Author Topic: Possible Player run end of game event  (Read 25684 times)

Copper Cockroach

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Re: Possible Player run end of game event
« Reply #60 on: November 29, 2012, 02:03:44 PM »

*SPOILER ALERT* So Primal Earth has been successfully shunted into Dreamspace, safe from both the Battalion and NCsoft. The Rikti Mothership has been destroyed once and for all. Hamidon showed up to help and got beaten down twice for his trouble.

Great stuff, Arcana... hats off to you and the sinister-yet-strangely-lovable Black Pebble, and whoever else helped get this together. If you guys could do something this good without even the ability to get into the system (except some dev hacks), it's scary to think of what the whole Paragon team could've come up with for an end-of-game event if they'd been given the chance.

pson

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Re: Possible Player run end of game event
« Reply #61 on: November 29, 2012, 03:58:13 PM »
I just found out about this, a pity but I am happy non the less.

Thank you Aracana, thank you Black Pebble, thank you everyone who was there for giving our game and our world there a proper send off.

Hugs to you all! Stay safe, have fun!

Black Light@Union / White Knight@Union / @BL

Arcana

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Re: Possible Player run end of game event
« Reply #62 on: November 29, 2012, 08:18:22 PM »
Cross-posting from official forums:

First: Part Seven of the story will be posted later this afternoon (for me, I know its afternoon already for some of you). I didn't have the chance to finish polishing it yesterday due to unconsciousness.

This was a fun, if manicly exhausting event to put together. I can't specify every single detail of it, but I do want to give players who are interested in that sort of thing a behind-the-scenes look, as it were, into how this came together from my side of the fence.

It was really only about a little more than a month ago when I realized this sort of thing might be possible for us to pull off. I won't get into the technical details of who did what, but suffice to say its probably obvious to everyone there that the enabling issue was we gained access to a certain level of admin rights on the beta server. This would allow us to do certain things: we could control things like spawning critters, for example, and even manipulating powers to a degree, and that opened the possibility of creating an end of game event.

I have to admit, it was far earlier - literally days after the announcement - when it became clear to me that there was no formal plan for a shutdown event, in spite of what the formal announcements implied. That bothered me a little, and in the back of my mind I was already musing what such an event should be. To me, we should have had something like an end-of-the-world event that coincided roughly with server shutdown.

The Save City of Heroes movement changed that idea for me: I stopped thinking we should lose such an event, but rather should win it. But how can you win the end of the world, and still have the servers shutdown?

When we gained the ability to do this event, I put serious thought into that. The result is The Immortal Game story, which started with that question: how do you win the end of the world, and have the world end? My answer: there's a threat from outside, and to win we have to cut off all ties from the outside. In winning against this foe, Primal Earth metaphorically also has to cut ties with our Earth, and that's why we can't reach it anymore. We're "disconnected."

From there the idea snowballed. The obvious choice for the enemy: the Battalion, and the Coming Storm. It was also quickly obvious that we would not likely be able to add any new content to the servers: we would have to somehow leverage what we had. So the story had to connect to the kind of event we could likely pull off, which was a slugfest. So we were going to have the players fight some foe(s). It then occurred to me we should make every attempt to let players fight at full power. After all, the game's ending: what difference does it make now if we buff anybody? So I decided as part of the story we'd try to buff players to level 50 and grant them full incarnate status (which eventually worked only somewhat). That's when Prometheus joined the party. He would be the actor with the power to "lock the incarnate potential" of the players.

But he would need to be pushed into it. The current lore has him thinking his own inscrutable way of jerking the players around is the correct path. I needed to escalate the threat, light a fire under him. Long story short: I asked myself the question the Dream Doctor asked himself in part one: why can't we just take our incarnate power and run away from the Battalion. Would they chase us, or still attack undefended Earth. Thus was born: the Battalion as alien devourers of incarnate potential: a Galactus-horde of sorts. And the Battalion barrier. And that's when the Dream Doctor becomes the first actor: he's the one with power beyond space and time.

It had to be three. Prometheus, Dream Doctor - . Nemesis. It had to be Nemesis. Thus Mender Silos was added. It all sort of made sense to me and the more I played with those characters the more it all seemed to make complete sense. The key to power, the master of time, the dream traveller.

They would be the key players, but it would be silly if they could just all get together, buff some players, and defeat the most powerful threat in the cosmos. If you want to credibly fight the most powerful threat in the cosmos, you have to bring the most powerful guns you can imagine. And that's when I thought about RulaWade, and created my own in RulaCole.

At this point we had the basic idea of what the event would entail: we'd have NPCs spawned as the cannon fodder for the players, and player volunteers running buffed up to the gills Battalion soldiers for the players to fight. I tried to make them as balanced and as interesting as possible, and in fact we were trying things out and testing things right up to that morning. I wanted critters that were tough to fight, but not just insta-kill critters. I know we all hate that. And I wanted them to be tough enough to stand up to the players full incarnate potential, but still seem like they were eventually beatable.

For the record, the Battalion soldiers were Tankers buffed with controller pets (not sure if any of the drivers used them: they would have been quickly vaporized), ranged attacks, purple triangles, and shifted +2 beyond the alpha shift. Oh, and to make them really hard to kill, some of you might have noticed they had a powerful green healing and regenerating aura. You guys were fighting Tanker-mitos: that's the healing power of a green Hamidon mitochondria.

So yeah: tanker health, near capped resistances, AV triangles, mito healing, shifted 50+3. Tough, but not invincible - as we saw. I hope you guys enjoyed my attempt to create a balanced opponent for you.

Believe it or not, the idea to blow up the mothership came almost at the last minute. Through our investigations, we discovered how to control some of the scripts in the zone that control the mothership raid. And putting two and two and two and two together we realized we could kill the shield, make the mothership invisible, and set an explosion that would make it look like it exploded, then was gone. We just needed a big enough explosion for something that big. And for those that haven't already guessed, that explosion is the nuclear explosion Tyrant drops on the players during the Magisterium trial. I tested it: if you're standing anywhere in the zone you'll see the blast wave. Some of you saw that even standing in the base when we had to reset something and it accidentally went off before the event started. Its a really big boom.

After the zone crashed and we reset everything, I think when we did the magic to make the Battalion capable of fighting you (ironically, because RWZ is a co-op zone, its tricky to make other players capable of fighting you: that's why we had to lock the zone when the event started) the explosion detonator got messed up. One of us I think fixed it, but rather than take a chance when it didn't go off on cue I replanted one and set it off manually. Thus that little glitch.

So here's the final script we attempted to execute yesterday:

0. Teleport everyone into the zone over the zone limit.
1. Lock zone, flag Battalion as enemy.
2. Gather at RulaCole near mothership.
3. Make announcement, set off Magi nuke, simultaneously make mothership invisible.
4. Make second announcement, begin spawning Battalion NPCs. We tried to spawn Shivans and Kheldians as appropriate soldiers for the Battalion based on Lore, but I think something borked the Kheldians because I didn't see them spawn.
5. Make third announcement, make Battalion soldiers visible, have pilots engage the players.
6. Continue to spawn NPCs periodically, monitor battle between Battalion and players.
7. At appropriate time, make announcements from RulaCole.
8. When event reaches appropriate point, declare "victory". Battalion killed at this point stay dead.
9. When the players think its over, spawn Hamidon and Avatar plus a few mitos.
10. The end.

Needless to say, the following happened afterward:
11. Photo op at base.
12. Everyone with admin access loses mind, begins spawning the encyclopedia. And that wasn't just me. For the record, I spawned the non-combat Nemesis giant thingy, the actual killable version, the Seed that got stuck in the corner, various aspects of Rularuu, the Winter Lord and Lady, the various Rikti, some other stuff. But there were actual devs there spawning things also: the Jade Spider was actually not me. Pretty sure the Warwalkers and anything with tentacles was Black Pebble, because nothing makes Black Pebble happier than when he's surrounded by tentacles and killing other players.


Also, most have posted pictures, but for the record this is who you were killing in the fight:

BattalionGamma - SnowGlobe
BattalionDelta - Starsman
BattalionUpsilon - Codewalker
BattalionPhi - TonyV

Also, I'm pretty sure BattalionUpsilon's universal translator was broken and he misspelled Battalion. Thanks to all of them for volunteering their time both on Wednesday and for providing valuable feedback earlier in the process. And unfortunately you were also supposed to kill me as the BattalionHerald, but unfortunately something glitched on him at some point and I decided to abandon that. It would have driven me crazy controlling the NPC spawns, the dialog, *and* the Herald anyway. But I apologize for those of you that wanted to kill me dead. Maybe next time.

And I have to give special thanks to Codewalker: he not only helped immensely with technical details of the event - in fact I would say he did more technical discovery than I did allowing me to focus on the story, the look and feel of things, and the specific design of the Battalion soldiers - but he was the guy running around like a maniac teleporting people into the zone so as many people as possible could attend.


And to answer a question posed to me several times in-game and in PMs, no, we did not specifically reach out to the devs for this event. All of the devs that appeared did so freely as fans of the game. We did not specifically intend to exclude them, this was a conscious decision not to entangle them in an activity who's legality was somewhat ... questionable. Not that anyone will care in 72 hours, but we didn't want them held responsible for any of what we were doing if our plans were discovered early. I'm glad some of them showed up, and also appreciate that some wanted to attend but were unable to. But to the extent that we gained some unauthorized access to server resources, that responsibility is mine alone.

Finally, thanks again to the players. This was my attempt to try to bring a small amount of closure to the game. I have two more parts to the story to post (as I finish them), but this event was intended to be part of the whole. For we the players to do something for the players to help end the game with some dignity. The effort we all put into this is commensurate with the love we have for the game and you the player community of the game. I am sure I speak for everyone involved when I say you all deserved this, and more, and the best we could deliver was our best effort. I only wish we could have done more. I tell you now if I was given an opportunity to work on an event like this in September and could work with the dev team to create it, I would have worked for three months on it for free. I wish they were given a chance to do it themselves.


I will end on two things. First, while in the process of poking around for this event, I came across something you all might enjoy. This is a compilation of some rough work on cut scenes that were originally intended for Issue 25. With Issue 24 basically in the bag work was already deep into I25 and starting on I26. See here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N9dVlNA1SMM

Second, want to know how to run an event like the one yesterday? Command macros. Lots and lots of command macros.



Full size: http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8058/8229786063_bfc20afdcb_h.jpg

And I was still typing occasional commands. AND I removed all my experimental menus just before the event.


I was asked if we could do this again. I asked the volunteers and I got some enthusiastic responses, but also some non-responses. Some of them may still be in a coma. It would be difficult to do it without everyone and I specifically took time off to help run this on Wednesday, so running the full entire scripted event is unlikely to be possible. There's just a lot of moving parts that have to happen in just the right way and it took practice to get them all right.

However, if the players just want to get together and have some fun, fight some stuff, I would be willing to jump into the zone and serve up a heaping scoop of NPC. Tell you what: I'll "seed" the zone with some stuff, and we'll see if anyone wants to take a shot at them. Having spent the last month on a carefully scripted, structured, *sane* event, I'm up for a little crazy.

steve1967

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Re: Possible Player run end of game event
« Reply #63 on: November 29, 2012, 10:31:53 PM »
Arcana, there were some kheldians at the beginning - I saw some novas and dwarfs early on, but not later.

Thanks again to you and the team for all the work to pull this together - it was mighty fun.

Also, I love that you were worried about getting enough players to make it fun.  *snicker*

Shadowhawke

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Re: Possible Player run end of game event
« Reply #64 on: November 29, 2012, 10:58:07 PM »
The humungous spider mob in front of the Vanguard base HQ in RWZ1 last night was a nice touch...no other game I've played does giant purple bosses the way CoH does.  :D


EDIT- Arcana, thank you and the devs again for this.

Arcana

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Re: Possible Player run end of game event
« Reply #65 on: November 30, 2012, 12:57:11 AM »
The Immortal Game

Part Seven: Time's End



At first, it was just a few. It was difficult to know if they were here to witness, or to fight, but as they continued to arrive it was obvious Primal Earth would not go quietly. Honored heroes with legions of cheering fans and ruthless villains only spoken of in whispers. They loved each other, and they hated each other, but they shared a single purpose, a single burning thought. This was our world, and it would not be taken from us.

Cole, Voice of Rularuu, paid them no attention. His work was subtle, sublime, invisible, undetectable, but all important. He was pulling at the fabric of reality with immeasurable power and respinning it into a new form. The Barrier of the Battalion was close now, in just a few short months it would arrive and with it a scourge of the cosmos unmatched and undeterred in a millennia. RulaCole would not give it that luxury. Under his influence the barrier accelerated, racing towards Primal Earth; it would now take mere days to encompass what had been planned to take months. This did not go unnoticed.

The lead element of the Battalion was its advance forces - the implacable Shivan Destroyers and the Kheldian slaves that formed the spearpoint of the Coming Storm, and their commanders the Vanguard of the Battalion. They were ruthless and unyielding and had devastated dozens of worlds. It was they who rode the wavefront of the Barrier, and they who first detected its alteration. At their command, the first wave of Battalion forces willed themselves to Primal Earth. Someone had interfered with the Battalion. They would have to be dealt with.

...

The early arrivals to the Rikti War Zone were soon a flood. So much power was concentrated in one area it almost seemed like the War Walls bowed from the pressure. As they gathered at the place where all instinctively knew the fight would begin, the voice of Prometheus spoke:

"Defenders Of Primal Earth. Behold The Power Of Rularuu."

For a minute, it seemed as if nothing happened. And then, off in the distance, there was a bright flash from the Rikti Mothership. The powerful war machine, symbol of invasion and destruction for so long, was consumed by an immense fireball. The destructive wave blasted outward in all directions, nearly blowing down the gathered defenders. As the dust cleared, for the first time in a decade, White Plains was free. The great mothership was simply gone, vaporized in the massive conflagration. For such large destruction, the blast wave seemed oddly mild, as if the destructive energies were turned inward, imploding the craft to its core. This wasn't a simple explosion. This was an extinguishing. The last connection between Primal Earth and the greater multiverse was severed, the Rikti destroyed as a mere afterthought. Some paused, briefly mourning the Rikti, enemies though they may be. Some cheered, for a variety of reasons. But that was all short-lived. The Battalion had arrived.

They seemed to come out of nowhere, appeared around them and throughout their ranks. The Shivan army engaged the Primal defenders as they had so many before them. But this time it was different. On a dozen, dozen worlds there were those who fought back, those who tried to defend their world and their own future potential from consumption and annihilation. They were always spirited, determined, and ultimately futile efforts. This would not be the case here. This time, Prometheus the Fire bearer brought the full, raw, untempered potential of humanity to itself. Once before, giving humanity the merest glimpse of their destiny was a crime punishable by the harshest sentence by those Prometheus called his masters. This time, the punishment would be self-inflicted. But Prometheus knew the full measure of the destiny of humanity, and he would not allow an outside force to end that journey.

The defenders of Primal Earth were raised to their full potential. Some to the peak of their abilities, many others beyond that to rise to wield the power of the Incarnate. Such power had been working its way into humanity for some time: it was this very fact that attracted the Battalion. But they would not be facing children, working their way to becoming Incarnates. They would be facing the full power they had hoped to tap.

The defenders quickly made short work of the Shivan army. As fast as they could arrive, by the hundreds they came and fell. Never before had a Shivan army been reaped like so much stalks of wheat. But then the Vanguard arrived. Four of them descended upon the Primal defenders and the real battle began. The Vanguard was protected by powerful incarnate strength and wielded as much Incarnate ability as a hundred incarnate warriors. The tide began to turn, and it was now the defenders that were on the defensive. And yet slowly, gradually at first and then with more conviction the Primal defenders began to bring down the Vanguard. It seemed the longer the fight went on the weaker the Vanguard seemed to become. In fact, it was the reverse: humanity, now in full possession of its incarnate potential, and wielding it with a singular purpose, revealed the Well of the Furies for what it really was. It was not a powerful entity with control over humanity's destiny. In fact it was humanity's destiny itself: it was the embodiment of the potential and the consciousness of humanity. It had no voice save what humanity impressed upon it. It had no power save what humanity itself opened the door to reaching. This was the great secret of incarnate potential, which Prometheus had once tried to protect. The denizens of Primal Earth were always limited by only one thing: their belief in themselves and their ability to control their destiny. No man or woman could control the Well of the Furies. But humanity could. And here, at the place once known as the place where The People could look out beyond the horizon and speak to their inner voices about their place in the cosmos, humanity spoke with one voice, and acted with one hand. And the Well of the Furies responded, by releasing its potential to its protectors. Humanity was no longer on the slow path to Incarnate or the fast path. They were on the path Prometheus opened to them: the path of Destiny.

For what seemed a long time the battle raged, but then RulaCole, who had been indifferent to the battle that raged just below him, spoke:

"It is done."

The Primal defenders detected no sign of anything changing, but the Vanguard did. The barrier which once confined humanity now trapped them. And their brethren, on their way to join the battle, felt it also. The barrier now enclosed all of the Battalion, and it no longer allowed them beyond it. In their shock the Vanguard were finally cut down by the Primal defenders. Far beyond the remaining Battalion turned to the Barrier, hurling themselves towards it in a vain attempt to escape. But escape was now not possible.

Cole knew what would happen next: the power of Rularuu told him as much. For an instant, he reflected on his fate. His energy, including much of the power of the Well of the Furies, would be quickly siphoned by the Barrier. He would become a part of the Barrier, trapping the Battalion within it. And in a few days when the Barrier reached its nadir, his power would join with the rest of the Incarnate power within Primal Earth and germinate a new world within a new Primal dimension, a world that was a reflection of this world in Dreamspace. Their world would survive, within the land of Dreams. For Cole, this instant was as a day. He saw a young man going off to war, and coming back changed forever. A girl who would become a woman. A woman who would become his wife. A wife he would ultimately betray. He saw the unforgivable destruction of nuclear fire, and he saw the threat of it end under his slammed fist. He saw the gleaming citadel of Praetoria rise under his rule. He saw all the good he accomplished brought down from without and within. He saw the future of humanity, and the ugliness it held. And he saw the ugliness he created in an attempt to shepherd it. And he saw all of it threatened by these cosmic criminals, these assassins of destiny. He would stop them. And in the end he would help give birth to a new world. The new world would be just as messy, just as ugly as the one he once tried to reshape. But it would forever be protected from those who would steal its potential. Humanity would always have a chance to flourish. Whether it did or not was up to them, and them alone.

This was a good fate, Cole decided. As his essence began to dissolve, his last thought was of her. "Forgive me, M-" And then he was gone.

...

We Have Saved The Innocent: Faathim the Kind expressed.
The Enemy Has Escaped Our Grasp We Must Pursue: Ruladek demanded.
We Must Not Allow These Incarnates To Escape Servitude To Rularuu: Chularn stressed.
Let Us Unravel This World And Entwine It With The Realm Of Rularuu: Lanaruu opined.
Should We Not Take What We Will From This World And Leave: Kuularth inquired.
It Has Happened Again: Uuralur observed.

The many voices of Rularuu, now freed from the Incarnate power of Marcus Cole, now rose up as one and returned to their eternal war. Rularuu was pulled apart, and as he became the individual voices of Rularuu again each returned to their places of power within the Shadow Shard. All but one. The last Voice sought out a human, standing far off from the battle.

"I Would Speak With You, Human."

Mender Silos turned to face Aloore the Watcher. Aloore towered above him, but Silos chose to remain standing on the ground. He looked up upon the expressionless face of the aspect of Rularuu. "I would listen to Aloore the Watcher."

"It Was The Godling That Came To Us, But It Was You Who Was The Chessmaster, You Who Commanded The Pieces, You Who Made All This Occur." It was not a question.

"I would say I was the primary architect of this day."

"And You Know The Price." This was also not a question.

"I know the price." Silos repeated.

"You Are A Planner, A Schemer, A Manipulator. You Did Not Need To Sacrifice. There Is Always Another Way."

"None that wouldn't cost someone else more." Silos stared into the face of Aloore. "I was a schemer, a manipulator, and the truth is I will always be. But today I was not a plotter, I was a general. I was fighting a war. A war that required tactics. A war that required a strategy. And I would not sacrifice my army just to save one man." Mender Silos paused. "Even if it was me."

Aloore seemed to think upon this, and then with no further acknowledgement he turned to go. But then he stopped, and turned to face the Mender again.

"Farewell, General." Silos nodded. And then Aloore was gone.

...

The Primal defenders began to catch their breath. They had won. The Vanguard was defeated. And then it happened. From under the ground emerged a giant orb of power, surrounded by a swirling mist. Hamidon. And it wasn't alone. Rising from the Earth with the being known as the Primal Hamidon was another creature, the Avatar of the Hamidon: voice of the being known as the Praetorian Hamidon. The Hamidon of two worlds were here on a single world. The Avatar spoke, but its words were almost impossible to hear above the din. The Primal defenders elected not to wait for Hamidon to make the first move. As one they attacked. The Avatar of the Hamidon was an incredible force on its own world, but here it seemed slightly weakened, and posed less threat to the commensurately more powerful Incarnate forces of Primal Earth. Strangely, as they defeated the Avatar and turned to the nucleus of the Primal Hamidon, it seemed more powerful. Surrounded by its phalanx of mitochondrian firepower it was more difficult to destroy than it had been in the past. Unbeknownst to the Primal forces, the same reason for the rising power of Primal Hamidon was also the reason for the weakened condition of the Avatar. The Avatar had brought its core essence, the Will of the Earth, from Praetorian Earth and allowed it to germinate on Primal Earth. There, the Primal Will and the Praetorian Will combined, fusing into The Will, and The Hamidon.

On Praetorian Earth, Hamidon Pasalima became one with the Will of the Earth on a world devastated by two nuclear wars. In response, the Praetorian Hamidon never reverted to the primitive raw state it had on Primal Earth. It retained much more of Pasalima to use as a weapon against humanity. The Hamidon on Praetorian Earth had will, it had awareness, it understood the threat of humanity and sought to destroy it. But with that strength came a weakness. The Primal Hamidon became much closer to the Earth, much more of a raw force of nature. It became a much more pure entity. It wasn't burdened with the yearning, the pain, the fear, the anger of the Praetorian Hamidon. And in return, it became far more powerful.

Mender Silos had gone to Praetoria to address the Praetorian Hamidon. He knew that the Praetorian Hamidon yearned for the destruction of humanity but lacked the sheer power necessary to accomplish that feat outright. But for a being such as Hamidon, there was a path to power. It had no connection to the Well of the Furies; Incarnate power was outside its grasp. But there was another way. Ascension. Few beings attempted Ascension, and fewer succeeded on any level. Those who tried typically destroyed themselves. Occasionally they became destroyers: Rularuu was such an Ascended being. And it was a path to the power Hamidon sought: a way to gain the power to completely obliterate humanity for all time, to return the Earth to its natural, undespoiled state, and to guard it against all future threats for all time. And Mender Silos was willing to give this secret to Hamidon.

But there was a catch. To Ascend, one needed a purity even Praetorian Hamidon lacked. On Praetoria, Hamidon fought a constant war against humanity, made deals with its representatives, plotted attacks against its weak spots. Ironically, Hamidon was too human to Ascend. On Praetoria. On Primal Earth, it was different. The Will of the Earth on Primal Earth had reverted to a much more primitive state. Hamidon himself reverted to a highly primitive, *pure* state. Hamidon was the Will and nothing else. On Primal Earth, Hamidon could Ascend. It just didn't want to, or have any awareness of the possibility at all.

Silos opened the door to a possibility for Praetorian Hamidon. This Hamidon could come to Primal Earth and join with the Will of the Earth of Primal Earth. There, it could be the guiding voice of Ascension, and use the pure raw power of the Primal Will of the Earth to do it. The Avatar was not there to defeat the humans, it was actually there to be killed by them. As it was destroyed and the Primal Hamidon was destroyed, their essence would combine in the very ground, and soon a new Hamidon would emerge. An Ascended Hamidon. A Rularuu with one Voice. The process would not take long. Silos asked for only one thing from Hamidon. A cease fire for two days. After that, Hamidon could destroy all of humanity if it so desired, if Silos did not keep his word to remove humanity from the Earth. In the meantime, Silos told Hamidon, it was free to destroy anything else that it perceived to be a threat.

The Will of the Earth was now The Will, the Ascended guardian of Earth. Its power built exponentially with each passing moment. Its power was not of the Well of the Furies, but rather it tapped the raw elemental power of the Earth itself. Its power was the power of life, and death. As Rularuu was the keeper of the Shadow Shard, so was The Will now the keeper of Earth. Here, in its place of power, The Will was the ultimate authority, the ultimate power. It would become the transcendent force of Earth, which would bear no unwanted intrusion from the outside.

The Battalion had ultimately lost its war with humanity, but it would ironically gain the Earth. An Earth isolated from the rest of the cosmos. An Earth from which there would be no escape, no new worlds to conquer, no more Incarnate power to feed upon. A world humanity would abandon to them as they left to seek their own fate.

A world ruled by an Ascended Hamidon.

There was a Storm coming. And this time, it was the Battalion that would be feeling its maelstrom.

...

Note: the last part, Epilogue, will be posted tonight, and crossposted here.

Arcana

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Re: Possible Player run end of game event
« Reply #66 on: November 30, 2012, 09:22:31 AM »
The Immortal Game

Part Eight: Epilogue



Of course, the Battalion would not go quietly either.  When it became clear the Barrier no longer responded to them, they attempted to do the only thing they knew how to do: conquer Earth and force the secret from its people.  Their first mistake was landing an assault force in a deserted stretch of forest, where no one lived.  Admirably, with only minimal casualties, they managed to overpower the enormous Thorn monsters, a full fifty feet tall and twice as powerful as their pre-Ascendant forms, that seemed to spring out from nowhere.  They had significantly less success at traversing the field of defensive mitochondria that sprouted up for a mile all around them.  The Will of the Earth was the immune system of the planet, and it had been supercharged by the merging with the Praetorian Will and the process of Ascension.  It responded like Hamidon had never before to an unwanted infection.  It set upon the Battalion with a vicious strength and unrelenting fervor not seen even at the height of the Hamidon Wars on Praetorian Earth.

The second mistake of the Battalion was thinking that Hamidon cared at all about civilian casualties.  Their next assault was in the heart of a major metropolis, far from the concentration of Incarnate powers in Paragon City.  Hamidon took care to single out the Battalion and avoid directly attacking the humans of the city, but it did not shy for an instant to bring the full force of the Will upon the Battalion.  Civilian casualties were significant, but the toll upon the Battalion was even more severe.  They were wiped out in less than an hour.

Eventually, they found a place that offered refuge.  A barren stretch of desert wasteland the humans called the Sahara.  Within this expanse of sand and dust, the Hamidon appeared to have no strength.  What life clinged to existence here was too weak to be empowered by the Will of the Earth.  The Battalion set up their camps and bases and barracks and began to strategize.  This world was protected by a powerful defender, but the Battalion had waged war for uncounted centuries.  There was no foe they could not eventually defeat.  The humans had set them back, and this new threat was powerful, but the Battalion would be supreme.  From this place, they would go forth and conquer the planet.  And once the planet was under their control, they would resume their quest to escape this temporary prison.  No jail lacked an exit.  The Battalion would find it, and when they did the humans would suffer as no other suffered.  They would pay as the Kheldian race had paid - no, they would pay a steeper price for their treachery.  Mere consumption was not enough.  They would be made to suffer for all eternity.  And the Battalion would resume its conquest of all Incarnate power across the cosmos.

The Battalion commander was one among many within the Battalion army.  He had personally led his forces to the destruction of a dozen worlds like this one.  He had seen much, and would not be deterred in his duty to serve the Battalion no matter the situation.  As he stepped out of his compound he gave orders to several Battalion soldiers and then gazed out upon the land they now called home.  The sun was hot here, and the air dry.  It had not rained in this spot in over a decade, and it had been a lifeless stretch of sand for over a millenia.  Their foe was powerful, where the land hosted organic life it could bend to its will.  But here, with nothing to command, the Battalion were supreme.  It would take years, the Battalion commander thought to himself, but from this stronghold they would be able to reclaim the planet for the Battalion, meter by meter if necessary.  They would blast the land to dust if need be, to push back their implacable foe.

There was a deep rumble off in the distance, and at first the Battalion commander thought it was the sound of artillery fire.  But as he looked out to the west, he saw it was not weapons fire but thunder.  Near the horizon, he could see giant thunderclouds forming, and occasional flashes of lightning brighter than the sun struck the ground off in the distance.  The sound rumbled past them again, louder than before.  As he stared in disbelief, the clouds appeared to roil, faster than seemed natural, and raced towards their position.  As they approached, he could see the clouds tinged in eerie shades of green and blue, and surrounded by a silvery glow.

The Battalion commander reached up instinctively, touching his forehead.  His hand came away wet.  As he stared at it another large splash of water struck his hand, then another.  Soon he could hear the patter of water striking the rooftops of their structures.  Here, where less than a sprinkling of water fell in a century, it began to rain.  The rain grew stronger by the minute, and the wind began to pick up.

A storm was coming.  In this place, the first in a millenia.  It would not be the last.  It would take years, but this place, which was once a tropical rainforest a hundred centuries before, would become again a place where life would blossom.  The Hamidon would see to that. 

And the Battalion commander, realizing the true nature of the foe they faced for the first time, felt a shiver of fear.

...

This time, they met not in the ethereal landscape of the Dreamspace, but on a rooftop in White Plains.  The Rikti were gone, driven away from this place when their mothership was destroyed.  This place was now the domain of the Hamidon, the merged entity of Praetorian and Primal Earth. Soon, humanity would be gone from this place, ensconced in their new reality within Dreamspace.  It would take centuries, but eventually this place would revert to its former appearance as the Palace of the Stars.  But there would be no one to come and commune here.  It would no longer be the Rikti War Zone, or the Crash Site, or White Plains, or Witfield, or the Palace of the Stars.  It would just be another place on Earth.  The Hamidon saw no need to name places, and no need to treat this place any differently than any other place.  Once it was the only being left on this world, there would be no more names.

In the meantime, the Hamidon appeared to be taking no chances.  It quickly gained control of White Plains, and spread its power throughout the War Wall enclosed zone.  The Will of the Earth spawned Hamidon nuclei and monstrous Avatars and giant monstrous defenders throughout the zone.  It wanted White Plains.  And it seemed most were willing to let it have it.

"You didn't tell me you were going to bring Hamidon into this, Mender."

"If I did, would you have let me?" Silos asked.

"Do you realize the danger?  You're helping a creature that hates all of humanity to Ascend" the Dream Doctor said incredulously.

"Indeed.  And where will humanity be that this is a problem?  Where will Hamidon be?"

"Its still insane.  Rularuu escaped his dimensional prison once before, Hamidon could do likewise."

"Because Rularuu is a being that hungers for conquest and power, and seeks things beyond its current reach.  Hamidon seeks only to control the Earth.  It cares not for any world beyond its own, or any beings beyond its reach.  It cares only to protect the home of the Will."

The Dream Doctor considered Mender Silos' words.  "You still should have told me, Silos.  Once again, you have done..."

"I have done what was needed." Silos interrupted.  "I did what you would not do.  Was this not why you came to me in the first place?"

"The Battalion Would Now Be Battling For Control Of This World" Prometheus stated.  "They May Have Yet Achieved This If Not For The Mender And His Deal With The Hamidon."

The Dream Doctor wanted to continue to argue, but Silos was right: they were both right.  It only made it more infuriating.  This was his plan, and the first thing Prometheus and Mender Silos did apparently was deal behind his back.  Exactly as he needed them to.

"Wait.  How exactly did you assist the Hamidon with Ascension?  A being like Hamidon should not be able to Ascend.  Hamidon lacks the singular focus needed for Ascension."

"Primal Hamidon has the purity of purpose necessary to Ascend." Silos replied.

"But Primal Hamidon lacks the will, the drive to Ascend."

"Praetorian Hamidon doesn't lack the will."

"But even if they were combined - there is still something missing Mender.  Tell me."

"The Dream Walker Should Know, Mender" Prometheus announced.

"He does" Silos agreed.  "It would ordinarily take Hamidon years to evolve to a state where it could Ascend.  Millions of years in fact."

"But isn't Hamidon Ascending now?"

"Yes, he is."

"But you said it would take millions of years."

"I have given Hamidon millions of years."

Mender Silos explained.  When he went before the Praetorian Hamidon, he explained the process of Ascension.  For Hamidon to Ascend, the Praetorian Hamidon would have to merge with the Primal Hamidon: the best parts of each contributing to the new whole.  But this would put the Praetorian Hamidon into a similar state as the Primal Hamidon.  The merged Hamidon would have to evolve to a new state in which it could use the power of the Primal Hamidon and the will of the Praetorian Hamidon simultaneously.  Then, Hamidon could begin the process of Ascension.  But this would take an immense amount of time.

Which was the one currency Silos had to bargain with.  Silos was the leader of the Menders for one reason only.  He had mastered time travel as no other, and had broken the very limits the Menders thought inviolate.  He had traveled vast stretches of time thought impossible.  He was not only the greatest of the Menders, he was also the only one to have knowledge of timelines beyond anything any other Mender knew.  He, and he alone could break the carbon tether and travel millions of years forward and backward in time.  When the two Hamidons merged at the Battle of the Coming Storm, he took a sample of the merged Will of the Earth into the vast future.  With RulaCole's help, he crossed the barrier into deep time, into the far future of the Hamidon.  There, he merged his sample with the evolved Will of the Earth he collected there.  He then returned to the present, and returned the Will to the Earth.

The Will that was exposed to the evolved future Will quickly assimilated with the Will of the Earth in this time.  It combined with the Will of the present day and accelerated the evolution of Hamidon, allowing the Hamidon to achieve Ascension.  But there was a price.

"You are no longer attuned to this time, Silos" the Dream Doctor deduced immediately.

"No, I am not."

"The Mender Will Not Pass On" Prometheus added.

"But that means - you'll be trapped with Hamidon?"

"I'm not that crazy" Silos replied.  "No, its been arranged.  When the Barrier implodes Primal Earth will not split in two.  It will split in three.  The Incarnate power will flow into the Incarnate Earth.  Hamidon and the Battalion will remain here on Primal Earth, trapped in the Battalion bubble.  I will be propelled into another Earth, one without humanity and without Hamidon."

"You'll be alone?"  Silos only smiled at the Dream Doctor.

"And what of you, Prometheus?  Are you prepared for your fate?" Silos asked.

"Your Concern Is Unnecessary.  I Will Do What Is Necessary As I Have Always Done."

While Silos was barred from the Incarnate Earth, for Prometheus it was the opposite.  He was locked into being thrust into Incarnate Earth with humanity.  But while that would mean living in a world much the same as the current one, it would mean being permanently exiled from the others of his kind.  His people, his elders, lived in a dimensional plane now forever severed from Primal Earth.  Incarnate Earth would have no means of reaching the former home of Prometheus.  He would be with humanity, but he would also be alone.  Centuries ago, Prometheus cast his lot with humanity over the objection of his masters.  He would now be bound to humanity and its fate for all time.

"Don't look so glum, Doctor" Silos said.  "This is how it had to be.  Prometheus will be there, to guide humanity to its Destiny.  And you'll be there, to ensure no threat reaches them through Dreamspace and one day, when they are ready, to emerge from it into the greater cosmos.  The rest is up to them."

"And you?  What of you Silos?"

"Me?  I'm going to the top of that hill.  I'm going to watch the sunset.  And then, who knows?  After all, I will have lots of time to plan my future."

Mender Silos smiled at them for the last time, and then began to walk towards the hilltop to the west. 

"All the time in the world."

Arcana

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Re: Possible Player run end of game event
« Reply #67 on: November 30, 2012, 09:30:20 AM »
Part eight is the last part of the story. I hope you all liked it as much as I enjoyed writing it. There's so much I think there is to say about this world, and I only had a limited amount of time to say it. I hope I did justice to this game, the rich lore of the game, and the expectations of my readers.

I will be there until the end.  Once things have settled down a bit, I intend to start a new thread here on Titan discussing how the story and the event was made, at least as long as I have something to say and anyone cares to know.

Until then, Aloha for now.

SnowJackal

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Re: Possible Player run end of game event
« Reply #68 on: November 30, 2012, 08:10:52 PM »
I just wanted to post that this story pretty well inspired a lot of my own 'exit/endgame' stories. I'm not a good writer in the least but the fact that it inspired me just the same and fueled my own characters' finale stories is a testament to how well this story played out, in event and the story itself.  So in a sense, my fanfic is a fanfic of your fanfic of CoH! Thank you. As far as I'm concerned, this is canon.

« Last Edit: November 30, 2012, 08:21:11 PM by SnowJackal »

lobster

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Re: Possible Player run end of game event
« Reply #69 on: November 30, 2012, 08:41:31 PM »
Part eight is the last part of the story. I hope you all liked it as much as I enjoyed writing it. There's so much I think there is to say about this world, and I only had a limited amount of time to say it. I hope I did justice to this game, the rich lore of the game, and the expectations of my readers.

I will be there until the end.  Once things have settled down a bit, I intend to start a new thread here on Titan discussing how the story and the event was made, at least as long as I have something to say and anyone cares to know.

Until then, Aloha for now.

I can't be the only one who is picturing the Battalion as NCsoft and cackling maniacally at them being trapped with/within/on Hami.  Thanks so much Arcana.  It works for me.  It's an end.  Hopefully not the end, but a good one either way. 

Arcana

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Re: Possible Player run end of game event
« Reply #70 on: November 30, 2012, 09:45:59 PM »
I can't be the only one who is picturing the Battalion as NCsoft and cackling maniacally at them being trapped with/within/on Hami.

The thought had crossed my mind when I was writing it, yes.

Metaphors between the implacable destructive enemy of Primal Earth and the Battalion are not explicit, but not entirely unintentional either.

The Fifth Horseman

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Re: Possible Player run end of game event
« Reply #71 on: December 01, 2012, 04:19:01 AM »
I've heard some footage made it to YouTube. Links / .cohdemos anyone?
We were heroes. We were villains. At the end of the world we all fought as one. It's what we did that defines us.
The end occurred pretty much as we predicted: all servers redlining until midnight... and then no servers to go around.

Somewhere beyond time and space, if you look hard you might find a flash of silver trailing crimson: a lone lost Spartan on his way home.

The Fifth Horseman

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Re: Possible Player run end of game event
« Reply #72 on: December 01, 2012, 09:06:34 PM »
Bunch of short clips on Jordi Paps's channel:
http://www.youtube.com/user/jordipaps/videos
We were heroes. We were villains. At the end of the world we all fought as one. It's what we did that defines us.
The end occurred pretty much as we predicted: all servers redlining until midnight... and then no servers to go around.

Somewhere beyond time and space, if you look hard you might find a flash of silver trailing crimson: a lone lost Spartan on his way home.

Pep Rally

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Re: Possible Player run end of game event
« Reply #73 on: December 07, 2012, 05:50:37 AM »
Awesome! I made it into a couple of them.

I'm so happy I actually got to play with the cool kids for once. I always seem to miss the big events.

Thanks again Arcanaville for all your hard work with the story, and the event. It was super fun.