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Difference between revisions of "Texas Incident"
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− | + | The Texas Incident happened in 500 A.S. | |
− | + | The entire Texas system was decimated. | |
− | A quarantine was erected across half | + | Valhalla Research scientists aboard the Dallas had begun the second phase of testing |
+ | a new, long-range jump gate that would have allowed travel beyond the confines of | ||
+ | the Sirius Sector -- and could have potentially opened the entire galaxy for | ||
+ | exploration. Unfortunately, an unforeseen concentration of dark matter along the | ||
+ | jump route created a feedback wave that not only destroyed the Dallas and everyone | ||
+ | aboard, but expelled huge masses of dark matter and radioactivity. A quarantine was | ||
+ | immediately erected across half the system -- not for security, this time, but for the | ||
+ | safety of anyone foolish enough to stray into the dangerous morass. The jump gate | ||
+ | itself sank into a monstrous singularity that still hangs at the edge of the Texas, an | ||
+ | evil, swirling eye, that casts its gaze upon the wasteland of Houston. | ||
==See Also== | ==See Also== | ||
*[[Texas]] | *[[Texas]] |
Latest revision as of 07:32, 7 January 2010
The Texas Incident happened in 500 A.S.
The entire Texas system was decimated.
Valhalla Research scientists aboard the Dallas had begun the second phase of testing a new, long-range jump gate that would have allowed travel beyond the confines of the Sirius Sector -- and could have potentially opened the entire galaxy for exploration. Unfortunately, an unforeseen concentration of dark matter along the jump route created a feedback wave that not only destroyed the Dallas and everyone aboard, but expelled huge masses of dark matter and radioactivity. A quarantine was immediately erected across half the system -- not for security, this time, but for the safety of anyone foolish enough to stray into the dangerous morass. The jump gate itself sank into a monstrous singularity that still hangs at the edge of the Texas, an evil, swirling eye, that casts its gaze upon the wasteland of Houston.