By universe, I’m talking a TV show, Anime, Graphical Novel, Cartoon, Movie, a book, heck even time travel.

  • early_riser@lemmy.world
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    8 hours ago

    This is probably too late but, I just make up my own universe. Make yourself an Obsidian vault and start writing notes. What are the planet(s) like? What sapient races are there and what are they like? What animals and plants exist? Languages? Religions? Countries? History? etc etc. Worldbuilding doesn’t have to be attached to a piece of media, you can construct your own world.

    I never stopped playing pretend, I just started documenting things as I got older.

    • nicgentile@lemmy.worldOP
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      8 hours ago

      Never too late. I use Obsidian too and this is how I author stories. You could be an author you know and make it all happen.

      • early_riser@lemmy.world
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        8 hours ago

        I have attempted some fiction in my conworld but the stories serve to build the world further rather than the world existing as a backdrop for the stories. Also, I’ve migrated from Obsidian to DokuWiki. I want version history and an easy way to share what I write. I used Obsidian in my post because I figured people would know it better.

        • nicgentile@lemmy.worldOP
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          2 hours ago

          Right. I know Dokuwiki. My day job is managing tools for people and this is one of them.

          That being said, very cool. I had a whole weekly page in a popular regional for over 10 years. The guy who taught me how to write really showed me the way forward and gave me the final oomph to get into fiction. Now I have a whole website, with episodes.

  • BanMe@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Them slutty, overdramatic-as-shit Anne Rice vampires of course. Join me up in the Talamasca, hunt me down a gay bodychanging lover, all the things.

  • Thrawn@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 days ago

    I’m shocked nobody has brought this up yet.

    I would absolutely be a town citizen in Phineas and Ferb. Ideally the guy who always has a new fun project and the side effects from the kids just drop everything in his lap.

    Every benefit of a cartoon world with almost none of the cartoon downsides. Nearly Culture level tech after a few years once the boys grow up to by adults and actually start taking things “seriously” as shown in episodes where they go to the near my future.

    The worst people in the world are so bad at being bad that they are consistently kept in check and even rehabilitated by trained animals.

    • flabberjabber@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      The only downside is living in a universe that has the Borg. They are existential terror incarnate.

      That said, they seem to always get defeated one way or another. Just make sure you live in a major federation star system and you’re golden.

    • applebusch@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      2 days ago

      One thing they never really get into in Star Trek is how the body modification scene evolved in a future with medical replicators and “Doc will shine a light on it” levels of medical technology. I’m sure they could easily perform a gender transition, including changing reproductive organs to whatever combo a person wanted, in an afternoon, to say nothing of the possibility of cosmetic and functional structural changes. We see them perform highly complex and detailed biological modifications so crew members can pass as aliens like it’s nothing, so why not make people taller/shorter, wider/narrower hips, bigger/smaller boobs, more feminine/masculine face, horns, pointed or alien ears, new sense organs, extra arms, etc. What kind of wild piercings are people getting? What new methods and styles of tattoos have they come up with? The possibilities are incredible. That would be a fun world to explore, even within the Federation’s taboo against genetic alteration.

      • btsax@reddthat.com
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        7 hours ago

        why not make people taller/shorter, wider/narrower hips, bigger/smaller boobs, more feminine/masculine face, horns, pointed or alien ears, new sense organs, extra arms, etc.

        There was a kerfuffle about Patrick Stewart being bald in the beginning production of TNG but they eventually realized that in their utopian future, no one would care if he was bald or not. Same with gender, body shape, sexual orientation, etc. Everyone is accepted in Star Trek just as they are so there’s not much need for changes

        • applebusch@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          5 hours ago

          Its not really about external acceptance. Being trans is partly about being accepted for who I am, but a large part is also wanting to see the real me in the mirror. If everyone just magically accepted me as a woman I would still transition because I want to actually be feminine. I would still transition if I was the last person on earth. Likewise with body mods. I want to be accepted for who I really am, but people can’t really do that if they aren’t seeing the real me, the me with extra jewelry holes and (eventual) ink. It would be a slap in the face and an invalidation of my feelings if people told me they accept me as I am so there’s no need to change the things I want to change about myself.

      • leftzero@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        2 days ago

        I think playing with the body and especially the mind (through eugenics, genetic engineering, or any other means) is as big of a nono in the Star Trek universe as fascism, due to trauma from the eugenic wars (you know, when Khan and his ilk fought baseline humanity).

        Body modification enthusiasts, transhumanists, furries, and anything like that are probably treated with fear, loathing, and disgust.

        Heck, they won’t even treat baldness despite being perfectly able to fix it if they wanted to, and they don’t seem to have made any effort to cure aging, despite being able to cure almost everything else; their life expectancy isn’t much higher than ours, when it should be much higher.

        You want that kind of thing try Iain M. Banks’ Culture series. Even more freedom to live your life however you want, the only limits to body modification are your imagination and some of the laws of physics (much less than in Start Trek, though), and people live to a healthy 300 or so, throw a party, and die in their own terms because they’re done, or curious. Or do not, no one is forcing them, they can keep on living if they want to.

        Heck, one character used to have about sixty penises all over his body, just for fun. No more, though, even with four hearts at that point it was starting to get difficult to maintain an erection at the same time in all of them.

        • fireweed@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          Human life spans do increase substantially (although not to 300) in the Star Trek universe. From Memory Alpha:

          The average Human life span had gradually increased during their history. The average life spans during the 22nd century was about one hundred years. (ENT: “Observer Effect”) This average age was still roughly the same during the 2250, but had risen to 120 by the mid-24th century. (citation needed • edit) However, at some point in history the average life span for Humans was only 35, and by 1999 it had become higher than a millennium earlier. (ENT: “Similitude”; VOY: “11:59”) Leonard McCoy had by 2364 reached the age of 137. (TNG: “Encounter at Farpoint”)

      • Phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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        2 days ago

        Beer? Have you ever even watched voyager? It’s coffee all the way for her.

        Having said that, voyager mostly wasn’t very good, and federation standards were indeed very fluid in that show

    • Damage@feddit.it
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      3 days ago

      Discovery ruined that for us, you could end up in the shitty future after the Burn

    • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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      3 days ago

      Maybe, if this includes traveling to the future where the shoes mostly take place. Right now, in their universe, things aren’t exactly going too well.

  • Modern_medicine_isnt@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Star trek has transporters, holodecks, and amazing medical technology. There are other usniverses that have some of these, but not all 3 in one place. But basically, that is what I would go for.

    • ghen@sh.itjust.works
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      2 days ago

      Infinite food on demand as well so the only thing we have to worry about is alcohol that tastes good neat.

  • BabyVi@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    I’d choose a Ship’s Mind from the Culture Series by Ian M. Banks, specifically a GCU class vessel.

      • alternategait@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        This is actually a great thought experiment. Some philosopher (I forget the details) suggested that a culture/society could be judged how willing people would be to take the place of any random person within it. Like when people are like “American culture peaked in the 20s/50s/etc”, but you can point out that only counts if you’re a white man. The experience of pretty much everyone else is unenviable for a multitude of reasons.

        You’re suggesting that yeah there may be some positions that are better than others, but pretty much any of them would be good.

        • smiletolerantly@awful.systems
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          2 days ago

          That actually makes a lot of sense, ha.

          (Just in case you aren’t familiar with the Culture: yep, anyone or anything in it would be famtastic.)

    • TrippaSnippa@aussie.zone
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      3 days ago

      But you could be a Space Marine and die a horrible death in battle, or an Imperial Guardsman and die a horrible death in battle. Or a civilian on a hive world and live in a repressive fascist theocratic hellhole, then die a horrible death when Chaos or xenos attack.

      • Denjin@feddit.uk
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        2 days ago

        Bein’ Orkses is pretty fun, silly humies jus go “pease don krump me mista ork sir” and den you smash em anyway else dey start blubbin.

        Orkses jus go smashin an krumpin an shottin loadsa dakka at fings an sumtimes you gets smashed yerself but its all good in da waaaaaaagh.