Post by halinder on May 10, 2019 1:31:17 GMT -5
OVERVIEW
The Persh Museum of Extraordinary Accomplishment and Events houses designs stemming all the way back from the Great Interplanetary War. Artifact collectors are still finding things everyday from the sunken and abandoned cities scattered across the globe, with archaeologists uncovering overgrown settlements every day. From missile silos hidden beneath decrepit farmhouses to massive underground subways, Brumas holds many secrets even today.
PRE-SINGULARITY WING
As can be expected from the name, the pre-Singularity wing holds artifacts which were built before the development and termination of T.S.A.I.A., the intelligence that pulled Brumas from the brink of destruction. It holds the largest collection of historical artifacts on the entire planet. Particularly interesting exhibits include items like "Breathtaker", the nuclear bomb that was dropped on the Lovang Group facility where T.S.A.I.A.'s predecessor was made. If it had successfully detonated, historians speculate that no one in the AUS would be alive today, and that the war would have carried on until total extinction. Today, it is a symbol that although the State holds tremendous power, it should always consider the impact of its actions before exercising its technological might.
POST-SINGULARITY WING
The post-Singularity wing is separated between achievements of individuals and groups. In the time before the State rose to power and unified the globe, adventurous tinkerers dug through T.S.A.I.A.'s scattered research and created daunting projects of their own. Most famous on the list is the Subcritical Mass Rifle made by an unknown inventor whose only distinguishing marks were the words "I HATE THESE THINGS" etched into the stock. The rifle fired a ball of subcritical mass inside a shell no larger than twelve millimeters in diameter. When the shell hit a target, the utterly absurd pressure building inside it caused the mass to go critical, initiating a small nuclear explosion. Confusingly, it had no method of reloading, suggesting the rounds were built into the rifle itself. It was discovered after someone, presumably its creator, abandoned it after firing the weapon into a wildlife reservation for a now-extinct species of rodents.
The Persh Museum of Extraordinary Accomplishment and Events houses designs stemming all the way back from the Great Interplanetary War. Artifact collectors are still finding things everyday from the sunken and abandoned cities scattered across the globe, with archaeologists uncovering overgrown settlements every day. From missile silos hidden beneath decrepit farmhouses to massive underground subways, Brumas holds many secrets even today.
PRE-SINGULARITY WING
As can be expected from the name, the pre-Singularity wing holds artifacts which were built before the development and termination of T.S.A.I.A., the intelligence that pulled Brumas from the brink of destruction. It holds the largest collection of historical artifacts on the entire planet. Particularly interesting exhibits include items like "Breathtaker", the nuclear bomb that was dropped on the Lovang Group facility where T.S.A.I.A.'s predecessor was made. If it had successfully detonated, historians speculate that no one in the AUS would be alive today, and that the war would have carried on until total extinction. Today, it is a symbol that although the State holds tremendous power, it should always consider the impact of its actions before exercising its technological might.
POST-SINGULARITY WING
The post-Singularity wing is separated between achievements of individuals and groups. In the time before the State rose to power and unified the globe, adventurous tinkerers dug through T.S.A.I.A.'s scattered research and created daunting projects of their own. Most famous on the list is the Subcritical Mass Rifle made by an unknown inventor whose only distinguishing marks were the words "I HATE THESE THINGS" etched into the stock. The rifle fired a ball of subcritical mass inside a shell no larger than twelve millimeters in diameter. When the shell hit a target, the utterly absurd pressure building inside it caused the mass to go critical, initiating a small nuclear explosion. Confusingly, it had no method of reloading, suggesting the rounds were built into the rifle itself. It was discovered after someone, presumably its creator, abandoned it after firing the weapon into a wildlife reservation for a now-extinct species of rodents.