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Thread: Question about life in Vaylen space?

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    Question about life in Vaylen space?

    I have read both graphic novels and I'm about 30% done w/ my 'straight through' read of the BE rules (I've jumped around the stunning BE rulebook a *lot* ever since I got it) and I have some questions about what life is like in Vaylen controlled space.

    So the Vaylen conquer a world, they round up and hull everybody. Or do they? Are there any exceptions or is everyone from infants to the elderly hulled? My understanding is the Vaylen not only want the human bodies to think/reason with but they want the human's previous experiences as well. So even an elderly invalid would be an attractive host becuase of their ability to think as well as their long life of past experience. The infants not so much. Besides not having much past experience if a Vaylen is only as smart as it's host, a baby-minded Vaylen isn't all that smart (though arguably smarter than a goo swiming worm in some respects). But on the other hand it would *eventually* be smarter once it had grown up, would the Vaylen hull it now or later?

    Then what about after the successful invasion? Do the Vaylen w/ their new human bodies proceed to 'get busy' <cue electric guitar music here> and procreate more human hosts for the billions of waiting Naiven? And if so when are these new hosts hulled? Right after birth, in childhood, in adolescence, etc?

    And why don't the Vaylen just mass clone human host bodies? At least they would have the human brains to think/reason with. I know they don't have the added bonus of past human experience/emotion but once the Vaylen conquer a world that's all used up in the first wave isn't it?
    Aaron the Akfu

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    There are people that say wild game tastes better than meat you buy in the store. I think this analogy applies to Vaylen and their preference for hulling people "in the wild".
    My name is Jon.

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    Well, seeing how Vaylen produce a much greater number of Naiven then there would be humans on a planet, I think after they land, most humans recieve a hulling and become vaylen. Currently, earth has roughly 6 billion human beings on it, the Vaylen control many, many worlds, some of which may approach this number. Now, as invertebrate, defenseless worms, they produce large broods of children, lets say 30 per worm. If we assume that the Naiven have a male and female sex and we give them a ratio of 50% of the population per sex, that means there are 3 billion worms giving birth to 30 worms in one spawning. Assuming the Vaylen do the best to ensure that every naiven worm survives, we get 90 billion worms in one spawning. That's probably a really high end estimate, but that would be from one moderately populated planet. I think life on invaded worlds end once they get taken over, at least from the human point of view.

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    I have been considering a 'Red Dawn' (the movie) style campaign, where the PC's are young-adults just about to hit majority, when their world is assaulted by the Valyen. The campagin would focus around their retreat into the wilds of their world, and surviving while the Vaylen round up everyone they can and impose their 'order' on things. The PC's just struggle to survive until the first covert human teams land to plan the re-taking of their world. It would be interesting to postulate what the Vaylen would do to their newly acquired 'farm' world...
    ~Andrew R.
    Now Working on: Empyrean

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    Hi, Akfu. I hope you'll forgive me for doing a cut-up job on your post, but I can see several questions in there that deserve separate attention.

    Quote Originally Posted by Akfu View Post
    So the Vaylen conquer a world, they round up and hull everybody. Or do they? Are there any exceptions or is everyone from infants to the elderly hulled? My understanding is the Vaylen not only want the human bodies to think/reason with but they want the human's previous experiences as well. So even an elderly invalid would be an attractive host becuase of their ability to think as well as their long life of past experience. ... Then what about after the successful invasion? Do the Vaylen w/ their new human bodies proceed to 'get busy' <cue electric guitar music here> and procreate more human hosts for the billions of waiting Naiven? And if so when are these new hosts hulled? Right after birth, in childhood, in adolescence, etc?
    I think there are a few factors at work here:
    • The Vaylen are connoisseurs. Those with the wherewithal to exchange bodies likely indulge in the practice so that they can partake in the varied flavours of humanity, from child to adolescent to adult to elderly.
    • The greatest pleasure for a Vaylen is to be a human being in the company of human beings, who treat the Vaylen just as they treated the human prior to hulling. As such, the Vaylen have a vested interest in not only keeping the structures of a planet they've conquered intact, but also keeping quite a lot of the human beings on the planet not only unhulled, but unaware that the Vaylen are now in control of their lives.
    • The BE text states in several places that having a human body is a status symbol, and that the holders of power, after the Yaadasahm, are those in the human castes. This makes an unhulled human being with a few decades of living under its belt a commodity. Controlling which Naiven get which humans is, no doubt, something which the various Vaylen clans often struggle over. Think about how much wealth a Vaylen who controls a family - a community - a whole world full of humans living their lives away would have, how much power over his fellow Vaylen.
    • Finally: More than anything else, Vaylen want to be human. So what happens when a Naiven is inserted into a hulled human and the subsequent Vaylen starts to think it is human, in every way that’s important? So much so that it goes over to the other side, dons a kilt, slathers on blue face-paint and starts yelling, “FREEEEDOOOOOM!” at the top of its lungs? What if we’re not just talking about one Vaylen, but a whole tribe of them? Could that spread to infect a clan? A planet? Sure, it’s not likely. But what if a pair of human caste parents get so attached to the baby they've given birth to and the person it grows up to become that they decide that trapping this person in its own body is a crime against humanity? What if the majority of human caste in a nation or a planet got that idea in their worm-ridden heads? I bet that scenario keeps the heads of a few clans up at night.

    Quote Originally Posted by Akfu View Post
    And why don't the Vaylen just mass clone human host bodies? At least they would have the human brains to think/reason with. I know they don't have the added bonus of past human experience/emotion but once the Vaylen conquer a world that's all used up in the first wave isn't it?
    In a way, Akfu, they already are creating clones; it's just that the clones in question - the various Vaishyen and Shudren bodies, the Mukhadish and until their rebellion, the Kerrn - aren't quite human. But except for the Shudren and Mukhadish, most of those clones already have human-level intelligence. And then there are the Yaadasahm, with their Makara breeding tanks. They're all thinking and reasoning just fine, thank you!
    - Rob F. Always Plenty of Time!

    "Get ready for destruction, Blues! We're gonna kick your ass! We have become Death, Destroyer of Wor- oh wait, hold on. I gotta take out the trash. I'll be right back." - Red Vs. Blue Episode 40, "Visiting Old Friends"

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    Actually, you know what? Yeah. The Vaylen hulls everyone. Mom, Pop, Little Timmy and the dog. Worms for all. Constant turnover of trephines due to excesssive wear. All those transparently bogus rationales I was coming up with in that last post, they just... take the terror out of the terror, you know? Hell with that. A neat little skull-sized prison for each organism even vaguely sentient!
    Last edited by IMAGinES; 11-28-2006 at 04:58 AM. Reason: More terror needed!
    - Rob F. Always Plenty of Time!

    "Get ready for destruction, Blues! We're gonna kick your ass! We have become Death, Destroyer of Wor- oh wait, hold on. I gotta take out the trash. I'll be right back." - Red Vs. Blue Episode 40, "Visiting Old Friends"

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    Actually Rob, I think you were correct the first time.

    You guys should check out this thread

    To quote myself from various posts in that thread:
    Quote Originally Posted by Thor Olavsrud
    I would also note that I don't think the Vaylen hull all humans on the worlds they control. Possibly not even the majority.

    Vaylen need and want humans with sophisticated sentience. I imagine worlds designed to shape humans in certain ways. Experience farms, all kinds of wonders. Also breeding programs. The best and brightest and most beautiful are selected as hosts.

    They're constantly on the hunt for new and better hosts. A better gene pool. Better experiences.

    If you put a worm in a simple-minded, uneducated human, you get a simple-minded, uneducated vaylen. If you put a worm in a super-intelligent, richly experienced human, you get a super-intelligent, richly experienced vaylen.

    If it were only about bodies, vaylen could clone them by the billions and just slip their offspring into animals. In fact, they do just that. That's what the other castes are.

    The Human Caste is reserved for the aristocracy of the vaylen. They are the best and brightest.

    Rich experiences, deep emotions and intelligence are the currency of valyen. They are rare and they are valuable. They are the commodities the vaylen clans desire above all others.

    The vaylen can genetically engineer all sorts of bodies that are perfectly suited to tasks humans are not. The only problem is they tend to be flat emotionally and the quality of their intelligence is different. Only the Makara are the equivalent of humans on the intelligence front, though they are limited due to the requirement of an aquatic habitat.
    And a little backup from Chris:
    Quote Originally Posted by Chris Moeller
    Thor's got it. The majority of conquered worlds deep inside Vaylen space are garden worlds, where only the governing powers are Vaylen, and the humans are left to develop as naturally as possible. There is an unobtrusive harvesting, using different mechanisms depending on taste (lottery, "tax", age, whatever), to cull off hosts for the ruling clan's hungry Naiven. But the Vaylen are good caretakers for the most part. A human world is the goose that lays the golden egg... it doesn't pay to get greedy. How many unhappy humans do you have to kill when a world rises in revolution? What a tragic waste. Such a clan proves it is unfit to hold something so precious. Perhaps they should be deprived of it...

    The vaylen are organized into a few overarching clan lineages as outlined in the book, but each of those is composed of countless smaller off-shoots, some wealthy, some struggling, some falling into the great unwashed masses. There are two basic types of these (sub) clans... those that are established, and those that are hungry to become established. It's the latter that fuel the invasions into human space. Theoretically, there will come a day when there are no independent human worlds left. How Vaylen culture will cope, nobody knows. But that's a long way off, and for now, there are more human worlds than even the humans know of (the Void is composed of millions of human worlds that have fallen out of contact with the Iron Empires).

    The Vaylen are a more unified power than the human empires, but that doesn't mean there isn't very polite, very serious jockeying for position. That said, unlike the humans, the Vaylen will only very rarely turn on their own openly. There are hard-wired reactions to treachery. If a clan steps too far out of line, unless it is very lucky, it will be stripped of its holdings by common action, and its line exterminated. Outright warfare between Vaylen is almost unheard of. Assassination and intrigue (the subtler forms of warfare) are more commmon.

    And Tim, you're right, there are any number of possiblities for the Vaylen farm worlds in the interior. In the fairly recent past there was a huge human crusade into Vaylen space (of course it fell apart almost before it had begun), but I wonder what sorts of horrors they discovered the farther into Vaylen space they plunged?

    Different clans will have different priorities and strategies for how to "raise humans". Ultimately, the Vaylen try to be as hands-off as possible. They are painfully aware of the limits of their social engineering skills. They know they aren't human, and can't raise children as successfully as human parents. I imagine they wrecked a lot of worlds before they learned that nature worked best.

    I corner him and stab him in the face!

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    Have any of you read The City of Gold and Lead? I could see Vaylen occupation being something like that, with the Vaylen 'honouring' a number of people each year with hulling. And I bet that's exactly what happens when the Usurpation succeeds. There's no reason to bring in Hammer assets at all. Just begin instituting 'games' every year, and have the winners be hulled. Tout hulling as a profoundly spiritual experience, and a virtual necessity for advancement in most careers.
    -Mike

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    Quote Originally Posted by Countercheck View Post
    Have any of you read The City of Gold and Lead? I could see Vaylen occupation being something like that, with the Vaylen 'honouring' a number of people each year with hulling. And I bet that's exactly what happens when the Usurpation succeeds. There's no reason to bring in Hammer assets at all. Just begin instituting 'games' every year, and have the winners be hulled. Tout hulling as a profoundly spiritual experience, and a virtual necessity for advancement in most careers.
    In that thread I linked to above, a few of us buzzed about how we loved the Tripod novels as kids. The White Mountains, The City of Gold and Lead, and The Pool of Fire, are in large part responsible for my love of quality SF. I was not aware of When the Tripods Came until rafial posted the wikipedia link though. It was published years after I read the original trilogy!

    I corner him and stab him in the face!

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    This model is actually much, much more upsetting than the "planet-sized concentration camp" idea.

    In the concentration camp, you lose your life, probably your dignity, perhaps even your morality as you become so desperate to survive that you turn on your fellow-prisoners (think of the hardened criminals the Nazis put in charge of political prisoners, or the Sonderkommando Jews who survived by becoming crematorium cleaners). But at least you're fighting to be you the whole time.

    In the carefully cultivated garden world, though, you give up your identity -- your soul -- and you do it gladly.

    I'm beginning to think of some appalling mash-up of The City of Gold and Lead, The Matrix, Aldous Huxley's Brave New World, and the Jim Carey movie The Truman Show.

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