Department of Subspace Communications Archive
First Contact Universe
Humanity reached for the stars carrying the weight of its wars, its divisions, and its ambition. What it found waiting beyond the known systems would change everything.
The Premise
The First Contact universe begins in a future shaped by humanity’s own conflict. Earth’s nations fractured into rival powers, and the pressures of war, expansion, and survival pushed civilization outward into the stars.
The discovery of ancient technology buried beneath Luna changed the course of human history. Through it, humanity uncovered the galaxy’s hyperspace network and began expanding into multiple systems, turning one planetary struggle into an interstellar cold war.
But the next breakthrough changed the balance completely. A newly discovered material and the development of true faster-than-light travel gave humanity something it had never possessed before: the ability to move freely, without the old restrictions.
That breakthrough created the WarpStar—and opened the door to forces, powers, and truths far older and more dangerous than humanity had ever imagined.
Restricted Archive Fragment
Initial long-range signals recovered from beyond mapped human space referenced unknown fleet movements, damaged relay traffic, and repeated mentions of
nonhuman command structures.
Subsequent analysis suggested possible links between early contact events, lost expeditionary records, and the disappearance of
designated colonial assets.
Portions of this archive remain restricted pending DoSC authorization.
Archive Sequence
Reading Timeline
The First Contact archive is best approached in sequence. Each entry expands the operational picture, the scale of the conflict, and the truth behind humanity’s first steps beyond known space.
WarpStar
The first unrestricted FTL breakthrough changes history and opens the door to the unknown.
Epsilon
The mission changes, the truth deepens, and the stakes escalate.
Orion: The Last Day
A novella entry expanding the wider conflict and the cost of what lies ahead.
Trinity
The signal continues into the next major phase of the archive.
Mission Files
Archive Briefings
Core entries currently cleared for public review through the Department of Subspace Communications archive.
Mission File 01
WarpStar
Humanity’s first true unrestricted FTL ship was supposed to change history. It did.
What begins as a technological triumph becomes the opening move in something far larger and far more dangerous. WarpStar marks humanity’s first real step beyond old limits—and the moment the unknown begins answering back.
Mission File 02
Epsilon
The mission was never what it seemed.
As survival, war, and hidden truths collide, Epsilon widens the scope of the universe and deepens the cost of what humanity has set in motion. What waits at the edge of that mission may decide much more than one expedition’s fate.
Mission File 03
Orion: The Last Day
A shorter archive entry from within the wider First Contact conflict.
Orion: The Last Day expands the larger saga through a narrower lens, showing another side of the universe and the people trapped inside its machinery, losses, and consequences.
Mission File 04
Trinity
The signal continues.
Trinity carries the archive into its next major phase, building on the fractures, discoveries, and consequences that came before.
Supplemental details remain restricted pending future transmission release.
Operational Landscape
Major Powers
The First Contact universe is shaped by rival governments, unknown actors, and older forces operating beyond the reach of human assumptions.
Human Power
United Federation of Nations
One of humanity’s major interstellar powers, the Federation stands at the center of military expansion, political tension, and many of the technological breakthroughs that reshape the series.
Human Power
Russian Republic
A rival human bloc forged by war, doctrine, and strategic necessity. Its role in the broader conflict helps define the balance of power across known human space.
Unknown Status
Alliance
A major external force whose arrival transforms the scale of conflict and forces humanity to confront the reality that it is not alone—and never was.
Restricted File
Legion
A separate and highly dangerous power operating outside normal human assumptions of governance, life, and warfare.
Supplemental archive details remain limited pending DoSC clearance.
External Contact
Sumarians
Their involvement broadens the political and strategic picture, revealing that the galaxy’s history and alliances are deeper than humanity first understood.
Redacted
Archived Contact Group
Additional nonhuman actors and historical powers may exist within restricted files not yet cleared for open publication.
Systems & Breakthroughs
Technology and Discovery
The First Contact universe is driven by discoveries that do more than advance civilization—they destabilize power, expand war, and expose humanity to realities it was never prepared to face.
Network Discovery
Hyperspace Network
The discovery of ancient infrastructure beneath Luna reveals that faster interstellar movement was possible long before humanity understood it. This network reshapes exploration, colonization, and military reach.
Propulsion
Hyperdrives
Early interstellar expansion depends on humanity’s ability to exploit older travel systems, but those systems come with limitations that shape strategy, politics, and distance.
Breakthrough
True Faster-Than-Light Travel
The development of unrestricted FTL changes the balance completely. For the first time, humanity gains a capability that is not bound by the older rules—and everything changes.
Power Source
Antimatter Systems
Advanced power generation becomes essential to supporting the scale, ambition, and operational demands of the next generation of starships.
Restricted Archive
Recovered Nonhuman Technology
Fragments of older systems, designs, and mechanisms suggest that humanity is interacting with only a fraction of what already exists beyond known space.
Full technical files remain partially restricted.
Strategic Impact
Why It Matters
In the First Contact universe, technology is never just machinery. Every breakthrough alters command decisions, military doctrine, exploration patterns, and humanity’s relationship with the unknown.