Sectors contain one or many Systems. Systems consist of one or more stars, brown dwarfs, or black holes, and their orbiting bodies which always includes at least one World.
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| WIP player-facing Starmap for 5MW RPG |
Sectors
Sectors are groups
of Systems connected through hyperspace. Systems within the same Sector are
not necessarily physical astronomical neighbors, but are spacetime is
folded such as the Jumps required between them are “shorter” in practice.
Sectors are depicted in game as hex map segments called Sector Segments.
Sector Segments take
sizes between a single System up to ten Systems. Avatars construct their own
starmaps in 5MW, placing their Sector Segments on a larger, empty hexmap,
weaving their own tapestry of Sectors as they explore the 5 Million Worlds.
The idea here is that the frontier is always unknown, and that folks can build their own independent Sectors to plug-and-play as needed.
Systems
Star systems—whether
a solitary star, multiple star system, brown dwarf or black hole—is called a
System. Systems are often named [Star]-Sys or [World]-Sys, e.g. Spindle-Sys, Breq-Sys, etc. This abbreviation is common, e.g. in-Sys travel, out-Sys
trading, etc.
Each Sys contains at least one World and one Ansible. A System, its Worlds, and other major orbital bodies are represented on a System Map:
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| From the Mothership Search & Rescue Campaign post |
Worlds
A World is an orbital
body where people live. This may be a planet, moon, asteroid, space station,
superstructure, etc. Depending on their Form, some Avatars may need to make a Body Save against World Shock when visiting certain Worlds.
World Maps can be
acquired through a World’s organization, or a close orbit scan with consent
from the World’s peoples.
World Shock
Ecologies and
Ansibles
Ansibles are the single ubiquitous remnant of the Serpents: superluminal communication nodes. From an Ansible, any Sys can communicate with another Ansible within its network in real time. Fully functional Ansibles can even use the Uplink to travel between systems, uploading the Mind and printing a new body at the System destination. Most Ansibles, however, are either derelict, thought lost, or controlled by a World’s power to disseminate or control information across the Sector.
Serpents & Serpentware
Extremely
few in the 5 Million Worlds know what Serpents were/are, but their proximity to
the Avatars is widespread, whether as myth, spacer tales, or historical or
archaeological “fact”. Many cultures blame Serpents for the constant
disappearances of large-scale Artificial Minds, Hive Minds, and other forms of
superintelligence.
Serpents
were/are capable of creating technology beyond the ability of any culture in
5MW Space to fabricate, and left remnants of these feats behind:
superstructures and Serpentware, as well as two loose orders: the Serpent’s
Lance and the Avatars.
Serpentware
While reproducing Serpentware is
nigh-impossible, those with the necessary Skills and resources can repair and
maintain this technology. Repairs of superstructure habitats, and the teaching
of these methods, is common work for Avatars.
Other Serpentware ranges from personal equipment to starship components.
Serpentware Repairs
Serpentware
almost always exists as part of a larger technological system. If Serpentware
needs repairing, other Serpent ruins are very likely to be within the same
System. Salvaging without permission is frowned upon, but sometimes skipped in
pressing crises. Usable salvage for fixing Serpentware is counted in units
called Remnants.
When maintenance requires newly fabricated components, an Avatar must use a Serpent Forge. Such incredible replication machines are found within superstructures, and very infrequently anywhere else.
Chrysalis
A Chrysalis is Serpentware whose main function is an advanced cryopod for unshielded Jumps through hyperspace. Their advanced functions include: healing pod, downloading a Mind, bio-print new bodies, and collecting a library of Forms for the Avatars to change between. A Chrysalis requires expending Exotic Matter to perform a single advanced function, and must have a hardwire connection to an Ansible.
Personal Serpentware
Highly advanced cyberware, bioware, personal protection, and other equipment also exists throughout the 5 Million Worlds. Yet Serpentware rarely exists in a vacuum; it serves its location, and holds importance to the peoples of its World. Such treasures belong to the World and its cultures, not those who find them. How the Avatars handle such encounters is important for their reputation.
Serpent’s
Lance
Hunters who seek Avatars who have broken the Code, their promise to help. Members of the Lance are often former Avatars, with advanced starships and Serpentware. The Lance is not immune to corruption or transmuted belief systems.
Call of the Avatar
Avatars are mediators, liberators, merchants,
explorers, and troubleshooters. They answer the Call of the Avatar to fight for
peace, resolve crises, and help the peoples of the 5 Million Worlds. This is
the Avatar’s pledge. Breaking this pledge may attract the ire of the Serpent’s
Lance; Following this pledge may attract the ire of local Sector powers. The
lives and adventure of Avatars tend to follow this pattern:
Starfaring Phase
The Avatars
choose where to travel. They may begin with a small Sector map, or must find an
Ansible to discover local hyperlanes.
In order to
Jump to another system, Avatars must have a Jump Drive or better.* Out of
respect for privacy and local traffic safety, Jump Points tend to be on the
polar stellar axis of a System. Jumping elsewhere in a System is possible, with
the relevant Skills, but often attracts major disfavor with space-faring
locals.
Avatars may spend one unit of Exotic Matter and two weeks per light year, if they have a vessel capable of such stocking capacity, and the Warden is so inclined to build out a Realspace star map.
Avatars may begin with a small starship capable of superluminal travel called a
Wedge.
Wedge
- Airlock with Docking Sleeve.
- Lander Bay. Contains one Lander Pod to travel to and from Worlds without their own travel infrastructure.
- Bridge. Piloting, Comms, Sensors.
- Commons. Bunks and central living space.
- Cryobay. 10 cryopods.
- Engines. Jump-I Drive for hyperspace travel (expends one unit of Exotic Matter per single hex Jump), and Loop-I Drive for in-system superluminal travel (expends one unit of Exotic Matter per three in-Sys uses).
Contact Phase
While contacting the
peoples of a World when entering a System is technically optional, it is the done thing. Space
pirates and warlords never call ahead, so Contact is
common courtesy, and achieved across two steps: Ansible Ping and World Ping.
1) Ansible
Ping
Avatars may attempt to ping the local
System’s Ansible. If the Ansible is online, the Avatars can contact those who
run the Ansible, even if only the Ansible's Virtual Intelligence that remains. If the Ansible
is offline, they may skip to the World Ping and attempt to discover the
Ansible’s location in the Looping Phase.
2) World Ping
Avatars may attempt to directly ping a local
System’s Worlds. This may be necessary to contact peoples who do not control
their Ansible, whether due to power or technological struggles. Such communications
can be more easily hidden or obfuscated.
If neither pings yields results or the Avatars
skip Contact, move into the Looping Phase.
Looping Phase
During the
Looping Phase, the Avatars’ starship enters the standard stellar orbit. Except
under unusual circumstances, a starship’s sensors can deliver a System map.
Detailed information on planetary bodies, or World maps may require travelling to
the orbital body.
If the Avatars
chose to skip both pings, and the System has the means to initiate Contact,
they attempt to ping the Avatars during the Looping Phase. Avatars enter
Contact at Disadvantage.
In-Sys
Travel
Looping the Sys, Avatars may travel between
orbits, collect Matter, and explore Worlds using the starship’s Loop Drive.
Travelling between any two regions, regardless of distance, requires two weeks
and expends one use of Exotic Matter on the starship’s Loop Drive.
Looping on Mundane momentum does not expend Exotic Matter, and takes much longer.
With a comfortable starship, Avatars may Expend
Limit on projects while Looping (pg. xx).
Travelling within a System depends on the infrastructure, regulations, and other local factors. Mostly, Avatar starships have free reign to travel across the system, but in certain cases they may be required to dock their starship and use local travel infrastructure, or perform special jobs or duties to extract Matter from the System.
Whether using a World’s infrastructure or
their Landing Pod, Avatars may visit a Worlds to answer the Call.
The Call Phase
This is the
adventure phase of the game, and makes up for most of the play. What happens
depends on the World, its Peoples, the nature of the Call, and how the Avatars
choose to resolve the issue.


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