An Archive of Our Own, a project of the Organization for Transformative Works
At the end of the Golden Age, the data archivist Orion Pax is not alone in harbouring doubt in Cybertron’s future. Inspired by the revolutionary fervour of the gladiator, Megatronus, Orion seeks him out; and thus begins a relationship that will eventually bring Cybertron to its knees.
Heeeeere’s Enceladion! Also featuring a Realisation™ on Orion’s part, multiple laws being broken for a good cause, and a couple of cameos.
(Worth repeating - I will continue to update this account, but you can also find me at Kemmasandi on pillowfort and hurricanefoundry on dreamwidth.)
It seems like my blog is safe from the banhammer for now, but honestly I’m not attached enough to tumblr to keep making it my main base. Here’s something of a status update on my blogs:
- panthalass: ABANDONED. My personal shit is going elsewhere, probably to pillowfort.
- book0fhours: Will continue to be maintained at approximately the rate it currently is, ie. at a snail’s pace lmao. I am planning to crosspost everything on that blog to dreamwidth, either at my current account or a purpose-made account (I haven’t made up my mind yet), and major posts to the headcanon collection on Ao3.
- kemdoodles: ABANDONED. All my art is going to dA these days anyway lmao.
- battlesparked: I… have not yet decided. I would like to go back to rping Optimus, but at this point I think it would be an awkward proposition. I’ll probably wait and see what happens with tumblr etc. before I make an official decision.
- other rp blogs: ABANDONED.
I was just reminded of a Problem that exists, so here’s a note on that account.
The tumblr blog carrying the protihexirecords URL was the old version of this blog, a sideblog attached to my previous main tumblr account. The deviantArt gallery carrying the same URL is NOT affiliated with either tumblr blog or the fic project on Ao3. I have a deviantArt account which I am currently active on; the account name is Kemmasandi. I only have a few TF things on my dA, and they’re all OCs. Aerugo might turn up there at some point, idk.
Furthermore, the protihexirecords account on dA has also reposted headcanons and graphics created by an entirely different Transformers fanwriter. I don’t care that much that they’ve reposted my graphics, and the whole ‘literally claiming to be me’ thing (seriously, check the profile comments) is fucking hilarious, but I do have an issue that they’ve reposted someone else’s art as well. The original artist of those other works is tumblr user decepticonfetti (not tagging because they’re already aware of this issue from 2016 when I first discovered it, and also I have no idea if they’re still in the fandom), just to lay credit where credit is due.
The account doesn’t seem to have been active since 2015, and because of dA’s report system I don’t really have a way of flagging the blog, so I can’t really do anything but post about the issue here. Also, at least one person and potentially others was given “permission” to use the headcanons posted to the account, so I really don’t how much further my graphics and headcanons may have spread.
An Archive of Our Own, a project of the Organization for Transformative Works
At the end of the Golden Age, the data archivist Orion Pax is not alone in harbouring doubt in Cybertron's future. Inspired by the revolutionary fervour of the gladiator, Megatronus, Orion seeks him out; and thus begins a relationship that will eventually bring Cybertron to its knees.
In which Orion continues his self-discovery and Soundwave’s skeletons start falling out of the cupboard. Also, Jazz.
[walks in, trips over a conveniently placed rock, plot threads fall out of my pockets, scattering all around my prone body]
in other news i finally started counting up the plot threads i’m juggling with Rise and there’s 16 so far. I’m certain i’m forgetting some because lbr, i always do, but at least they’re written down now. I probably shoulda done this ages ago.
An Archive of Our Own, a project of the Organization for Transformative Works
At the end of the Golden Age, the data archivist Orion Pax is not alone in harbouring doubt in Cybertron's future. Inspired by the revolutionary fervour of the gladiator, Megatronus, Orion seeks him out; and thus begins a relationship that will eventually bring Cybertron to its knees.
Here’s Chapter 14, a few months delayed. I need to give Orion a break sometime, just writing about him being stressed makes me stressed as well XD
At the end of the Golden Age, the data archivist Orion Pax is not alone in harbouring doubt in Cybertron's future. Inspired by the revolutionary fervour of the gladiator, Megatronus, Orion seeks him out; and thus begins a relationship that will eventually bring Cybertron to its knees.
Chapter 13! How's three weeks for an update nearly 7k words long? v: I didn't think I had it in myself these days.
In this chapter, Orion discovers more about his own history, and makes an important choice regarding his future in the Hall of Records, while the Alphas Plot, as one does...
3.7k into ch.13 of Rise. I said I’d try to update within the next six months, but I didn’t think it was going to go this easily.
Brought to you by “I love it when a webpage that’s gone down has a cached version”, a tiny preview:
The dark shadow of his residential building loomed out of the falling snow ahead. Orion opened a Datanet browser window, typing in a search query: ‘Megatronus’ + ‘Decepticon’ + ‘essay’.
Two hundred pages of results. Orion skimmed the first -- almost all linked back to a multi-page clickbait article on a Kaonian news streaming site known for unreliable reporting. He blacklisted that site and tried again.
This time, a little more success. He opened five links in new tabs as he stepped into the residence hall’s foyer, and continued up the stairs, splitting his attention between collecting more links and not tripping on the steps. Reordering the list by age brought up a few results he hadn’t seen in his previous research binges, including an essay with an unfamiliar title, posted on a site which when he clicked the link proved to have gone down several vorn ago.
Orion copied the link, brought up his favourite digital archive site, and pasted the link into the search bar. The archive worked for a moment, then threw up three cached snapshots of the page. He clicked on the most recent.
What appeared on the screen was a simple text document, black glyphs on a soft purple background. At the top of the document, the title read ‘The Struggle for Cultured Speech’. Below it, a note ahead of the main text indicated that it was a translation of an essay originally written in Vulgate Kaoni -- a deliberate choice, contrasted against the rest of Megatronus’ body of work, which was largely Austral Vulgate.
Orion stopped off in the communal washrooms, where he stepped into a washrack for five minutes to wash away the snow that had dripped between his plating. As he stood beneath the gentle spray, he skimmed the essay. The translation was a little shaky -- an amateur’s work, probably, but not a bad effort. The essay told the story of how Megatronus had taught himself the Kaoni Vulgate, and how a mech named Terminus had found him among the detritus of the Kaoni Undercity and shown him a much deeper, more critical understanding of the things he read.
The name ‘Terminus’ triggered a faint flash of recognition. Orion looked back through his recent memory files, but found nothing.
He went back to the Datanet.
>> Search Query: “Megatronus” + “Terminus”
Six results -- all hosted on robotic cache archives. A familiar essay title leapt out at Orion: An Open Letter to the Establishment.
At the end of the Golden Age, the data archivist Orion Pax is not alone in harbouring doubt in Cybertron's future. Inspired by the revolutionary fervour of the gladiator, Megatronus, Orion seeks him out; and thus begins a relationship that will eventually bring Cybertron to its knees.
Title: Rise
Rating: M
Continuity: TF:Prime (pre-canon)
Characters: Orion Pax, Megatronus, Jazz, Soundwave, Elita One, Ultra Magnus, Alpha Trion, Ratchet, and many more supporting characters
Pairings: Megatronus/Orion Pax, Elita-One/OC
Additional Tags: Alien Politics, alien social dynamics, caste system, Slavery, Worldbuilding, Relationship Development, alien economics, culture clash, Origins of Civil War, Gladiators, Violence, Death
I’ve finally managed to update! Took me a few months, but a lot’s happened in that time, so there’s my excuse :D
In this chapter, Orion’s visit to Petrex and Megatronus continues, extending his education in the daily realities of the lower castes. From the next chapter, we enter Phase Two of the story, and head further toward the future. Hopefully that update won’t take me six months, but we will see. :B
Some simple stuff to kickstart Cybertronian mathematics - numerals zero to thirteen in calligraphic Primal Vernacular ( an Iaconian addition to the prayer glyphs script ) and the Simplified Modern Universal Script ( the basic digital format of the half-binary abjad ).
Reposted from my roleplay blog, a world map of Cybertron as it appears in Book of Hours. Under the cut are some short introductions to the places named on this map, others that aren’t, and the general geographic makeup of the Cybertronian homeworld.
This is a HEADCANON developed for my own use in fanfic and rp projects; feel free to borrow these concepts if they take your fancy, but they are NOT canon to any continuity.
♕┊ the Boreal States
Iacon.━ the Imperial capital of Cybertron, Iacon was founded as a trading hub near the north magnetic pole of the planet, and became a rich interstellar cargo port before becoming home to the Primes, who wanted to keep a close optic on their nation’s biggest source of income, in the early Age of Exploration. The city is built on top of the northernmost tip of the Manganese Mountains, the Stellar Galleries, and parts of the Polar Depression. The hive city itself is surrounded by thousands of square leagues of subcities, many of them with their own hives. The city and immediate surroundings played host to more than ninety million sparks during the heyday of the Empire.
the Observatories.━ flat-topped table mountains upon which sit Iacon’s most exclusive districts, full of old mining operations turned into boutique shopping malls and custom homes for the eccentrically-minded. One pays a lot to get up here, even to visit; the metro zone fares are jacked up to take advantage of the regular clientele.
the Boreal Flats.━ a general term for the flat plains surrounding Iacon, which at their lowest are occupied by the third largest liquid body on the planet, the Mare Chryseis. Parts surrounding the magnetic pole are known as the Polar Depression. Known widely for its bad weather.
Pion.━ a smaller city built on top of a scenic lake in the middle of the mountains, which hosts the flagship campuses of many of Cybertron’s most prestigious universities. Has a reputation for being full of snobs, because it’s a top tourist destination among the northeastern population centers of Cybertron. Also a center for Golden Age architecture, known as one of the most visually and technologically striking cities anywhere in the Empire. The population hovers perennially at around 12 million.
Rodion.━ the largest of Iacon’s satellite cities, located about a hundred leagues south on the Polar Highway. Rodion is a flat, unremarkable city, prone to flooding in its lowest levels. Bordered on the south by the lower branch of the Manganese Mountains, it sits right in the math of the annual spring melts. Rodion’s population reached 35 million during the Age of Rust. Its two largest population demographics are low-caste manufacturing workers and the military.
Burthov.━ One of the two main ports on the Sea of Rust. Burthov has a reputation for squalor, inefficiency and corruption that would make any government agent quail. The city follows the coastline of Thunder Passage for a hundred leagues, sandwiched on a narrow coastal plain between the mountains and the Sea. It is very old, and contains many relics of the Dynasty of Primes. The port dominates the city, producing a constant grey smog that lurks about the foothills. If you’re rich in Burthov, you build your house up in the Highlands. The population was estimated at over a hundred million, but it’s hard to tell because so many of the lowest castes are undocumented arrivals from other states.
Kalis.━ A sprawling city covering the hills south of the Mare Chryseis, Kalis is the northern terminus of the Western Trunk Road from Tarn. As one of Cybertron’s younger cities, it has the simultaneous reputation of being hip and modern where the money is, and an overbuilt monstrosity everywhere else. The prestigious districts in the state cluster around the satellite polity of Graveyard Sound, on the edge of the Mare. Kalis’ population is estimated at around 40 million individuals, making it one of the five largest in the northern hemisphere.
Tyrest.━ The home of the Accord between Cybertron and the Council of Galactic States, Tyrest is the third largest and second richest city in the northern hemisphere. It is also one of the oldest, dating back nearly a billion years to the time of the Cataclysm. Tyrest is primarily known for business and secondary industry, with a significant proportion of the higher caste population being involved in the intergalactic political scene. Tyrest hosts Cybertron’s largest university, the flagship campus of the Northern States Academy. Its lords are the dramatic and powerful Pax Aella clade; its most popular serial videocast is a dramatization of that clan’s rise to power long ago.
Kimia.━ Nestled on the edge of the geologically fractious Mitteous Plateau, Kimia plays host to Cybertron’s most celebrated sunsets and its most well-known minority group. The Palace of Eight Queens, from which the Arachnicon nation is ruled, rests among the crags high above the city. Kimia is a primarily industrial state, with the majority of its population involved in resource farming and mining. Population densities are low, due its location in the farthest northeast corner of the Tagan Seaboard; it is considered a good place to retire to.
Mare Chryseis.━ A low-lying and very large lake located within the Boreal polar region, the Mare Chryseis spends most of its time locked under a thick sheet of ice. The southern shores are a popular tourist destination, while the more northern parts are frequented by thrillseekers, explorers, and natural scientists. Take a magnet to the rare sandy beaches in the west; they are composed primarily of black iron sand.
the Mitteous Plateau.━ A geologically unstable and tectonically active region in Cybertron’s northeast corner, home to the Arachnicons. The Mitteous Plateau is undergoing orogeny and erosion at a rate unmatched by anywhere else on Cybertron; it can be dangerous if a traveller does not know what they are doing. The constant exposure of rich new veins of ore makes the border region of the plateau one of Cybertron’s mining hotspots. The Mitteous Plateau is primarily administered by the state governments of Kimia and Protihex.
♕┊ the Tagan Heights and Eastern Corridor
Praxus.━ a city a little larger than Iacon, and with every bit the pomp and splendor. Praxus forms the western corner of the geopolitical unit dominated by Vos, and is known by many of the same stereotypes as that city. Its largest sectors of population are involved in trade and the military, reflecting a status among the homeworld states that is second only to Iacon. Praxians developed and reified Cybertronian art forms, creating a city which is as beautiful as any on the planet. Its inhabitants carry a perhaps unfair reputation for being orderly buffoons. The population is estimated at around forty million, with a significant underground population; the city covers a land area of about five thousand square leagues.
Altihex.━ one of the smaller northern cities, located on a strategic tabletop plateau between the Tagan Heights and the Mitteous Plateau. The city plays host to about eight million sparks, most of which are tier seven industrial workers employed within the city limits or in the Tagan hinterlands. The mountains on which it sits tend to collect clouds, resulting in a significant number of days per vorn in which fog lights become absolutely necessary.
Tetrahex.━ the regional center of the western Mitteous Plateau, forming the northern corner of the Vosian sphere of dominance. Tetrahex is dominated by the military castes, and heavily influenced by the mystic order of Clavis Aurea. The city is of middling size, with a population of around 18 million. It was built among the rifts of the western edge of the Mitteous Plateau, and like Vos, to whom it owes significant cultural influence, it is largely populated by flight-capable frames. This is because, also like Vos, it is largely inaccessible to the majority of traditional groundframes. If you go holidaying in Tetrahex, invest in an offroading alt.
Polyhex.━ an industrial powerhouse of the Empire, located on the northern edge of the Praetorian Estuary about fifteen minutes’ drive from the biggest ore works and mines of the Manganese Mountains. Polyhex is tied with Tarn for first place in the dubious honour of which city-states have the least legal protections for their residents’ basic rights. Polyhex plays host to just under 80 million sparks, a full quarter of which earn under the Imperial poverty threshold. The most recognizable structure in the city is the massive black tower which housed the Polyhex Board of Ethics during the later stages of the Golden Age – and which would later be recycled by occupying Decepticons into the fortress known as Darkmount.
the Manganese Mountains.━ a chain of block-uplift mountains stretching from the Boreal pole to the southeast of the Mitteous Plateau. Rich in manganese, hence the name, and in many other useful minerals besides. The Mountains as a geopolitical unit are administered jointly by Iacon and Polyhex, who often squabble over particularly shiny bits.
the Tagan Heights.━ an extensive system of plateaux covering nearly a quarter of Cybertron’s total land area, the Tagan Heights fueled the industrial Golden Age which allowed Cybertron to become and interplanetary imperial superpower. A rugged, merciless landscape that yielded massive deposits of iron and Cybertronium when prospected, it was the Empire’s first try at large-scale terraforming. The cities of Vos, Protihex, Altihex, and Hexima are the largest in this region, with a surprisingly large total population for having the shared trait of being buried under snow and darkness for nearly half the vorn.
the Eastern Corridor.━ the wide coastal plains between the Tagan Heights and the Sea of Rust, running from Centralia in the south to the Manganese Mountains in the far north, historically known as the Tagan Rus. This became a population center during the pre-Imperial confederation period, with the populations of Praxus, Tetrahex, and Polyhex experiencing extended population booms which precipitated the founding and settlement of a multitude of satellite cities. The culture of the Eastern Corridor was derived in large part from the self-sufficient ideals of the original settlers, lending these populations a reputation for being quiet and somewhat preoccupied with themselves. Praxians, the most famous of the Eastern Corridor’s children, became the face of the stereotype, which persisted for better or for worse.
Praetorus.━ a settlement half in and out of the Sea of Rust, sprawled across islands of bedrock at the mouth of the Praetorian Estuary. Praetorus was settled by traders who worked the routes along the eastern Sea of Rust, following the fiords and rivers of the Estuary inland to the Tagan and Polyhexi industrial centers. It is one of the smallest independent city states, with a population of two and a half million.
the Praetorian Estuary.━ a complex system of rift valleys and fluvial channels which drain snowmelt from the Mitteous Plateau, the Manganese Mountains and much of the southeast Polar Depression. The estuary floods every spring, twice a year, something which is an awesome sight to see but makes farming and industry in the greater region a risky business. Despite the northern Estuary’s industrial output in the form of Greater Polyhex, it is home to some of the poorest communities outside the Southern Rust Belt, which made it an inevitable target for Decepticon recruiters.
Uraya.━ a southern neighbour of Polyhex, sharing its mineral riches and crippling social inequalities. The running joke in the north goes that Uraya is the poor mech’s Polyhex; where you go when you don’t have the money for the pretense of labour laws. ( It’s not a very fun joke. ) The population hovers around twenty five million, crammed into a narrow floodplain measuring just over a thousand square leagues in area.
Harmonex.━ the small city at the entrance of the Sonic Canyons, one of Cybertron’s most famous tourist destinations. Most visitors to the city get more than they bargained for – Harmonexsings. The nearby Sonic Canyons collect the distant sound of the city, which reverberates around the canyon network for a while and is reflected eventually back out into the Harmonexi hinterlands. The volume varies from a distant hum to a shriek like gusts of wind. Harmonex is one of a few large cities without central hives: a land area of 6000 square leagues and a population of nearly 30 million makes it one of the largest in the Eastern Corridor.
Protihex.━ the oldest city in the region, founded during the Dynasty of Primes by the Thirteen around the Well of All Sparks and Solus the Forger’s grave. Protihex was abandoned for several dozen millennia during and after the Cataclysm ; its rediscovery precipitated a vicious conflict over the office of the Prime, and a schism lasting several thousand vorn in which two mecha simultaneously claimed the Primacy. The Protihexi Prime lacked the Matrix, but laid claim to the Well. Ever since, the city’s global power has come from its custodianship of the Well and by extension all the sparks which rise from its depths. The city itself is small, but fiercely defended. Its inhabitants have a reputation for being insular and arrogant.
Vos.━ the city of Seekers, founded in a network of valleys surrounded by hundreds of miles of the inaccessible central Tagan Heights. Vos took the hive city style of architecture and turned it inside out, creating a network of spires exposed to the air which allowed for easy flight between the components of the city no matter the level. To mecha used to the heavy, ground-hugging style of other cities, Vos is a striking and alien landscape. The vast majority of its nearly 60 million sparks are flighted – the city is just plain inconvenient for grounders.
♕┊ the Central Lowlands
the First City.━ as the name suggests, this is the oldest city on Cybertron. Legend has it that it came through the upheaval of the Cataclysm unharmed, but archaeological evidence suggests otherwise. The First City is located along the banks of one of Cybertron’s rare rivers, fed by snowmelt from the Main Divide. It covers an area of approximately 8000 square leagues and hosts around 30 million inhabitants, though a significant underground population makes this a conservative estimate. The most notable feature of the city is the walled enclave surrounding the old city center, a fortified remnant of times when Cybertron was not so peaceful.
Metrotitan.━ the place where the first sparked city was created, by which name the frame type as a whole came to be known. Metrotitan is an old city, and not particularly noticeable otherwise; it came by its status of independent city-statehood by having existed prior to Imperial unification. Visitors are often disappointed by the lack of actual metrotitans.
Meridia.━ the largest city in the Central Lowlands, a metropolis of over 80 million sparks. Meridia is distinguished solely by its size – one of the largest cities on Cybertron by land area, measuring at around 14,000 square leagues. It is the conglomeration of a handful of smaller cities dating back to the age following the Cataclysm, featuring a handful of separate hive cities and half a dozen metrotitans. Like Tyger Pax, it is a cultural melting pot. Meridia’s dominant demographics are the labor and arts castes, the former by sheer weight of numbers and the latter by cultural significance. Visit Meridia for all museums and art galleries your spark desires.
the Central Lowlands / Centralia.━ the cradle of Cybertronian civilization, Centralia is where the Thirteen reportedly pitched their camp after the defeat of Unicron. The original locations of its cities are long lost under the impact craters and rift valleys of the Cataclysm, but the history lives on in place names and the underground maps of the Patterners.
Thetacon.━ located on a coastal plain in the far east of Centralia, Thetacon is the gateway to the Eastern Corridor and the Tagan Heights. Scant archaeological evidence suggest that the founding of the city prior to the Cataclysm may have had something to do with Predacons. South of the city lays a massive fossil field, much studied by archaeologists. Thetacon itself is a very large city, hosting around 55 million sparks and a handful of metrotitans. It has a reputation for being insular and crime-ridden ; if so, it hides it well.
Crystal City.━ the city of miracles, Cybertron’s premier city of science and academia. Nestled among the crystal formations of the southwestern Tagan Heights, the city skyline is dominated by glass, clearsteel, and decorative crystal cladding on a massive scale. Crystal City was founded as a stopover on the route up into Harmonex and the southern Tagan Heights, but as time went by, it came to be known as a spiritual retreat. Science came to Crystal City in the form of the purpose-built headquarters of the Interstellar Exploration Division, the Empire’s offworld colonization apparatus. At the end of the Golden Age, Crystal City hosted 35 million sparks.
Central City.━ located near the hypocenter of Cybertronian culture, Central City was founded by travellers from the First City who had outgrown the fortified walls. It was named so apparently because it laid at the geographical center of Centralia at the time, an unimaginative name for an unimaginatively built city. Central City, like the First City and many other Dynastic locations, is built flat, lacking hive cities and laid out according to a strict grid plan. The modern city is not large, having stagnated through much of the Golden Age – the population is around 22 million sparks, largely those of the labor and industrial castes.
the Sea of Rust.━ Cybertron’s largest liquid body by surface area, and the effective northern edge of Centralia. The Sea of Rust consists mainly of ferrous hydroxide, from which it got its name. The equatorial latitudes of the Sea are warm and tropical, with large bergs of green rust resulting from liquid evaporation; north a little, the concentration is balanced enough that in most locales it is swimmable by Cybertronians ( with appropriate altmodes ); and in the northern shores, along the Thunder Passage and Burthov, it begins to freeze in the long winters to a soft off-white slush. The Sea of Rust served as a trading route between the Well of All Sparks at Protihex and Centralia during the Dynastic Period, which culminated in the Great Schism and the rule of two rival Primes at each of those seats of power. Its importance waned as Cybertronian trade moved offworld in search of new partners, and the recession which would eventually bring the Golden Age to an end is generally thought to have originated in the loss of the main shipping routes around the Sea.
the Hydrax Plateau.━ Cybertron’s largest island, a tectonic drifter lifted out of the Sea of Rust during the spasms of the Cataclysm. In the aeons since, the Hydrax Plateau has lain still and been colonized by successive groups of Cybertronians. The Plateau is known for surface veins of minerals which ordinarily form deep in Cybertron’s crust, most of which are only of interest to geologists and historians. Some, however, have proven useful to industry, and throughout the Golden Age the local government maintained a dictatorial hold on the rights to these locations, prompting many long, drawn-out legal battles and a saying that those who argue for the sake of argument are possessed of a ‘Hydraxi temperament’.
♕┊ the Main Divide and Western Cybertron
Tarn.━ bearing the title of second-largest city on Cybertron, Tarn covers a land area of close to fifteen thousand square leagues and hosts a population of well over 167 million sparks – how much more is hard to tell. Like Burthov and Polyhex, Tarn possesses a massive underground population, many of whom lack official documentation by circumstance or design. Tarn’s economic strength made it hard for Imperial watchdogs to operate in the region, as any sanctions they imposed for legal breaches hurt Iacon more than Tarn. As such, the city gained an entirely deserved reputation for exploitation. Despite this, immigration into the city far outweighed emigration – the lure of jobs and money proved stronger. As the Dusk Age hit, the economic giant faltered. Despite massive efforts to prop the local industries up, many failed, and the city imploded into abject poverty, bringing revolt and civil war to Tarn
the Iron Ridge.━ a massive series of plateaux and high mountain ranges rich in ores of all sorts, this is the main catchment zone and industrial hinterland fueling the economic powerhouse of Tarn. Like the Tagan Heights, the Iron Ridge is a high-elevation death trap for the unwary, but its hidden bounties have been the source of riches beyond belief for the West’s luckiest inhabitants. It is known to host seven out of the ten highest mountains on Cybertron, and a surprising amount of mecha willing to bear the worst of its weather for the sake of its natural resources.
Tyger Pax.━ the holiest city on Cybertron, the southern sister of Protihex and the Well. Tyger Pax was the historical residence of the Primacy, serving as Cybertron’s capital even before Imperial unification. The center of the city is the Dawn Basilica, the replica of the first Sanctuary to Primus built by the Thirteen. Before the Primacy’s migration to Iacon, it was known as the most beautiful example of Cybertronian culture anywhere. After the Primes left, Tyger Pax stopped putting in the effort. The city’s population of nearly 50 million nevertheless swells each summer with up to five million pilgrims, seeking out the holy places trodden by ancient Primes. It lacks a hive city – the underground population crowd into districts in the north and west. The area covered by permanent city reaches twelve thousand square leagues ; counting shanty towns, the total comes up to twenty thousand.
the Main Divide.━ the narrow chain of mountains separating northern Centralia and the Acid Wastes from the beautiful Occidental Rus. The Main Divide remained unexplored well into the Golden Age, and is still rumoured to host hidden populations of Cybertronians who survived the wars and the Cataclysm among the steep peaks and deep rift valleys that characterize the region.
Simfur.━ a trade city along the southwestern trunk line, founded and settled under the shadows of uplifted mountains that loom like vast predatory birds. Simfur is known as the gateway to the Western Hemisphere, situated in the middle of the lowland pass between the Iron Ridge and the heights of the Main Divide. The railways that opened up the West were largely based out of Simfur during the early Golden Age, expanding the city from a minor regional center to a megalopolis of more than 50 million inhabitants.
Hive City.━ a northwestern industrial city, and the oldest example of hive architecture anywhere on the planet. Hive City was founded as a nameless outpost on the edge of the Tyrest Fracture Zone, and over the course of the early Golden Age quickly outgrew its location. The city planners and engineers solved the problem of lack of usable space by building up and inwards, creating a lump of structures around massive support columns which from a distance is often mistaken for a solid mountain. Hive City’s modern population clocks in at around 18 million sparks, covering a land area of under 1000 square leagues. It is one of the poorest cities in the Northern Hemisphere.
Nyon.━ a remote city on the northwestern trunk road to Ibex. There is a running joke among many northwestern cultures that Nyon does not exist at all. This irritates the local government, but paradoxically provides popular attention that Nyon would otherwise not be getting. Many young Nyonians emigrate to Ibex and Tyger Pax at the first opportunity, another subject of local grouching. The drain on the literati and business castes this has created is resulting in the steady evolution of the city from a trade-focused economy to industry and production. Nyon’s population is somewhere around twelve million and trending downward.
Nova Cronum.━ an industrial city in the west of the Sea of Rust, Nova Cronum rests on the borders of the Acid Wastes. The city is known for its efficient and well-maintained wastewater system and street hygiene corps, and also for being the place where half an hour driving in the rain will strip the paint from your plating and dissolve the plastic in your bad-weather insulation systems. Despite the danger, Nova Cronum has a population of approaching twenty million, most of which are engaged in the industrial and service castes. It was the home of an early philosophical movement known as the Rubellites, which espoused equality between castes and the importance of free will. Its most notable natural feature is the massive tide that create beaches more than two leagues wide along the local shore of the Sea of Rust.
Ibex.━ a city that grinds to a halt every vorn for the running of the Ibex Cup, the culmination of the Cybertronian Empire’s multi-billion dollar street race circuit. Ibex is the largest of the Occidental cities, with a land area of approaching nine thousand square leagues and a population around thirty-eight million. It is known for its night life, tourist opportunities, and a whole lot of sleazy business deals. You can make it big in Ibex, but it makes you ruthless – or so the saying goes. The population includes a significant military sectory ; Ibex is the western hub of the Cybertronian Imperial Army.
Mare Occidentalis.━ Cybertron’s second largest liquid body, the Mare Occidentalis spans from eastern to western hemisphere, the other side of the planet’s answer to the Tagan Heights. Its shores are ringed with many of Cybertron’s youngest and richest cities, the waterfront districts of Ibex and Centurion being the hottest tourist destinations of the late Golden Age. The Mare is deeper and marginally larger in volume than the Sea of Rust, but loses out on surface area. Its depths are not well studied ━ if you’re going to look for cryptids anywhere on Cybertron, you might as well start here.
Centurion.━ Nestled in the rift valley between two lakeside plateaux, Centurion began life as an army outpost which was repurposed as a regional industrial center following the exploration of the upper Occidental Quarter. Its closest large neighbour by land is Protihex, across the Cybertronian date line in the far east ; driving the road to Centurion, you skip a day ahead. Its lakeside location is picturesque but also somewhat inconvenient – trade winds funnel the humid summer air north, where it runs into the mountains and condenses into orographic rain. Flooding is an acknowledged risk of living in the area.
Hyperious.━ located in the southwest arm of the Mare Occidentalis, a young and vibrant city. Like most of the Western Hemisphere, Hyperious has the reputation of being wild and exotic. Also like the rest of the Hemisphere, it exploits the slag out of this reputation. As an equatorial city it retains a relatively warm average temperature year-round, with a dry winter and humid summer. Living costs in Hyperious tend to reflect this – of all the Western cities, it has the cheapest prices on rent and basic utilities. The city covers an area of about 1900 square leagues, and hosts a population of around 3 million. Despite its small size, it was created as an independent state, with its own governor and local Senate.
the Acid Wastes.━ nowhere anyone of any consequence need go. Found just west of Nova Cronum, the Acid Wastes are an atmospheric dead zone which collects much of the pollution originating in the cities of the northern Rust Sea and the Boreal States. There is, unsurprisingly, acid rain here. Conversely, it is also a tourist destination for the religiously-minded; as due to the acidic precipitation washing away impurities, the Wastes are one of the only places on the surface of Cybertron where the original Dynastic landscape has survived.
Proximax.━ a remote southwestern city with a tendency to be forgotten about and left off maps. Proximax was founded late, an outpost of Tarn on the border between the Iron Ridge and the Austral polar regions. It has a population of about five million, and perhaps twice that in the surrounding hinterlands. It is constantly overshadowed by its larger industrial neighbours, the closest of which are Tarn and Kaon. Proximax is considered an independent city state by virtue of its sheer inaccessibility – given that it can be rendered completely cut off from the Cybertronian network during a harsh winter, the city must have its own governor on site. Proximaxi folk have a reputation for being resilient and self-sufficient. The city was one of the last economies to succumb to the global recession of the Dusk Ages
♕┊ the Industrial South
Kaon.━ The home of Megatronus, Cybertron’s most revered and reviled son. Built almost directly on top of the Austral magnetic pole, Kaon is part of the Southern Rust Belt, the Empire’s manufacturing powerhouse. It holds the title of largest city on the planet, covering roughly 11,000 square leagues and hosting more than 300 million inhabitants. The population is almost exclusively low-caste, mainly engaged in primary industry or manufacturing. There is a very large underground population, making censuses impractical, and government oversight of industry is near nonexistent. Kaon has a ( not entirely undeserved ) reputation for being the place where you go when you don’t want to be found; the city has become a colloquialism referring to things which are out of sight and thus out of mind: “It’s in Kaon for all I care.”
the Cataract.━ An urban satellite of Kaon, the Cataract is a city which grew up around an ancient religious site and was incorporated into the greater Kaon conurbation out of sheer laziness on the part of the city planners in Iacon. Like the rest of the Rust Belt, the city is majority industrial. The ancient city centre is listed as a location of cultural significance by the Iaconian Heritage Board.
Slaughter City.━ Located on the northern edge of the Rust Belt, Slaughter City was founded amid the bloodshed of the early Quintesson Wars. It had a different name back then, but the memory stuck. Fittingly, it is now the murder capital of Cybertron. Slaughter City’s population is estimated at around 32 million residents; unlike the rest of the Rust Belt, the total is trending slowly downward.
Breaker City.━ Slaughter City’s largest satellite, and home to the largest dump on Cybertron. Per capita, Breaker City is one of the poorest regions on Cybertron, with an average income per working mech per vorn of 1,833 shanix, or roughly one six hundredth of the Iaconian average. The recycling industry is largely based here, employing around a third of the above-ground population. The air smells constantly of slag and acid; the city has many nicknames, none of which are suitable for polite conversation.
Mebion.━ located just inside the Titanium Highlands, Mebion is one of the Southern States’ richer cities. With the discovery of rich veins of rare Cybertronium variants, it grew from a remote village in the Austral Rus to a global power during the Golden Age. The depletion of these Cybertronium veins was one of the major causes of the first global recession which brought on the Age of Rust. Once hosting more than 50 million inhabitants, Mebion now claims only 38 million. Its remaining industry is manufacturing ; the gross domestic product per capita is 1500 shanix.
Blaster City.━ a mountainous city situated around, on top of, and through an ancient mine; the name derives from the miners who used explosives to break apart the dense rock in which the minerals they sought resided. Like the other cities of the Rust Belt, it is poor and often dangerous. It also hosts a thriving underground art scene, and is known for the steady stream of tourists from other Rust Belt cities that come seeking that art.
Stanix.━ the city where the Decepticon rebellion was incubated; a major military staging point in the Southern States. Stanix is the descendant of the city called Stanix in Dynastic times, which was located farther south; the original was destroyed in the First Quintesson War and the site abandoned for richer terranes closer to the industrial regions of the time.
Austral Tagan Fracture Zone.━ an extensive region of geological fault and crumple zones located south of the Tagan Heights. Tectonic and seismological activity here reveals mineral veins usually hidden deep beneath the planetary surface; the industry of the southern Rust Belt follows the edge of the zone for a thousand leagues north and east.
Triax.━ located along the far eastern edge of the Austral Tagan Fracture Zone, Triax was founded during the early Golden Age as the base of operations of the Mare Triax Prospecting Company. As mining operations proliferated along the southern Tagan Heights, its population swelled quickly into the hundreds of thousands, prompting the central government to grant the city a metrotitan and its own provincial government. By the middle Age of Exploration, Triax was a city-state in its own right. Its population rests at around twenty million, most of whom are Tier Seven laborers. Its hinterlands contain some of the most spectacular scenery anywhere on Cybertron, lending it significant income from the movie industry.
Hexima.━ like Triax, Hexima was established late. It sits among the foothills of the Eastern Tagan Heights, one of Cybertron’s most remote polities. Primary industries include energon production, mining, and adventure tourism ; again like Triax, Hexima is known for its impressive scenery. It is one of Cybertron’s smallest city-states, with a population of around ten million and a land area of less than 700 square leagues. It was designed during the population booms of the Age of Exploration to cater for up to sixteen million individuals, resulting in a city which today boasts low living costs and a high proportion of non-indentured workers.
Gygax.━ nestled in the bowl of an intermontane basin in the Titanium Highlands, Gygax is yet another southern mining city. Founded late, it benefited from the same mineral riches as Mebion, and suffered the same downfall. When Mebion’s Cybertronium deposits ran out, Gygax experienced skyrocketing mineral prices, a bubble economy which eventually burst, worsening the economic depression spreading out of Mebion. Its population is around 25 million, most of whom are Tier Seven laborers, with a significant undocumented underground population.
Triscanion.━ the Jewel of the South, an agricultural and manufacturing city located on the flat plains between the Titanium Highlands and the picturesque shores of Mare Mithril. Triscanion was largely insulated from the economic and political troubles of the late Golden Age, remaining a stable and affluent society until well after the beginning of the Cybertronian Civil War elsewhere. It maintained equal links with the Southern and Central Lowlands states, fostering a reputation for diplomacy. Late in the Dusk Ages, it was the location of a failed ceasefire summit between Autobot and Decepticon leadership cabals. Its population is small, around 15 million individuals, and the city covers just over a thousand square leagues.
Helex.━ one of Cybertron’s manufacturing hotspots, Helex’s location on the main trunk road between Kaon and Tarn is the ultimate evolution of a rest stop along the Simfur Narrows north-south route. Its origins date back to the Dynasty of Primes, with archaeological evidence found from across the Dynastic world. Helex is the fourth largest single city on Cybertron, with a population of approaching 100 million spread across 7,600 square leagues. Its inhabitants are primarily those of the Sixth and Seventh Tiers of caste, with a large and transient population of undocumented individuals. It has a reputation for violence, and is somewhat infamous for the gangland practice of execution via smelting pools.
Twin Cities ( Tesarus & Border City ).━ the Twin Cities conurbation is the third most populous administrative division on Cybertron, hosting over 75 million in Tesarus and close to 60 million in Border City. Both grew up out of villages along the main route to Kaon during the exploration of the First Generation, merging physically long before the city administrators started working together. The Twin Cities grew rich from trade on the opening of the Grand Trunk Road from Kaon to Iacon. They are well known for the complexity of their urban map, which features two separate hive cities and five metrotitans. Travellers visiting the Twin Cities are advised to bring a very good map.
Oh, i'm glad you responded, haha. Well, let's start at the begining, how the planet of cybertron was created? or what the scientists think made it?
Ack, this took way longer to answer than I thought it would D: That said, I’m all fired up from reading the Covenant and I am going to do this NAO.
Basically you’ve got three religious versions as to how Cybertron came to be - there’s the Oriens Orthodox and Imperial Pentarchal canon, which is basically the official Imperial line RE: how Cybertron came to be; the Occidens Orthodox view, which is kind of half-and-half, and the Pax Enigma view. Then you have the scientific view, which is kind of controversial and few people want to think about too hard.
As far as the Imperial Canon goes, a view which is shared by the Oriens Orthodox and Imperial Pentarchal broadstreams of the Mythos, Cybertron is the assumed material body of Primus in celestial stasis, his spark forming the gateway to the First World*. Someday I’ll write up the full version of this story, but for now it goes like this:
so I have this headcanon that some cultures on Cybertron don’t name the dead once they’re consecrated and smelted. Some don’t - like Kaon and the Austral States, they’ve got a bit of ancestor-worship going on and in fact they give their dead post-funerary names and that’s what they’re referred to as from then on - but places like Vos and Protihex and the Torus States where there’s a focus on the Well of All Sparks are very big on not referring to the dead by their names.
it’s so they don’t disturb the dead in their rest.
A shiny new version of my old spark spectra headcanons. I wanted an easier-to-read graphic, and the changes just kept coming from there…
+ Disclaimer: This is the system I’ll be working with for most of my TF works, particularly those set in Book Of Hours. It’s completely headcanon’d, meaning I make shit up and wave at canon as it flies past, so don’t take it too seriously.
+ References:
Basic Spark Structure
Ramblings on TF ‘Gender’ and Pronoun Usage [slightly old but still more or less relevant]
Spectral Classification—
>> The internal temperature range at which the spark burns plasma, which determines the charge output, cyclic and pulse rates, apparent colour, and resonant affinity of the spark. An important marker of identity for virtually all Cybertronians, due to the spark's status as the giver of life for all.
+ DISCLAIMER: This is a headcanon for my TFP AU fanfiction project, Book of Hours. It has little to do with Aligned canon - as with everything else of mine, basically I’ve just made shit up. Don’t take it too seriously.
C A S T E—
>> Stratified social groupings defining which rank a mech occupied in gatherings, his ritual status in the Mythos, what jobs he could do, the level of education to which he was entitled to, which people he could talk to with which level of [in]formality and what pronoun groups he was referred to by.
I keep finding decepticonfetti’s spark headcanons all over the place and heck if they aren’t super interesting and inspiring :D
+ Disclaimer: As with all my headcanons, this goes with my AU developed for TF:P, Book of Hours. It draws inspiration from canon, but very much picks and chooses what bits of said canon to apply. Doin’ my own thing, so don’t take me too seriously.
SPARK BONDS—
>> Quantum links between individual sparks, which allow a certain amount of interpersonal contact and private communication over distance.
I was mucking around with that Cybertronian alphabet post that was going around a while back this afternoon. I don’t think it works that well; a bunch of them are really clunky and it’s hard to tell some of the other ones apart. So I drew what I could of them, and fiddled a bit, and these happened. :D
+ Disclaimer: This is a headcanon for my TFP AU project Book of Hours. Don’t take it too seriously.
The Cybertronian languages are all interrelated and come from the same ultimate source, so there are a lot of features that get repeated from language to language. These are one of them. They’re a set of calligraphic symbols used in the Mythos to represent concepts and phenomena, and in their earliest forms date back to the earliest forms of Cybertronian language. They are not an entire language by themselves, but are incorporated into many modern ones in some form.
They’re primarily ceremonial in nature, often used for contracts, written prayers and suchlike. They can be combined together and often are to indicate more specific meanings. Usage is regulated differently by each broadstream of the Mythos and local linguistic convention, so although theoretically if you understand them in one language you should have a good idea of what they’re talking about, it often doesn’t work that way in practice.
The above are fairly commonly seen in names. See for example:
As fas as the meaning of these goes? Windchill is fairly simple: ‘air’ over ‘horizon’ = ‘wind’, and ‘ice’ over ‘temperature’ = ‘chilly’, geddit?
Harlequin is a very loose translation; his glyph is ‘balance’ over ‘white’ over ‘black’, and the reason I called him Harlequin in English is because his altmode pattern is kinda like those suits they wear. :B
Deadstream’s is simpler: ‘life/energy’ beside ‘balance’ over ‘horizon = ‘on the other side of life’, which could mean either death or simply not-living; and ‘water’ + ‘channel’ + ‘movement’.
Equinox’ was also quite artistic I fear: ‘day’ (represented by ‘sun’; see the ‘star’ radical?) beside ‘night’ (dark/black + horizon), and ‘balance’ between ‘gates’, which is the standard symbol for the procession of seasons.
Blackstorm is very simple: ‘storm’, the first glyph, is formed by ‘raw metal’ beside ‘wind’ (which on its own means ‘weather’, incidentally) beneath a glyph meaning ‘danger’. The second glyph is simply ‘black’.