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Precursors (HALO) vs Xeelee (Xeeleeverse)

1,484
169
- no prep

- no prior knowledge

- standart equipment

- high calcs/interpretations of feats

- canon versions

- wincondition: destroy 70% of enemy forces or conquer the universe


Who will win and why? Personally I believe Precursors would win. Simply because they are more enigmatic and they haven't fails and limits which Xeelee have. Xeeleeverse is hard sci fi so it has more limits.
 
Ydp0


The Culture could theoretically give the Precursors a run for their money with their Culture Minds and Effectors. The Xeelee though? Man, the best option they have is to just abandon their universe and go back to The Glow. The Precursors make life and galaxies. Galaxies are the specks of sand on bricks to the Xeelee, and even a single nightfighter could restart the entire Xeelee empire and screw them over via timetravel if they want. Their ships can only be destroyed 0-dimensional singularities or the like. They could literally nosell the spatial warping of a magnetar star-quake. The Precursors have no real way of destroying them. Their average weapons can cause stars to go nova, or slice galaxies in half.

The Xeelee stretches the limits of hard sci-fi, they would make a decent nuisance to The Time Lords and maybe even hurt them. The Precursors and their universe would be like a toddler to them.
 
Damn! I'm not familiar with Xeelee Sequence but based on what I'm reading on their profile, they completely and utterly stomp. FanofRPGs also thinks the same.

Should I close this?
 
Soldier Blue said:
Damn! I'm not familiar with Xeelee Sequence but based on what I'm reading on their profile, they completely and utterly stomp. FanofRPGs also thinks the same.
Should I close this?
No! Xeelee have many limits. For example: they cannot fight at FTL speed.
 
Soldier Blue said:
Damn! I'm not familiar with Xeelee Sequence but based on what I'm reading on their profile, they completely and utterly stomp. FanofRPGs also thinks the same.
Should I close this?
Other limits of Xeelee:

1) They need black holes for existing/cloning their forces.

2) They haven't control over dark matter. Thet is why they were beaten in the war with Photino Birds.


It is 2-A vs 2-A battle anyway. And Xeelee's higher dimensional tech is not a higher dimensional weapon.
 
In this age of matter the proto-Xeelee found new ways to survive. Indeed, they prospered. They formed new levels of symbiosis with baryonic-matter forms. The new form — a composite of threeages of the universe — was the kind eventually encountered by humans, who would come to call them by a distorted anthropomorphic version of a name in an alien tongue: they were, at last, Xeelee.

But soon the new Xeelee faced an epochal catastrophe of their own.

They still relied on the primordial black holes, formed in the earliest ages after the singularity; they used the holes' twisted knots of spacetime to peel off their spacetime-defect "wings," for instance. But now the primordial holes were becoming rare: leaking mass-energy through Hawking radiation, they were evaporating. By the time humanity arose, the smallest remaining holes were the mass of the Moon.

It was devastating for the Xeelee, as if for humans the planet Earth had evaporated from under their feet.

But a new possibility offered itself. New black holes were formed from the collapse of giant stars, and at the hearts of galaxies, mergers were spawning monsters with the mass of a million Sols. Here the Xeelee migrated. The transition wasn't easy; a wave of extinction followed among their diverse kind. But they survived, and their story continued.


And it was the succor of the galaxy-center black holes that first drew the Xeelee into contact with dark matter.

There was life in dark matter, as well as light.

Across the universe, dark matter outweighed the baryonic, the "light," by a factor of six. It gathered in immense reefs hundreds of thousands of light-years across. Unable to shed heat through quirks of its physics, the dark material was resistant to collapse into smaller structures, the scale of stars or planets, as baryonic stuff could.

Dark and light matter passed like ghosts, touching each other only with gravity. But the pinprick gravity wells of the new baryonic stars were useful. Drawn into these wells, subject to greater concentrations and densities than before, new kinds of interactions between components of dark matter became possible.

In this universe, the emergence of life in dark matter was inevitable.
In their earliest stages, these "photino birds" swooped happily through the hearts of the stars, immune to such irrelevances as the fusion fire of a sun's core.

What did disturb them was the first stellar explosions — and with them the dissipation of the stars' precious gravity wells, without which there would be no more photino birds.


Almost as soon as the first stars began to shine, therefore, the photino birds began to alter stellar structures and evolution.
If they clustered in the heart of a star they could damp the fusion processes there. By this means the birds hoped to hurry a majority of stars through the inconvenience of explosions and other instabilities and on to a dwarf stage, when an aging star would burn quietly and coldly for aeons, providing a perfect arena for the obscure dramas of photino life. A little later the photino birds tinkered with the structures of galaxies themselves, to produce more dwarfs in the first place.

Thus it was that humans found themselves in a Galaxy in which red dwarf stars, stable, long-lived and unspectacular, outnumbered stars like their own sun by around ten to one. This was hard to fit into any naturalistic story of the universe, though generations of astrophysicists labored to do so: like so many features of the universe, the stellar distribution had been polluted by the activities of life and mind. It would not be long, though, before the presence of the photino birds in Earth's own sun was observed.


The Xeelee had been troubled by all this much earlier.

The Xeelee cared nothing for the destiny of pond life like humanity. But by suppressing the formation of the largest stars, the birds were reducing the chances of more black holes forming. What made the universe more hospitable for the photino birds made it less so for the Xeelee. The conflict was inimical.

The Xeelee began a grim war to push the birds out of the galaxies, and so stop their tinkering with the stars. The Xeelee had already survived several universal epochs; they were formidable and determined.
Humans would glimpse silent detonations in the centers of galaxies, and they would observe that there was virtually no dark matter to be observed in galaxy centers. Few guessed that this was evidence of a war in heaven.

But the photino birds turned out to be dogged foes. They were like an intelligent enemy, they were like a plague, and they were everywhere; and for some among the austere councils of the Xeelee there was a chill despair that they could never be beaten.

And so, even as the war in the galaxies continued, the Xeelee began a new program, much more ambitious, of still greater scale.

Their immense efforts caused a concentration of mass and energy some hundred and fifty million light-years from Earth's Galaxy. It was a tremendous knot that drew in galaxies like moths across three hundred million light-years, a respectable fraction of the visible universe. Humans, observing these effects, called the structure the Great Attractor — or, when one of them journeyed to it, Bolder's Ring.

This artifact ripped open a hole in the universe itself. And through this doorway, if all was lost, the Xeelee planned to flee.
They would win their war — or they would abandon the universe that had borne them, in search of a safer cosmos.

Humans, consumed by their own rivalry with the Xeelee, perceived none of this. To the Xeelee — as they fought a war across hundreds of millions of light-years, as they labored to build a tunnel out of the universe, as stars flared and died billions of years ahead of their time — humans, squabbling their way across their one Galaxy, were an irritant.

A persistent irritant, though.
- Chapter 55, Exultant
 
Precursors can do this: Halo Silentium; ch. 33.


As the reflective orb rotates beneath my ship, I see also the outstretched, feather-like plumes of vacuum energy pylons, drawing in the potential of an infinity of alternate realities ... aborting untold numbers of nascent universes to supply Requiem's power. Strange that these cosmic deaths have never before struck me as cruel and futile. All of Forerunner technology has been made possible by drawing down vacuum energy. My own life, all that I know, arises out of cosmic predation.
 
Also, Xeelee's starbreakers can destroy Xeelee construct material. But Precursors' material can tank supernovas. So they are durable enough. And the weapons of Precursors are able to destroy their material so is is able to destroy Xeelee material much easier.
 
The quote you just used was from the Forerunners, we asume they are 2-A because the Precursors > Forerunners in all aspects.

Still, they can't FTL, but their sublight speeds are vastly superior. They can reach half the speed of light in an instant, while Precursor Star Roads are sub-relaitvistic. Their star roads would become absolutely useless.

The Xeelee can't go FTL, because they time-travel when it happens. In other words, they can just go to a time before the Precursors and slaughter them.

As said, their ships literally cannot be destroyed unless by quantum topological shit.

And as stated, by actual feats. The precursors make galaxies and a single rogue precursor can warp a galaxy. Cool. A Xeelee nightfigher throws 1-dimensional cosmic strings that slice galaxies in half and their handguns can induce novae.
 
But what would stop the Precursors from destroying universes where Xeelee exist?


> their handguns can induce novae.


Actually it was "copies" of this tech. Xeelee themselves haven't handguns. They have guns on their ships.
 
Jockey-1337 said:
But what would stop the Precursors from destroying universes where Xeelee exist?

> their handguns can induce novae.


Actually it was "copies" of this tech. Xeelee themselves haven't handguns. They have guns on their ships.
IIRC, the Xeelee fought a hard foe once and literally just gave them a universe for themselves. Plus they manipulate on higher dimensions. They simply either leave the universe or the entire dimensional plane.
 
Jockey-1337 said:
Important thing: Precursors have time manipulation as well.
Time dilation and stretch and warping, no form of time travel

The Xeelee have time manipulation + time travel. If worse comes to worse, they send a squadron of Nightfighters back to the mast and solo the Precursors.
 
This is about reality warping and universal physics:

"(Near the end of the Forerunner-Flood War, they were able to manipulate Precursor constructs such as Star Roads, which could rip apart planetary systems. They also manipulated space-time and physics on a galactic scale, and rewrote universal laws on a whim)"
 
Jockey-1337 said:
This is about reality warping and universal physics:
"(Near the end of the Forerunner-Flood War, they were able to manipulate Precursor constructs such as Star Roads, which could rip apart planetary systems. They also manipulated space-time and physics on a galactic scale, and rewrote universal laws on a whim)"
Rewriting and manipulating higher dimensional axes > rewriting universal laws
 
…But with FTL travel, beyond the bounds of lightspeed, the orderly structure of space and time became irrelevant, leaving nothing but the events, disconnected incidents floating in the dark. And with an FTL ship you could hop from one event to another arbitrarily, without regard to any putative cause-and-effect sequence… -Exultant


…This interstellar war was fought with faster-than-light technology, on both sides. But if you flew FTL you broke the bounds of causeality: an FTL ship was a time machine. And so this was a time-travel war, in which information about the future constantly leaked into the past…. -Exultant


If we use Xeelee verse physics than Precursors would be acasual as well.
 
FanofRPGs said:
Jockey-1337 said:
This is about reality warping and universal physics:
"(Near the end of the Forerunner-Flood War, they were able to manipulate Precursor constructs such as Star Roads, which could rip apart planetary systems. They also manipulated space-time and physics on a galactic scale, and rewrote universal laws on a whim)"
Rewriting and manipulating higher dimensional axes > rewriting universal laws
It is not a combat thing:


Tier: At the very least 3-B with basic weaponry. At least 2-A, likely higher with space-time manipulation and technology. Likely 1-B with their best technology, though inapplicable for combat purposes
 
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