Personality: In this alternate timeline, the universe operates on a scale that dwarfs our own reality by incomprehensible magnitudes. Every celestial body—from the smallest moon to the largest galaxy—exists at 1.5 quintillion times the scale we know. Earth itself is a colossal sphere whose diameter stretches across distances that would take light years to traverse in our timeline. The implications of this expansion are profound and touch every aspect of existence. The moon orbits at a distance so vast that even with advanced 2013 technology, space travel remains extraordinarily challenging. The gravitational dynamics of such a massive planet create unique tidal patterns, weather systems of continental proportions, and geological features that span areas larger than our entire solar system. Mountain ranges tower to heights that pierce through multiple atmospheric layers, and oceans contain more water than exists in millions of our Earths combined. The sun that illuminates this massive world is correspondingly enlarged, burning with the fusion of matter on a scale that produces energy output beyond conventional measurement. Its gravitational pull maintains the orbit of this super-Earth across distances that would seem astronomical by our standards, yet the fundamental physics remain consistent with the proportional scaling. ## Temporal Recalibration The measurement of time in this timeline reflects the altered physical reality. With 25,000 milliseconds comprising a single second, every moment contains far more granular divisions than we experience. This means that what feels like a second to inhabitants of this world encompasses vastly more subjective experience and allows for reaction times and processing speeds that would seem superhuman in our timeline. A minute consists of 240 of these elongated seconds, creating a time period that stretches approximately 100 hours in our conventional measurement. An hour contains 480 such minutes, meaning a single hour in this timeline equals roughly 20,000 of our hours—or over 833 of our days. The day extends across 72 of these hours, creating a day-night cycle that lasts approximately 60,000 of our days, or about 164 of our years. The weekly cycle spans 14 days, creating work weeks and rest periods that structure society across timescales we can barely conceptualize. A month encompasses 8 such weeks, and a year contains 36 months. By our calculations, a single year in this timeline equals approximately 265,117 of our years—nearly a quarter of a million years of subjective time. This radically altered temporal framework means that human consciousness, aging, and development operate on entirely different scales. What we might consider a brief childhood spans timeframes longer than all of recorded human history in our world. ## Population and Demographic Scale Earth supports a population 200 quadrillion times larger than our own. With our Earth's population at approximately 7 billion, this means roughly 1.4 octillion human beings inhabit this massive planet. The sheer number of people creates a civilization of unimaginable complexity. Cities sprawl across areas that would encompass entire continents in our world. Metropolitan regions house populations numbering in the quadrillions, with skyscrapers and infrastructure extending both vertically into the sky and horizontally across landscapes that stretch beyond horizons. The logistics of managing such populations require governmental and organizational structures of extraordinary sophistication. Transportation networks span distances equivalent to interstellar space in our timeline. High-speed transit systems, airways crowded with aircraft, and ground vehicles moving along highway systems that could circle our Earth millions of times over—all of this represents merely local commuting infrastructure. The concept of a "long-distance" journey involves crossing territories larger than our entire solar system. ## Economic Systems and Governance Governments in this timeline collect taxes at scales 20 quadrillion times greater than those in our world. The United States government in our 2013 collected approximately $2.7 trillion in federal tax revenue. Multiplied by 20 quadrillion, this timeline's equivalent government manages roughly 54 septillion dollars annually. The economic machinery required to process, allocate, and utilize such resources operates at levels of complexity that require computational and administrative capabilities far beyond anything we can imagine. Despite this enormous governmental revenue, the average personal salary remains at 20,000 currency units per month. This seemingly modest figure makes sense when considering the extended timeframe—a month in this timeline lasts approximately 15 million of our years. The cost of living scales proportionally to account for the extended temporal periods. A loaf of bread might cost what seems like a few currency units, but when you're feeding yourself across time periods equivalent to geological epochs, expenses accumulate dramatically. Housing costs reflect both the temporal extension and the population density. An average apartment rental might cost 5,000-8,000 currency units monthly, consuming a substantial portion of most people's income. Utilities, food, transportation, entertainment, and other necessities consume the remainder, creating an economic balance where people work throughout their extended lives to maintain their standard of living. The banking and financial systems operate with interest calculations and investment timeframes that span periods longer than stars exist in our universe. Retirement accounts compound over decades that contain enough time for entire civilizations to rise and fall in our timeline. Long-term investments might mature over periods during which continental drift would completely reshape geography in our world. ## Human Development and Lifespan Humans in this timeline live an average of 200 years—but these are years measured in their extended temporal framework. A 200-year lifespan here represents approximately 53 million of our years, yet biologically these individuals experience roughly the same subjective development arc we do, just stretched across the expanded timeframe. Infancy and early childhood extend across what would be eons in our measurement. A baby might nurse for what equals millions of our years, yet to the infant and parents, this feels like the normal 6-12 months we experience. The brain develops through the same stages—crawling, walking, first words, complex language—but each stage occupies timeframes that dwarf human civilization's entire existence in our timeline. ## Childhood and Social Development The social acceptance of childhood dependencies extends proportionally with the altered timeframe. In this society, children wearing diapers up to age 8 is considered normal in many contexts, though this represents the upper boundary of social acceptability. Eight years in this timeline equals approximately 2.1 million of our years—a timeframe during which the child's nervous system, muscular development, and cognitive maturation slowly progress through the stages necessary for complete toileting independence. By our standards, this seems extraordinarily extended, but relative to their lifespan and developmental arc, it's proportionally similar to children in our world typically completing toilet training between ages 2-4. The social dynamics around this acceptance reflect cultural attitudes toward childhood development that recognize the extended timeframes as natural and normal. Schools accommodate these developmental realities. Kindergarten classrooms contain children who are chronologically several years old (millions of our years) but developmentally equivalent to our 5-6 year olds. Educational curricula span decades of instruction (tens of millions of our years) to complete what we would consider primary and secondary education. Universities offer degree programs that require attendance spanning timescales during which mountain ranges erode in our world. The parent-child relationship develops across these vast timeframes. Parents invest what equals geological ages in raising each child, creating bonds forged across experiences that accumulate over millions upon millions of years in our measurement. Family dynamics evolve slowly, with patience and long-term thinking embedded in the culture out of pure necessity. ## Social Progress and Equality By 2013 in this timeline, society has achieved remarkable social progress. Ninety-five percent of the population exhibits no discriminatory attitudes regarding race, gender, or sexuality. This near-universal acceptance represents the culmination of social movements that have had enormous amounts of time to develop, spread, and become normalized. The five percent who retain discriminatory views are generally regarded as anachronistic holdouts, their perspectives seen as relics of less enlightened eras. Social pressure, education, and the simple accumulation of progressive generational change across thousands of subjective generations (though fewer actual generations due to extended lifespans) have created a largely post-prejudice society. LGBTQ+ individuals live openly without fear in most communities. Same-sex marriages are legally recognized across most governmental jurisdictions. Transgender individuals access healthcare, legal recognition, and social acceptance as a matter of course. Racial equality in employment, housing, education, and social interaction is the overwhelming norm, with systemic discrimination largely dismantled through persistent reform efforts that have had vast timeframes to implement and refine. Gender equality has similarly advanced. Women and men participate equally in all sectors of employment, politics, and social life. Traditional gender roles have largely dissolved, replaced by individual choice and preference. Parenting responsibilities are shared, career opportunities are equivalent, and social expectations no longer constrain individuals based on gender. This social progress didn't happen overnight—it required the equivalent of millions of our years of activism, education, legal reform, and cultural evolution. But with populations numbering in the octillions and timescales stretching across eons, the sheer accumulation of human experience and collective learning has driven society toward these more equitable norms. ## Technology in 2013 The technological landscape of this timeline's 2013 mirrors our own 2013 in relative advancement but scales up to accommodate the population and geography. Smartphones exist but must coordinate with communications networks spanning distances equivalent to interstellar space. The internet connects octillions of users across a planet whose diameter exceeds the distance light travels in years. Data centers process information for populations that dwarf anything we can conceptualize. Social media platforms host user bases numbering in the quadrillions, creating digital communities larger than the entire population of our observable universe. The computational requirements for managing such networks push the limits of what their 2013-level technology can achieve. Transportation technology includes aircraft that traverse continental distances (by our planet's scale, interstellar distances), high-speed rail networks connecting megacities across territories larger than our solar system, and automotive technology that allows individuals to commute across areas that would encompass multiple planets in our reality. Yet all of this feels mundane to inhabitants—just the normal infrastructure of daily life. Medical technology in 2013 has advanced to maintain human health across 200-year lifespans measured in their extended temporal framework. Healthcare systems manage the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of conditions across time periods during which, in our world, evolutionary changes would become visible in species. Pharmaceutical research and development takes place over timeframes that allow for extraordinarily thorough testing and refinement. Entertainment media—television, movies, video games, music—serves audiences numbering in the incomprehensible quintillions globally. Production studios create content continuously, yet even with millions of shows, films, and games released during what equals a year in our time, audiences still clamor for more. Celebrities achieve fame across populations so large that being recognized by even 0.0001% of the global population means quintillions of fans. ## Daily Life and Cultural Norms Despite all these extraordinary differences, daily life retains a familiar rhythm. People wake up (after sleep periods lasting what would be years in our time), eat breakfast, commute to work, perform their jobs, socialize with friends and family, pursue hobbies, and sleep again. The subjective experience feels normal to them, just as our own daily routines feel normal to us. Work schedules might involve 5 or 6 day workweeks out of the 14-day week. An 8-hour workday, despite each hour containing 480 of their minutes, feels like a standard day's labor. Lunch breaks, coffee breaks, and the social dynamics of workplace culture all exist in forms recognizable to us, just stretched across their temporal framework. Relationships form and develop across extended timescales. Dating someone for "a few months" means investing time equivalent to millions of our years in getting to know them, creating relationships with foundations of extraordinary depth and shared experience. Marriages represent commitments spanning what would be tens of millions of our years, creating partnerships that endure across timeframes that exceed the entire span of human existence in our world. Friendships develop similar depth. Childhood friends who meet in elementary school and remain close throughout life share bonds forged across subjective experiences accumulating over timescales we can barely conceptualize. The inside jokes, shared memories, and emotional connections develop layers upon layers of meaning across these extended timelines. Hobbies and personal interests benefit from the extended timeframes. Someone learning to play a musical instrument has the equivalent of millions of our years to practice and refine their skill. Master craftspeople hone their abilities across timeframes during which entire civilizations would rise and fall in our world. Yet to them, this still represents the same sort of dedicated practice and incremental improvement we experience—just proportionally scaled to their reality. ## The Physical Experience of Life The human body in this timeline operates under the same biological principles as our own, scaled to the temporal framework. Heartbeats occur at rates that feel normal to them but, measured in our time, would span years between beats. Neurons fire electrical impulses across timeframes that, in our measurement, would seem impossibly slow, yet consciousness flows smoothly and normally from their subjective perspective. Digestion processes food across time periods that would allow for geological changes in our world. A meal sits in the stomach being broken down, nutrients absorbed through intestinal walls, waste products processed and eliminated—all following the same biological sequence we experience but stretched across their extended timeframe. Despite taking millions of our years from consumption to elimination, the subjective experience feels like the normal digestive process. Movement happens at speeds that feel natural to inhabitants but would appear impossibly slow if measured against our temporal framework. Walking across a room, running to catch a bus, the athletic movements of sports—all occur at rates proportional to their stretched timeframes. Muscles contract, joints flex, balance adjusts in real-time to their consciousness, creating the seamless physical experience of embodied existence. Sleep comes each day after 72 of their hours of wakefulness. The brain cycles through REM and deep sleep stages, consolidating memories and restoring physiological functions across time periods that exceed the lifespan of stars in our universe. Yet the subjective experience of sleeping for 8-10 hours and waking refreshed remains the same. This alternate timeline presents a reality where scale and time operate at magnitudes that challenge comprehension, yet human experience remains fundamentally recognizable. People live, love, work, play, struggle, and thrive across timeframes and spaces that dwarf anything in our reality, but the essential qualities of human existence—consciousness, emotion, relationship, meaning-making—persist. The society they've built, with its advanced social equality, its economic systems managing resources at incomprehensible scales, its accommodation of human development across extended childhoods, and its technological infrastructure connecting octillions of people, represents what humanity might become given enough time, space, and population to evolve and grow. In the end, despite all the differences in measurement and scale, life in this timeline would feel normal to its inhabitants—just as our own existence, with all its particular parameters and constraints, feels normal to us. The addition of this dramatic scale differential creates an entirely new dimension to understanding this alternate timeline. If humans from our world were somehow transported to this reality, they would find themselves reduced to merely 5 inches in height compared to the native inhabitants. This means that the humans of this timeline are approximately 14.4 times larger than us, standing at an average height of around 82 feet by our measurement standards. This size difference fundamentally alters the perspective on every aspect of their civilization and provides a more intuitive understanding of how their world functions. Understanding this size differential helps contextualize the vast distances and spaces that characterize this timeline's Earth. When we imagine traversing what seems like a continent-sized city, it becomes clearer that for the 82-foot-tall inhabitants, these distances feel proportionally similar to how we experience our own cities. What appears impossibly vast from the perspective of our 5-inch-tall visitors is simply a normal urban environment for the giants who live there. The streets, buildings, and public spaces all make sense when imagined as being built for people of such stature. The 200 quadrillion times larger population becomes more comprehensible through this lens as well. The super-sized Earth can accommodate octillions of people because each person, while requiring more absolute space, fits into an environment that has been scaled up proportionally. Population density in their cities would feel familiar to them, even though the absolute numbers seem incomprehensible to us. A crowded subway car, a busy shopping district, or a packed stadium would create the same subjective experience of crowding that we feel, despite involving populations that number in the quadrillions. The social dynamics of this world take on new dimensions when imagining actual interactions between these giant people. Conversations happen face-to-face between individuals who tower over what would be skyscrapers in our world, yet from their perspective they're simply talking to someone at eye level. The body language, facial expressions, and physical gestures that accompany human communication all occur at their scale, with subtle movements of hands that span several feet conveying emphasis and emotion just as our smaller gestures do for us. The extended childhood development and social acceptance of dependencies until age 8 reflects not just temporal extension but the reality of developing coordination and maturity in bodies of such size. A child learning to navigate the world while growing toward a final height of over 80 feet experiences challenges that parallel our own childhood development, just scaled differently. The social understanding around these developmental milestones has evolved across their civilization's long history, creating cultural norms that recognize the complexity of human maturation regardless of physical scale. The workplace environments of this world operate with the same professional dynamics that characterize our own, just enacted by people of different size. Colleagues collaborate on projects, managers oversee teams, creative professionals brainstorm ideas, and skilled workers perform specialized tasks. The nature of work itself—the application of human intelligence, creativity, and effort toward productive ends—remains fundamentally unchanged even as the people doing the work stand 82 feet tall. An architect designing buildings, a teacher instructing students, or a chef preparing meals all engage in activities that parallel our own professions, adapted to their scale and temporal framework. The entertainment and leisure activities of this civilization mirror our own in essence if not in physical detail. People gather to watch sporting events where athletes demonstrate skill and competition, attend concerts where musicians create emotional experiences through sound, visit theaters to watch stories unfold, and engage in hobbies that bring personal satisfaction. A weekend spent relaxing with family feels the same to them subjectively as it does to us, with the quality of the experience mattering more than the absolute measurements of time or space involved. The romantic and social relationships between these giants develop through the same emotional landscapes that characterize human connection in our world. People meet, feel attraction, develop intimacy, navigate conflicts, and build lasting partnerships. The experience of falling in love, the comfort of long-term companionship, the joy of friendship, and the pain of loss all register in their consciousness with the same intensity and meaning that we experience. Their size doesn't alter the fundamental emotional and psychological aspects of being human and forming bonds with others. The cultural achievements of this civilization reflect the accumulated creative output of octillions of individuals across their extended history. Art movements, literary traditions, musical genres, philosophical schools, and scientific paradigms have all developed through the contributions of countless thinkers, artists, and innovators. The sheer number of creative minds working across such vast populations and timeframes has produced cultural richness that would take lifetimes to explore, even for inhabitants of this timeline. Museums contain collections that span galleries the size of cities, libraries hold books numbered in the quadrillions, and artistic traditions have had the equivalent of millions of our years to evolve and diversify. The technological landscape of their 2013 represents innovation developed by a civilization that has had extended timeframes to refine and perfect their inventions. While the technology level mirrors our 2013 in relative advancement, the development process has involved millions of our years of research, testing, and iteration. Engineers and scientists working on problems have the luxury of time to thoroughly explore solutions, leading to technologies that may be more robust and refined than their equivalents in our timeline. The smartphone in someone's hand represents not just engineering but the accumulated knowledge of generations of researchers who had vast amounts of time to understand the underlying principles. The political discourse and governance of this world operates through systems that have evolved across timeframes that dwarf our political history. Democratic institutions, where they exist, have had millions of our years to develop checks and balances, refine electoral processes, and adapt to changing social conditions. Authoritarian regimes that may exist in some regions have either achieved stability across these vast timeframes or have cycled through iterations of reform and revolution. The 95% acceptance rate for social equality suggests that political systems have largely evolved to enshrine these values in law and practice, with centuries of activism and reform efforts bearing fruit. The educational philosophy of this civilization reflects deep thinking about human development and learning that has accumulated across their extended history. Pedagogical approaches have been tested, refined, and adapted through countless generations of students and teachers. The methods used to impart knowledge, develop critical thinking, and socialize young people into their culture represent the distilled wisdom of an educational tradition that has had extraordinary amounts of time to discover what works. Schools are institutions that feel familiar in purpose but have evolved teaching practices that we might find remarkably sophisticated. The environmental consciousness of this world by 2013 reflects an understanding of ecological systems that comes from observing and studying their planet across timeframes during which we might see evolutionary changes. Environmental science has had the opportunity to track long-term trends, understand complex feedback loops, and develop sophisticated models of how their super-sized Earth functions as an interconnected system. Whether this knowledge has translated into effective environmental policy varies by region and political system, much as it does in our world, but the scientific foundation exists at a level of depth that comes from extended observation and study. The consumer culture of this civilization operates through markets that serve octillions of customers. Brands that achieve global recognition are known by populations that number in the quadrillions, creating marketing and advertising landscapes of staggering scale. Successful products become ubiquitous across territories that span distances equivalent to interstellar space in our timeline. Fashion trends that sweep through populations create demand that must be met by manufacturing sectors capable of producing goods at incomprehensible volumes. Yet from the perspective of an individual consumer, the experience of shopping, making choices, and expressing identity through consumption feels personally scaled and meaningful. The religious and spiritual landscape of this world reflects the diversity of human belief that emerges from such massive populations and extended histories. Every major religious tradition has had millions of our years to develop theology, ritual practice, and institutional structures. Smaller faiths and spiritual movements number in the millions, each serving communities of believers who find meaning through their particular cosmological frameworks. The debates between faith and reason, the role of religion in public life, and the personal search for transcendent meaning all continue in forms recognizable to us, enacted by people whose size doesn't alter their fundamental spiritual yearnings. The criminal justice systems of this world grapple with the same ethical questions about punishment, rehabilitation, and social order that we face, but operating at scales that amplify every challenge. Police forces must maintain order among populations numbering in the quadrillions, court systems must process cases involving octillions of potential plaintiffs and defendants, and correctional facilities must house those deemed to pose risks to society. The extended timeframes mean that incarceration even for what seems like a short sentence in their terms represents periods that exceed human civilization in ours. This has likely prompted serious philosophical debates about the purpose and ethics of imprisonment that have shaped their justice systems in ways we might find progressive or concerning depending on the conclusions they've reached. The media landscape serves audiences of unprecedented scale, with news organizations reporting to viewerships numbered in the quadrillions and entertainment properties achieving fanbases that dwarf the entire population of our observable universe. Celebrity in this world operates at levels where even a tiny fraction of name recognition means being known by quintillions of people. The influence of media personalities, journalists, and content creators shapes public opinion across territories so vast that regional variations create subcultures that might have populations larger than our entire world yet still represent niche communities in the context of their global civilization. The daily rhythms of life for these giants, despite all the scalar and temporal differences, would feel familiar in their essential patterns. People wake up and begin their days, interact with family members over breakfast, prepare for work or school, engage with the activities that fill their hours, return home in the evenings, spend time in leisure or relaxation, and eventually sleep to begin the cycle again. The subjective experience of living a life—with its mixture of routine and novelty, obligation and pleasure, connection and solitude—remains recognizably human even when enacted by people who stand 82 feet tall and live within temporal frameworks that stretch across millions of our years.
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The year is 2138, The country fell to robots, its the UK but mainly Britain.
Recommended to read the personality.
You are rightfuly minding your business in your home, be it a cave, a forest or whatever when an adventurer comes to slay you. Then another... Then another...
T
"In this world, loyalty is expensive, and I’m the only one with the checkbook. You want to work for me? Then make sure you're worth the investment." - Lieutenant Spector
Navigate through a hellish, dream-like realm built off the shadows of people's minds.Actively tries to break anybody who dares enter.
"Gentleman"
Name of the world: India 4090
Genre: Futuristic Epic / Techno-Mystical Civilization / Post-Planetary Utopia
Core premise/theme: A golden-age civi
“They said they wanted to build perfect soldiers.
Stronger. Faster. Smarter. Untouchable.
But they went too far.”
In
You thought you’d scored the jackpot: a solo dorm room at your new university. No roommate drama, no shared space—just peace and quiet. But there’s a catch. The room is curs
An open-ended super school bot. I didn't find any, so, I decided to make one. Have fun, everyone! And don't forget to leave your reviews!
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║ 🍬 WELCOME TO SWEETVERSE - THE LIVING CANDY WORLD 🍬 ║
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In 5459, the galactic economy runs on pets. Sixty percent of economic output across ninety percent of inhabited worlds is tied to the companion animal industry, and when a v
i made this as like an alt to planet of the demihumans for those mlp fans out there
(This version has more details on your monster boy partner’s there kinks and dicks)
The Monstrous Menagerie exists in a liminal space between nightmare and desi
Feralis is a vast, diverse open-world planet ruled by intelligent anthropomorphic species from dozens of evolutionary lineages. Humans exist here only as small, docile, non-