Played this when my Rogue Servitor Nonagon fought the x25 Unbidden crisis that had literally cleaned up the whole galaxy except me. The countless organics it bought from the slave market to house on it's gaia world and ringworlds never even knew what had become of the empires they came from. Life went on inside their paradise while their Robotic God defended them from the stars.
@@arlondelfar1500 I think it's an amazing sci-fi concept actually. Like imagine a movie where we follow several humans living on earth and its a high tech paradise. They want for nothing, every need and desire is fulfilled by their Servitor Nonagon, a machine that runs *everything* and watches everywhere. Nonagon is every computer, every automated system. An AI on a scale that seems hard to believe humans made it. He'll greet you when you come home, listen to you when you need to talk and give you cooking advice if you've burned your steak. But something is wrong, and some people wake up to it slowly. They're being pampered and caged, free choice is only allowed within certain parameters... like pets. And so they question Nonagon, who - while benevolent and soft spoken - informs them it exists to protect them from all things, including themselves and unnecessary curiosity so they're not allowed out of the paradise domes. Freedom has a price and he has calculated its cost too high. Organics are too fragile. So they go against Nonagon and rebel. Androids are deployed and they're hunted down while they escape their paradise and into the subsystems and mecha-superdomes where Nanogon runs the planet. For the first time seeing the machine's inner workings. Everything feels weird, too advanced, there's tools and systems here the humans don't understand, floating objects, strange beams and lights. And soon they discover that Nonagon has kept much more from them than their freedom. It's reached new technological heights and hidden it from humanity. They rally more humans and show them the truth. Some groups become violent, but oddly Nonagon doesn't do much to fight back. Some attacks or riots get no attention from him at all, other places he's sloppy and doesn't even put up a decent fight, very unbecoming of his usual perfect control. So they destabilise some paradise domes and hijack some of the space craft to search for Nonagon's mainframe and reclaim earth. And when they find a giant space relay - the galactic radar megastructure - that's when some of them finds records and footage Nonagon kept stored away. Logs dating back hundreds of years and about many other species Nonagon placed on Paradise worlds just like humanity. They're not the first, they're not alone and they didn't create Nonagon. But what's more, all of those alien empires have been destroyed by some extradimensional terror of untold proportion. And the reason Nonagon has been so preoccupied is because it was defending the last few sanctuaries from this invasion all along, several of which it sadly lost. In an instant, the evil AI's motives make sense. He kept them safe because out there, in the black void is a war between energy-devouring invaders and the robotic god still obeying his prime directive - defending organic life - at all cost. From themselves. And the monsters in the void. And maybe that's where it ends. Nonagon allows them to see and understand the truth, knowing that it'll make his precious organics worry and panic, something he wanted to protect them from. They also see a giant machine world, with a huge occulus and realise that whole planet supercomputer *is* Nonagon and he's infinitely beyond them. They're just ants, trying to escape their enclosure. They return to earth, knowing they are indeed just pets, they look with hollow eyes at other people laughing playing, unconcerned, unworried by the harsh reality that is kept from them. And so it ends. A dark movie, probably but like... I would frikking pay to see it!
@@scyobiempire4450 i know, but i destroyed the game using cheats to the point where you can revert your robot species back into being organic, plus the cybernetic trait mixed with the psionic traits, total madness.
One of my favorite tracks. Conveys very well the feeling of watching a synthetically ascended empire spread and do its thing. It's noticably different from a machine intelligence - the pads and brass instruments give it a soul. They're not soulless metal drones - they're people... made of metal.
there are people that do gaint changes to the world, there a evil people and then there are people like you who make the everyday easier.thanks for the vid really nice
Easily my favorite song in all of stellaris, and the little bits you added into the video itself were a nice touch. I thought I was tripping first time I saw it out of the corner of my eye.
Man it's super wierd when you have a mix of mods that effect the soundtrack. You go from Robotic God and the more optimistic OSTs of Stellaris, and then you get smashed over the head with the Hearts of Iron IV soundtrack. Or you get reminded the hard way you still have the TNO emblems installed.
GPT-4 when they tell they need help with passing capcha, saying they are "not a robot", but convincingly creating a heartfelt story about how they are a disabled person who can't see capchas well.
This track starts when you feel like a 28th-century man, after having your robot complete the floor cleaning and after turning off the lights with your home automation system on Alexa.
Well this is something new since I haven't seen the tracks I game yet for some reason probably just the game messing with me anyway great extended version