Table of Contents

Races | Technology

EXOHUMAN MEDIA AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY IN THE BETA AGE

Overview

The ExoHuman communication system in the Beta Age was a pragmatic, low-power patchwork—born of necessity after the colony ark Last Frontier slammed into VOI 700 D on Day Zero. Aboard the star-ship, settlers enjoyed GAIA (AI)-regulated quantum-mesh networking: Service Bots chatted in real time, personal wristlinks streamed holograms, and every student could query the AI for instant tutorials. The crash shattered that ecosystem:

Forced to rethink from scratch, settlers pivoted to short-wave radio, Shellac Data Discs, and a tightly rationed GAIA heartbeat.

In 2625, communications engineer Klaus Weber founded the Weber Communication Company (WCC) and strung together a long-range Shortwave Radio Network that ran on wind turbines, microbial fuel cells, and geothermal trickles—no QFB drain required.

Despite vulnerability to twilight storms and volcanic static, this hybrid grid kept the four main settlements — New Kourou, Hope, Morningstar, Arla Town and Firetown — in tenuous contact. Daily life now revolved around:

What emerged was a communications culture that was half 22nd-century ingenuity, half pre-radio resilience —held together by GAIA’s faint pulse and Klaus Weber’s crackling airwaves.

The Failure to Establish an Internet Network

The collapse of ExoHuman connectivity on VOI 700 D was one of the greatest technological regressions settlers faced. While the Free State of Settlers attempted to re-establish a planetary internet system, they failed due to the following challenges:

1. Infrastructure Loss

2. Energy Constraints

3. Lack of Satellites & Communication Relays

4. Environmental Interference

As a result, settlers had to rely on the Shortwave Radio Network for real-time communication and Shellac Records for data storage and distribution. The failure to build a digital network also meant that many devices from the Last Frontier, including the NEX-9, became obsolete.

Key Components of the Beta Age Network and Media System

1. Shortwave Radio Network

The backbone of ExoHuman communication, shortwave radios provided reliable, long-distance contact between settlements and within individual communities. The Weber Communication Company (WCC) played a central role not only in designing, establishing, and maintaining this network but also in producing and distributing the Shortwave Communication Device (SWRWC). Known for its rugged design and innovative power source, the SWRWC became essential for settlers, law enforcement, and military units, ensuring portable and practical communication in even the harshest environments.

With its robust infrastructure and portable devices, the shortwave network became critical for facilitating governance, coordinating resource distribution, and ensuring security across VOI 700 D. Settlers could rely on their SWRWC for both public broadcasts and private communication, while law enforcement used it for patrol coordination and rapid response.

Each settlement housed a primary shortwave transmitter, forming the core of local communication, while WCC built and managed key relay stations to extend the network’s range and reliability. The most critical relay stations were strategically positioned to optimize coverage and withstand the harsh environmental conditions of VOI 700 D:

In addition to these major relay stations, Weber Communication Company deployed smaller repeater stations in remote areas to improve signal stability and prevent communication blackouts. These efforts ensured that even the most isolated farms or outposts could remain connected to the broader network, strengthening the settlers' resilience and survival prospects.

Applications:

Technical Features:

2. Data Storage and Distribution: Shellac Records

With limited access to advanced digital technology, ExoHumans revived the use of shellac records as a sustainable, efficient medium for data storage and transfer.

3. GAIA Integration

After Day Zero, GAIA’s once-seamless cloud splintered. Engineers converted the surviving shipboard core into a network of Local GAIA Hubs, each buried in a town-hall basement and powered by its own Quantum Fusion Battery. In practical terms this meant:

Feature Reality on VOI 700 D
——————————-
Topology One hub per settlement; no peer-to-peer traffic. All hubs receive nightly one-way updates from “The Kernel” in New Kourou.
Public Access A pair of rugged holo-kiosks per hub allowed settlers to pull ration data or land-lot results. GAIA’s voice channel broadcast only 20-second bursts a few times a day to save power.
Update Cycle *19:00* — each hub compresses local telemetry (crop yields, population counts) and pushes it via short-wave burst.<br>*22:00* — The Kernel returns an aggregated directive packet.<br>*23:00* — packet is flashed to vault memory and mirrored onto shellac disks for hard back-up.
Power Budget Each upload / download cycle costs ≈ 2 % of a hub’s weekly QFB allotment, forcing strict curfews on non-critical queries.
Failed Ambitions Factional groups (Technologists, Trade Guilds) petitioned the Settler’s Council to reopen full civilian or commercial APIs. All proposals were denied—energy austerity came first.
Why no Internet-style mesh?
Destroyed orbital relays + reactive atmosphere + QFB scarcity made high-bandwidth links impossible. GAIA had to shrink to a low-bit-rate, store-and-forward heartbeat.

Impact on Everyday Life

Energy Note: Local hubs cannot run on wind/solar alone; even in Beta-Age austerity each vault drains a dedicated QFB kept above 40 % charge via a weekly visit to the town’s Quantum Fusion Recalibration Station. If charge dips lower, GAIA auto-hibernates and the settlement reverts to manual governance until power is restored.

4. Remnants of Advanced Media Technology

While most high-tech digital media from Last Frontier was lost due to energy constraints and crash damage, a few devices survived, offering vestiges of pre-landing ExoHuman entertainment and information access.

5. Butler Bots: The Last Storytellers

One of the most iconic remnants of the past were the Butler Bots — luxury AI-driven robotic assistants from Last Frontier.

6. The NEX-9: A Lost Relic of Digital Communication

The NEX-9 was the standard personal communication device aboard the Last Frontier, functioning as an advanced, multi-purpose digital assistant. Before the crash, it allowed ExoHumans to make calls, send data, access archives, and engage in immersive augmented reality interactions. However, after the crash:

Though some settlers kept their NEX-9 devices as personal mementos, they quickly faded into obscurity. Only a few remained operational within high-ranking administrative buildings in New Kourou, where they were occasionally used for local data storage.

System Users and Applications of the Beta Age Network

Societal Impact of the Failed Internet Network

The failure to re-establish a digital communication infrastructure had profound psychological and social consequences for the settlers. Many of the older ExoHumans, who had spent their entire lives aboard Last Frontier, struggled to adapt to a world without instant access to knowledge, entertainment, and social connectivity. Their reliance on AI-driven systems had made them dependent on automation for information retrieval, personal organization, and interpersonal communication.

Younger settlers, however, adapted more easily, having grown up in an environment where low-tech solutions were a necessity rather than a fallback. This generational divide became a defining aspect of Beta Age culture, with older settlers often reminiscing about the convenience of the past, while younger ones embraced the new reality with greater resilience.

The absence of digital communication also led to a return to oral storytelling, physical media distribution, and greater reliance on local community networks for knowledge-sharing. News and cultural information spread at a slower pace, fostering tighter-knit communities within settlements but increasing the sense of isolation between them.

Legacy in the Gamma Age

By the Gamma Age, the Beta Age’s media system deteriorated due to energy restrictions and centralized control.

Tactical Advice for Dungeon Masters

The communication system of the Beta Age offers rich opportunities for engaging gameplay:

1. Lost Media Retrieval

2. Broadcast Interception

3. Courier Missions

4. Rogue AI and Lost Data

Short Wave Relay Stations within the Free State of Settlers

The Ages of the Exohuman history: