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Table of Contents
Races | Technology
SERVICE BOTS
Overview
Service Bots were robotic assistants originally developed for human passengers aboard the Last Frontier and for long-term planetary settlement after landing on VOI 700 D. Designed to handle a variety of essential tasks, these machines were integral to both spaceborne survival and planetary colonization.
Unlike early robotic systems on Earth, Service Bots were autonomous, adaptive, and modular, capable of learning user preferences and adjusting to different environments. Controlled by the GAIA-AUX Cognitive Modules, they performed tasks such as cleaning, cooking, farming, waste disposal, manual labor, and medical care, ensuring the efficiency of daily life for settlers.
Following the crash landing on VOI 700 D, many Service Bots were lost, but their influence continued into the Beta Age, where they were maintained, repurposed, and expanded upon by settlers. However, after the Great War, the Federal Confederation outlawed Service Bots, citing energy consumption concerns under the terms of the Peace Treaty with the Alliance of Native Tribes.
Despite this, Medical Bots remain legally operational at the Medical Station in New Kourou, where they continue to support the Federal Health Care System (FHCS). Meanwhile, black-market Service Bots persist in Firetown, where Outlaw factions and radical Individualists see them as status symbols and tools of rebellion.
History and Development
Pre-Launch Development (The Earth Era)
The Service Bots were originally developed in the 22nd century by Olympia Cybernetics, a megacorporation specializing in humanoid robotics and adaptive AI on Earth. The goal was to create a self-maintaining workforce that could support human settlers during their interstellar journey aboard the Last Frontier.
Each Service Bot was powered by GAIA-AUX, a semi-autonomous cognitive system that allowed them to adapt to human behavior while remaining under strict biometric authentication protocols. This system ensured that Service Bots remained loyal to their assigned human users, preventing unauthorized reprogramming or security risks.
The Last Frontier Era
Onboard the Last Frontier, Service Bots were maintained by the Frontier Engineering Corps (FEC), responsible for robotic upkeep and shipboard AI systems. They received regular firmware updates to ensure compliance with GAIA’s operational protocols. During the crash landing on VOI 700 D, the Service Bot fleet suffered massive losses:
- Of the original 520 units, 257 were destroyed in the impact and subsequent fires.
- The remaining bots became essential to early settlement efforts, assisting with construction, logistics, and survival operations.
The Beta Age: Expansion and Adaptation
- Ownership Transfer: The surviving Service Bots were repurposed under the Free State of Settlers, becoming essential tools for infrastructure, agriculture, and medical assistance.
- Expansion: To meet planetary demands, an additional 100 Service Bots were constructed using recycled ship components, allowing for greater adaptation to planetary conditions.
- New Kourou Robotics Syndicate: The New Kourou Robotics Syndicate was a company specializing in the maintenance, repair, and rental of Service Bots (except of Guarding Bots) under a subscription-based model, ensuring that settlers had continued access to robotic labor.
The Gamma Age: Prohibition and Black Market Trade
With the formation of the Federal Confederation after the Great War, Service Bots were banned due to their high energy consumption, which violated the Peace Treaty’s sustainability regulations.
- Prohibition: Supreme Councilor Aisha Patel’s officially banned Service Bots, except for Medical Bots, which remain active at the Medical Station in New Kourou to support the Federal Health Care System (FHCS).
- Jane Mendoza Gang Heist: In 2633, the Jane Mendoza Gang conducted a raid on the Federal Technical Recycling Plant, stealing the last remaining government-owned Service Bots.
- Black Market Demand: Despite the ban, Service Bots continue to circulate illegally, particularly in Firetown, where they are considered status symbols among radical Individualists and criminal factions.
Owning or operating a Service Bot in the Gamma Age is a major offense, but their rarity and functionality make them valuable in the black-market economy.
Roles and Functions
In the Last Frontier and Beta Age, Service Bots were deployed across various roles. Each type of bot had specialized functions but shared a modular design, allowing for task adaptability..
- Butler Bots: Configured as personal assistants, Butler Bots served high-ranking officials and wealthy settlers, managing household tasks, preparing meals, and ensuring optimal living conditions for their owners.
- Cleaning Bots: Equipped with sanitation tools, Cleaning Bots ensured hygiene and cleanliness in living quarters, communal spaces, and key shipboard areas.
- Guarding Bots: Guarding Bots combined high-grade surveillance technology with physical enforcement capabilities, assisting Guarding Troopers in patrolling corridors, monitoring secure zones, and managing public order
- Medical Bots: Programmed with comprehensive medical knowledge, Medical Bots provided diagnostics, minor medical procedures, and patient monitoring. Their role became crucial after the crash, as they assisted in early settlement healthcare. While all other Service Bots were prohibited in the Gamma Age, Medical Bots remain operational at the Medical Station in New Kourou, where they play an essential role in the Federal Health Care System (FHCS).
- Agricultural Bots: Designed for farming and crop management, Agricultural Bots handled planting, harvesting, irrigation, and soil care, ensuring food production remained sustainable.
- Maintenance Bots: Specializing in mechanical diagnostics and system upkeep, Maintenance Bots were deployed in engineering bays, calibration stations, and utility tunnels. These bots performed preventive maintenance on power conduits, QFB interfaces, service hatches, ventilation systems, and robotic components. Equipped with multi-joint appendages, welding units, diagnostic scanners, and modular tool cartridges, they were indispensable in keeping the Last Frontier and later exohuman settlements operational. Though non-humanoid in design, they were highly autonomous and widely respected among technicians for their reliability and adaptability.
- Manual Labor Bots: Deployed for heavy lifting, maintenance, and construction, Manual Labor Bots were essential in building infrastructure on VOI 700 D post-landing.
Appearance and Design
Service Bots fall into two broad chassis families — Humanoid and Non‑Humanoid — each optimised for distinct use‑cases.
Humanoid Models (Approachable & Interactive)
Humanoid Service Bots approximate adult human stature (1.4–1.9 m, 75–120 kg) and are favoured wherever social comfort or manual dexterity is paramount.
Humanoid Bot Types
- Butler Bots – bipedal frames with articulated five‑finger manipulators, courtesy‑grade synthetic dermal panels, and programmable “face‑plates” capable of 50+ micro‑expressions.
- Medical Bots – sterile‑white chassis with recessed medical tool bays and soft‑tone speech synthesisers tuned for patient reassurance.
- Guarding Bots (Patrol Variant) – armour‑reinforced humanoid shells, helmet‑style sensor suites, and retractable compliance staves.
- VIP Manual‑Labor Frames – exosuit‑styled bipeds used where a recognisably human silhouette aids in collaborative heavy lifting.
Materials & Finish
- Endoskeleton: Titanium‑Duraflex lattice for high strength‑to‑weight efficiency.
- Outer Shell: Poly‑ceramic composite plates over critical joints; optional synthetic polymer “skin” where tactile interaction is expected.
- Aesthetic Livery: Colour‑coded plating (e.g., butler black, medical white) plus removable fabric garments reflecting social roles.
- Expressive Systems: Tier‑2 emotion‑emulation firmware, full‑range speakers, and optical bands capable of subtle colour shifts to indicate status.
Non-Humanoid Models (Task‑Centric & Rugged)
Non‑humanoid bots prioritise terrain handling, payload capacity, or durability over human familiarity.
Non‑Humanoid Bot Types
- Cleaning Bots – disc or cricket‑leg mini‑bots that navigate tight gaps and low‑clearance spaces.
- Agricultural Bots – six‑legged “field crab” platforms designed for uneven soil and long‑range patrols with telescopic sprayer arms.
- Maintenance Bots – tracked “tool caddies” with 360‑degree turret rigs and interchangeable multi‑joint armatures.
- Manual Labor Bots (Industrial Variant) – quadrupedal loaders or crawler cranes rated for multi‑tonne payloads.
Materials & Finish
- Chassis: Hardened alloy monocoques or carbon‑steel tubing paired with shock‑damped servo clusters.
- Mobility Systems: Independent suspension pods, articulated treads, or micro‑thrusters for zero‑G maintenance.
- Tool Mounts: Omni‑Rail connectors that accept welders, irrigation nozzles, or weapon hard‑points (pre‑ban).
Energy Supply and Power Management
Service Bots originally relied on Quantum Fusion Batteries (QFBs), providing self-regulating, high-efficiency power cells:
- Standard Load (Beta Age): 1–2 years of operational time in normal civilian use.
- Heavy Load (Industrial/Battle Use): 3–6 months per charge due to power-intensive operations.
- Gamma Age (Degraded Conditions): Every 8–10 days due to lack of proper charging and maintenance.
- Emergency Mode: Low-power conservation mode when energy drops below 10%, reducing functionality to extend remaining lifespan.
- Illegal Charging Stations: In the Gamma Age, charging Service Bots is illegal.
- Firetown Black Market: Hidden charging hubs operate underground for Outlaw-owned bots, often requiring rare energy sources or stolen QFBs to function.
The loss of large-scale fusion infrastructure meant that Exohumans could no longer manufacture new QFBs, forcing them to rely on scavenged units from the Beta Age. Over time, power cells deteriorated, requiring frequent maintenance, modifications, and hybrid power solutions.
While Exohumans developed simple energy alternatives to keep bots operational, these were vastly inferior in efficiency, often requiring daily or weekly recharges. This energy scarcity played a key role in shifting settlement priorities, contributing to tensions that ultimately led to the Great War.
Social Impact of the Service Bot Ban in the Gamma Age
The prohibition of Service Bots in the Gamma Age was not merely a technological restriction but a massive social disruption that fundamentally altered exohuman society.
A Dependent Workforce
For over a century, exohumans relied on Service Bots for daily labor. The sudden shutdown in 2631 forced settlers to restructure their entire workforce.
- Loss of Productivity: Agriculture, logistics, and domestic work slowed dramatically.
- Labor Shortages: Entire industries collapsed overnight, requiring rapid workforce retraining.
Psychological and Social Fallout
- Loss of Companionship: Many settlers had developed strong bonds with their Service Bots. Unlike mere tools, these machines were lifelong assistants, programmed with adaptive behavioral AI that made interactions feel natural. Their shutdown left emotional voids, particularly for the elderly and disabled.
- Crisis of Productivity: Settlers had relied on Service Bots for efficiency in farming, logistics, and household tasks. Without them, labor-intensive work had to be reorganized entirely, slowing production and causing early economic struggles.
- Resistance Movements: Some radical Individualists viewed the Service Bot ban as an overreach by the Federal Confederation, interpreting it as a deliberate act to weaken exohuman self-sufficiency. This resentment fueled black-market trading and illegal bot reactivations, particularly in Firetown.
The “Switch-Off Crisis”
The immediate aftermath of the ban—referred to as the “Switch-Off Crisis”—lasted for nearly two years, as society attempted to restructure itself without the automated support it had relied on for generations. While younger exohumans adapted, many settlers resented the loss, seeing it as a forced regression rather than a necessity for survival.
The Federal Confederation framed the ban as a path to sustainability, but among the population, it was perceived as a loss of autonomy, comfort, and identity—an existential change that shaped much of the political climate in the Gamma Age.
Technical Specifications for Gameplay
While all Service Bots shared core design principles, their armor class (AC), hit points (HP), speed, and available actions varied based on their model and intended function.
Each Service Bot Model had task-specific enhancements that influenced their durability, mobility, and capabilities in gameplay. Some were lightweight and agile, while others were heavily armored for industrial or hazardous work. Their built-in toolsets and programming dictated their combat and utility functions, making them adaptable to different scenarios.
To use a Service Bot with the correct stats and abilities in gameplay, visit the designated page for each model.
Tactical Advice for Dungeon Masters
Service Bots add both flavor and functional depth to the game. Here are ways to incorporate them:
Beta Age: Potential Storylines and Encounters
- Essential Workforce: Service Bots were deeply integrated into daily life. Their malfunction, reprogramming, or sabotage could disrupt entire settlements and create high-stakes missions.
- The Rogue AI Incident: A Service Bot with corrupted GAIA-AUX firmware begins displaying unexpected behavior, leading settlers to fear that it has developed sentience. The players must determine whether this is a real threat or merely a glitch.
- Corporate Espionage: The New Kourou Robotics Syndicate monopolized Service Bot maintenance and rental. Rival factions, disgruntled settlers, or Outlaws might try to steal blueprints or sabotage their operations.
- The Stolen Prototype: A high-ranking official's customized Butler Bot (outfitted with secret intelligence or classified data) is stolen. Players might be hired to recover it before it falls into the wrong hands.
- The War Effort: Some Service Bots were reprogrammed for logistics, reconnaissance, or sabotage during the Great War. Players may discover old, deactivated war-modified bots in remote locations, still carrying sensitive data or dangerous subroutines.
Gamma Age: Potential Storylines and Encounters
- Black Market Deals: A wealthy radical Individualist in Firetown hires the players to locate, reactivate, or smuggle a functional Service Bot. However, the Federal Confederation is cracking down on illegal bot trade.
- Federal Confiscation: The Federal Sheriff’s Department launches a raid on an underground Service Bot operation. Players might need to hide a bot, rescue its owner, or escape before they’re arrested.
- The Lost Medical Bot: A deactivated Medical Bot from the Beta Age is found in the wilderness, still storing archived medical data that could revolutionize healthcare in the Gamma Age. But who gets to control it?
- A Hidden Threat: A Service Bot modified for combat surfaces in Firetown, rumored to be a Jane Mendoza Gang experiment. Players must investigate before a new wave of outlaw-tech warfare begins.
- The AI Reawakening: An old, seemingly dormant Butler Bot reactivates on its own, triggering questions about whether GAIA-AUX systems still function in abandoned Service Bots—and if so, whether they are evolving into something new.