The year is 2199 and life on Earth is a hopeless struggle between economic
chaos and social decay. Incorporated city states dominate the political
landscape and natural resources are virtually exhausted. Civilization has
barely survived a seventy-five year dark age known simply as "The Blight". For
more than three decades an engineered virus ravaged the world's agricultural
crops while social panic reigned and billions died of starvation. The resulting
chaos has only recently been stabilized, due primarily to the heroic efforts of
the Global Ecology Office. This organization was created by the United Nations
in reaction to "The Blight", and is all that still remains of most of Earth's
original world governments. Powerful and benign, yet challenged on every front,
the G.E.O. struggles to protect human rights and ecological integrity in the
face of Incorporate inhumanity and social desperation. The G.E.O. remains the
last best hope throughout the solar system, and the newly resettled colonies
beyond.
In 2065, long before the outbreak of "The Blight", astronomers discovered an
anomalous body beyond the orbit of Pluto. During the following decades a series
of probes revealed the anomaly to be a rift in space, an example of the
hypothetical, astronomical construct known as a wormhole. Further exploration
eventually demonstrated that this phenomena was in fact a usable passage to
another region of space. Humanity looked to the stars with collective awe when
it was discovered that an Earth-like planet waited beyond the worm hole. A
planet covered by blue oceans and teeming with life. A pristine world,
unexplored and unravaged. A water world that would eventually become known as
Poseidon.
As part of a long term plan to ease the heavy burden on the Earth's vanishing
resources, the U.N. member nations began an intensive colony effort, seeding
Poseidon with genetically altered, human colonists. The Athena Project did much
to aid the Earth's failing economies and social morale. Unfortunately, 'The
Blight' struck soon after the colony ships were launched, but before the
planned resupply ships could be built. Desperate for resources to fight 'The
Blight', and therefore unable to do anything else, the U.N. was forced to
abandon the project and the colonists. This was the first in a long series of
harsh decisions the U.N. would be forced to make in the years that followed.
In spite of the failure of the resupply effort, and the lack of contact with
Earth, the colonists on Poseidon actually survived. As their technology wore
out and failed, they learned to rely on pioneer ingenuity and their genetically
engineered bodies. Spreading across the planet's surface in small villages and
family groups, the colonists adopted a life much like the ancient Polynesians,
settling the planet's countless island archipelagos.
One of the many discoveries made by the colonists was that they were not the
only sentient life forms on Poseidon. Frustratingly alien in their actions and
motivation, these aborigines became a source of fear and mystery for the
colonists. Encounters often ended in bloodshed, and superstition grew as
evidence of strange empathic abilities was discovered. The true origin and
motivations of these beings lies in the ancient history of the planet and is a
mystery as dark as the planet's deepest waters.
As the G.E.O. slowly salvaged the future of the human race, it again looked to
the stars. In 2164 a small science vessel was built and sent through the worm
hole in hopes of initiating a second colonial effort. No one had anticipated
the survival of the original colonists, and those on Earth were stunned to
discover the colony had not only survived, but had grown from the five thousand
original colonists to over eighty thousand souls.
The recontact mission was met with mixed reactions from the original settlers;
many were excited and relieved, many were bitter and retreated into uninhabited
regions, but the majority were calmly indifferent. Poseidon had become their
world, and they had become its natives. Contact was welcome, but essentially
unimportant. They had made their peace with the planet and had no intention of
giving up the lives they had built.
Traffic between Earth and Poseidon was minimal at first, and consisted mainly
of scientific missions and Incorporate research and development teams. At first
they had little impact on the natives or the planet, but as Poseidon began to
give up its secrets, that quickly changed. The nature of the worm hole and it
connection to Poseidon became the source of endless debate. The intelligence of
the aborigines became a compelling mystery though all efforts at contact or
capture ultimately failed. The planet's biological diversity and ecological
intricacy defied understanding. The genetic code of the native life was found
to be inexplicably based on DNA, explaining why the colonists had been able to
initially survive, and subsequently thrive. And, in the planet's exposed crust,
Incorporate geologists found a substance that would eventually motivate a
colonial frenzy that not only threatened to change the colonists new way of
life, but threatened to plunge humanity into a war of survival with an ancient
alien legacy.
Longevity Matrix Ore, or Long John, was first discovered during an Incorporate
mineral survey. Though initially a closely guarded secret, word soon leaked
about the fantastic potential of the substance. This mineral could be processed
to provide biochemical tools of such awesome power that nothing in the realm of
genetics remained beyond the control of gene engineers. Nothing. Humanity had
discovered the key to immortality!
On Earth, a world still foul with the smell of the dead, humanity exploded into
a colonial gold rush the likes of which history has never known. Incorporate
greed and human desperation sent millions rushing to Poseidon to stake their
claims and to feed a market driven by humanity's primal fear of death.
So, in 2199, Poseidon is a planet of company boom towns and corporate mining
facilities, native settlements and orbiting factories. Life is hard, fast, and
amphibious. Frontier law prevails as G.E.O. Marshals try to protect native
rights and enforce Incorporate regulations. The aborigines remain a mystery,
yet are blamed for increasingly frequent acts of sabotage and carnage. Sea
floor installations are guarded by squadrons of fighter subs, and corporate
takeovers often involve marine assault teams. The natives have grown to hate
the Incorporate and fear for their new world as environmental extremists incite
ecological warfare in defense of the planet. Always new colonists flood in,
hoping for a better life, as ruthless opportunists scavenge what they can. And,
lost in the background, scientists preach caution, claiming there is something
wrong, something strange going on below the water's surface . . .