In science fiction, each “universe” has its own FTL travel.
Star Trek has warp.
Star Wars and Larry Niven’s Known Space have hyperdrives.
Babylon 5 has hyperspace.
Alan Dean Foster’s Commonwealth books have the KK Drive.
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Tim White's KK-Drive starship |
Dune has space folding.
Allen Steele’s Coyote series has star bridges.
The Mote in God’s Eye (Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle) has the Alderson Drive.
Traveller has jump drive.
John Scalzi’s Interdependency Series has the Flow. (And here’s a short story about its origin.)
The Expanse has the ring gate and its slow zone.
So each universe has its own way of breaking the rules of physics and travelling faster than light.
And many of them are the same kind of thing, just relabelled.
The Uplift Saga
Then there’s David Brin’s Uplift Saga. While the first book doesn’t really mention FTL travel, when it came to the second, Startide Rising, I was amazed to discover that the various alien races (and there is a multitude of them) use a wide range of FTL drives to suit their temperaments.
I can’t remember the different types of FTL drive (Startide Rising is on my to-reread list), and I can’t remember if I still have GURPS Uplift, or where it is if I do still have it.
So I did the same with my series of first contact freeform larps. Here’s the current list:
- Hyperdrives, which use hyperspace as a shortcut. Hyperdrives may still take many months to travel between stars, however.
- L-points are nexus points between stars. Travel is instantaneous, but the points are often close to (or sometimes within) stellar masses.
- Wormhole drives create wormholes between different parts of spacetime. Travel through the wormholes is instantaneous, but time is taken getting to and from where the wormholes can be created (deep space).
- Star bridges are stable wormholes constructed between two locations. Travel across the star bridge is instantaneous.
- The flow is an n-dimensional current that flow drives access. Travel using the flow is in one direction only.
- Teleporters convert a ship and its contents into information sent through spacetime (at the speed of light) or a wormhole.
- And some races even use slower-than-light travel.
Travel through conventional space is only possible at speeds below the speed of light. As a result, species that use STL often put their crews into cryosleep.
And we have a date for Aurora Horizon’s premiere
And we now have a date. After a bit of too-ing and fro-ing, I’m running it at the end of May.
The game files are mostly prepared, so between now and then I’m casting, sending out characters, redecorating the game space (a Discord server) and preparing the game instructions for when I run it again.
So I’ll have to think about something else to write about until then.
And after that: Consequences 2025
I’ve also submitted Aurora Horizon for Consequences 2025. That will be face-to-face in November, which means changing the format of handouts and contingencies, so I will do that over the next couple of weeks.
Aurora Horizon design notes
You can see other parts of my design notes here:
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