Shimmer, Glimmer, & Gleam - A Quest of Loss & Gain

Everyone's fucking homeless now, but it's stamped onto the edge of your soul, isn't it?
It's interesting to see what has been refracted and what has not been.

We got 4 big refractions, the large groups :
- Sex Workers
- Cops
- Homeless
- Corporate

Meanwhile, some things that define society have not been. Traffic does not appear to exist, for example, despite "The Commute" being what half the population spends several hours of their day on. While Gods have shown up, they are unrefracted, and no refractions of organized religion are seen. With the exception of the Dragon, there has been no refraction of entertainment or celebrity culture. Communication networks appear to be unrefracted, and (satellite) internet is still up, remarkably unchanged.

Is radio a thing?
 
We got the walkie-talkies early on, so Radio theoretically is still around. Radiowaves are also just... a base function of the world at large? Some fundamental laws of being alive have stuck around, breathing oxygen, gills being needed to breathe through water, etc. So with Internet and Gods still being around and largely unchanged beyond whatever entity is currently trying to subvert them, Radio must still exist in some fashion.

And honestly, would be easier to maintain and spread out for mass communication between the various groups in and outside the city
 
Threshold 3: Perspectives [End] New
You are Captain Isoldt Young, and you set down the warning from Micky the Grin, your late father's mobster friend. You hope he got through the suburbs somehow, maybe, but you don't have high hopes. You haven't heard from Hoch in far too long.

"We're set up, Captain," Hannah says as she jogs up, snapping a sloppy salute. "...Are you sure about this?"

You pinch the bridge of your nose and sigh. "This is a long way for me to have hauled out the fucking artillery to not be godsdamned sure, Hannah. Out with it."

Your subordinate (we are not saying girlfriend, that just ends badly, Hannah's a good person and she deserves better than you) worries at her lip with her teeth, and stares out into suburbia. It's quiet out there. Only the animals make any noise, and even then...

"...What about survivors?" Hannah says softly.

You shakes your head, and you sigh. "Hannah, do you know what a food desert is?" She shakes her own head in turn. "It's when a community doesn't have access to basic essentials and has to travel to get them. These developments are food deserts. They don't have grocery stores, or even businesses really. Strictly residential zoning. It's been months now. If they can't escape suburbia..." You thumb a little symbol on your belt, the sigil of the Everlasting Lady, one of the few things your father passed on that you accepted willingly. "They're already dead, Hannah."

"Captain," she replies, saluting again. "We're ready to fire on your order."

You look out into the nightmare hellscape that blocks access to the farms and the outlying towns, deceptive in its placidity. And you say: "My compliments to the mortar crews: burn it to the ground."

* * * *

You are Marie Miller, newly-minted saint of poison, and you flit from rooftop to rooftop, always keeping an eye out for that damn dragon. Your destination is halfway across the city, as good a place to start as any: the Saline Cathedral, built in honor of the Empire's gods, and maybe a place you could learn about this new relationship you're having. The Wasp isn't...cruel to you, but it's not good at being kind, so it doesn't talk to you too much. It doesn't help that a lot of times your perspectives are different enough that even when it tries to answer questions there's no joy to be found. You're still turning over something it said, when you asked why the cars are all shitwrecked. It had said: the real reality is remarkably good at getting its own way.

"Yeah, sure," you mutter to yourself as you fly on wings of burning glass in complete defiance of aerodynamics, lift, and all conventional physics. You peek your head over the lip of the roof you're on and see movement...

Hold up.

You raise a pair of binoculars and confirm what your naked eyes suspected. There's people out there, clustered in what used to be a city park. The play equipment has been thoroughly taken to pieces, and if you know your fantasy movies - which you do - there's a couple honest-to-the-gods forges there. A small team of people is busily disassembling a car, and carrying parts towards the forges to be sorted. This is exactly the kind of skill set your new home needs...

You worry your lip with your teeth, and flit towards a nearby water tower. No one ever looks up, you learned that quickly. Maybe you can settle in and watch.

That place is not chaos, little saint.

"I'm aware," you mutter, under your breath. "...I'm aware."

* * * *

Your name is Morrowday, THE SPIRIT OF....

...No, you don't have the energy for that. You deflate and settle back down on the upturned cup that is your chair, and you sneak a look through your gossamer wings at where Sunshower is smoking a cigarette the length of her entire torso. It's a whole affair, like, it barely fits in her entire mouth, the effort is so heroic that you almost forget that Heroes Don't Smoke. It's you, and Sunshower, and Honeyblossom, and Gigglegrin on guard duty right now, and you're having doubts. Sure, sometimes bad guys have to go to jail, but.

...Are these even the bad guys? They're not being fed enough, you know that, or being allowed to bathe, and the way your new "friends" talk to them when they think you aren't listening is...

Sunshower finally manages to take her drag and vanishes in a cloud of tobacco smoke, coughing up a storm, which is the exact moment one of the bad guys who's been scratching at the back of his home-made concrete cell makes a crumbling sort of noise. You zip up into the air, all five inches tall of you, and see him wiggling out of a little hole in the base of the wall.

"C'mon girls!" you call, and the four of you zip up and over, spreading out. Gigglegrin yells out for the evildoer to halt; he doesn't even slow down, scrambling to his feet, making for the Wrecker Wall at the edge of the 'village'. The people here had taken you in, and said they were the good guys, the true heirs of the Empire, and they'd been kinda familiar. Their flag even has the fasces on it, the symbol of friendship and unity!

So why're they so mean...

No time to think about that right now. Without speaking, the four of you split further, outpacing the prisoner and forming a rough square that easily keeps pace with him. "Halt! In the name of justice!" Honeyblossom demands, and he does not halt. So she starts gathering light in her hands, and you feel it gather in yours as an answer, and in Sunshower's, and in Gigglegrin's.

Your four tiny voices yelling out 'Friendship Blast!' finally gets some of the human-sized people to show up, far too late. It's not supposed to go like this. Friendship Blast sends people to jail so they can learn how to be good friends again and get the help they need. That's what it does! It's not supposed to hurt people. It's not supposed to burn them up and leave their head and their legs and parts of their arms scattered across the asphalt, it's not, it's not supposed to -

You lurch, land heavily on the shoulder of one of the humans, and lose your little lunch all over his uniform.

"Good job," the man now carrying you says. "You did a good job, Sparkle Squad. The others will think twice now."

"We killed him," you whisper, and you dry heave, vision swimming.

Sunshower is wringing her hands, but Honeyblossom...

She stares at those severed legs, and her voice is...different. "He was a bad guy," Honeyblossom says, almost eagerly. "Bad guys get what they deserve."

"We killed him!" you shriek at her, through tears in your eyes.

"It's not bad when the good guys do it!"

Gods help you all. What've you done? What've you done...

End Threshold 3: Perspectives
"In Glitch, to become aware of something is to affect it. To pay attention to something is metaphysically potent; to see meaning in something, significance in something, often generates that significance and that meaning."
- Doctor Jenna Moran, Glitch: A Story Of The Not
You Are...
[ ] Orchid, Jill, & Jackie
(begin Arc 4: Where The Heart is)
[ ] Marie (begin Arc 4: The Flame of Chaos)
[ ] Captain Isoldt & Hannah (begin Arc 4: First Contact)
[ ] Nattie & Sasha (begin Arc 4: Empire of Joy)
[ ] Diamond & Thomas Bright (begin Arc 4: Risk All Or Save None)

All of these plot lines will be happening. You are selecting your perspective. Choose only one.
You have 4 points of Communal Effort, but can earn more.
 
[X] Orchid, Jill, & Jackie (begin Arc 4: Where The Heart is)

I just kinda wanna see more of the Kayleigh+Orchid relationship.
 
[x] Orchid, Jill, & Jackie (begin Arc 4: Where The Heart is)

Are we shifting to community points or do we still use the gift system alongside it?
 
It is indeed, and cellular technology is...known, just not widely implemented. It kinda got got the way margarine did for about a century in the real world.

(No really. Look it up, it's darkly funny.)
Oh, so even pre-apocalypse this society didn't have widespread mobile phones?

That is, well, odd.
The cell in cellular reflects the fact that you need an entire network of broadcasting stations (cells) to make the network go. The system is simply now economically viable at a small scale, because you still need all the broadcast centers, even with fewer users.

The technology itself is highly tied to all other electronics tech, so it's hard to see how it could not advance, whereas other computing did. Or did it also not advance, and are people still futzing around with command lines and floppy drives?
 
Oh, so even pre-apocalypse this society didn't have widespread mobile phones?

That is, well, odd.
The cell in cellular reflects the fact that you need an entire network of broadcasting stations (cells) to make the network go. The system is simply now economically viable at a small scale, because you still need all the broadcast centers, even with fewer users.

The technology itself is highly tied to all other electronics tech, so it's hard to see how it could not advance, whereas other computing did. Or did it also not advance, and are people still futzing around with command lines and floppy drives?

Neither, satellite phone companies successfully lobbied to block the technology & the world ended before that could really be addressed. It got brought up awhile ago but no one really commented at the time.
 
Neither, satellite phone companies successfully lobbied to block the technology & the world ended before that could really be addressed. It got brought up awhile ago but no one really commented at the time.
Still, an odd world.

You look out into the nightmare hellscape that blocks access to the farms and the outlying towns, deceptive in its placidity. And you say: "My compliments to the mortar crews: burn it to the ground."

Channeling that eternal desire of the transportation engineer, building a highway through a residential neighbourhood.

(Ok, fine, suburbs suck too).

That said, we have a nuclear power plant and a river, why are we bothering with a land route?
 
That said, we have a nuclear power plant and a river, why are we bothering with a land route?

That one's more easily answered: if the roads can be cleared, the Sea's Children already have horses and caravans, and telescope surveillance has confirmed they're at the farms already. Captain Isoldt is betting on a peaceful resolution that can get trade going without needing to find or build ships, saving labor to be retasked to other things that won't take as much time and resources.
 
And, well, considering so far the horror of whats been forced on the world from Corporate, Cops, Prison, etc? I imagine that the Ontological Horror that is 1000s of Acres of Suburbs may in fact be a maze you are never meant to escape from.
 
That one's more easily answered: if the roads can be cleared, the Sea's Children already have horses and caravans, and telescope surveillance has confirmed they're at the farms already. Captain Isoldt is betting on a peaceful resolution that can get trade going without needing to find or build ships, saving labor to be retasked to other things that won't take as much time and resources.
The counterpoint is that moving food by horse doesn't work.

Because the horse eats the food. The amount of distance you can travel with a horse based supply chain before your horses eat more food than they can carry is incredibly short.
 
The counterpoint is that moving food by horse doesn't work.

Because the horse eats the food. The amount of distance you can travel with a horse based supply chain before your horses eat more food than they can carry is incredibly short.

This is... wrong for several reasons. First, Horses can graze. Second, Carts and Wagons exist, which multiplies both volume and weight that can be transported. Third, until the invention of the Train, Horses and Donkeys and Llama were the only way to transport large amounts of goods overland in any direction that a river wasn't flowing, including Grains and Flour and Produce; For about 6000 years.
 
This is... wrong for several reasons. First, Horses can graze. Second, Carts and Wagons exist, which multiplies both volume and weight that can be transported. Third, until the invention of the Train, Horses and Donkeys and Llama were the only way to transport large amounts of goods overland in any direction that a river wasn't flowing, including Grains and Flour and Produce; For about 6000 years.
1) Grazing is a possibility, but is not sufficient when the animals are doing heavy work, and along frequently travelled trade routes, you will soon exhaust the available grassland.
2) Carts and wagons help, but not much. You still run into trouble quite fast
3) This is true. We also see that until the invention of the train, civilization and trade pretty much grew along rivers exclusively. Any place a river didn't flow might as well not exist, not unless it had some incredibly tempting reason to be there.
 
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…just got back. Why are we talking about supply chains??? Can we focus on the whole Morrowday thing? Because dear lord I'm pretty sure that Morrowday is going to have a villain arc if we don't find her soon enough.
 
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…just got back. Why are we talking about supply chains??? Can we focus on the whole Morrowday thing? Because dear lord I'm pretty sure that Morrowday is going to have a villain arc if we don't follow her soon enough.
I like post-apocalyptic worldbuilding, and this is a fun and weird world to poke at.

As for Morrowday, it might be closer to a redemption arc than a villain arc. Right now, she appears to be an unwitting accomplice/prison guard on what is at best a slavery situation, at worst a concentration camp for the undesirables.
 
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