Apocalypse Package

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An Apocalypse Package is a miniature automated factory and education unit designed to rekindle technological civilization in case of a worst case scenario.


Please see the following AAB Library Data articles for more information:


Description (Specifications)

According to the legends, a standard apocalypse package displaced 10.0 tons (...up to 35 tons if the included 25 ton collapsable fuel tank was folded out), including its own fusion power plant (...running from said fuel tank or on external fuel), fuel processor, refinery, smelter, and production plants.

Each week, it could take in 4 tons of asteroids (...previously prospected for the presence of ores, though preferring to do its own mining rather than letting mining drones or laser drills pre-process the asteroids) for an eventual output of 0.8 tons inorganic goods (...spare parts, weapons, tools, vehicle components, et cetera) and 1 ton organic goods (...food, medicine, et cetera). Certain goods could only be produced at a lower rate: for instance, instead of the ton of organic goods, an apocalypse package could produce a 10 person-month supply of anagathics (which collectively massed less than a kilogram) or 1,000 doses of most other pharmaceuticals (...several kilograms) in a week.

The main prize was the included computer system - the best that TL-15 was capable of - with extensive databases on every skill imaginable, intended to teach and rekindle civilization.

The AAB had long kept digital archives of much of its knowledge base, for ease of shipping between its branches, so it was a simple matter to equip apocalypse caches with a copy. "Simple" did not mean "cheap": this accounted for the majority of an apocalypse package's MCr50 cost. (Likewise, "cost" does not mean "value": a functioning apocalypse package found and sold to a major polity during the Collapse might have fetched thousands or millions of megacredits.)

Device Drawbacks

The main drawback was the limited production volume. A single apocalypse package could (with sufficient mass input) produce enough to keep one person and ship alive forever, but it could not quickly equip an army. While one apocalypse package was capable of creating another (consuming its entire output over a 6 week cycle), each package required the attention of a sophont for at least half of each day to achieve full production rate. Getting a significant production volume by creating many packages thus required a large crew. This was partly a limitation of TL-15, and partly a deliberate design choice, to try to limit how much this could enable TEDs who kept their populace ignorant: 8 doublings (taking most of a year) would result in 256 packages needing 256 crew who could learn technical skills (and other skills, for instance how to hide small production projects such as weapons) from their equipment, each one of whom might thus be a threat to a dictator who refused to share power. Reaching that much production capacity would suggest a minimally acceptable form of governance, and that much production capacity could start churning out more labor-efficient factories in a reasonable amount of time.

Supposedly, this was a useful guard against Virus. Any package that was infected, would be unable to do much without assistance - and unlike a vampire ship, could not credibly threaten to turn off life support or otherwise harm any sophont who did not interact with it. However, an infected humanoid robot would have both the intelligence and manipulators to render the necessary assistance, though this would require the instance of Virus in the package and the one in the robot to work together, which was a problem for many strains of Virus.

History & Background (Dossier)

Hunting for them during the Collapse or the early Fourth Imperium is, in some circles, a well known "aryu scheme".

As the Black War phase of the Rebellion commenced, planners in the AAB and IISS who had been meeting on Reference grew concerned that this war might tear apart the Third Imperium, leading to another Long Night. (As it turned out, they were far more correct than they realized.) Allegedly, they commenced construction of miniaturized automated factories to carry the seeds of civilization to distant parsecs, wait out the war, then return to re-seed civilization.

It is known that there were abstract plans for similar measures at earlier crisis points during the Third Imperium, which this could have developed from; allegedly, the triggers to actually put these plans into action were the Black War and the development of a synthetic anagathic formula that could keep their guardians alive indefinitely. The degree of specification in these legends lends much credence to them; at the same time, subsector-wide navies have been mobilized over the merest whisper that an apocalypse package has been located, suggesting the rumors may have been blown out of proportion.

References & Contributors (Sources)

This list of sources was used by the Traveller Wiki Editorial Team and individual contributors to compose this article. Copyrighted material is used under license from Mongoose Publishing or by permission of the author. The page history lists all of the contributions.