on the object.

100% resolution. He had a warp-in. He ordered his ship to warp to a point one hundred kilometers from the site, ensuring that he was cloaked beforehand.

After another teeth-rattling warp he could never quite get used to, there it was in front of him, and it made him and his ship feel small.

Proud user of Ubuntu 11.10 / 12.04 LTS

Re: EVE Online: The Great Unknown

Shields: 100%, 4187/4187. Armor: 0%, 0/2812. Hull: 0%, 3/2076.


0% Hull had me laughing

I'm going to be nicer promise

Re: EVE Online: The Great Unknown

It was a gigantic collection of small structures, arranged in a spherical lattice tens of thousands of kilometers in diameter. The structures were connected by what looked like filaments of light enclosed in tubes made of something transparent. Like all Sleeper structures, this complex was powered and operational despite its age, though the wear and tear of nebula-infused space was beginning to show.

Drifting around the structure was a small army of drones. The ship computer recognized some of them as Emergents of various types, frigate-class robotic starships with prodigious remote repair and damage output capabilities. The others simply showed up, like so many other things out here, as "Unknown Ship".

The sensor arrays registered a flurry of electronic activity emanating from within the massive complex, consistent with exabytes of data per second constantly being pushed around. Was this a Sleeper master datacenter of some sort? Capsuleers of all walks of life had sifted through so many Sleeper artifacts, but none of it had ever pointed to something like this.

What secrets did this complex hide?

In the back of his head, the Sleepers beckoned him to let the light shine in.

Proud user of Ubuntu 11.10 / 12.04 LTS

Re: EVE Online: The Great Unknown

YC 121, Month 10, Day 16

By this time, he had given up all hope of reestablishing contact with his corpmates. He could see it plainly now. Matthias was dead, Evelyn had stopped looking for him, and as far as even CONCORD knew, he had vanished off the face of the known world.

He glanced at the status readout, trying to ignore the cracks in his armor. The middle arc had only the tiniest segment of white. Being a shield tanker at heart, he had never bothered to fit an armor repairer, as he had always assumed he could repair any armor damage after any engagement if he survived.

The cloaking device still worked, thankfully, and he had managed to evade the attention of the Sleepers in the area. It was not hard; Sleeper drones did not patrol the depths of space, restricting their attention to the long-abandoned sites they dutifully patrolled for their dead masters.

With some difficulty, he had managed to convince his probe launcher to work; he had managed to scan down several sites. What disquieted him was the fact that, apart from a single Oruze Osobnyk, none of the fifteen sites he had detected were of types identified in the ship database.

He had not yet seen another living soul. He was surrounded by the tombs of the ones that came before, mausoleums undisturbed by the hands of the living for tens of thousands of years. That was all the Sleeper sites were: tombs, much like his ship would eventually become, since (as the long-silenced klaxon in his head was quick to remind him) he was out of transmission range of any clone station.

For the first time in ages, he had to remind himself what it was like to be mortal again.

Proud user of Ubuntu 11.10 / 12.04 LTS

Re: EVE Online: The Great Unknown

Concentric spheres.

The little structures were connected in independent, concentric spheres, slowly rotating around every possible axis so that the whole structure took on a disorientingly mind-boggling appearance.

He had been staring at the structure for so long that he almost didn't quite notice the faint beeping his computer console was issuing, letting him know that the computer had managed to track down his absolute position in the Sleeper galaxy.

He looked at the coordinates, a few hundred lightyears away from his last position, a few hundred lightyears in the wrong direction.

The ship's cargo-handling system was still functional; he was thankful for that. He considered his options. Engaging the Sleepers in combat in a falling-apart covert-ops-fit Tengu was not a task he relished at all, but if he did, he could reprogram the few remaining cargo-handling robots to assemble the generated wreckage into something he could actually use. This was a big 'if'; Sleepers were dangerous foes, highly resistant to damage and capable of dishing out more than their money's worth in return. The alternative, though, was probing for wormholes until his hair turned grey, a mind-numbingly-boring task that he would have liked to avoid.

He looked at the structure before him. Its secrets beckoned to him. It looked like some sort of massive data center. He wanted to know what was inside, and he would stop at nothing to find out. He knew he risked permanent death, but in a few short seconds, he made up his mind. Breaking into a cache of lost knowledge would be a fine last act for a capsuleer run out of options.

There was a small perimeter-grade Sleeper outpost on the other side of the solar system's bright blue sun. He mentally punched in the coordinates to his navigational computer and gritted his teeth as he hurled his unseen ship into the horrors of warp.

Even before his ship left warp, he could feel electronic interference prickling against the ship's sensors, sense the robotic wardens of a long-dead outpost flare to life. As the ship's shield hardeners sparked to life, and the twin Angel Cartel issue small shield boosters began coughing out precious shield energy, he allowed the ship to slide into full view of the enemy outpost and the pack of Sleeper drones that awaited him.

Proud user of Ubuntu 11.10 / 12.04 LTS

Re: EVE Online: The Great Unknown

The battle was a distant memory by now as he looked upon the thing he had painstakingly assembled in the safety of deep space. He was an industrialist, sure, but his work had all been theoretical; other people had handled the details. He didn't remember the last time he had put something together from scratch with his own hands; and yet, there it lay, a makeshift hacking drone cobbled together from Sleeper wreckage.

The machine hummed to life, its power core charging up, as it obediently orbited his battered ship, waiting for instructions.

He brought the drone back into his cargobay, deactivated it, and warped his ship to a point far beyond the horizon of where Sleeper sensors could detect, but still in range that the drone could just fly to the mysterious Sleeper data center without an onboard warp drive.

He turned the drone back on, remaining cloaked, and then he was the drone, cruising across twenty thousand klicks of space. Before him was the Sleeper structure, a distant round web of light bigger than a planet, never seeming to get any closer, its secrets beckoning to him.

What strange secrets lay within this long-abandoned complex? He had visions of advanced technologies long lost, distant memories from an earlier time than even the legendary EVE Gate, perhaps clues as to the origins of the mysterious and forgotten Terrans that some people claimed had come before.

Join us in the light, the voice before him said. Together we can know the truth.

Proud user of Ubuntu 11.10 / 12.04 LTS

Re: EVE Online: The Great Unknown

His initial suspicions were confirmed: this was a data center. He could hear the rapid twittering sounds of information flowing freely across fiber-optic channels, none of it quite making sense at first. Filtered through the computer cores on board the Sleeper-derived hacking drone, though, the data began to coalesce into thoughts, into ideas.

Most of it was mundane, and he could feel the information tracing across the structure as if it had done so a trillion times before, walking along familiar paths, wearing down the same roads, in no real hurry to get anywhere.

He traced the paths from sensors to storage modules, from processors to data links, the onboard computer keeping track of everything. Tracing the data links to remote sites, some thousands of lightyears away, he began to realize that this structure was, or used to be, part of the command-and-control for an entire galaxy.

He tuned in to one data stream, pointing him to an unknown Sleeper site somewhere nearby. Nothing interesting came up, except the force composition of the garrison: four gigantic drones he recognized as Sleepless wardens, as well as twelve smaller drones he did not recognize.

Another data stream pointed to a more distant site. This site was empty apart from a gigantic ring structure he recognized as a smaller data center, with loose data nodes potentially containing the scraps Tech 3 manufacturers valued so much.

A third data stream pointed to a site he realized must have been on the other side of the galaxy; it was in an alert state, being attacked by twelve ships the Sleepers registered as unknown, but that he recognized as a fleet of capsuleer-controlled remote-repair battleships.

He moved his focus away from these and probed a little deeper, into the reserves of knowledge that must have been contained inside the massive structure. Before long, the first of these prized secrets lay before him.

He was looking at a blueprint for what looked like some sort of Sleeper outpost, smaller than a full-size space station, but having docking clamps capable of handling anything battleship-sized or smaller.

Modularity and extensibility was present at the heart of the design; it presented data and resource interfaces that to the Sleepers were standard. Add-on modules could provide additional functionality to the base outpost, and would be a snap to install.

What really interested him, though, was the power of the main reactor - similar to that of a full-sized station, with a fraction of the power consumption - and the on-board defenses. He had to blink a few times to make sure he was looking at the right numbers. Doing some math in his head, he determined that the structure could withstand many times the damage output of a lunar starbase, while not taking up significantly more space.

He made a copy of the data into the onboard computer banks, carefully disengaged himself, and prepared for the flight back.

Proud user of Ubuntu 11.10 / 12.04 LTS

Re: EVE Online: The Great Unknown

He had been sitting in space, poring over the schematics for hours.

This would take too long for him to build in its current form. He needed too many rare resources, some of which he did not know how to collect, some of which he knew he needed a conventional starbase to synthesize. Having a base of operations more solid than a bubble-protected cluster of free-floating structures would be a dream in and of itself, but he wouldn't be able to do this if he couldn't find a way home.

He took the ideas of the schematics to heart, though. Already he was envisioning something curious. He stared at the wreck of the Rorqual that was sitting nearby, half-concealed in a gas cloud. In his mind's eye he saw a mobile base of operations, with turrets, manufacturing slots, ship hangars, and laboratories all on board.

He found some blank space in his ship's computer and began to scribble down ideas. He was no shipwright, but he had seen enough ship BPCs to know what the basics were. He would need far more than basics to create a fully functional version of his new dream, but as he worked, he began to see how he could use the wreckage in front of him to put together something bizarre, something piecemeal, and yet something that would do everything he needed it to do, a crude prototype of this grand new vision.

He would need to hunt more Sleepers, though, and get his hands on some nanotube composites and fulleride fibers. The project would be impossible without them.

Proud user of Ubuntu 11.10 / 12.04 LTS

Re: EVE Online: The Great Unknown

A prickling sensation crept up the back of his neck as he carefully fitted one piece of wreckage to another, rotating his right hand gently, his fingers actually a flight of cargo drones with welding lasers. It began to bother him, and he quickly realized why it was happening.

The Sleepers knew.

The Sleepers knew what he had walked off with, schematics to one of their powerful battle stations, and the Sleepers knew what he was trying to do. The Sleepers knew everything. They had been watching the whole time, waiting, gauging intent.

We know who you are. We know what you want.

For too long have you hunted us, plundered our resources for your own ends. For too long have you taken from us and given naught in return.

We have been watching you, pilot. Again and again you take from us what is not yours. Again and again you prove to us that your kind is violent, your kind is warlike, your kind is not to be trusted.

We allow you to see but a taste of what we have. There is more. We will show your kind this and more, and you and your kind will tremble beneath our wrath.

Take our message back to your people. Take our gift back to your people. Warn them that there is more, that they may prepare for a destruction more complete than they can ever bring unto us.

We are the Sleepers. We are eternal.

Regulus opened his eyes, the half-finished constructor ship in front of him. His sensors started beeping. Some sort of massive energy pulse was hurtling toward them at superluminal velocity.

Seeing where the pulse was headed, he threw his ship to the side, narrowly dodging the incoming pulse, which slammed into the space in front of them and splashed violently, rocking the Tengu from side to side, sending his careful work careening away, punching a hole through spacetime that read on the scanners as Unknown Wormhole.

Highsec endpoint, capable of accommodating a carrier. This was impossible. The wormholes generated from the Seyllin incident shrunk close to the galactic center; no highsec wormhole could accommodate a capital ship. But here it was, in front of him, one that could, as it swallowed the half-finished constructor and then his Tengu.

The last thing he saw before the transit was a gigantic robotic ship leaving warp surrounded by what looked like fighter drones.

The Sleepers had risen.

Proud user of Ubuntu 11.10 / 12.04 LTS