Lost Carnival Mods (
ringleaders) wrote in
lostcarnival2017-09-04 07:53 pm
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⇨ GREYSOL
Who: Everyone!
When: Day 155 - Day 169
Where: Greysol
What: The carnival resumes its tour, this time heading to Greysol, a city tied deeply into the fabric of the multiverse. Here, everyone has an animal companion from birth that is the second half of their soul - and thanks to the Ringmaster, so do you. (Remember,
joysweeper is our guest event runner for this location, and location specific questions should go to them.)
Warnings: Individually marked!
When: Day 155 - Day 169
Where: Greysol
What: The carnival resumes its tour, this time heading to Greysol, a city tied deeply into the fabric of the multiverse. Here, everyone has an animal companion from birth that is the second half of their soul - and thanks to the Ringmaster, so do you. (Remember,
Warnings: Individually marked!
THE CITY OF GREYSOL↴![]() The carnival arrives in a manicured park in the center of a big city that sprawls out along where the river reaches the ocean. It’s spring, early enough that nights are chilly, warm enough in the days that people and their souls savor the weather, and sometimes shelter together from the rain. Greysol was designed from the bottom up to accommodate the human-dæmon bond. Go out and see! ► THE SHAPE OF YOUR SOUL: The dæmon-forming spell kicks in at about four in the morning. Most characters will wake up with their souls in some small form, curled against them. Even if they were awake, they became dazed and unfocused while their souls were being drawn out of their bodies and have little memory of how it happened. Until that evening every character's dæmon is able to change shapes, and children and some teens will continue to do so. Most will settle on their permanent forms by evening. Characters without dæmons will just look on, and the few who are thousand-pound bears have to handle being really big. ► IT’S GOOD TO SETTLE: Elaine Tavis Aracari, sixteen-year-old daughter of two actors and a moving pictures sensation herself, just ‘settled’ - her dæmon Tavis stopped changing shape - as a stunning blue peacock. Settling is a major coming of age milestone and celebrated as such in different ways all over the world. She and her family are throwing a massive party in the central park and inviting the public to join in! Enjoy easy access to free catering, live music and showings of moving pictures, and displays of mostly trivial magic. There are also form readers from across the country setting up booths, happy to accept a small fee to inspect your dæmon’s settled or most favored forms and tell you what they mean. Is there anything to these analyses? Eh, maybe, but they’re flattering and fun. ► WITCHING HOURS: Characters who are clearly witches for this event will often be assumed to be in town for a lover, and people, witches and not, may want to know who that is. Humans usually regard them with wary respect and interest. Real witches living with their human families or on business quickly suspect that something’s up, but without clear and present danger take a relaxed wait-and-see attitude. Wait for long enough and any possible decision will come around again, they believe. There isn’t time to learn much witch magic, but witches, real and carnival-made, have an inherent power: the ability to fly using branches of “cloudpine”, an attractive soft-needled tree common in the park. Witches usually ride large branches as if they’re steeds but can use even short sprays, and you’ll probably see the few witches in the city coming to the park to do so. Why not try? ► BEAR PUN: Human-panserbjørn relations have historically been troubled, but have warmed in the past century. It’s the 65th anniversary of the breaking of the Siege of Bertin, a much-mythologized time when Spectres flooded Greysol and a company of panserbjørn arrived and directed efforts to get the survivors out of the city. A statue is being erected and many florid accounts of the story are being told. If you’re in a panserbjørn shape for the duration of the visit you will probably get thanked and celebrated by people trying to hide their nervousness of you. Expect someone to ask if your dæmon would be a human - it’s a common supposition. ► KERNER ISLAND: From the harbor you can see a wooded island. Although there are no rocks to speak of it sports a tall lighthouse, and nearly all boat traffic avoids it carefully. On a clear day someone with binoculars or a particularly sharp-eyed soul can see loads of trash, birds and various other animals that don’t seem local, and… children? Adults and settled teenagers will see tall vague shapes moving about too. When asked about it the most important thing adults will tell other adults is don’t go there. They’ll hold their dæmons close and tell you that on that island are things that eat souls. They may also admit with mixed pride and shame that it’s been a source of wealth and innovation for the city. There’s a facility there that can open windows into other worlds, and the children who can reach it can cross through and bring things back. Many of the children are recruited by research and development teams on the lookout for items they can use, but there are also kids out to have adventures or who’ve run away. More on this later. |
no subject
9S blinks, before his lips draw into a wide smile. "You're letting me look at it?"
He can hardly contain his excitement at examining this new piece of technology, barely restraining the urge the snatch the blastia out of Rita's hand. As it is, he hurriedly takes the blastia from her, immediately scanning it. Like her pendant, it does seem to be some kind of technological device, though on closer inspection, the core seems be a biological component.
"So this is biological and mechanical? Is the core some kind of power source?" he muses aloud. He can't get a read on the biological part -- that's not his specialisation, unfortunately -- but if it's a complex bit of technology, it's bound to need a source of energy. "Hey, you don't mind if I hack into this, right? I won't make any changes, if that's what you're worried about."
no subject
"The core is essentially a power converter. It draws a sort of energy from the atmosphere and converts it to magical energy through use of a formula. The surrounding part, the blastia's body, then has a formula that determines how that converted energy is used."
There's a pause when he asks to 'hack' it. Fortunately, Rita's been to enough computer-era worlds to understand what he means by that, though it takes a moment. "Be gentle with her," she says with a consenting nod. "Juana... this blastia, she's a sort of memento."
no subject
But man, the blastia is named, too? Rita sure is weird.
Nevertheless, 9S smiles and says, "Don't worry, I know how to treat a lady right."
Looking down at the small device -- this shouldn't take long -- 9S hacks in. From all outward appearances, it just seems like he's looking at the blastia, but his consciousness enters it. Notably, Pod 153 stops its sweeping; the pod is assisting him by keeping an exit route available in case things go pear shaped.
9S needn't have worried, though; the blastia doesn't have defences the same way machine lifeforms do. Navigating within the hacking space of the blastia's body is different to what he's used to, though; it must be the 'formula' Rita was talking about. But it's similar enough that he can parse the formula as if he were navigating through machine based circuits. He can sense the energy eminating from the core and flowing through the formula, converting it, just as Rita had described. He can't tap into the core, though; it's like a traditional black box to him, where he can see the input and he can see the output, but not any of the in between. But if he analyses the data...
Disengaging, 9S' mind is soon back in his body, and he lifts the blastia up so it's about eye-level. All in all, the entire process hadn't taken longer than a few seconds; even if the blastia's foreign technology, it isn't as complex as hacking into a server or the mainframe of a factory. A single, isolated device with a restricted purpose is easy by comparison. "So Juana's core converts energy into heat? That's weird. Normally heat's considered a waste product of the energy conversion process, so naturally you'd want to avoid that. But... it looks like you've adapted the heat into a sensor that monitors heat fluctuations from a distance."
He holds the blastia out on his palm for Rita to take back.
"Why do you want to know that sort of information?"
no subject
"It's for research and analysis, mainly. The scholar who made this blastia, Hermes, did a lot of work in developing efficient, high-output energy conversion formulas. He probably had to use something like this to monitor the cores he was working with, to make sure they didn't overheat and cause damage." Of course, they ended up causing a whole hell of a lot of damage anyway... but that's a topic for another time.
"Thermo blastia like this one are normally used to produce heat for cooking, or for staying warm in winter. They aren't very common, though, so most households just use wood-burning stoves and fireplaces for those purposes."
no subject
Hacking assistance done, Pod 153 returns to cleaning up their trailer, sweeping up the cat fur on the ground, too.
"What kind of maintenance do you need to perform for your blastia?" He explains his line of thinking, "It seems unlikely something with a mechanical component wouldn't need regular maintenance. Unless it's like Pod 153, which can do its own maintenance."
And himself... to a point.
no subject
"But some blastia are different. Larger and more complex ones do need mages to come by from time to time to fix or maintain them. It usually involves things like taking them apart to clean the components, realigning anything that needs it, repairing any damage to the body, testing the energy output and making sure it's stable. Stuff like that."
But it seems like 9S may be asking for a reason, and she notices he said the pod could perform self-maintenance, but said nothing about himself... "What about you? How do you handle maintenance?"
no subject
"It's a bit like what you do with blastia. I can handle the 'formula' part of the maintenance, easy. It's part of my duties back home. But cleaning, realigning, and repair? I'm gonna need someone else to do that."
He shifts his stance, folding his arms.
"Usually it's not a big deal. If I need repairs, the maintenance crew handle that while I'm in another body. ...Er, if there's enough of a body left for them to bother repairing it."
Getting blown up is fun!!1!
no subject
Additionally, she can't help but wonder at something else he mentioned. "You have multiple bodies?" And also trashed a few of them?
no subject
"Yeah. All the YoRHa number 9 type S models are for my use. The body isn't important." He taps the side of his head. "It's the personality and memory data that make me who I am. If something happens to my body down on Earth, my data will be uploaded from my last backup into a body in the Bunker, which is in space."
no subject
As alien as some of the concepts mentioned by 9S are, they fit together logically, and Rita finds the explanation satisfying. "I see... it makes sense. Replaceable parts, transferable data... must be nice." She kind of envies him, and it shows. "But... I suppose it's not that easy out here, is it? I mean, without access to all those resources."
no subject
"Kinda, yeah." But he already gets a whole lot more socialisation here than he does when he's out on solo missions. It'd be nice if he could still talk to 2B and 21O, though... "But that's what you have to live with, isn't it? I think it makes your life unique. Special. You only get to live once, after all."
He leans his elbows on the table, lacing his fingers between each other.
"Us YoRHa androids out on the field, we die over and over again. If I haven't backed up my data in a while, is the me that gets put into a new body the same as the me that died?"
He knows he was rolled out on December 30, 11,942AD but given how few memories he actually has, the only explanation is that large swaths of his memory data was corrupted or lost in the line of duty. He'd thought 2B models were cold, but she had thanked him for an action he doesn't even remember doing. It makes him wonder...
no subject
"Still... I don't know that having one life is all that special. It'd be nice to have some assurance that, even if something happened to me, it wouldn't just be the end." Rita's not one to get too hung up over her own mortality, but she's had a few close calls, which is enough cause for her to think about it from time to time. "I've got some important work I wouldn't want to leave unfinished, at least."
no subject
Yeah, that's a good point. It's a bit hard to really grasp the idea of a lifetime's work when YoRHa R&D has such quick turnaround. But he can understand feeling like everything you worked on vanishing or stopping with your death. Maybe the reason he's not afraid of dying is because he knows that whatever be discovers will be passed on to other androids. That his life was useful.
Well, aside from the being reuploaded to a new body thing.
"You know, records say that humans passed their most important memories to each other in all sorts of things." Something Rita should already know as a human! "Things like... ink on their skin, or in the weapons they made, or journal entries. Maybe... if you recorded your important work, someone could finish it if something happened to you."
no subject
"Naturally, I keep records of everything. I've even started writing a book about blastia, to make sure that my knowledge and feelings about them can be communicated, without ambiguity, to future generations." She gestures to the papers on the table. While some appear to be notes and sketches relating to things found in the carnival and in the worlds visited here, there are a bunch of pages in slightly neater writing (Rita's penmanship is generally atrocious) that make up a partial rough draft of a book chapter.
When Rita thinks about all the things the Geraios civilization must have known about blastia, but failed to pass on, she knows she has to do better. She doesn't want historians to hypothesize about her motives for changing the world, and she doesn't want future generations to repeat the same mistakes that humanity already made before.
"Still, there are some things I need to do that, even if someone tried to continue my work, they probably wouldn't be able to learn enough in time to do what needs to be done." It might sound egocentric of her to say that no one else can do what she does, but as far as Rita's concerned, it's the truth.
no subject
9S decides it's better not to bring that up.
Well, at some point, he's going to read those papers, whether Rita wants him to or not! You can't just leave information out in the open like that and not expect him to pry. But something she says strikes him as odd...
"Wouldn't be able to learn enough in time to do what needs to be done...?" 9S repeats slowly. Somewhere behind them, Pod 153 is done with the sweeping and has started on folding the clothes. "Rita... is something bad about to happen to your world?"
no subject
Well, there's no point in mincing words. "Precisely," she answers with a solemn nod. "Right now, we're facing a catastrophe that could mean the end of the human race... or of all life in the world. Once I return, the next few weeks will be critical in determining what happens in the long run."
no subject
If he had a heart, it would feel heavy. As it is, it feels as if suddenly the weight of the world was dropped on his shouders. The humans of her world, too...?
"That's the reason you're researching magic and technology from other worlds, isn't it?" 9S brightens, a smile spreading across his face. "Then allow me to help!"
Well, technically he'd already offered when he proposed they work together.
"I'll assist in any way I can."
no subject
"Actually, our goals might have a lot in common. You see, I've come up with a way to put a stop to the catastrophe... at the cost of all the blastia in the world. Our magic, technology, we'll lose it all." Rita still has a lot of mixed feelings about it, but she's still determined to move forward with her plan. It's not like there's any other choice, anyway.
"That's why I want to learn about societies that have always gotten by without blastia. How they use magic, how they provide for people's basic needs... the kind of knowledge that'll help us start over." That seems to be what both of their goals boil down to: helping humanity start over.
no subject
It's so hard to imagine giving up something that's so intrinsic to one's livelihood. But... if that's what they have to do to survive... It's incredible that Rita is willing to sacrifice all that to save the world.
"Your blastia already have a technological framework." He nods in the direction of where Rita keeps the thermo blastia. "You might not have to change as much as you think. If you tell me more about blastia, I can cross reference your information with mine..."
[ooc: And tie it off here with them nerding for the entire rest of the day or something?]