W A R P

S P A S M

 

 

 

I J E D

 

louismanning@gmail.com

 

 

 

I N S T A L L A T I O N
 

 

T E C H  N O T E S
 

 

S T O R Y L I N E
    Main Story
     
    Bile Plant
    Sealed City
    Nightmare Tangents
     
    Ancient Laughter
    Bile
    Burning Rain
    Feast
    Laughter
    Molten Blood
    Mother
    Spasm
    Teeth
    The Iron Hand
 

 

C R E D I T S
 

 

I N S T A L L A T I O N
Unzip (7-zip or WinRaR) the pack to the main Quake directory.  It will create a warp folder, where the main packfiles will be placed.  In the Quake directory will be the three engines variants and FMOD, for users without Nehahra installed.

Create a shortcut to one of exes with the commandline;

-quoth -game warp -heapsize 48000

The Nehahra version (nehwarp.exe) is the recommended.

Start a single player or cooperative game as normal.  Deathmatch is not supported.

Thanks to aguirRe's engines and Quoth-based progs there are also some new game modes that can be used:

coop 2 - Replaces some standard Quake creatures with Quoth, this typically makes gameplay harder.

coop 3 - The opposite to 2; replaces all Quoth creatures with standard Quake variants, this typically makes things easier.

coop 4 - Very easy mode, monsters have 1/2 health, do 1/2 damage to player and all ammo boxes are x2.

You can also set the nomonsters cvar to 1, this will spawn all enemies on starting the map, alerted and hunting the player.  This is something for fun / testing - expect low fps if you use it, though all the maps are probably still playable without cheats in this mode. You may need to noclip through some doors if triggering monsters have fled.

Note that these new coop modes allow you to play in any number of ways - in nightmare skill without Quoth creatures, for example. You can also save games in coop, just remember to set the coop mode before loading the saved game (only necessary once per engine session).

index

 

 
T E C H N I C A L  N O T E S
These maps are very PC and engine intensive. If you don't use the provided engines, you most likely will encounter crashes and various problems with non-spawning enemies and non-triggering triggers etc due to engine bugs and limitations.

You should use the special warp engines provided (courtesy of aguirRe) and set a decent heapsize - 48000 or higher. I also recommend shutting down other programs whilst running the pack, especially if playing all the maps in sequence. You will receive a series of warnings at the start of most maps, relating to various limits being breached. These are not errors and can be ignored. Do not complain to me that your favourite engine cannot run the maps. I don't care.

The pack files are in three groups - pak0 is warp, the base mapfiles and models. pak1 is external textures and sprites - you can easily delete or copy this pack as you wish, which is why I left it outside. The third pack is a dummy Nehahra pack (with kind permission of Mindcrime) which allows the use of the Nehahra engine for those who don't have the Nehahra mod installed. If you delete pak files, you must make sure that the remaining ones are numbered sequentially.

The autoexec triggers the preferred settings for the pack, but it also executes the autoexec in id1 first, hopefully avoiding issues.

If you want the map source then check the Shub-Hub, the password for the 7zip is warpspasm - one word, all lowercase.

Commands:

The game modes are not the only extended / modified commands available.  I assume you know about the console, here are some other useful commands:

chase_active 

Turns on or off chase camera.

gl_nocolors  

Turns off player colours.

v_gunkick    

Disables the weapon kickback, also the visual effect of ground quakes (eg. the Gug's attack)

There's other stuff as well - check the autoexec or the engine readmes.

 

NOTE: This is a fixed version of a previous upload, which was missing a total of eight skins, mostly secondary to actual function.  These have now been added, along with the Quoth corpse skins.  All is held in pack 1.  If you like the skins you can copy this pack into other folders, or, conversely, delete it.  They're up-resed, converted to .tga with sharpness and a slight contrast (+10) change.

The changes to the skins are minimal, I only did it so that the Quoth creatures wouldn't look out of place alongside those I modified for their Quake brethren.  No doubt someone with the patience for texturing could do much better.  I didn't touch any projectiles or weapons and only the explosion sprites - which I took from Xwar.

index

 

 
S T O R Y L I N E
 
M A I N  S T O R Y

 


P R O L O G U E

The theoretical design had existed for months, he’d tweaked it and poured his life into its inception for nearly six years, but now, physically, it sat on his desk. The patterner constructed as far as human science understood. But the beauty and elegance of his creation was that the things it required, it had created itself. And now it was there, sat in front of him. Looking directly at it, it was unremarkable, the size of a pack of cigarettes - innocuous. But when the eye shifted so did the space around the instrument. He rose and poured a whisky. His image in the mirror was normal, until he saw the machine in the reflection, and reality seemed to warp. He sat heavily and rubbed the stubble covering his head. Done. Finally. The pinging of the alarm registered after a few minutes. He finally reached forward and pressed the intercom. What’s up, you dead in there or what?
Nearly. The project’s finished. Come on up.
He hit the entry buzzer. Sarcen was well dressed as he entered, not showy, but well groomed. Talben had a sensitive sense of smell and recoiled at the pungent stink. "Christ - you trying to kill ´em or shag ´em?" Sarcen grinned and sat. "Don’t be a bastard all your life, gimme a drink."
He rose and poured one. "So what’s the plan?"
"Dunno, go to the Prometheus first then see what happens - but hold on - it’s finished?" "Yeah, done, dusted; but not put to bed. Still don’t know if it works." He handed the glass over. "So how many mice this week?" Talben smiled tiredly.
"Four", he replied.
"And they blew apart like the others?"
"No, they’re over there."
He waved a hand in the direction of the Plexiglas boxes sat in the corner of his apartment.
"They fell unconscious for a few days, all vital functions continuing, then they died, though one did go nuts and start doing some weird shit, stood up on hind legs" - he chuckled harshly - "looked like it was trying to do sign language, then keeled over dead as a doornail."
Sarcen had stood up, crossed the room, to inspect the stiffened corpses.
"Enough of this shit, it’s not healthy - you know that lass Donna? She was asking after you, wondering what the fuck since you spent the night at her place that week."
"Stuff got in the way, I never have the time."
"But you do now." He pointed. "It's finished, you said so yourself. Well, the testing . . . bollocks; look my friend, forget all this for a few hours, time to go!" "Sure. Okay."
He stopped himself.
"Wait, have you seen it? Look"; Birkin held up the tiny device, sat in the palm of his hand.
"When those fuckers over at slipgate research see this they'll cry. All of them useless wanabees working off the back of a long dead genius - this thing is more than teleportation, more than possible to understand in human physics."
He looked down at the tiny machine in his hand, pride, longing and greed showing in his face. He didn't notice that during his oration, Sarcen had been looking at the device, fixated. Birkin looked up, eyes meeting the blank stare. Saracen's eyes moving upwards as well, looking through him. "I never thought it was possible. A strange coincidence - me, knowing you, for so long, and you, creating this. Don't worry, I'll remember you when I ascend."
Sarcen reached forward, all his space marine bulk eclipsing that of his scientist school friend and picked him up easily, looking away as he snapped Birkin´s neck.
He dropped the corpse and pulled the device from its cooling fingers. Something was speaking to him and he knew how it worked despite his zero knowledge of its design. He activated the sphere, which spread outwards from the device in his hands in a two-meter bubble. Then the alternate reality collapsed. But what had been within it was subtly changed. Sarcen took the machine and smashed it to pieces, even the base electrical components. Then he wrote a virus and eradicated all of Talben´s files and research. But it wasn't him that created the self-replicating disease which destroyed Birkin´s life work, but something that he now knew, told him that all he wanted could be his. The once mortal Sarcen stood up and the air moved around him. He smiled, eyes unfocused.
He drank some of the whisky - a good Scottish replication - then recoded the patterner to dispose of the body. To go on the razz or not to go on the razz. He smiled, he had time; the slipgate complex wouldn't be open and charged until 0730. He went out that night and was charming, boisterous and friendly. But always the knowledge lay there, like a star in his mind.
He woke the next morning next to the twins - he couldn't remember their name - and names, now, but they'd probably be dead in an hour when he blew the reactor anyway. Shame, nice girls, but he had bigger fish to fry. He flexed and picked up the antique broadsword that had been his killing tool for years, subtly modified by the technicians so as to have an edge around a molecule in thickness. First things fucking last, get into the slipgate complex and kill all resistance, lock it after him so that no-one would be able to stop the fusion reaction. Then step through the gate and become what the mortals around him would probably call a god, them lacking the vocabulary to describe what he was going to become. And all thanks to good old Talben, said a voice in his head. Yep, the rest of him replied, good ´ol Talben. He keyed the thumb pad and walked out the door, one of the Dana twins stirring on his bed at the whoosh of the servos as it shut.
 



S A R C E N

He had been a member of the Ranger section for around four years - a surprisingly long time since most died within six months or took permanent leave on psychological grounds after a year. The theoreticians in Slipgate research thought there could be long term effects of constant slipgate travel, though the government and big corporate science divisions are quick to downplay any advice that could endanger its huge financial implications. Sarcen was a typical marine when he entered the project, if slightly more intelligent and with a knack for surviving. By the end of his fourth year his was held in awe. He was also incredibly rich and well-connected, his danger pay and being one of the few reasonably sane experts on real, physical slipgate use seeing to that.
But he was a loner.


No other soldiers could work with him on mission, the psychosis enhancing effects of interdimensional suggested by the scientists becoming evident. It was never him that requested a team mate be transferred, either they were MIA - without any of the other team being able to give a reason, or else they dropped out by themselves, requesting transfer, risking anything, even severe demotion or technical inquisition in order not to work with Sarcen anymore.
Eventually the brass learned this was just the way, and so sent him on his continued missions, alone, through the gate into other worlds, dimensions, universes. And he kept coming back, time and again, surviving against the odds.
At the end of his fourth year his sense of humor was macabre to say the least, his savage behavior and cruel demeanor making him a feared figure in the night life of the base - his favorite past-time after going on missions.
But he remained functional, lots of medals were awarded, along with bigger bonuses and more fame. All the missions he had been on, the countless environments in which he had killed, maimed and tortured, had left an imprint on his animal soul, somewhere near the very centre of the brain, where the mammal met the reptilian. And he had learned to harness it.
Research had helped - those who didn´t see past his brutish visage would have been surprised at how quickly he reaped information from the net. He learned and he practiced.
Now there was no question of others accompanying him on a mission. He also found a way to disable the hard-wired military feed from his body armour. This inferred that he was doing things too depraved even for the stern minded military officers of the Ranger section to be able to stomach. But it was quietly overlooked.
He had trained in a discipline called the Warp Spasm.
Ancient and powerful.
He disabled the feed not because he was worried that the military would court-marshal him for his acts on the other side - those had been sadistic and psychotic for years. He was worried they wouldn't let him back through the portal at all, leave him drifting on the other side, lost.
A friend of his who was similarly brilliant in his chosen field - Talben.
 


T A L B E N

A child prodigy in a time when, thanks to genetic manipulation, all children were expected to be many years ahead of where their base-genetic equivalents would have been.
But Talben was different.
The facet's of his mind were balanced perfectly to create a machine before which problems dissolved, superstition became a shadow and complexity the simplest of equations.
He created a machine, technically unnamed, though he liked to think of it as the Reverter - his own little joke. It folded space, but, an important distinction; only within the perceptions of those within its sphere of effect. In other words, it warped the mind, beyond and before and aside and after anything the human brain would ever or had ever known.
He was worried when he first drew up the design - there was something there, beyond his ken, he didn't know where this would finish. But he was a scientist. He couldn't resist creating it. And so he did.
The ramifications of the prototype alone were huge, a leap in the understanding of mankind akin to the discovery of fire. But he didn't test it. Some part of him was terribly scared of what he had done. Endless testing on mice - he felt trapped by his creation, like it was consuming him from within and without, the only thing left a slowly corroding shell, getting thinner, losing willpower.
He knew this and yet couldn't bring himself to destroy it, either. His life slowly collapsed into drunken nights, late mornings and bitter hangovers; spent staring at the thing.
The bills mounted and his spiral into dissolution continued.

 


W A R P  S P A S M

You smile grimly and concentrate, channeling your whole essence in readiness. It begins, its easy now. The itching at the base of the scalp starts, then spreads to your whole skin surface, seeming to crawl along your bones. Like fire.
These puny weaklings.
They don't know pure force, let alone pure reality. Your hackles raise and heart pounds, a drum of doom for those around you. But this time it is in your one-time home. No matter, they would stand in your way. A howling, roaring, ululating sound echoes in your mind and body. You grin, your view dark, shot with blood, and take the sword from its hilt. It dances in your palm and across reality like a flowing line as you practice.
You finish by slicing through a soldier from head to crotch who had thought to sneak up on you.
You hear the rattle of footsteps on gantries. Here they come.
You hear a roaring, hacking, broken voiced laugh echoing off the walls. Here they come.
 


A U D I E N C E

The blind idiot danced at the centre of the maelstrom, his servitors mute in their vigil. As he danced they watched, swaying in time to his rhythm. The flutists roiled in agony, the bamboo flutes speared into their bloated torsos bleating in discordant harmony.
The messenger drifted forward in humanoid form, body twitching spasmodically along with his master's dance. In deference his face was blind and lifeless, blood flowing from the eyes. The great one danced closer, body jerking from side to side, crushing underlings who made no attempt to avoid their destruction and had no joy or hope; only the song.
Azathoth took the puppet messenger in two hands of negative light, their shape impossible to see. Still dancing he held his servant aloft, twirling across the black void of his own consciousness. In one swing he set down the puppet, limbs broken and twisted, a manic grin distorting its features.
Azathoth danced away, changing reality with his every gesture, mutating worlds, destroying and giving life, torment and satisfaction. The puppet, Nyarlathotep, righted and repaired his shattered body, reforming it at the same time into a leprous beggar, twisted with age and disease.
He watched his master dance for a few moments, the adoring throng surrounding him. A tooth came away as he smiled. And then he was there, between the dimensions, watching yet another of his machinations unfold.
The human and the demons - beautiful to watch - the tiny creature thinking he had purpose, the demons thinking the same. There was something piquant about their idiocy he always found refreshing. He thought back to the orders he had been given by his master. The call for a viewing came intermittently, sometimes human adjusted millions of years between them.
This time the hearing was very short. Azathoth had told him, through the dance; "CHILD; I COMMAND YOU, ENJOY YOURSELF!"
Not very specific, and hardly worth the audience, but he had been summoned, and so had attended. He leaned over the dimensions where the story would unfold, promising himself that this time he would not sculpt fate, no matter what. Though he knew, especially as he was a student of human nature, that he would break his own promise. And that the act of observing changes the observer.

 


E P I L O G U E

The human fell into the machination, body and mind held static from the energy, helpless, inert, unknowing.
Nyarlathotep performed the human equivalent of sitting back. Most diverting. The marionette had overcome so much, destroyed and survived in such incredible amounts it was almost beyond reason. The indistinct figure coalesced into a raven haired woman, who began to stroke her tresses absent-mindedly. The human, Sarcen, was frozen in place, he would remain for eternity or a split second, as she wished. Nyarlathotep really, physically, sat back. The other things crept back into view, the other worlds, times and places.
So much to do and so little time. And yet the human creatures were facinating. Something about their hope in the face of hopelessness. The corporal representation of the god tested the strength of her nails against the rest of the stone seat upon which she sat, forcing them into the pediment. One cracked, one split; blood dripping.
She smiled, raised the hand to her human eyes and vanished, swirling into the multiverse. Omniscient, fascinated and indomitable.
 



N Y A R L A T H O T E P

And it was then that Nyarlathotep came out of Egypt. Who he was, none could tell, but he was of the old native blood and looked like a Pharaoh. The fellahin knelt when they saw him, yet could not say why. He said he had risen up out of the blackness of twenty-seven centuries, and that he had heard messages from places not on this planet.
Into the lands of civilization came Nyarlathotep, swarthy, slender, and sinister, always buying strange instruments of glass and metal and combining them into instruments yet stranger. He spoke much of the sciences - of electricity and psychology - and gave exhibitions of power which sent his spectators away speechless, yet which swelled his fame to exceeding magnitude. Men advised one another to see Nyarlathotep, and shuddered.
And where Nyarlathotep went, rest vanished; for the small hours were rent with the screams of a nightmare.
—H.P. Lovecraft, "Nyarlathotep"
 

index

 

 
BILE PLANT
They stormed in, their pact with the Voice, Nyarlathotep himself, filling them with power. The humans were weak, unable to stop the attack which broke against their feeble defenses like a meteor hitting a small pool. Afterwards they tortured and sacrificed those still alive and began the process of refitting the plant to their own specifications.
Before long the grow vats replaced the chemical refinement pods and the primitive, moralistic technologies of the weaklings we replaced and upgraded until the base became worthy of the Iron Hand.

Shalbolt knelt before the soul mirror, brain linked directly to its image. Two words consumed his mind, "CONQUEST" and "METHOD". The device was designed to allow the priest, through days, sometimes weeks of meditation, to be able to cast his mind into the outer spheres and then see images on the surface of the mirror, effectively a mixture of his own thoughts and the infinite realities to which the temporal systems of the machine had access.
Other times one of the elder gods would speak directly to the priest. Such was the case now. Beads of blood sweat suddenly broke out on his skull to be wiped away by the nearby servitor.
The mirror and priest howled in unison, an echo somehow ringing out in the tiny space that was the divination shrine. The priests implants wriggled and squirmed within his flesh, broke the skin in some places. Then they began to reform themselves. Burrowing through his bones, organs and flesh. Merging with them, transforming his whole being into a bio-automaton, a twisted creature many removes from his former genetically enhanced, cybernetically charged previous self.
As this happened, the voice came.
"You know who I am?"
"Yes, Lord."
"Speak my name."
"Nyarlathotep, the Voice."
"Correct. You are to take this location."

Images flashed across the screen.

"I will shroud it from the humans and aid your possession. It is to be your new base of operations. I have injected a retroviral nanoplague into your body through the soul mirror. It is a great gift I bestow. It will transform you beyond any dream of humanity, you will be a demigod. Go, my son, take the place I have allotted to you as yours."


The mirror fell silent, then cracked, its surface going dark.
Shalbolt shuddered, his whole frame racked with invisible blows as his internal systems rearranged themselves.
The servitor closed again, trying to wipe up some of the blood from the tears in the priest's skin. A cluster of metallic tendrils shot from the shaking form and dragged the servitor into its now expanding mass.

A junior priest approached the divination chamber, three squads of troopers with him. His orders were to kill everything inside the chamber, including the 2nd priest, Shalbolt. The 1st priest, Reinkin, had ordered this and so it was his duty.
He did not know what was happening to the 2nd priest, or that the 1st priest had witnessed the events via a relay inside the servitor's skull, at least until it was ripped to pieces.
Reinkin was fearful and jealous, he knew that Shalbolt had talked to Nyarlathotep himself, and that he would have to kill him in order to retain control of the Iron Hand, Third Division.
Two troopers went to the door and pulled it open, stepping smartly to the sides as the squads opened fire into the chamber.
Nothing was there.
The junior priest tc'd a ceasefire and ordered the 1st squad to enter. As they began moving a huge humanoid figure dropped from the ceiling from where it had been hanging, limbs and joints moving in a way impossible in any human basic or even any creature recorded in the Iron Hand's xenobiological journals.
It reached forward and picked up a single trooper and leisurely bit his head off, commencing to eat the whole of him, including armour and weapons. The other stood mute, immobile.
The junior priest raised his own blaster to fire, only to find that it would not work. The creature continued to eat, although a voice sounded from somewhere on its body.
"Junior priest. Obey. I was Shalbolt. I am now the avatar of Nyarlathotep."
It picked up a second trooper and began to eat.
"Obey or you will be destroyed. The Voice speaks through me. We have a new target for acquisition. But first I am going to Reinkin's chambers, he will pay for his heresy in attempting to kill me so soon after my ascension."

Nyarlathotep performed the human equivalent of sitting back. A job well done. Not only would Sarcen pass through the Iron's Hand territory in thirty years or so, he would arrive to a place ruled by one of the most psychotic and horrific creatures he had ever created.
He smiled to himself.
He had deliberately not looked to Sarcen's future, but would lead him to all the items he would require in order to destroy the third division of the Iron Hand.
Would he succeed?
Again Nyarlathotep resisted the impulse to concentrate on the outcome and see.

 

index

 

 
SEALED CITY
Azaurath, the High One, has reopened the main gate. It has been a thousand years since he last stirred from his throne or spoke a word to his servants. They continue to care for him, knowing that almost limitless magical might resides in his ancient body. To them he is a living god, one whose will is never to be questioned.

His decaying body sits atop the throne, held together by willpower and ancient enchantments. The yellow silk of his mask never moves, no breeze enters this place. Those who are brought before him hear a voice in their minds, but no more, the decayed figure on the dais above them never moving, beyond even producing a smell; his vitals, skin and flesh long since mummified in their own fluids. He sees all, the past, present and future, but is content to wait here, for his eventual mind death. Marshalling himself again after these long eons would require too much effort, too much energy, so much would be lost if he tried that he has resigned himself to his fate.

He feels the eddies of time slowly drawing his destructor near, sees ever more clearly his own demise. Without hope or fear he faces it. Sixteen centuries he has lived; in his prime he was a demigod, once even challenging Shub-Niggurath herself. But even she has gone now.

He waits.

index

 

NIGHTMARE TANGENTS
The warrior lurched forward. The final Ghast had managed a swipe across his torso that came close to disemboweling him. They had some SW tape, so he'd bound himself up in a cocoon of the stuff. He was the final member of the team, all the others were dead. They'd come through an alien portal - flat against the rules, but something had called them to this place, where ever the fuck it was.
None of them had ever heard of anything like this. The place was floating, it looked like half a factory, half a castle and mostly like an abattoir. Corpses were piled everywhere, blood spattered the walls and floor and beneath there was nothing but an endless grey void, what looked like cloud tops. He leaned against the wall, blood dripping from his side, a demonic face set in the steel above him watched, his imagination making it leer and grin at his pain. He straightened up and saw the white sun burning down through the haze, making everything humid and carrying the smells of various species' type corpses strewn around the open space.
He shook his head again, trying to clear the slowness. In his med kit he had enough combat drugs to keep him alive through maybe one more encounter and a dose of strychnine in case the pain got too bad.

index

 

 
ANCIENT LAUGHTER
The old man laughed. It was good to be alive today. The two children fought in the dust, The larger threw the other down, cheering, until the weaker punched into his nose, breaking it and the scuffle resumed.

Oh what fun it is to ride, he thought. Then another attack happened. Hi system turned against itself, fierce pounding in his chest, like drums of pain. Vision swam, left then right and back, flashes of black and red. He knew that the master was coming. The portal faded into existence, a shadow on the air. The children looked up, surprised, as the soldier stepped forth. Fifteen. The old man nodded. Alias, Keblen, fetch numbers five to sixteen. You all go now. Any report? Barked the armoured figure. No, as usual, no suspicion, in this place. He gestured to the arid backdrop.

It is well. The children arrived and began to march through the portal. Some looked at the old man, their father, for guidance. He nodded. When they had all gone the knight knelt before the ancient. Here is the wine. The lord allows you seventy more years, adjusted. Maintain your duty. Thank, master.

He sat back after the knight had gone. What kind of life was this?

index

 

 
BILE
He lurched to the sink and vomited. It all came up, liquid pain bursting from his stomach. He looked in the mirror. Some mucus had sprayed even there. Some was flecked red. The image swam and shifted. The shadows were there again, coiling around his head like wraiths. Purple or green, turquoise, sometimes golden. Do something, said his soul. Do what? He replied. Do something. Do something. Do something. Do something. Do something. Do something. Do something. Do something. Do something. Do something. Something.

The gantry was nearly empty, one guard. What's up, a revision? Nope, I need something, personal, like. What. A statement, wary, not a question. To go back. You've just been logged and flagged pretty much thirty times, Sarcen. You know I can't send you again, You, me both dishonourably discharged if that happens. I have authorisation. He pinged the data stream through his helmet to the console, the guard read it. This is old, maybe two months. Technicality. Punch it.

I won't be discharged, but you will. Fucking do it. What the hell thought the guard. These guys were special watch, more than half crazy. He wouldn't get in trouble. The portal formed. Sarcen stepped through.

Gentlemen, if you will excuse the lack of formality. The general waited until the other s nodded, they knew the history between the soldier sat before them and the general chairing the behavioral revision.

You think I'm some kind of jackass? Sir, . . Shut the fuck up. You were not given permission to speak soldier. As far as you are concerned your commander in chief is sat right here in front of you, deal. He paused, watching the figure in front. He liked tired, careworn. But the medical check had shown various free radicals and unknowns floating in his system. There was nothing invasive or contagious, but the tests showed that something bad had happened on the other side. I don't want to break you. If I did you'd be broken already. Why did you go back. Insomnia? Sir, I was doing my job. No chance. I'm not one of these desktop pansies - he gestured at the other generals. Some coloured in either rage or embarrassment, but none spoke. The two ignored them. I, don't know. I went back because I had something to do. I needed to live. He looked up from his monologue. Like a child. The general smiled, despite himself. But with an old man's years, he murmured. So what, he said more strongly, no court marshal, free as you please, come ago go, skipping across the galaxy? No sir, by orders. The job there wasn't finished. Not to my satisfaction. Very well.

The special dispensation meant he could continue, traveling solo, indulging in his blood frenzy. The only backpedal was that he was now in the Archon Lodge program. He didn't mind, the drugs they gave kept him on edge and he had trouble sleeping, but he was sharper and faster, could feel it.

index

 

 
BURNING RAIN
The second one hit just a few feet away, but on the other side of a boulder so the blast didn't hit her.
Caren ran in the opposite direction, more fiery lumps of rock smashing into the earth all over - in the distance and nearby. She knew a place she'd played as a child, a cave, she could hide there.
She worried about her family, hoped they were safe, and that their wooden adobe wouldn't stop burning rain, no matter how nice it looked or how comfortable an upbringing it had given her. She waited by the mouth of the cave, lying on her stomach and watching as the lumps of rock smote the earth, burning the fields and setting light to the scattered trees.
The fire spread, luckily the cave was nestled high up in the rocks, but eventually she had to retreat inside for the smoke.
How long had it been going on? Hours, probably, with no sign of stopping. As she went further back into the cave she noticed some carvings in the walls. She'd played here with her childhood friends many a time and knew the small network like the back of her hand. Maybe she'd just never noticed when she was younger.
Caren looked closer and saw they looked like writing, kind of weird. She walked further into the caves, the crack and boom of the firestorm sounding behind her, almost forgotten, now. There was light ahead, the place had been built up, wooden joists holding up walls and ceiling, large strings of the same strange writing carved into the walls in a series of running bands that flowed around the outside of the cave.
And in the centre; what looked like a doorway, but empty, going nowhere. It seemed to be important, whoever had been here had even carved a small dais for the stone pillars and lintel to rest on, as well as scrollwork into the floor.
She knelt down and brushed at it with her fingertips and felt the surface still gritty from the chisels. Who had done this? It was the work of thirty or more to create this weird monument - especially where nobody would see it. It was like a temple.
A crack and a shudder rocked the place as a burning bomb hit the stone roof of the cave. She dropped again to the floor, hands over her head for a few moments, realising that she was safe in here when nothing happened. Standing shakily she was about to cross behind the monument to continue exploring when something happened to it.
The carvings on its sides seemed to glitter, like water, then the glittering flowed all through its traceries until it seemed to flow and spread, linking across the empty frame to form a glittering black doorway where before there was nothing.
She scampered back and upwards, hiding in one of the nooks where she had once played hide and seek with her friends. The black portal shimmered and waved and a man stepped through, dressed in metal. Then another and another until the place was full of them, all holding swords and dressed in the same armour, similar scrollwork decorating it as that on the walls.
The one at the front looked like the leader. He lifted his sword and the torches mounted around the cave burst into life on their own, bathing the space in a flickering light, Caren ducking down behind her rocky hiding place as the leader gave a speech. He growled on for a while, voice reverberating inside his iron helm in some foreign tongue. Caren risked a glimpse and saw all the others on one knee, heads leant forward to rest on their swords. The leader made a motion and they straightened up in unison, Caren ducking back out of sight.
She heard the tramp of iron shod feet as they left, realising that the firestorm had finished some moments earlier. She heard the last one leave the cave and crept out from behind the rock, looking back and forth, making sure she was alone. The place looked radiant with all the torches lit, like gold dust was inlaid in the carvings.
The black portal glimmered in the centre. She walked toward it.

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FEAST
The creature leant forward and began to eat, eyes flicking back and forth in case of anyone coming to steal its food.
Despite its gangly, malformed appearance it was surprisingly strong, cracking the sternum with relative ease, the harsh snap of the solar plexus sending shards of bone flying left and right. When it was finished it picked up the bloodied remains, mostly skin and bone, though a few areas of flesh remained. It dragged them off towards the entrance to its home, a trail of blood following.

There was a clang of gridiron as the ghoul retreated to its underground lair beneath the base. The eye of a security camera watched dispassionately. It had already watched and recorded the events that had provided the skulker with its meal.
The battle here hadn't been particularly impressive - the colonists outnumbered four to one, making their last stand here with old fashioned shotguns against the invaders´ blasters and RPG's.
The result had been slaughter, the entire fight lasting less than fifteen minutes. Afterwards the invaders took a few prisoners - women, the aged and children, though most of these had already died either through suicide or just mindless butchery.
They'd then retreated through the slipgate back to their own realm. A machine priest had remained behind with a cadre of troopers, using several corpses and arcane magics to perform the Desecration.
After all, this was a message; a warning.

The Desecration was around ten foot square on one metallic wall, iron spikes holding it up. It consisted of the corpses of the defenders impaled and broken, some threading through each other's intestines are spinal columns, others simply flayed to form overhanging awnings from their skin and flesh.
On the floor were the heads of all the remaining fallen, each mounted on a spike set along ley-line patterns, their lower jaws sheared off.
The ley-lines had been burned into the decking with acid - this was the spell that kept the Desecration functioning, that would strike the recovery team that came here with pure horror. The ghoul had avoided touching it instinctively.

What the spell did was sustain the reanimation of each of the corpses used in the Desecration. Those who still had tongues and jaws moaned mournfully, almost inaudibly, without lungs to give them air. At least, not connected ones.
Broken and smashed faces nevertheless rolled their eyes in grief and agony, mutilated torsos spasmed with pain, struggling mindlessly to escape the spikes that impaled their flesh.
The whole structure was composed of agony, fear, hatred and pain - the nervous systems of eighty-seven butchered linked into one blasphemous entity of woe.

The machine priest had been particularly pleased with the centerpiece, consisting of a child partially flayed and impaled through the muscle by a number of long thin spines, a tiny keening noise echoing from its throat.

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LAUGHTER
The throaty, burbling sound echoed down the hallway.
He pulled harder on the sword, staring into the dead eyes a few inches from his own. The knight had sprinted forward and impaled him, right through the lung it felt like. The combat drugs hadn't worn off yet or he'd be in agony.
He reckoned they'd last around another half hour, if he lived that long. He had dropped the first one, blown his head clean off, but the second had been charging and he turned a fraction of a second too late.
He jammed the bayonet through the knights chest plate and ribs, piercing the heart, the warrior's own momentum helping kill him. But at the same time the knight pinned him to the wall - both held upright by the tangle of armour and weaponry.
He laughed again, tasting blood in his throat. Spat, a pinky foam, so not too bad yet. Maybe he could get out of this. He knew he couldn't risk bracing his legs, the motion would cause the lodged sword to slice through other organs inside his torso, probably killing him. He heard a tramping noise - someone was approaching, the clang of footsteps preceding them.
Not one of theirs.
He panicked for a second, the drugs feeding off the chemicals produced by his glands to make his heart beat faster and system slow down, putting a false calm over him. He appeared to drop dead, head hanging, arms by his sides.
The approaching knight stopped as it saw the weird tableau. A harsh laugh came and he muttered something in his own eldritch tongue, leaning forward to pull the sword from the wall. Both corpses went sliding to the floor, the last bit of support having been removed.
He nudged his fallen comrade with one foot. Useless fucker.
He turned and began to walk away, throwing the sword into a corner. He heard a click behind him, then felt something smash into his back and saw his own intestines spray before his eyes.

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MOLTEN BLOOD
The beast lashed out, scattering the troopers like puppets, strings cut, bodies broken. The leader leveled his rifle and fired a volley, the energy blasts scorching its mottled flesh. It replied with a shuddering convulsion, belching a burning ball of lava back that struck the human in the chest and exploded, scattering burning limbs and gobbets of liquid fire across the clearing. The other scattered, some even dropping their weapons. The Drole howled in furious happiness, the hunt was on - it had prey. He charged forward, picking one trooper up in a tentacle and breaking his back in one easy gesture and without breaking pace trod heavily on another who had fallen, crushing his skull with its cloven hoof.

On the hilltop the machine priest watched dispassionately, leaning crookedly on his staff. They'd have to upgrade the combat software they were uploading to these idiots. Luckily he was recording the debacle below so it could be played back and analysed. They worked well against humans but against big targets with allot of power they were easily mown down. "Sir, we have lost almost the entire squad - it is unlikely those remaining will be capable of continuing your plan", intoned the lieutenant behind him. Then get down there and you do it. The trooper seemed to hesitate, as if his staple was fighting against his instinct of self-preservation. Then he about faced and marched down the hill.

The lieutenant charged forward and past the Drole, surprising the creature which dropped one feebly struggling trooper whose legs were smashed and turned awkwardly to charge after the impudent figure. The man ran onwards, his battle programming and mind staple augmented by old fashioned fighting experience. He jumped over a small rise in the ground, the creature within a foot of his back, and dropped into a prone position. The Drole was going too fast to change direction and flew overhead, the lieutenant quickly springing back to his feet and charging in the opposite direction. The creature howled again in an ear cracking cacophony.

The priest nodded, impressed despite himself. Down below the lieutenant charged through the gap in the cliff wall, the Drole right behind him. He threw himself to the side at the last moment and the steel net fell onto the Drole, quickly enclosing it in near unbreakable bonds, howling and raging, its prey a few scant feet away, almost within reach.

The priest descended to examine the prize. "Well done, lieutenant. I will make sure to mark this feat on your genetic history - you will almost certainly have descendants." "Thank you, Sir."
The priest turned and looked at the Drole, raging in its trap. He prepared his staff for the extraction procedure. As he was distracted the Drole broke free, one line snapping from its mooring in the cliff face. It lunged, half caught in the net, yet managed to smash the lieutenant against the wall, a dull crack and spray of blood as his armoured helmet cracked open. The Drole shook itself fully free and reared above the priest, ready to crush this puny creature.

The priest twitched slightly and the injector pod on his shoulder fired a burst of spines into the creature, knocking its huge bulk back. A swift whirr as it reloaded and fired again. He had no toxins that would work on the creature, and didn't want to pollute its fiery blood anyway - that would destroy the reason for the exercise. He continued firing, his studies of the morphology allowing him to cripple the beast in only four volleys, both knees, upper dorsal and lower spinal stem. He fired an extra one into it lower cerebral cortex, where its pain centre was controlled - just for its impudence.

He turned his attention back to his staff, completing the preparations. The internal housing had been modified to hold the boiling liquid but he wanted to be sure it would work. Finally satisfied, he leant forward and stabbed the base of his staff into the mewling, paralysing bulk of the Drole. The extraction began and went like clockwork, several pure samples of its blood being contained. The priest turned to go, leaving the creature in its death throes, but as he did so he noticed the lieutenant. Hmm, shame to let a worthy specimen go to waste. He was a lover of knowledge and couldn't bear to waste resources. But his staff was full and wouldn't be able to sample the trooper's DNA.

Returning to the telepad with the severed head hanging from his belt he considered the mission a success, Drole DNA collected, video footage of squad / large animal combat and DNA plus memory sample from a highly effective soldier. Job well done.

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MOTHER
It hit the floor, hairy forearms smacking the pavement with a thump. The spray of embryonic fluid hit it and splattered to the ground. It coughed up the umbilical cord in a series of hacking motions, vomiting the last of the potent soup that had given it life the past month since its inception.

The Ancient came forward and helped the youngling to its feet, accidental lightning crackling from his claws.
He was over six hundred years old and held some of the ancient knowledge. He knew the decline of his race would continue until they were mere yowling beasts, but he also trusted in the Mother.

He approached the huge mass of her body which had produced his son. He knelt, lowering his head.

The Mother, ancient beyond reckoning, leant forward and gently broke his back, dividing his carcass into segments easily eaten. The youngling made rumbling yowl of appreciation at the food.

The Mother leant back. Another child. In time he would be reabsorbed and continue the race, another progenitor. She tried to remember when she had come to this place, with its boiling heat and safe surroundings. Memory was hazy. How many centuries had passed? They were a scattered race, now. Intelligence grew thin but the lust for survival remained strong.
How long since she had used her legs? They had atrophied beyond any ability to move her bulk.

Why continue the madness of producing these almost mindless offspring whose only desire was to hunt - they understood nothing of the former glory of their kind. The one race, the Masters of Reality. Star Vampires, Dimensional Shamblers; they had become animals.

She leaned forward and slapped the youngling away with a howling grumble; a sigh. It burped a yelp and ran away on all fours, apelike. One of the elders approached through one of the gates, baring his teeth in subjugation. He held two untouched humans in either hand. They were very small, possibly young, or nearly so. He bowed his head and presented them to her.
She leaned forward and began to drain them of their essence. They were indeed new, fresh, untouched by any other. She felt the rush of blood and vitality. He had done well. She leaned forward and picked up the supplicant.

Now he would father a child.

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SPASM
Here it came. Bang. It was everywhere.

Something cracked in his mouth and a shard of tooth hit the wall. He leaned over and picked up the modified shotgun.

The tech nodded. Ready, slipgate stabilised. See you on the nearside. Sarcen acknowledged by leaping into the swirling vortex.

He dropped and rolled on landing, repeated bursts from the weapon shredding guardian creatures.

A fast paced blaze of fury, he sprinted from the slipgate chamber. Something spoke from inside, telling him to keep moving upwards.

The room was splattered with gore. The medieval armour was useless against modern weaponry.

The Shambler smashed a huge paw into the ornate light fitting, catching the edge of the shotgun. It spun away, hitting the window ledge and dropping into the nether.

Too easy. The wounds had slowed it but it should still have been stronger. He wrenched the axe from the base of its neck, turning casually to bury it in the face of an approaching foot soldier.

Hand to hand. Meat meeting metal. He reached the pinnacle.

Swaying the human stood, smeared with blood, most of it not his own. One forearm shattered. One eye gouged, the orb ruptured. The priest looked down. Something was wrong.

The broken bones in the creature's arm cracked of their own accord, sinews of muscle moving like worms, splintering the humerus and forcing what was left back into place. The blood underneath the humans skin bunched and boiled around the eye, causing a pink foam to drip forth from the open socket.

The man roared, raising the axe over his head, charging the priest. A thrown spell ricocheted away to blast a hole in the tower wall. A second knocked the axe from the demon's hand.
And then it was on him.

Knotted hands found the priests throat. He struggled weakly, like a kitten, as the human snapped his neck and then ripped off his head. He was aware of movement, saw his corpse thrown to the plains below through the hole he had blasted in the tower. Then was raised to the world as the human roared in triumph before pitching the head after its body.
Then...nothing.

"Another close call I see. You're a weirdo, buddy, don't mind saying. You're lucky they don't charge for equipment replacement in the exploratory service."
Sarcen ignored the prattle.
"How the hell did you manage to get the armour ripped up like this - med team said you only needed stitches and a new eyeball. Here's a new full kit - makes it easier for me just to send the docket off for a full set instead of pissing about with wotnots. Be seeing you. Soon."

The Sergeant watched the tall figure go, then flipped on the terminal. A grim face stared from it.
"Yes Sir, just what's suspected."
"Rogue time prediction ?" asked the officer.
"Let's just say I'm taking my leave right now, Sir", he replied.
"This fucker is ready to hit the fan any minute. Suggest clearing out of all critical personnel and removal of all classified information from the local database immediately."
The officer nodded.
"Understood. Leave granted."

The screen went black.

"What do you think?"

"Well, he's got nano trackers in both thighs and the skull. His equipment's set with sat relay. But I don't think that'll help us track him. So we let it happen? Why not? We nuke the base now and clear up any problem instantly, or we let him do his thing while we monitor the fallout."

"The statisticians say he'll be headed for enemy territory. The enemy of my enemy, so to speak."

"Good. What about the base?"

"Fucked. There's only thirty or so recruits or dipshits out there, everything's clean, information-wise."

"Ok. One thing though, activate the time degeneration explosives in the nano-trackers right now. This Sarcen goes to the other side and dies or dies in bed, one or the other."

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TEETH
The creature whipped past, spines and teeth sticking from a sleek black muscular body. It had taken three knights with it. He signaled the retreat from the fissure. The Dholes were simply too big and fast to fight conventionally, especially in their natural habitat. The knights retreated and waited for the next order. The sacred fire began to crackle off his armour, moving like solid electricity, shadows given substance, evil thought with form. The knights scattered as the magical charge built until he let it loose with a howl of rage and pleasure, a searing blast of burning energy blasting into the fissure, a burning skull at its fore. In his mind he saw the tunnel ahead, directed to chase the Dhole, an almost liquid form twisting and squirming through the tunnels ahead, the energy bolt slowly gaining until it impacted. As it did so the chasm bottom seemed to rock in a minor earthquake, stones rattling from above. A few larger rocks tumbled down as well as the creature went through its death throes down below, until a minor rockslide started, another knight being crushed by a boulder and a second huge rock hurtling towards the Death Lord himself. He flicked it aside with a whim of magical might, shattering the stone into fragments as he did so, also knocking several more of his minions to the floor. He drew himself up, allowing the energy he had summoned to fade back into the outer planes. Get in there and drag it out! if it's still alive then keep it that way - we need its blood to be fresh!

The knights marched forward, loyalty pushing them into the fissure ahead. The Death Lord stretched inside his armour. The spell would go ahead as planned, the Liche would be raised. Almost a shame, he preferred a proper battle with a chance for glory and tactics. He heard a few stones rattle behind him, put it down to the rockslide settling, then turned and saw the second Dhole, summoned by the death of its mate. Huge and wormlike, multiple mouths unfolding as it smelt him out. He readied another bolt but was too late, the creature simply dropped its head forward, smashing him flat in an instant, a smear of blood, flesh and mangled armour, a few sparks of energy crackling into ground. The Dhole then squirmed across the canyon floor to where the other knights had entered the fissure, before following them down into the dark, its mouths readying for the feast.

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THE IRON HAND
They called themselves The Iron Hand. Fundamentally they were a group of zealots, depraved separatists who had turned their back on humanity and now pursued twisted dreams and the lure of forbidden knowledge. Using technologies long since outlawed in human society such as cloning, mind stapling and genetic recombination they advanced themselves rapidly in terms of psychological ability and military capability. Staying hidden from the mainstream of humanity for a long time they finally became an active threat in the the year 3118 (new time). It was here that they used their advanced knowledge of both sorcery and teleportation to launch capture operations whereby they would transport squads into cities, outposts and colonies, slaughter all resistance and capture any survivors for use within both genetic experimentation, as new gene material for cloning and as grisly sacrifices for the dark gods they now worshipped.

The reaction was instantaneous and widespread. Whereas before only certain colonies had martial law and street side execution for wrongdoers it was now emplaced as matter of fact throughout all of human civilization. Automatic defenses were installed at all points in order to defend the cities that became fortresses and despite the harsh nature of these controls they seemed to work - attacks by The Iron Hand fell reduced to a few sub-structures led by the lower echelons of their command and these usually failed miserably, the zealots driven back and the citizens safe behind their walls.

But then the new methods were brought to light when colony 23355-beta fell, its police force suddenly going berserk, half of them slaughtering the others and a series of carefully timed detonations wiping out the military detachment stationed there, the governor himself leading the insurrection. Apparently an underground cult had formed, instigated by the Iron Hand, using illegal substances and mind stapling to breed discord until they deemed their puppets strong enough to take the colony, which they then did, the troopers and priests of the Iron Hand at a safe remove until the fighting ended and they entered the colony, welcomed by the traitors who had butchered their own.

Although they also stole the survivors of this massacre they took all the technology as well - only a few recordings by hidden security devices surviving, giving humanity a glimpse into the twisted sub-society it had spawned. Ruled by sadistic murderers, the standard troopers being almost mindless killing machines, the priests deviant in the extreme, the labourers twisted things alien to the genetic code that had spawned them. That they had advanced far in illegal technology and heretical worship there was no doubt. But when foul demonic entities were seen working alongside them it became clear that the Iron Hand had become one of the single greatest threats to humanity and must be wiped out for good.

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C R E D I T S
 

aguirRe for tools, playtesting, modified Quoth progs, advice and engines - the guy is a legend. http://user.tninet.se/~xir870k

Sielwolf for hours of playtesting, good suggestions, formatting the storylines and general encouragement.

Kell + Necros for all the Quoth content, sound fx, skyboxes and textures. Also all the modifications I made to their IP.   Note that the exttex skins for the Quoth creatures are unendorsed.   Hopefully nobody will mind that I created them, they just converted with a slight contrast / sharpness / resolution increase as per the other skins in the pack.  http://kell.leveldesign.org/quoth/quoth.html

Mindcrime for Nehahra sprites and other contents. http://nehahra.planetquake.gamespy.com

XWar mod for sprites. http://xwar.planetquake.gamespy.com

Paul Carrick for the painting textures in Sealed City. http://www.nightserpent.com

Distrans for the warpe music.

Everyone at Func_Msgboard, especially metlslime for whose Rubicon texture set I used (and modified slightly). http://www.celephais.net/board
 
All the sound engineers who unwittingly contributed music for the pack; Dotkraz, Idle Sunder, Turmoil, Legion, Damballah (album name, unknown artist) and Zero Degree. The unconverted mp3's can be found athttp://www.archive.org/index.php
 

My wife, Bessie, for her patience.

 

Anyone I forgot.

 

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