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{{Navbox Lore}}
{{Navbox Lore}}
{{Navbox Human Lore}}
{{Navbox Human Lore}}
<center>[[Image:San_Colette.png|500px]]</center>
<center>[[File:Luna_pixel.png|link=]]</center>
<center><i>'''The flag of the Sovereign Solarian Republic of San Colette.'''</i></center>
{{Infobox Planet
|Name = Luna
|System = Sol
|Image = Earth's Moon.jpg
|Sector = [[The_Orion_Spur#Jewel_Worlds|Jewel Worlds]]
|Capital = Harmony City
|Species = Humans, Skrell, IPCs
|Languages = Sol Common, Tradeband
|Demonyms = Lunan, Lunarian
|Nation = [[Sol Alliance]]
}}


In what is now the Northern Wildlands and was once the northern half of the Middle and Outer Rings of the Solarian Alliance lies a system located auspiciously on the border between the Outer and Middle Rings, directly at the conflux of the warp gates that allow easy transition between the two. This system, Patria Nueva, contains one inhabitable world, and this world is known as San Colette. The '''Sovereign Solarian Republic of San Colette''' is a (now formerly) Solarian nation where many things meet: the Middle and Outer Ring, the Coalition and Alliance, and — now — the forces vying for control of the Northern Wildlands. But the Republic — which was long intended by the Alliance to be a fallback point and redoubt in a theoretical Second Interstellar War — is not without its defenses or, thanks to its still-intact phoron facilities and stockpile, protectors. But with the system now caught between the Solarian Restoration Front and the League, many in the Republic ask themselves a simple question: can San Colette weather the storm which approaches her shores, or will she be swept away like so many others?
Earth’s only natural satellite, '''Luna''' was the first extraterrestrial body ever visited and colonized by humanity, with the first humans landing in 1969 and the first permanent colonists arriving as 21st century climate refugees. It is the oldest, richest, and grandest of the Alliance’s colonies, and is the location of many government and corporate headquarters. Lunarian cities are known as dome cities due to their domed structure, and are surrounded by rings of subordinate cities known as satellite cities. While the richest here have wealth beyond measure, the Lunarian working class has historically suffered as the moon’s industries have moved abroad and cheaper synthetic labor has replaced them. Above them the middle class toils away at the endless task of maintaining the Alliance’s huge bureaucracy, and worries about losing their livelihoods and being forced into the working poor.


==History==
==History==
While humanity has been obsessed with Earth’s moon for untold millennia before the invention of the most primitive spacecraft, historians generally regard the modern era of Luna as beginning on July 16th, 1969 - when American Apollo 11 astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin were the first humans to ever land upon another celestial body. These pioneers were quickly followed in late 1970 by the Soviet N1/L3 Soyuz 7K-LOK “Pervoprohodets” mission, which landed the third group of humans on the Moon. The “Moon Race” would continue for the rest of the 20th century and result in the first permanent settlement on Luna by the early 1980s - the Soviet “Zvezda” moonbase. The Moon Race ended in an arguable draw in the early 21st century, due to increasing economic instability on Earth.


<center><i>“To understand the history of the Alliance, one must first understand the history of our Republic,” - President (2405-2413) Valentia Carabello, 2352 - 2454.</i></center>
Luna was mostly ignored by a humanity more obsessed with survival at home until 2070, when colonists from United Orbital Enterprise (a unified space agency between the USA, China, France, and Mexico) landed on its light side. Colonists from Cosmonaut Enterprises (a successor to the Soviet space program of the 20th century) landed on the dark side of Luna in 2072. With this the colonization of Earth’s moon had formally begun, and it would see significant use as a waystation for other points in the [[Sol|Sol System]] over the course of the upcoming decades and centuries. Due to its low gravity, the Soviets and UOE used Luna as a major shipyard and proving ground for deep-space equipment.


</div></div>
Further colonization to Luna took place during the 21st and 22nd century as climate damage gradually worsened, with many wealthy families and companies simply moving off-world to Luna when able to do so. With Earth's economy rapidly deteriorating the rich families of the planet found themselves in need of a new home in a very short order with very few good options: [[Mars]] suffered from many of the same problems as Earth, orbital stations were often too impractical, and Luna was -- aside from some way stations built upon it in the late 21st and early 22nd century -- mostly uninhabited. Luna was chosen by most rich refugees fleeing Earth due to its close position to Earth and the perceived ease of development on Earth's only natural satellite compared to the cost of producing dozens of semi-private stations for rich families and businesses.
<div class="toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed">
===Discovery and Interstellar War History===
<div class="mw-collapsible-content">
The system of San Colette was first discovered by astronomers from France in 2272, in the years immediately preceding the devastating Interstellar War. Its original discoverers named it after Saint Colette of Corbie, in the hopes that the system would bring about a peaceful future for the then-struggling Alliance. The system was quite desirable for the Alliance as it contained one readily habitable world, San Colette, and a small planet, D’Anzin, with Helium-3 deposits sufficient enough to justify the expensive task of colonization. The Alliance, desperate for money in the midst of the Second Great Depression, sold off the system’s colonization rights in 2274. The rights were purchased by an unexpected source: rather than a nation-state or corporation purchasing the system’s colonization rights an alliance of Spanish and Portuguese business magnates secured the winning bid with seconds on the clock. The magnates – perhaps out of patriotism or perhaps out of a desire to win the economic goodwill of the government while avoiding the true cost of colonization – gifted the rights of colonization to the governments of Spain and Portugal. Before a colonization plan could be created the Interstellar War (2278 - 2287) broke out, effectively dashing the hopes of many of the prospective settlers.


While the initial hope of an Iberian colony faded in the chaos of the Interstellar War and its economic impact, the desire of many in the region was not extinguished. By the 2330s the worst of the economic crisis had faded into the background and Iberia once again prepared to journey to the stars and in 2338 they launched the first colony ships to San Colette, and towards a new future.
A great deal of manpower and money was required to create this new home for the Earth's richest and brightest as Luna, unlike Mars, was built without the use of cyborg-based labour. To do this hundreds of thousands of well-trained engineers, technicians, and other personnel were employed by the climate refugees to build their new home in exchange for a place on it when the refuge was completed. As such Luna, despite its original conceptualization as a climate refuge for the richest and most notable of Earth, has had a working class from its first days. As settlement continued and more domed cities were created the "lower class" of Luna expanded to include a variety of miners brought by [[Einstein Engines]] in order to exploit Luna's natural Helium-3 and titanium deposits. Though these deposits have since dried up the descendants of these miners can be found on Luna even today, and often still work for Einstein Engines -- though now as engineers and bureaucrats rather than miners.
</div></div>


</div></div>
The booming economy of Luna created an environment in which corporations could easily succeed. In 2155 Einstein Engines, using the foundation provided by Lunan Helium-3 mining, created the first practical mass-market warp engines and became the first modern megacorporation. Luna’s prosperity has continued since then, and it remains one of the wealthiest planets in the Sol Alliance to this very day, despite its small size and small population. The Luna of today is, in many ways, the ideal colony. Rich, prosperous, and unfailing in its loyalty to the Sol Alliance.
<div class="toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed">
===The Early Colonial Era===
<div class="mw-collapsible-content">
The journey to San Colette took almost two years due to the distance traversed from Earth and the ad-hoc nature of many of the Alliance’s transportation networks, which had been ravaged by both the Interstellar War and the Second Great Depression. As the five colony ships sent to San Colette traveled across the breadth of the Alliance one of the scientists aboard the lead ship, Doctor Ernesto Castrejon, observed the sorry state of the Alliance’s warp network. Doctor Castejon was, at the time, a scientist of little importance simply sent to assist in the construction of a theoretical warp gate for San Colette which would connect it to the broader Alliance. But as the journey dragged on and Ernesto became increasingly irate, he began to form a greater idea which would transform the broader Alliance. At long last, in 2340, the first colonists arrived in the system of San Colette, ready to begin the immense undertaking of colonizing a new world for the Alliance.
 
These colonists who landed on San Colette found, as the reports had suggested, an Earthlike world with a pleasant, if somewhat dry, climate. The first colonists to land found themselves on the coast of the largest of San Colette’s three major continents, overlooking a vast blue sea on one side and kilometer after kilometer of grassy, fertile flatlands on the other. The colonists, ecstatic at the good fortune, decided upon a historical name for what would become their capital city: Nueva Isabela. Over time Nueva Isabela would grow and become the primary agricultural and political hub of the fledgling colony as the other four colony ships formed similar settlements. In the far north of its largest continent the settlement of Montblanc was formed, which would become its technological hub. Across the sea from Nueva Isabela the settlement of Porto de Ouro was established, later becoming a major hub for off-world travel. The settlements of Vila Nova de Norte – the most northern major settlement on the planet and one of the few able to function year-round despite the poles’ snowstorms –  and Nuevo Villaviciosa – an industrial center located at the mouth of a major river – were both founded on the same continent, the smallest of the three. The five original cities of San Colette would go on to become its hubs, and still dominate its economy today.
 
Within a decade San Colette had established itself as a young, though quite productive, colony. Helium-3 mining on D’Anzin kept its budget in check and a warp gate, first completed in 2344, ensured shipments of materials were never long in reaching the new colony. But for one man, who had now been promoted to the lead scientist in charge of the Coletter warp gate, it was not enough. What Doctor Castejon had in mind was far greater than one planet, one warp gate, and Helium-3 mining. The doctor had turned his mind towards the future and realized something: with San Colette’s position, which straddled the line between the Middle and Outer Rings, it had a unique opportunity to establish itself as the main point of transit between both rings. Doctor Castejon intended to turn San Colette into a transportation hub, and to transform its economy in the process.
</div></div>
 
</div></div>
<div class="toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed">
===The Warp Gate Project===
<div class="mw-collapsible-content">
Doctor Castejon took his idea for a warp gate network in the northern section of the Alliance to the then-governor of San Colette, Beatriz Rada, in 2449. What happened behind the closed doors of the governor’s residence may never be truly known, but both Governor Rada and Doctor Castejon left the meeting with a drive to see the project realized. Following six years of debate, backroom dealings, and extensive political maneuverings the Warp Gate Project – the largest project undertaken by the Alliance – was approved by the Solarian government, and the majority of the construction contracts were awarded to Einstein Engines. Governor Rada and Doctor Castejon had achieved their dream: to make San Colette the largest point of transit between the Middle and Outer Rings, and to bring immense wealth to it in the process.
 
But there was a catch to this deal. Despite the efforts of Rada and Castejon they were unable to proceed without the support of one of the Alliance’s most significant forces: the Navy, which had become even more powerful in the aftermath of the Interstellar War. The Navy demanded oversight of the project in San Colette’s system itself and the ability to take “reasonable precautions,” in designing a defense for San Colette. The Coletter delegation attempted to protest but rapidly found themselves shut down by the Naval delegation and, surprisingly, the Alliance’s central government. With its economy and prestige battered and bruised by the Interstellar War the civilian government of the Alliance was, at best, unwilling to argue with the Navy and often deferred to it – a trend which would continue into the 25th century, with devastating consequences.
 
The Navy’s demands for its support were deceptively simple on paper, and only contained one requirement: that San Colette be designated a “fallback point,” for any future conflict with the Coalition. This simple requirement would go on to define San Colette due to the factors required to meet the Navy’s standards for its fallback point. First: A large stockpile – fuel, weaponry, and assorted equipment – would have to be assembled, designated, and placed in the system. Second: Fortifications would have to be constructed to hold off the Coalition for an extended period and the Navy, rather than San Colette, would be the final judge of what constituted enough fortifications to hold off the Coalition from San Colette. Third: A local military, which San Colette had nothing resembling, would have to be formed to man the defenses and secure the system. The gravity of what would have to be done to fulfill this demand, and the impact it would have on the system’s budget, almost immediately caused a crisis in the government which only ended when the Alliance, along with the Navy, promised to subsidize much of the work. But despite the Alliance and Navy’s funding the project remained daunting and would date years, if not decades. Further negotiations ensured San Colette would not have to finish the defenses before the warp gates were built, but they were required to start as soon as possible.
 
In 2356, following a short period of internal debate regarding the practicality of the Navy’s demands, the warp gate project began in San Colette in earnest. By 2457 the first gate – which connected San Colette to [[Callisto]], another Alliance member state chosen for the Warp Gate Project – opened, and equipment for the creation of additional gates began to flow from the Sol System to San Colette. Gate after gate opened over the following years, bringing more materials and more wealth to San Colette. The gate network brought new industries to San Colette beyond its previous exports, which had mostly consisted of foodstuffs from San Colette itself and Helium-3 mined on D’Anzin. This economic diversification was also driven in part by desperation, as the Navy now required much of the system’s He3 production to be stored for a theoretical emergency. A local shipbuilding industry which specialized in ships designed to work in San Colette itself, rather than traveling abroad, formed as a result of the influx of trade goods. Most importantly for San Colette’s future a local artificial intelligence industry began to grow in the late 2360s. While Colettish AI would never reach the level of sophistication of IPCs on [[Konyang]] due to being based upon indigenous AI designs instead of Glorsh-derived designs, it would become very effective at carrying out the tasks needed to run dozens of warp gates in a singular system. One of the tasks commonly assigned to Colettish AI was the identifying of ships in the system and determining their destinations, which would later prove itself to be of stunning importance.
 
But the demands of the Navy never left the mind of the inhabitants of the system and, in 2362, work began on the first of what would eventually become four lines of defense of San Colette. The “Rock of San Colette,” as it would become known, was designed to fulfill the Navy’s demands while not destroying San Colette’s budget. At the time of its completion in 2398 the Rock consisted of a series of armed space installations. But this was not enough for the Navy and the government of San Colette was sent back to the drawing board. To the Rock was added the Tools and Field of San Collette, which would become the second and first layers of San Colette’s defensive lines. The Field itself was self-explanatory: a large section of space on the edge of the system was designated as a stellar minefield and filled with a variety of anti-vessel mines. Built from 2375 to 2405, the Tools consist of a ring of automated defenses built using Colettish AI.
 
While the Navy was relatively content with San Colette’s defenses there remained the matter of training and equipping a local military arm to defend San Colette in the event of a dire emergency. In 2356 the Civil Guard of the Sovereign Solarian Republic of San Colette, or simply the Civil Guard, was founded in response to the Navy’s demands. The Civil Guard, over the next few decades, proved to be a competent and relatively well-equipped force. Its size remained relatively small due to the Guard’s focus on defensive readiness and automated weapons, but constant funding ensured it was never free of willing volunteers. A sense of patriotic duty related to the Civil Guard also began to slowly develop and many Coletters began to view service in it as a way to seize some of their military autonomy back from the Solarian Navy, which had become increasingly unpopular due to its demands.
</div></div>
 
</div></div>
<div class="toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed">
===The Discovery of Phoron===
<div class="mw-collapsible-content">
By the early 2400s San Colette had become a beacon of economic stability in the outer Alliance, and served as a hub for trade flowing from much of the northern Spur into the Alliance. In 2402 it was officially declared to be the Sovereign Solarian Republic of San Colette, finally shedding its colonial roots and ascending as a full Solarian member state. As the first decade of the 25th century came to a close the Republic had one of the highest standards of living in the Middle and Outer Rings thanks to its status as a trade hub. But the relationship between the Navy and Republic remained poor and efforts by the Civil Guard to further expand their capabilities were often frustrated by the Navy. In 2415 the Navy-Guard relationship reached a new low when the Guard’s ships were banned from possessing warp engines capable of traveling without a gate, despite the protests of the Republic.
 
But these protests were soon drowned out in 2417 by the discovery of phoron in the system of Biesel. Coletters, ever poised to increase the prominence of their Republic, rapidly managed to carve out a niche in the growing phoronics industry by establishing processing facilities for the fuel on the surface of D’Anzin. Unused and neglected Einstein facilities were rapidly bought up by the government and converted into facilities which turned inert phoron crystals into a usable form, which was then sold to actors across the Orion Spur. Colettish facilities, while they would not reach the output of Tau Ceti, became an important link in the phoron economy between Tau Ceti and much of the outer Alliance and inner Coalition. Trade to the Coalition was initially severely protested by the Navy, and required the addition of phoron to the Colettish strategic reserve in order to appease them.
 
The addition of a phoronics industry to the system brought the wealth of the Republic to new levels as the 25th century progressed. The Civil Guard was equipped with domestic ship designs for the first time, another layer — the Spears of the Saint, a series of fifteen massive orbital railguns — was added to the Republic’s defenses at the Navy’s insistence, and a local arms industry began to develop in response to growing fears concerning the Solarian government’s seeming unwillingness to assist more distance colonies such as the Republic. Perhaps most importantly the AI industry of San Colette continued to develop, with more and more deadly semi-autonomous drones being created for the defense of San Colette. While skrellian dignitaries were sometimes quick to point out the dangers of such weapons, Republic officials dissuaded them by noting their semi-autonomous nature required a human hand to guide them and make final decisions, and explaining the designs — unlike typical IPCs — were based on human algorithms and technology.
 
The phoronics boom lasted until the early 2460s. By 2461 the flow of phoron gradually began to slow and many facilities opted to limit their production or entirely cease their operations. Some blamed it on NanoTrasen, which had long had a poor relationship with the Republic, while others claimed the decreasing flow was due to Elyran isolationism. Throughout 2461 and into 2462 the Republic stockpiled more and more phoron, hoping it would be able to slowly release fuel from its strategic reserve in order to preserve their economy during what many viewed as an incoming fuel crisis.
 
Unfortunately, few could anticipate how grim the crisis would become as 2462 neared its end and many families in the Republic prepared for Christmas.
</div></div>
 
</div></div>
<div class="toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed">
===The Solarian Collapse===
<div class="mw-collapsible-content">
Coletters often argue over when the Solarian Collapse truly became unavoidable. Some argue that the Clandestine Incident of 24 October, 2462 — which many in the Republic believe was carried out deliberately by Biesel — marked the start of the end. Others believe the end truly began on 07 November, 2462, when Mars ceased responding to interstellar communications. Or perhaps it was on 11 November, 2462, when the Prime Minister was found dead in his suite. But most argue the Collapse was truly, irreversibly set to happen on 17 November, 2462, when forces from the 58th Fleet opened fire on fellow Solarians. This, to most in the Republic, marked the decisive turning point.
 
Mere days after this, on 20 November, 2462, the Collapse came to the Republic. The garrison fleet stationed in San Colette, the 67th Fleet, attempted to seize the system for itself. The 67th Fleet, much like its Konyanger counterpart — the 58th — was a smaller fleet loyal more to its admiral, Frederich Müller, than the Solarian government. Admiral Müller demanded the civilian government surrender and hand over the phoron stockpile to him. They refused, and the Battle of San Colette began between the Civil Guard and the 67th Fleet. The Civil Guard and San Colette’s defenses, aided by deserters from the 67th and a home field advantage, eventually routed the 67th and chased them from the system at little cost to themselves. But, due to their inability to pursue them, the 67th was eventually able to find its way to New Atlantica, where its remnants formed the basis of the Anti-Corporate League.
 
With the defeat of the 67th Fleet the immediate danger had passed for the Republic. However, the chaos of the Solarian Collapse was far from over and during the final two months of 2462 chaos reigned throughout the region San Colette called home. To its galactic west Konyang seceded and the Anti-Corporate League filled the vacuum left by the collapse of Solarian authority in the region. To its east Lycoris, which had at one point helped build the Colettish warp gate network, fell to the Solarian Restoration Front, which began to brutally purge all non-humans from its territory. Solarian fleets collapsed entirely, defected, resorted to piracy, and sometimes became roaming mercenary bands. Refugees began to flow into the Republic from both sides, and the systems around San Colette — many of them too small or otherwise unable to maintain their own fleets — looked to it for aid and some form of protection in this desperate time.
 
In January 2463 the Republic answered the call of its neighbors by forming a defensive Alliance known as the Middle Ring Shield Pact. The Pact, unfortunately, quickly ran into problems. Many of its systems, while wealthy, were reliant on the Solarian Navy for protection prior to the Collapse and had no appreciable navies of their own. Most, aside from San Colette, additionally suffered from high degrees of megacorporate domination in their local economies. None had the defenses of San Colette and the Civil Guard was unable to patrol every system vying for membership due to its small size and lack of independent warp engines. Even worse was the economic situation: many gates into Sol itself had been damaged or otherwise closed during the months of the Collapse and the businesses of the Republic now had a desperate need to find new markets before an economic meltdown began.
 
Salvation would arrive later in January in an unusual form: the former 5th Middle Ring Battlegroup, now better known as the Free Solarian Fleets, under the command of Fleet Admiral van der Rensburg. The mercenaries of the Fleets were tempted by the Republic with a rare prize: phoron from its stockpile and a port to call home. The current President of the Republic, Maribel Sarmiento, and van der Rensburg have a very amiable relationship but many in the Republic — particularly in its Civil Guard — know the loyalty of the Fleets, despite the privileges granted to them, only goes as deep as the Republic’s pockets. Whether they will stand and fight against the enemies of the Pact remains a matter of great concern, particularly for those beyond the reach of San Colette’s defenses.
 
Resolving the economic crisis caused by the Collapse was simpler than many in the Pact and Republic originally expected. With the collapse of Solarian authority in what became the Corporate Reconstruction Zone, much of the food supply line was interrupted and a new need for weaponry emerged. San Colette, stripped of many of its more high-end export routes, has fallen back onto exporting two mainstays of humanity to the CRZ via Tau Ceti in the meantime: foodstuffs and weaponry. By summer 2463 the economic crisis was resolved. However the necessity to maintain good trade relations with Biesel has led to the SRF and League becoming more vitriolic in their rhetoric towards the Pact, but what can one do? To trade with the Alliance means trade must go through the SRF, and to trade with the Coalition one must go through the League. Coletters have thus been forced into an awkward, perhaps temporary, economic relationship with Biesel.
 
As the Republic looks forwards towards what many in its view as an inevitable, existential war against its regional rivals in the Northern Wildlands, many in it dread what the future may hold. While it maintains a better standard of living than most of the Wildlands — and a significant amount of the frontier — it remains teetering on a knife’s edge, pressed between two warlord states which despise it and forced to trade with a corporate state which desires to dominate it. The Republic and its people must chart a steady course through the waves of the Collapse, or be swamped and drown in it.
</div></div>


==Environment==
==Environment==
Luna is a large moon, larger than [[Pluto]] — the ninth planet in the [[Sol|Sol System]]. It has roughly one sixth of the [[Earth|Earth’s]] gravity, which necessitates the use of artificial gravity in its settlements and led to it becoming an early center of Solarian shipbuilding. Arrival gravity in Luna’s cities generally brings the area up to 85% of Earth’s gravity, leading to the typical Lunarian being taller than most Solarians but more awkward in Earth-level gravity. The lunar surface is dominated by lunar dust, which is highly abrasive and can cause damage if inhaled — necessitating the use of large, often multi-stage, airlock systems whenever a Lunarian must venture outside of a dome. The surface is also heavily bombarded by cosmic radiation due to the thin lunar atmosphere, and some cities must use specially treated materials to have their outer shells  resist both dust, radiation, and the occasional meteoroid.


<center><i>“Oh, San Colette! My homeland so fair! The land of our own, and no others compare!”</i> - Excerpt from the Anthem of the Sovereign Solarian Republic of San Colette (2408)</center>
Luna is locked in a synchronous orbit with Earth, leading to both a near side — which always faces Earth — and a far side — which always faces outwards. Lunarian settlements have historically been centered on the near side due to ease of resupply and a desire by early Lunarians to view their home planet. Of the five great dome cities only Gagaringrad is on the far side of the moon, which has earned it the nickname of the “Shaded City” by Lunarians. When viewed from Earth, Luna’s dome cities and their satellite cities create a vision not unlike viewing humanity’s homeworld from orbit. Despite early attempts to sync the Lunarian calendar to lunar months, colonizing governments — then the Alliance — insisted on using the standard Terran calendar for convenience, and this example has been followed across the Spur.


===The System of San Colette===
==Culture==
[[File:Luna - Final.png|The government flag of Luna. The crescent represents Luna itself, and is meant to remind viewers of Selene's headpiece.|thumb]]


The system of San Colette consists of four major stellar bodies including its star, Nueva Hispaniola. The nearest stellar body to Nuevo Hispaniola is a small and barren planet known as San Felipe. Due to its closeness to the star San Felipe is entirely uninhabitable and its only man-made features are a neglected series of solar power facilities built by Einstein Engines during the Warp Gate Project which exist both in the orbit of San Felipe and on its surface. The rusting hulks of these facilities are occasionally used for target practice by the Civil Guard but otherwise rarely receive visitors due to their proximity to Nuevo Hispaniola and the presence of unexploded firing range munitions aboard them.
Lunarians are a tightly-knit and somewhat insular people wracked by stark class divisions between the rich, middle, and working class. The rich here are more wealthy than perhaps anywhere else in the modern Spur, but the working poor are just as poor as anywhere else. The richest Lunarians are part of families which have  lived on Earth’s only moon since the 21st century and originally arrived as climate refugees, and upper-class families are known to spend extravagant sums of money to have their entire family trees charted out and known. Members of the middle and working class lack the obsession with pedigree, having neither the desire nor the resources to carry out these projects.


Further out from Nuevo Hispaniola lies the temperate world of San Colette, where the vast majority of the system’s population can be found. San Colette’s surface is defined by its three large continents and large ice cape at its poles. The planet is remarkably hospitable and relatively Earthlike, with no major meteorological phenomena occurring on its surface. It has one natural satellite, San Colette Minor. The moon of San Colette is a barren rock without any major settlements. Scattered Civil Guard facilities and private mining platforms can be seen across its surface. But no reasonable Coletter would describe San Colette Minor as their home.
Regardless of class, Lunarians tend to have certain physical characteristics due to their shared origin on the moon. Due to the lower gravity of the moon, Lunarians tend to be taller than most humans — such as the residents of Earth or [[Republic of Biesel|Tau Ceti]] — and can struggle with adjusting to Earth-level gravity, much like [[Callisto|Callisteans]] or other moon-originating humans. Lunarians also tend to be paler than their Earthborn counterparts due to many living in partially-recessed dome cities where natural light can be rarer, and the Lunar day-night cycle, where most locations have 14 days of light followed by 14 days of darkness — though earthshine (light reflected from the Earth) ensures these nights are brighter than Terran ones. Many develop sunburns more quickly than other humans, and “Lunarian-proofed” sunscreen is a common sight in starports across the current and former [[Sol Alliance|Alliance]].


Thousands of miles beyond San Colette, towards the edge of its system, lies the frozen planet of D’Anzin. The thick layers of ice and rock which cover the surface of D’Anzin are rich in deposits of Helium-3, the fuel which powers the warp gates of the Republic. For nearly as long as humans have called the system home there have been mining operations on the surface of D’Anzin and the planet is covered in a variety of mines, in various states of repair and functionality, as a result. Recently D’Anzin had become home to a new form of energy production: phoronics. The planet’s remote location and lack of large settlements has made it the ideal location to process raw phoron into usable fuel, and all of the Republic’s processing facilities can be found on D’Anzin itself or in its orbit.
Most Lunarians have membership in class-specific clubs and fraternal organizations, which can range from drinking clubs for dockworkers to clubs for politicians where all participants must wear stylized masks. Almost every one of these organizations are invitation only . As all things on Earth’s moon, some are far more prestigious than others, and the most prestigious of these – such as the Oakheart Club of Harmony City, a fraternal order for Solarian Navy flag officers – can and do influence the political culture of the entire moon (and perhaps the broader Alliance). Many prominent Lunarian social clubs have been accused of involvement in the secret societies alleged to run Luna from behind the scenes through proxies, patsies, and fronts. Most clubs will have some form of special, often opaque, gesture or ritual associated with their activities, ranging from handshakes to seemingly occult rituals involving the burning of sacrificial effigies. Many a B-list Venusian crime film has involved a plucky detective investigating a Lunarian fraternal organization, only to find it is not-so-secretly a cover for something supernatural or evil.


Beyond the orbit of D’Anzin and the massive warp gates near it lies the Colettish Belt, a sizable ring of asteroids which surrounds the system. Asteroids and comets found in the Belt contain little of value and much of the Belt itself is designated as a restricted military zone due to the presence of the Republic’s second layer of defense: the Tools of the Saint. Automated defenses are scattered throughout the Belt and wandering into it, or deliberately tampering with the defenses, often results in injury, death, or time in a prison on San Colette. The extent to which the Belt is fortified remains a secret of the Republic few are aware of.
===Social Classes===
[[File:Navy graduation.png|Throughout history, members of the Lunarian upper class have made up a large portion of the Solarian Navy's officer corps.|thumb]]
Sitting at the top of Lunarian, and perhaps the entire Alliance’s, society are its most wealthy citizens. Sometimes known as Sol’s aristocracy, or — more derisively, and often by non-Solarians — as the Solarian nobility, the Lunarian upper class is per capita the richest group of humans in the modern Spur. These Lunarians can trace their origins to the original climate refugees, often already rich themselves, and to the early executives of successful corporations such as Einstein Engines. They are obsessed with their pedigrees and their family histories, and few marry outside of Luna or the upper class; though an up-and-coming upper middle class family may find itself aligned to one of these venerable families by marriage, it is an uncommon thing. Genetically-engineered children, even cloned children, are not uncommon, and Zeng-Hu Pharmaceuticals is always willing to provide its services, though Galatean firms have long plied their trade on Earth’s moon. The extent of genetic editing the Lunarian upper-class experience before and after birth ensures they live longer, healthier lives than most other humans in the Spur. It is often joked Luna contains not just the greatest concentration of wealth in its upper classes, but the greatest collection of centenarians anywhere in the modern Spur.


===The Planet of San Colette===
Wealthy Lunarians are massively influential in its political and economic environment, and many conspiracies — both on Luna and throughout the Alliance — swirl around their wealth and dominance. Some hold membership in secret or semi-secret societies they are rumored to use in efforts to further their influence and dominance, and some claim these societies far predate the founding of the Alliance or the colonization of Luna. The richest Lunarians are an exclusive class and zealously guard their homes in the central domes from intrusion by those deemed beneath their notice or unworthy of the privilege, with secret covenants between rich and influential Lunarians to make their neighborhoods more exclusive not being unheard of. Further increasing their exclusivity is their unusual accent: rich families will teach their children, and sometimes upper-level assistants in their employ, how to speak in a refined, learned dialect known as Formal Lunarian. Formal Lunarian, or FL, must be taught from birth as the way one learns Solarian Common for it to be passable to those who have also learned the dialect to birth. This makes it both hard to passably fake and marks someone as an outsider in a community when they speak, ensuring they may never fit in.


The climate of San Colette is temperate and relatively Earthlike, which helped ease its colonization. Its surface is defined by three continents — Maria, Nueva Norte, and Morro — separated by large seas and covered in a variety of climates. The planet’s poles are covered in ice caps which have shrunk following colonization by an insignificant amount, and San Colette Minor provides enough of a gravitational pull to create a system of tides. San Colette is relatively free of freak meteorological phenomena and has four seasons which roughly correspond to their earthbound counterparts.  
The Lunarian middle class makes up the majority of the moon’s population following the decline of its working class populace, and forms the backbone of the modern Solarian central bureaucracy. Most live in satellite cities and work in government buildings of the central dome, performing the endless duties of an interstellar bureaucracy under the watchful eye of the upper class. Often seen as a colorless and boring people due to their line of work, a common Solarian joke claims the stereotypical middle-class Lunarian is a Solarian government bureaucrat who wears a suit to work, commutes by train, and only feels joy when completing paperwork. Though typically wealthy in their own right, many of the middle class suffer from impostor syndrome and drive themselves into debt attempting to follow the trends of those richer than themselves. They are frequent travelers abroad, with middle-class Lunarians having a higher purchasing power off of Luna than on it due to their high wages being needed to match the moon’s cost of living. These Lunarians also form the middle management of Luna-centric corporations such as [[Einstein Engines]], [[Zeng-Hu Pharmaceuticals]], and [[Zavodskoi Interstellar]].


====Regions====
The Lunarian working class, in contrast to the upper and middle classes, is not flush with wealth. Once almost the equal of the middle class, the working class has seen its size shrink and influence fade away as Lunarian industries have moved abroad from the moon and a new invention has been brought in to replace those they have retained: positronic-based robots known as [[IPC|IPCs]]. Many working-class Lunarians have moved abroad, often to [[Callisto]] or to another colonized world in the [[Sol|Sol System]], and those who have chosen to remain must often make do in poorly-maintained and run-down satellite cities filled with rotting industrial infrastructure that serves as a reminder of the better life their parents and grandparents once lived, with the fading names of these once-great industrial companies now serving as epitaphs to the working-class life that was. These Lunarians are some of the most anti-IPC citizens of the Alliance, viewing them as having taken their well-paying factory jobs before and now threatening what service industry jobs they desperately hang onto, hoping to not be forced into insolvency. Working-class Lunarians who work in mechatronic-focused industries such as ship production take pride in a culture of technical ingenuity and non-positronic automaton maintenance which ensures they can keep positronics out of the workplace, even if their equipment is often slower and less efficient than a positronic-only factory.


The continent of Maria is the largest of the three and is home to the capital of Nueva Isabela and the industrial center of Montblanc, which is in its more northern regions. Maria is easily divided into two major regions: a large, grassy flatland called the Colettish Plains known for its rich soil which has long been the agricultural heartland of San Colette and the more northern forests of Cristobal. The Colettish Plains are home to Nueva Isabela and are dotted by many smaller towns, ranging from cities of thousands to villages of mere hundreds. It is separated from Cristobal by the uncreatively named Northern Range, a old and quite short mountain range which bisects the continent and is home to many mining operations. Cristobal is colder and criss-crossed by various rivers, eventually transitioning into taiga and then polar ice in its north. Montblanc, a Colettish industrial center, sits at the mouth of one of these rivers, which allows it to easily receive minerals from the Range and lumber from further inside Cristobal.
===Holidays===
The '''Zhongqiu Jie Festival''' is an extremely popular holiday on Luna said to date back to the 2070s. The holiday is originally rooted in the Lunar New Year, itself imported by East Asian immigrants to Luna, but has since grown to be a common holiday designed to celebrate the success of humanity’s first interstellar pioneers. The Zhongqiu Jie Festival takes place on the same date as its Earthbound variant; the fifteenth day of the eight month of the traditional lunar calendar.


Across the sea from Maria, to its west, lies the mostly unpopulated continent of Morro. The continent is dominated by a large, arid scrubland known as the Hinterlands which often suffers from droughts and fires. It is home to the settlement of Porto de Ouro, which is unique among San Colette’s major settlements as it mostly lies off of the shore of Morro on a series of island chains — some natural and some artificial. The flat planes near it have been mostly cleared of plant life by Coletters and now serve as a major offworld hub. Much of Morro is poorly explored aside from satellite photography and rumors of mineral wealth have long motivated expeditions into it — though few return with much of value.
'''Apollo Day''' is another common holiday, taking place on the sixteenth of July. Similarly to Danza de la Luna, this holiday celebrates the success of humanity’s interstellar pioneers. However, this one celebrates the success of Apollo 11 specifically rather than explorers more generally.


The third, and smallest, of the continents is Nuevo Norte, a highly-populous region home to two major settlements. Nuevo Norte is the furthest north of the three continents and is mostly defined by taiga and tundra, though some regions in its south are more hospitable. In its far north lies Vila Nova de Norte, a scientific hub which is known for its freezing temperatures and frequent snowstorms. Vila Nova stands on the edge of a large, flat tundra known as the Guard’s Tundra due to its use as a proving ground for Civil Guard weaponry. To the south of the continent in one of its few temperate regions is Nuevo Villaviciosa, the planet’s major shipbuilding center. Nuevo Villaviciosa is one of the few locations in the Middle Ring to feature a functional space elevator, which lies slightly offshore and is visible from almost anywhere on Nuevo Norte.
A variation on Apollo Day named '''Pervoprohodets Day''' is instead celebrated in Soviet-colonized areas, with this holiday instead taking place on the fifteenth of December - the date the USSR’s LK lander touched down on the Lunar surface.


==Life on San Colette==
==Life in Dome Cities==
 
[[File:New_Odesa.png|A map of New Odesa and some of its satellite cities' rail infrastructure (click to enlarge).|thumb]]
<center><i>“I swear to defend the Republic, its people, and its values at any cost. I will uphold the values of freedom enshrined in our constitution, even if it costs me my life.”</i> - Except from the Colettish Oath taken by Civil Guard personnel prior to beginning training.</center>
Lunarian settlements are known as dome cities due to their original shape: as one would expect, they are large, domed structures designed in the early 2100s to replace the primitive early structures from humanity’s first settlements on Earth’s moon. The term “dome city” refers to the original dome, which most Lunarians see as the heart of their settlement and the most prestigious location to live, though only the ultra-wealthy can afford it. Central dome cities are ringed by satellite cities that serve as its neighborhoods and suburbs, and are connected by underground rail and highway lines often built into the moon’s long-dormant lava tubes. The quality of a satellite city can vary wildly depending on its original purpose and which individuals now inhabit it, with the best satellite cities resembling the central dome – though less prestigious and the worst being decaying industrial areas which would not look out of place in a rough area of [[New Hai Phong]] or pre-Violet Dawn [[Mars]]. As all things on Luna, the quality of where one lives is generally determined by the economic strata they are born into.
 
The culture and daily life of a typical Coletter is informed by both the planet’s past as a planet settled by the nations of Iberia and its more recent history as a trade hub for the broader Alliance. Coletters value familial bonds, duty to the Republic, and are often seen as friendly and outgoing people by the broader Alliance. Coletters are known to be very talkative abroad and often stand very close to their conversation partners, which can result in some awkward encounters for those unused to Colettish conversation customs.
 
To a typical Coletter familial bonds are very important, and several generations of the same family will often live very close to one another — occasionally even in the same house! Holidays are viewed as a chance to catch up with one’s family and, prior to the Collapse, Coletters abroad would often return home for major holidays even as the cost of travel increased due to the phoron crisis. These holiday celebrations are often accompanied by the traditional dance of San Colette: the flamenco.
 
One of the key cultural tenets of Colettish life is a sense of duty to the Republic which has been ingrained in Colettish culture for several generations. Initially starting as a reaction to the anger many felt at the Solarian Navy, this feeling has helped cement the Civil Guard as a key cultural pillar of the Republic. Enlistment, particularly enrolling as an officer, is seen as a prestigious duty and many middle class Coletter families will try to enroll at least one child into the Civil Guard. In many Colettish households it is a common sight to see a photo of a relative in the uniform of the Civil Guard placed prominently on a wall or above a fireplace.
 
===Holidays===


The Republic celebrates a multitude of holidays throughout the year. Some are derived from historical events while others are rooted in the historical culture and religion of the original Iberian settlers of San Colette. Listed below are some of the more notable holidays in the Republic:
The central domes of dome cities are extremely exclusive locations, with only the wealthiest of already-wealthy Lunarians being found here, living alongside corporate headquarters buildings, fine dining and shopping, government buildings, and public buildings. Their residents are corporate executives, high-level government bureaucrats, and members of Luna’s most prestigious families and dynasties. These individuals will typically work to make the central dome even more exclusive through the creation of formal and informal compacts designed to ensure only those they deem sufficiently worthy. Further worsening one’s chance of ascension into the inner dome are restrictions placed on new constructions – or modifications – by organizations known as Municipal Development Compacts, or MDCs. A unique feature of central domes, MDCs are part social club and part homeowner’s association, and often involve local government officials. Unless one is a member – or has enough money to pass the exorbitant fees they charge – they have no chance of getting into the central dome. MDCs are, of course, always invite-only, further working to exclude new members.


* The Beatification (23 January): A celebration of the beatification of Colette of Corbie, whom the Republic derives its name from. Perhaps the most important holiday in the Republic, the Beatification is often marked by celebrations of the previous year and public carnivals.
Satellite cities have no such associations, though some richer ones have close equivalents, and are home to the vast majority of Luna’s population. Often connected to the central dome – where many satellite city dwellers work – by underground rail lines or highways, satellite cities can vary greatly in their quality and in what they contain, and their fates were often determined by how they were originally zoned by the early Lunarian government. Industrial-zoned satellite cities, due to the decay of Luna’s industrial sector, have fared the worst, but residential or commercial ones have fared much better. The typical middle-class satellite city is full of mixed commercial and residential zoning, and often has a high population density reminiscent of Callisto or New Hai Phong due to the height restrictions placed on expansion due to the presence of the dome. They can sometimes extend much further underground, both vertically and horizontally, with the most premium space being in the center of the satellite city where natural light reaches the streets at most times of the Lunar day. Typically they are laid out in a grid pattern, with government and high-rise buildings at the center – the tallest point of the dome – and structures becoming smaller as one approaches the edge of the dome.


* Holy Week (movable — generally falls in late March or early April): A religious, cultural, and social event combined into one, the Holy Week has its roots in both Catholicism and the Spanish roots of San Colette’s settlers. Holy Week celebrations vary based upon the region of the planet they take place in but often involve distinctive costumed processions, many of which date back to Earth.
==Economics==
The Lunarian economy has undergone significant changes since colonization. Luna’s economy was initially based around heavy industries deemed non-viable on Earth: shipbuilding and He-3 mining and refining. With the earliest of humanity’s vessels having been made in Earth’s orbit, where collisions with abandoned space objects were a constant risk, shipbuilding forms were quick to rebase to Luna, with many concentrating on the near side of the moon and establishing facilities on the outskirts of climate refugee settlements: arguably, these were the first satellite cities. On the far side of the moon the Soviets were quick to establish a settlement of their own — Gagaringrad — and the Union’s insatiable urge for Helium-3 to power warp technology caused mining operations to follow. First the Soviets, then the rest of Earth, staked out mining operations for themselves. For its first few decades, Luna was a very working-class colony: home to those building the new future of humanity. Dinged and scuffed Soviet monuments to the conquest of the Stars on Luna built in this era can be found across its surface, though many are in disrepair and few can read their dated script.


* Republic Day (15 June): A celebration of San Colette being officially declared the Sovereign Solarian Republic of San Colette.
But the early Lunar economy was not to last. As humanity expanded beyond the Sol System and congealed into the Alliance, the need for new ships and more fuel rapidly outpaced what Earth’s moon could produce. Shipbuilding moved further away to larger, purpose-built facilities further out in the Sol System — now a few hours’ travel away instead of weeks — and He-3 operations moved to Pluto, where the Soviets applied everything they had learned on Luna to create the still-largest producer of Helium-3 in the modern Spur, and one with the nearly-unlimited resources of the Oort Cloud rather than Luna’s already-depleted reserves. Shipyards, factories, and refineries began to shutter across the moon’s satellite cities. Skilled labor fled abroad and those who stayed behind suffered from unemployment, with many turning to crime or accepting lower-paying jobs in the now-growing service industry. Some instead chose to work for a growing employer on the moon: the Solarian government, whose bureaucracies were migrating to Luna’s domed cities from a decaying Earth.


* Civil Guard Day (22 June): A celebration of the establishment of the Civil Guard, San Colette’s local military force. Traditionally, Civil Guard officer candidates officially graduate from the Naval Academy of Nueva Isabela on this day.
The modern Lunarian economy is heavily based around the government and its service sector, though many previously human-worked service jobs are being supplanted by positronic units owned by corporations or the government. Middle-class Lunarians typically work for the Solarian government or in office roles for corporations with facilities on Luna — with most corporations having a regional headquarters here, [[Hephaestus Industries|Hephaestus]], [[Orion Express]], and [[NanoTrasen Corporation|NanoTrasen]] excepted. Rich Lunarians work in the same sectors as their middle-class colleagues, but tend to be in senior-level positions rather than the middling ones occupied by the middle class. Working-class Lunarians are left with what remains: most work in the service industry, with a minority being employed in government-run blue collar jobs such as Navy shipyards and urban maintenance. They have significantly less purchasing power than other Lunarians and often live paycheck to paycheck, with the creeping growth of synthetics in their traditional jobs having caused many to migrate abroad, often to Callisto, in hopes of a better life.


* Colonization Day (5 October): The day the first settlers landed on the surface of San Colette. Officially made a holiday in 2421, shortly after the Republic was declared. This holiday is often viewed as a chance to reflect upon San Colette’s past and future, and has become quite solemn following the Solarian Collapse.
===Corporations===
Luna is home to headquarters — or regional headquarters — for many corporations based inside and outside of the Alliance. Of the megacorporations Einstein Engines, Zavodskoi Interstellar, and Zeng-Hu Pharmaceuticals are most prominent on the moon. However, dozens of other corporations — from [[Empire of Dominia|Dominian]] engineering firms to [[Coalition of Colonies|Coalition]] shipping companies to Solarian industrial companies — have regional headquarters here, and establishments frequented by corporate employees for their breaks can be a whirlwind of dialects and languages, with [[Federal Technocracy of Galatea|Galatean]] firm representatives working out deals with Solarian businesses over food well outside the purchasing power of many Lunarians. Most of these companies have their headquarters on the near side of the moon in Harmony City, with only Zavodskoi Interstellar stubbornly remaining on the far side in Gagaringrad, in a building known locally as the Obelisk.


* Christmas Day (December 25): Christmas in San Colette arguably starts with the drawing of the Christmas lottery on 22 December, which itself has its own traditions around its first prize (locally referred to as “the Big One,”) and “luck pilgrimages,” made to the lottery booty which sold the last year’s first prize ticket. Christmas itself has changed little from its Earther roots and serves as a day to celebrate with one’s family and relatives.
[[Einstein Engines]] is the de facto kingmaker of the Lunarian corporate world, and any company with a desire to be successful on Earth’s moon will find themselves interacting with the oldest megacorporation sooner or later. Based on Harmony City, Einstein is unofficially regarded as the Lunarian corporation, and many in its upper management come from the moon. Most still-functioning heavy industries on Luna are connected to EE or one of its affiliates, and most facilities previously operated by NanoTrasen have been bought out by Einstein at below market prices using their connections to the Lunarian government. Most synthetics on Luna are produced by Einstein in one of its facilities, which has led to growing resentment from the Lunarian working class in recent decades. The famed Suzuki-Zhang Hammer Drive was invented in the Robert H. Goddard Administrative, Commercial, and Research Facility, an Einstein Engines proving ground located in a satellite city of Harmony City.


* Saint Sebastian’s Day (December 26): Often considered to be a continuation of Christmas, this holiday has similar religious and cultural roots. It is typically treated as a quiet day to spend time with family and reflect upon the previous year.
[[Zavodskoi Interstellar]] is, alongside Einstein, one of the prominent corporations on Luna. Based mostly on the far side of the moon in Gagaringrad, unwritten rules between ZI and EE have seen Zavodskoi’s domain in Gagaringrad mostly untouched by Einstein in exchange for unknown concessions. Zavodskoi, to the chagrin of [[NanoTrasen_Corporation|NanoTrasen]], often works alongside Einstein — sometimes in the same facilities — and is a major supplier of the Lunarian Public Safety Bureau, providing the moon’s police with everything from bulletproof vests to their service weapons to tear gas. Like Einstein, much of Zavodskoi’s upper echelon is dominated by Lunarians. However, recent decades have seen a steady encroachment by Dominian staff, with more and more ZI board meetings on Luna having at least one Morozian present.


===Refugees===
[[Zeng-Hu Pharmaceuticals]] controls much of the medical industry on the moon, though through the corporation’s unique keiretsu structure instead of direct oversight. Medical facilities across Luna are controlled by ZH’s tendrils, and the keiretsu is likewise dominated by Lunarian staff. Many graduates from Luna’s universities go straight into Zeng-Hu’s staff, where they have historically succeeded in its competitive environment. ZH’s generic medicine divisions readily provide their services to the Lunarian upper and middle class, and it is not uncommon for Lunarians to live significantly longer than average Solarians as a result — a lucky genetically engineered Lunarian may live well over a century.


Most current residents of the Republic who are not native Coletters are instead refugees from other sections of what is now the Northern Wildlands. These refugees are a diverse group of Solarians, and other citizens, drawn to San Colette by its relative stability in the maelstrom of the Solarian Collapse. The refugees are a diverse group due to their variety of origins: some come from the industrial world of Lycoris and have opted to flee the violence of the SRF, while others are offworlders from stations cannibalized by the League for spare parts. Rarely non-human refugees — skrell, the rare tajara, and handfuls of IPCs trickle into the system from territory now controlled by the SRF, exhausted from a harrowing journey barely ahead of the Front’s internal police.
==Politics and Government==
The Lunarian government is dominated by the richest of its population, with political dynasties having always influenced the moon’s politics. The amount of wealth one needs to enter into the moon’s political scene is prohibitively expensive, and acts as a barrier against non-dynastic political actors entering into politics. Without a significant wealth reserve or a powerful backer, a prospective candidate will simply not have enough cash on hand to get their name out to be heard, and thus voted in. Some seemingly independent actors do enter into its politics, but a savvy Lunarian will easily uncover these seeming independents often have connections to the political dynasties and are only pretending to be free of their influence — a trick often used to subvert a dynasty’s rivals through subterfuge.


When they arrive most are sent to refugee settlements on San Colette — hopefully temporary arrangements on the edge of Colettish cities — where they are given a residence and the option of work. Most of these refugees follow two career paths: the more common option is to enlist in the Civil Guard, which desperately requires troops to defend San Colette. The second path is to work in the phoron refineries of D’Anzin, which few choose to do. Those who do opt to work on the phoronics facilities can find themselves away from their families for weeks at a time due to the remote location of D’Anzin and the difficulties of travel due to fuel rationing. IPC refugees, due to their status in Sol, do not have the liberty to choose. They are conscripted into the Civil Guard upon arrival in the Republic, regardless of ownership status, and given a chance to earn freedom, in the form of transport to Biesel or another system of choice, through two years of military service.  
Conspiracies have long swirled around the moon’s political dynasties, with some claiming their influence over the moon includes control over the various Solarian government agencies headquartered here, and that the Alliance’s direction is largely chosen ahead of time by a cabal of Luna’s ultra-wealthy. Other, more outlandish, conspiracies claim the dynasties are in league with demonic forces, are an outgrowth of Earther conspiracies such as Majestic 12, are shapeshifting aliens (distinct from [[Skrell|real aliens]] met by the Alliance), or are supernatural creatures such as vampires. The Lunarian government has long not entertained these claims, deeming them too ridiculous to even be worth denying.


Not all refugees have found San Colette welcoming. Resources are often limited due to the economic malaise inflicted by the Collapse and native Coletters often receive goods before their refugee counterparts, who must depend on the government for support. Policing in refugee camps is often a difficult matter due to the small size of San Colette’s domestic police force and the exponentially-increasing number of refugees. Many are concerned that the Republic will soon be entirely unable to accept refugees due to their sheer number, but the flow of desperate people fleeing warlords shows no sign of stopping in the immediate future.
The current governor of '''Luna is Dietmar de Esterházy von Galántha'''. Governor de Esterházy von Galántha, known as E-V-G by many Lunarians, is the patriarch of a venerable Lunarian political dynasty with historical ties to the Solarian government, particularly its diplomatic service, and Harmony City’s branch of Luna’s local police agency, the Lunarian Public Safety Bureau. The governor has connections to most political dynasties on the moon and is rumored to be one of the most powerful men in the Alliance, though such theories often bear an edge of conspiracy. Dietmar is old, past eighty, and it is expected he will retire when the current term expires in 2480, having served as the moon’s governor for thirty years, surviving ATLAS, Frost, the coup, the civil war, and its aftermath. What dynastic family will replace him, or if one of his relatives will be elected, remains to be seen.


===Language===
In addition to local politics Luna is home to most of the Solarian government’s agency and department headquarters, and millions of civil servants are either Lunarians or work on Luna, toiling away at computers or filing cabinets as part of the endless struggle to ensure the Alliance’s labyrinthine and massive bureaucratic apparatus does not collapse under its own weight. Most government bureaucrats on Luna are drawn from its middle class, though the long reach of the upper classes cannot be entirely escaped as they often head local offices or the departments of offices. Government work is an honest life for many Lunarians, and local residents take pride in their moon’s status as the beating heart of the Alliance’s government and its bureaucracy. Many say that Unity Station has ideas, but it is Luna which makes them into reality.


The primary language of San Colette is the Colettish dialect of Tradeband, which is often simply referred to as Colettish Tradeband. This variant of Tradeband has been heavily influenced by its Iberian roots but has its own unique twists. The name of the system, San Colette, is typically rendered in Colettish Tradeband rather than in its original names of Sainte-Colette and Santa Coleta.
Lunarian law enforcement is handled by the '''Lunarian Public Safety Bureau''', or '''LPSB'''. One of the most well-funded public security services in the Solarian Alliance, it is regarded as one of the better policing agencies in the Sol System by middle and working-class Lunarians. However, the LPSB operates on a pay-to-play system of corruption with rich Lunarians where crimes, assuming they are not completely egregious, can be deemed a non-issue if one pays enough. The moon’s wealthy political dynasties exert an immense amount of control over the LPSB and de facto run the Bureau, with its upper ranks dominated by those affiliated with the ultra-rich. The police officers of the Bureau are known as public security agents, or PSAs, and the officer in charge of an entire satellite city is known as a chief director. The officers of the LPSB are typically recruited from the Lunarian working or middle class. They are well-trained and well-equipped, often having instructors affiliated with [[Zavodskoi Interstellar]] or the [[Solarian Armed Forces]] and utilizing the most cutting-edge equipment, ranging from laser-based weaponry to [[San Colette|Colettish]]-produced police drones. Zavodskoi is known to recruit many ex-LPSB officers into its ranks, though this source of qualified manpower has started to dry up as Solarian attitudes have shifted to be anti-corporate in a post-2462 Spur.


Solarian Common is the typical secondary language for most Coletters out of necessity, and is taught in Colettish primary schools. Other human languages, such as Elyran Standard and Freespeak, are rarely spoken by natives of the Republic. Freespeak is the more common of the two due to the Republic’s status as a trade hub of the northern Alliance, but is rarely spoken by native Coletters.
Compared to other Solarian police forces, the LPSB uses a larger number of [[IPC|synthetics]]. Industrial units serve as backup for IPC-qualified officers and as riot suppressors, Bishops serve in technical or intelligence roles, and shells do much of the LPSB’s clerical work, but none serve in patrol roles. These IPCs are often secondhand units from the Solarian military or corporate security, though some have been purchased directly by the Bureau itself, and often with the assistance of wealthy backers.


==Military==
==Major Dome Cities==
'''Harmony City''' is the capital of Luna and the beating heart of both its political life. Here, the political deals that will run Luna for decades are made in the private rooms of high-end establishments. Situated in the Mare Insularum, it has a unique feature not found in any other dome city: a coastline situated in Mare Luistania, an artificial lake built out of an asteroid crater inside the dome city. The center of this lake is an artificial island known as the Isle of Harmony where the government buildings of Luna’s central administration are found. The Isle of Harmony can only be accessed by appointment if one is not a government employee or elected official, ensuring the government remains out of practical reach for many Lunarians. Harmony City is home to the headquarters of Einstein Engines and many of the megacorporation’s employees live here, giving the city a reputation as the de facto capital of the megacorporation as well as Luna. Notable sights in Harmony include the Museum of Aeronautics and Astronautics, where the original landers of the Soviet Union and United States of America were moved after the city’s establishment. Most of Harmony City’s satellite cities are home to corporate employees or employees of the Lunarian government itself, and few were designed for industrial use. Residents of Harmony City are often negatively stereotyped by other Lunarians as social climbers and backstabbers who are all too willing to betray even their family for minor political or social gain.


===The Defenses of San Colette===
'''Nouvelle Caen''', originally settled by French climate refugees, is the heart of Luna’s culture and home to many of its corporate offices. Known for its art galleries and high society functions, the residents of ''Le Nouvelle'' – as they often refer to their dome city – pride themselves on being the highest echelons of modern Solarian culture, and on enjoying the finer things in life. The city’s government has taken the unusual step of turning all of its former industrial satellite cities into upper- and middle-class housing, making Nouvelle Caen the only dome city without any industrial satellites. It is home to most of Luna’s small Dominian expatriate noble population, and is the only dome city to have an Imperial consulate aside from New Odesa. Sights in Le Nouvelle include its entertainment district, where one can find theaters, opera houses, and playhouses in an architectural style known as Nouveaux Beaux-Arts which deliberately calls back to French history, and its numerous art galleries, some of which are the only galleries in the Sol System to feature prominent non-human artists. It is the richest dome in terms of raw wealth, and many Venusian stars have homes away from home in its satellite cities. Residents of Le Nouvelle are stereotyped as foppish and somewhat aloof by other Lunarians, and it is commonly joked that most speak French – a dead language – at home, and Solarian Common only when inconvenienced by those not of Le Nouvelle.


<center><i>“We must form a wall of steel around our Republic. We must ensure no invader is able to seize San Colette. We must be ready to die for our Republic if necessary.”</i> - Admiral Emerico Tolentino (2403 - ), Commander of the Civil Guard (2455 - Present)</center>
'''Hangzhou''' is Luna’s academic center, and traces its origins to a joint project between NASA and the Federal Republic of China’s Space Agency. Viewed by many as the Alliance’s brain, the central dome city of Hangzhou trades conventional Lunarian styles of zoning for a number of universities, student houses, and laboratories. More middle-class Lunarians live in Hangzhou’s central dome city than in the rest of Luna’s central domes combined, and some rich Lunarians from elsewhere on the moon look down at Hangzhou residents as unworthy of the prestige of living in a central dome. The dome city has a large Solarian military presence due to numerous proving grounds and testing facilities, some originally built by the Solarian Armed Forces and some seized from corporate actors in 2463. Hangzhou is a key medical research hub in the Orion Spur due to housing the Lunar University of Medical Science, the city’s largest employer, and many Zeng-Hu Pharmaceuticals facilities. Zeng-Hu. Residents of it often brag they may not be the richest dome, but they are undoubtedly the longest-lived. Hangzhouers are stereotyped by other Lunarians as shy intellectuals who are issued a pair of glasses and a degree at birth by the city’s government.


Stay tuned :^)
'''Gagaringrad''' is the largest dome city founded by the Soviet Union and the largest dome city on the dark side of the moon. It was the heart of the moon’s mining and refining industries before the USSR moved most of these operations to [[Pluto]] as the city’s Helium-3 deposits began to dry up, causing Gagaringrad to fall on hard times as thousands emigrated to Pluto, returned to Earth, or became unemployed on Luna. Many Lunarians see Gagaringrad as a dome city on its last legs, only one economic shock away from total collapse, with many of its once-proud industrial satellite cities now being abandoned relics of a better time. The high unemployment rate of the city has led to a rise in crime, and Gagaringrad is unofficially known by many Lunarians as the moon’s crime capital. The one remaining bright spot for the moon’s Soviet city is the presence of a still-active shipbuilding industry affiliated with the Solarian Navy, and the domes associated with this industry are home to the last remnants of the Lunarian Soviet man. Residents of Gagaringrad are stereotyped as gloomy, due to living in darkness for most of the year, and easily irritable people who may or may not have organized crime links.


Matt was here lol get fucked if you're reading this + you lost The Game
'''New Odesa''' is the administrative hub of the [[Sol Alliance#Government|Solarian government]] on Luna, and is home to literally millions of government bureaucrats and most of the moon’s foreign embassies. Abroad, it is rumored by some to be the heart of the Lunarian conspiracy to control the Spur, a claim Odesans find absurd. The youngest satellite city, it is the moon’s transit hub and has a twice-hourly shuttle to Unity Station utilized by many Solarian government employees and elected officials. It is also home to Yuri Kondratyuk Shuttleport, the moon’s primary interstellar shuttleport. It is also home to the headquarters of Pan Solarian Interstellar. New Odesa’s central dome has the lowest population of any dome city as most of its space is taken up by government offices, though its population rises during the week as many bureaucrats are known to sleep overnight in government-owned dormitories. Most workers commute from its satellite cities and suited bureaucrats asleep on high-speed trains are common sights. Sights in New Odesa include the Zvezda Museum, which chronicles early colonization of the moon, and New Lviv Satellite City, which has been carefully zoned to ensure all buildings are in the antique Hustul Secession style of architecture. Odesans are stereotyped by other Lunarians as underslept and overworked bureaucrats twitching from caffeine (or stimulant) abuse in their desperate struggle to conquer the Alliance’s endless tide of paperwork.


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Latest revision as of 03:53, 19 January 2026

Luna
Sol System
Sector: Jewel Worlds
Capital: Harmony City
Species: Humans, Skrell, IPCs
Common Languages: Sol Common, Tradeband
Demonyms: Lunan, Lunarian
Part of: Sol Alliance

Earth’s only natural satellite, Luna was the first extraterrestrial body ever visited and colonized by humanity, with the first humans landing in 1969 and the first permanent colonists arriving as 21st century climate refugees. It is the oldest, richest, and grandest of the Alliance’s colonies, and is the location of many government and corporate headquarters. Lunarian cities are known as dome cities due to their domed structure, and are surrounded by rings of subordinate cities known as satellite cities. While the richest here have wealth beyond measure, the Lunarian working class has historically suffered as the moon’s industries have moved abroad and cheaper synthetic labor has replaced them. Above them the middle class toils away at the endless task of maintaining the Alliance’s huge bureaucracy, and worries about losing their livelihoods and being forced into the working poor.

History

While humanity has been obsessed with Earth’s moon for untold millennia before the invention of the most primitive spacecraft, historians generally regard the modern era of Luna as beginning on July 16th, 1969 - when American Apollo 11 astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin were the first humans to ever land upon another celestial body. These pioneers were quickly followed in late 1970 by the Soviet N1/L3 Soyuz 7K-LOK “Pervoprohodets” mission, which landed the third group of humans on the Moon. The “Moon Race” would continue for the rest of the 20th century and result in the first permanent settlement on Luna by the early 1980s - the Soviet “Zvezda” moonbase. The Moon Race ended in an arguable draw in the early 21st century, due to increasing economic instability on Earth.

Luna was mostly ignored by a humanity more obsessed with survival at home until 2070, when colonists from United Orbital Enterprise (a unified space agency between the USA, China, France, and Mexico) landed on its light side. Colonists from Cosmonaut Enterprises (a successor to the Soviet space program of the 20th century) landed on the dark side of Luna in 2072. With this the colonization of Earth’s moon had formally begun, and it would see significant use as a waystation for other points in the Sol System over the course of the upcoming decades and centuries. Due to its low gravity, the Soviets and UOE used Luna as a major shipyard and proving ground for deep-space equipment.

Further colonization to Luna took place during the 21st and 22nd century as climate damage gradually worsened, with many wealthy families and companies simply moving off-world to Luna when able to do so. With Earth's economy rapidly deteriorating the rich families of the planet found themselves in need of a new home in a very short order with very few good options: Mars suffered from many of the same problems as Earth, orbital stations were often too impractical, and Luna was -- aside from some way stations built upon it in the late 21st and early 22nd century -- mostly uninhabited. Luna was chosen by most rich refugees fleeing Earth due to its close position to Earth and the perceived ease of development on Earth's only natural satellite compared to the cost of producing dozens of semi-private stations for rich families and businesses.

A great deal of manpower and money was required to create this new home for the Earth's richest and brightest as Luna, unlike Mars, was built without the use of cyborg-based labour. To do this hundreds of thousands of well-trained engineers, technicians, and other personnel were employed by the climate refugees to build their new home in exchange for a place on it when the refuge was completed. As such Luna, despite its original conceptualization as a climate refuge for the richest and most notable of Earth, has had a working class from its first days. As settlement continued and more domed cities were created the "lower class" of Luna expanded to include a variety of miners brought by Einstein Engines in order to exploit Luna's natural Helium-3 and titanium deposits. Though these deposits have since dried up the descendants of these miners can be found on Luna even today, and often still work for Einstein Engines -- though now as engineers and bureaucrats rather than miners.

The booming economy of Luna created an environment in which corporations could easily succeed. In 2155 Einstein Engines, using the foundation provided by Lunan Helium-3 mining, created the first practical mass-market warp engines and became the first modern megacorporation. Luna’s prosperity has continued since then, and it remains one of the wealthiest planets in the Sol Alliance to this very day, despite its small size and small population. The Luna of today is, in many ways, the ideal colony. Rich, prosperous, and unfailing in its loyalty to the Sol Alliance.

Environment

Luna is a large moon, larger than Pluto — the ninth planet in the Sol System. It has roughly one sixth of the Earth’s gravity, which necessitates the use of artificial gravity in its settlements and led to it becoming an early center of Solarian shipbuilding. Arrival gravity in Luna’s cities generally brings the area up to 85% of Earth’s gravity, leading to the typical Lunarian being taller than most Solarians but more awkward in Earth-level gravity. The lunar surface is dominated by lunar dust, which is highly abrasive and can cause damage if inhaled — necessitating the use of large, often multi-stage, airlock systems whenever a Lunarian must venture outside of a dome. The surface is also heavily bombarded by cosmic radiation due to the thin lunar atmosphere, and some cities must use specially treated materials to have their outer shells resist both dust, radiation, and the occasional meteoroid.

Luna is locked in a synchronous orbit with Earth, leading to both a near side — which always faces Earth — and a far side — which always faces outwards. Lunarian settlements have historically been centered on the near side due to ease of resupply and a desire by early Lunarians to view their home planet. Of the five great dome cities only Gagaringrad is on the far side of the moon, which has earned it the nickname of the “Shaded City” by Lunarians. When viewed from Earth, Luna’s dome cities and their satellite cities create a vision not unlike viewing humanity’s homeworld from orbit. Despite early attempts to sync the Lunarian calendar to lunar months, colonizing governments — then the Alliance — insisted on using the standard Terran calendar for convenience, and this example has been followed across the Spur.

Culture

The government flag of Luna. The crescent represents Luna itself, and is meant to remind viewers of Selene's headpiece.

Lunarians are a tightly-knit and somewhat insular people wracked by stark class divisions between the rich, middle, and working class. The rich here are more wealthy than perhaps anywhere else in the modern Spur, but the working poor are just as poor as anywhere else. The richest Lunarians are part of families which have lived on Earth’s only moon since the 21st century and originally arrived as climate refugees, and upper-class families are known to spend extravagant sums of money to have their entire family trees charted out and known. Members of the middle and working class lack the obsession with pedigree, having neither the desire nor the resources to carry out these projects.

Regardless of class, Lunarians tend to have certain physical characteristics due to their shared origin on the moon. Due to the lower gravity of the moon, Lunarians tend to be taller than most humans — such as the residents of Earth or Tau Ceti — and can struggle with adjusting to Earth-level gravity, much like Callisteans or other moon-originating humans. Lunarians also tend to be paler than their Earthborn counterparts due to many living in partially-recessed dome cities where natural light can be rarer, and the Lunar day-night cycle, where most locations have 14 days of light followed by 14 days of darkness — though earthshine (light reflected from the Earth) ensures these nights are brighter than Terran ones. Many develop sunburns more quickly than other humans, and “Lunarian-proofed” sunscreen is a common sight in starports across the current and former Alliance.

Most Lunarians have membership in class-specific clubs and fraternal organizations, which can range from drinking clubs for dockworkers to clubs for politicians where all participants must wear stylized masks. Almost every one of these organizations are invitation only . As all things on Earth’s moon, some are far more prestigious than others, and the most prestigious of these – such as the Oakheart Club of Harmony City, a fraternal order for Solarian Navy flag officers – can and do influence the political culture of the entire moon (and perhaps the broader Alliance). Many prominent Lunarian social clubs have been accused of involvement in the secret societies alleged to run Luna from behind the scenes through proxies, patsies, and fronts. Most clubs will have some form of special, often opaque, gesture or ritual associated with their activities, ranging from handshakes to seemingly occult rituals involving the burning of sacrificial effigies. Many a B-list Venusian crime film has involved a plucky detective investigating a Lunarian fraternal organization, only to find it is not-so-secretly a cover for something supernatural or evil.

Social Classes

Throughout history, members of the Lunarian upper class have made up a large portion of the Solarian Navy's officer corps.

Sitting at the top of Lunarian, and perhaps the entire Alliance’s, society are its most wealthy citizens. Sometimes known as Sol’s aristocracy, or — more derisively, and often by non-Solarians — as the Solarian nobility, the Lunarian upper class is per capita the richest group of humans in the modern Spur. These Lunarians can trace their origins to the original climate refugees, often already rich themselves, and to the early executives of successful corporations such as Einstein Engines. They are obsessed with their pedigrees and their family histories, and few marry outside of Luna or the upper class; though an up-and-coming upper middle class family may find itself aligned to one of these venerable families by marriage, it is an uncommon thing. Genetically-engineered children, even cloned children, are not uncommon, and Zeng-Hu Pharmaceuticals is always willing to provide its services, though Galatean firms have long plied their trade on Earth’s moon. The extent of genetic editing the Lunarian upper-class experience before and after birth ensures they live longer, healthier lives than most other humans in the Spur. It is often joked Luna contains not just the greatest concentration of wealth in its upper classes, but the greatest collection of centenarians anywhere in the modern Spur.

Wealthy Lunarians are massively influential in its political and economic environment, and many conspiracies — both on Luna and throughout the Alliance — swirl around their wealth and dominance. Some hold membership in secret or semi-secret societies they are rumored to use in efforts to further their influence and dominance, and some claim these societies far predate the founding of the Alliance or the colonization of Luna. The richest Lunarians are an exclusive class and zealously guard their homes in the central domes from intrusion by those deemed beneath their notice or unworthy of the privilege, with secret covenants between rich and influential Lunarians to make their neighborhoods more exclusive not being unheard of. Further increasing their exclusivity is their unusual accent: rich families will teach their children, and sometimes upper-level assistants in their employ, how to speak in a refined, learned dialect known as Formal Lunarian. Formal Lunarian, or FL, must be taught from birth as the way one learns Solarian Common for it to be passable to those who have also learned the dialect to birth. This makes it both hard to passably fake and marks someone as an outsider in a community when they speak, ensuring they may never fit in.

The Lunarian middle class makes up the majority of the moon’s population following the decline of its working class populace, and forms the backbone of the modern Solarian central bureaucracy. Most live in satellite cities and work in government buildings of the central dome, performing the endless duties of an interstellar bureaucracy under the watchful eye of the upper class. Often seen as a colorless and boring people due to their line of work, a common Solarian joke claims the stereotypical middle-class Lunarian is a Solarian government bureaucrat who wears a suit to work, commutes by train, and only feels joy when completing paperwork. Though typically wealthy in their own right, many of the middle class suffer from impostor syndrome and drive themselves into debt attempting to follow the trends of those richer than themselves. They are frequent travelers abroad, with middle-class Lunarians having a higher purchasing power off of Luna than on it due to their high wages being needed to match the moon’s cost of living. These Lunarians also form the middle management of Luna-centric corporations such as Einstein Engines, Zeng-Hu Pharmaceuticals, and Zavodskoi Interstellar.

The Lunarian working class, in contrast to the upper and middle classes, is not flush with wealth. Once almost the equal of the middle class, the working class has seen its size shrink and influence fade away as Lunarian industries have moved abroad from the moon and a new invention has been brought in to replace those they have retained: positronic-based robots known as IPCs. Many working-class Lunarians have moved abroad, often to Callisto or to another colonized world in the Sol System, and those who have chosen to remain must often make do in poorly-maintained and run-down satellite cities filled with rotting industrial infrastructure that serves as a reminder of the better life their parents and grandparents once lived, with the fading names of these once-great industrial companies now serving as epitaphs to the working-class life that was. These Lunarians are some of the most anti-IPC citizens of the Alliance, viewing them as having taken their well-paying factory jobs before and now threatening what service industry jobs they desperately hang onto, hoping to not be forced into insolvency. Working-class Lunarians who work in mechatronic-focused industries such as ship production take pride in a culture of technical ingenuity and non-positronic automaton maintenance which ensures they can keep positronics out of the workplace, even if their equipment is often slower and less efficient than a positronic-only factory.

Holidays

The Zhongqiu Jie Festival is an extremely popular holiday on Luna said to date back to the 2070s. The holiday is originally rooted in the Lunar New Year, itself imported by East Asian immigrants to Luna, but has since grown to be a common holiday designed to celebrate the success of humanity’s first interstellar pioneers. The Zhongqiu Jie Festival takes place on the same date as its Earthbound variant; the fifteenth day of the eight month of the traditional lunar calendar.

Apollo Day is another common holiday, taking place on the sixteenth of July. Similarly to Danza de la Luna, this holiday celebrates the success of humanity’s interstellar pioneers. However, this one celebrates the success of Apollo 11 specifically rather than explorers more generally.

A variation on Apollo Day named Pervoprohodets Day is instead celebrated in Soviet-colonized areas, with this holiday instead taking place on the fifteenth of December - the date the USSR’s LK lander touched down on the Lunar surface.

Life in Dome Cities

A map of New Odesa and some of its satellite cities' rail infrastructure (click to enlarge).

Lunarian settlements are known as dome cities due to their original shape: as one would expect, they are large, domed structures designed in the early 2100s to replace the primitive early structures from humanity’s first settlements on Earth’s moon. The term “dome city” refers to the original dome, which most Lunarians see as the heart of their settlement and the most prestigious location to live, though only the ultra-wealthy can afford it. Central dome cities are ringed by satellite cities that serve as its neighborhoods and suburbs, and are connected by underground rail and highway lines often built into the moon’s long-dormant lava tubes. The quality of a satellite city can vary wildly depending on its original purpose and which individuals now inhabit it, with the best satellite cities resembling the central dome – though less prestigious – and the worst being decaying industrial areas which would not look out of place in a rough area of New Hai Phong or pre-Violet Dawn Mars. As all things on Luna, the quality of where one lives is generally determined by the economic strata they are born into.

The central domes of dome cities are extremely exclusive locations, with only the wealthiest of already-wealthy Lunarians being found here, living alongside corporate headquarters buildings, fine dining and shopping, government buildings, and public buildings. Their residents are corporate executives, high-level government bureaucrats, and members of Luna’s most prestigious families and dynasties. These individuals will typically work to make the central dome even more exclusive through the creation of formal and informal compacts designed to ensure only those they deem sufficiently worthy. Further worsening one’s chance of ascension into the inner dome are restrictions placed on new constructions – or modifications – by organizations known as Municipal Development Compacts, or MDCs. A unique feature of central domes, MDCs are part social club and part homeowner’s association, and often involve local government officials. Unless one is a member – or has enough money to pass the exorbitant fees they charge – they have no chance of getting into the central dome. MDCs are, of course, always invite-only, further working to exclude new members.

Satellite cities have no such associations, though some richer ones have close equivalents, and are home to the vast majority of Luna’s population. Often connected to the central dome – where many satellite city dwellers work – by underground rail lines or highways, satellite cities can vary greatly in their quality and in what they contain, and their fates were often determined by how they were originally zoned by the early Lunarian government. Industrial-zoned satellite cities, due to the decay of Luna’s industrial sector, have fared the worst, but residential or commercial ones have fared much better. The typical middle-class satellite city is full of mixed commercial and residential zoning, and often has a high population density reminiscent of Callisto or New Hai Phong due to the height restrictions placed on expansion due to the presence of the dome. They can sometimes extend much further underground, both vertically and horizontally, with the most premium space being in the center of the satellite city where natural light reaches the streets at most times of the Lunar day. Typically they are laid out in a grid pattern, with government and high-rise buildings at the center – the tallest point of the dome – and structures becoming smaller as one approaches the edge of the dome.

Economics

The Lunarian economy has undergone significant changes since colonization. Luna’s economy was initially based around heavy industries deemed non-viable on Earth: shipbuilding and He-3 mining and refining. With the earliest of humanity’s vessels having been made in Earth’s orbit, where collisions with abandoned space objects were a constant risk, shipbuilding forms were quick to rebase to Luna, with many concentrating on the near side of the moon and establishing facilities on the outskirts of climate refugee settlements: arguably, these were the first satellite cities. On the far side of the moon the Soviets were quick to establish a settlement of their own — Gagaringrad — and the Union’s insatiable urge for Helium-3 to power warp technology caused mining operations to follow. First the Soviets, then the rest of Earth, staked out mining operations for themselves. For its first few decades, Luna was a very working-class colony: home to those building the new future of humanity. Dinged and scuffed Soviet monuments to the conquest of the Stars on Luna built in this era can be found across its surface, though many are in disrepair and few can read their dated script.

But the early Lunar economy was not to last. As humanity expanded beyond the Sol System and congealed into the Alliance, the need for new ships and more fuel rapidly outpaced what Earth’s moon could produce. Shipbuilding moved further away to larger, purpose-built facilities further out in the Sol System — now a few hours’ travel away instead of weeks — and He-3 operations moved to Pluto, where the Soviets applied everything they had learned on Luna to create the still-largest producer of Helium-3 in the modern Spur, and one with the nearly-unlimited resources of the Oort Cloud rather than Luna’s already-depleted reserves. Shipyards, factories, and refineries began to shutter across the moon’s satellite cities. Skilled labor fled abroad and those who stayed behind suffered from unemployment, with many turning to crime or accepting lower-paying jobs in the now-growing service industry. Some instead chose to work for a growing employer on the moon: the Solarian government, whose bureaucracies were migrating to Luna’s domed cities from a decaying Earth.

The modern Lunarian economy is heavily based around the government and its service sector, though many previously human-worked service jobs are being supplanted by positronic units owned by corporations or the government. Middle-class Lunarians typically work for the Solarian government or in office roles for corporations with facilities on Luna — with most corporations having a regional headquarters here, Hephaestus, Orion Express, and NanoTrasen excepted. Rich Lunarians work in the same sectors as their middle-class colleagues, but tend to be in senior-level positions rather than the middling ones occupied by the middle class. Working-class Lunarians are left with what remains: most work in the service industry, with a minority being employed in government-run blue collar jobs such as Navy shipyards and urban maintenance. They have significantly less purchasing power than other Lunarians and often live paycheck to paycheck, with the creeping growth of synthetics in their traditional jobs having caused many to migrate abroad, often to Callisto, in hopes of a better life.

Corporations

Luna is home to headquarters — or regional headquarters — for many corporations based inside and outside of the Alliance. Of the megacorporations Einstein Engines, Zavodskoi Interstellar, and Zeng-Hu Pharmaceuticals are most prominent on the moon. However, dozens of other corporations — from Dominian engineering firms to Coalition shipping companies to Solarian industrial companies — have regional headquarters here, and establishments frequented by corporate employees for their breaks can be a whirlwind of dialects and languages, with Galatean firm representatives working out deals with Solarian businesses over food well outside the purchasing power of many Lunarians. Most of these companies have their headquarters on the near side of the moon in Harmony City, with only Zavodskoi Interstellar stubbornly remaining on the far side in Gagaringrad, in a building known locally as the Obelisk.

Einstein Engines is the de facto kingmaker of the Lunarian corporate world, and any company with a desire to be successful on Earth’s moon will find themselves interacting with the oldest megacorporation sooner or later. Based on Harmony City, Einstein is unofficially regarded as the Lunarian corporation, and many in its upper management come from the moon. Most still-functioning heavy industries on Luna are connected to EE or one of its affiliates, and most facilities previously operated by NanoTrasen have been bought out by Einstein at below market prices using their connections to the Lunarian government. Most synthetics on Luna are produced by Einstein in one of its facilities, which has led to growing resentment from the Lunarian working class in recent decades. The famed Suzuki-Zhang Hammer Drive was invented in the Robert H. Goddard Administrative, Commercial, and Research Facility, an Einstein Engines proving ground located in a satellite city of Harmony City.

Zavodskoi Interstellar is, alongside Einstein, one of the prominent corporations on Luna. Based mostly on the far side of the moon in Gagaringrad, unwritten rules between ZI and EE have seen Zavodskoi’s domain in Gagaringrad mostly untouched by Einstein in exchange for unknown concessions. Zavodskoi, to the chagrin of NanoTrasen, often works alongside Einstein — sometimes in the same facilities — and is a major supplier of the Lunarian Public Safety Bureau, providing the moon’s police with everything from bulletproof vests to their service weapons to tear gas. Like Einstein, much of Zavodskoi’s upper echelon is dominated by Lunarians. However, recent decades have seen a steady encroachment by Dominian staff, with more and more ZI board meetings on Luna having at least one Morozian present.

Zeng-Hu Pharmaceuticals controls much of the medical industry on the moon, though through the corporation’s unique keiretsu structure instead of direct oversight. Medical facilities across Luna are controlled by ZH’s tendrils, and the keiretsu is likewise dominated by Lunarian staff. Many graduates from Luna’s universities go straight into Zeng-Hu’s staff, where they have historically succeeded in its competitive environment. ZH’s generic medicine divisions readily provide their services to the Lunarian upper and middle class, and it is not uncommon for Lunarians to live significantly longer than average Solarians as a result — a lucky genetically engineered Lunarian may live well over a century.

Politics and Government

The Lunarian government is dominated by the richest of its population, with political dynasties having always influenced the moon’s politics. The amount of wealth one needs to enter into the moon’s political scene is prohibitively expensive, and acts as a barrier against non-dynastic political actors entering into politics. Without a significant wealth reserve or a powerful backer, a prospective candidate will simply not have enough cash on hand to get their name out to be heard, and thus voted in. Some seemingly independent actors do enter into its politics, but a savvy Lunarian will easily uncover these seeming independents often have connections to the political dynasties and are only pretending to be free of their influence — a trick often used to subvert a dynasty’s rivals through subterfuge.

Conspiracies have long swirled around the moon’s political dynasties, with some claiming their influence over the moon includes control over the various Solarian government agencies headquartered here, and that the Alliance’s direction is largely chosen ahead of time by a cabal of Luna’s ultra-wealthy. Other, more outlandish, conspiracies claim the dynasties are in league with demonic forces, are an outgrowth of Earther conspiracies such as Majestic 12, are shapeshifting aliens (distinct from real aliens met by the Alliance), or are supernatural creatures such as vampires. The Lunarian government has long not entertained these claims, deeming them too ridiculous to even be worth denying.

The current governor of Luna is Dietmar de Esterházy von Galántha. Governor de Esterházy von Galántha, known as E-V-G by many Lunarians, is the patriarch of a venerable Lunarian political dynasty with historical ties to the Solarian government, particularly its diplomatic service, and Harmony City’s branch of Luna’s local police agency, the Lunarian Public Safety Bureau. The governor has connections to most political dynasties on the moon and is rumored to be one of the most powerful men in the Alliance, though such theories often bear an edge of conspiracy. Dietmar is old, past eighty, and it is expected he will retire when the current term expires in 2480, having served as the moon’s governor for thirty years, surviving ATLAS, Frost, the coup, the civil war, and its aftermath. What dynastic family will replace him, or if one of his relatives will be elected, remains to be seen.

In addition to local politics Luna is home to most of the Solarian government’s agency and department headquarters, and millions of civil servants are either Lunarians or work on Luna, toiling away at computers or filing cabinets as part of the endless struggle to ensure the Alliance’s labyrinthine and massive bureaucratic apparatus does not collapse under its own weight. Most government bureaucrats on Luna are drawn from its middle class, though the long reach of the upper classes cannot be entirely escaped as they often head local offices or the departments of offices. Government work is an honest life for many Lunarians, and local residents take pride in their moon’s status as the beating heart of the Alliance’s government and its bureaucracy. Many say that Unity Station has ideas, but it is Luna which makes them into reality.

Lunarian law enforcement is handled by the Lunarian Public Safety Bureau, or LPSB. One of the most well-funded public security services in the Solarian Alliance, it is regarded as one of the better policing agencies in the Sol System by middle and working-class Lunarians. However, the LPSB operates on a pay-to-play system of corruption with rich Lunarians where crimes, assuming they are not completely egregious, can be deemed a non-issue if one pays enough. The moon’s wealthy political dynasties exert an immense amount of control over the LPSB and de facto run the Bureau, with its upper ranks dominated by those affiliated with the ultra-rich. The police officers of the Bureau are known as public security agents, or PSAs, and the officer in charge of an entire satellite city is known as a chief director. The officers of the LPSB are typically recruited from the Lunarian working or middle class. They are well-trained and well-equipped, often having instructors affiliated with Zavodskoi Interstellar or the Solarian Armed Forces and utilizing the most cutting-edge equipment, ranging from laser-based weaponry to Colettish-produced police drones. Zavodskoi is known to recruit many ex-LPSB officers into its ranks, though this source of qualified manpower has started to dry up as Solarian attitudes have shifted to be anti-corporate in a post-2462 Spur.

Compared to other Solarian police forces, the LPSB uses a larger number of synthetics. Industrial units serve as backup for IPC-qualified officers and as riot suppressors, Bishops serve in technical or intelligence roles, and shells do much of the LPSB’s clerical work, but none serve in patrol roles. These IPCs are often secondhand units from the Solarian military or corporate security, though some have been purchased directly by the Bureau itself, and often with the assistance of wealthy backers.

Major Dome Cities

Harmony City is the capital of Luna and the beating heart of both its political life. Here, the political deals that will run Luna for decades are made in the private rooms of high-end establishments. Situated in the Mare Insularum, it has a unique feature not found in any other dome city: a coastline situated in Mare Luistania, an artificial lake built out of an asteroid crater inside the dome city. The center of this lake is an artificial island known as the Isle of Harmony where the government buildings of Luna’s central administration are found. The Isle of Harmony can only be accessed by appointment if one is not a government employee or elected official, ensuring the government remains out of practical reach for many Lunarians. Harmony City is home to the headquarters of Einstein Engines and many of the megacorporation’s employees live here, giving the city a reputation as the de facto capital of the megacorporation as well as Luna. Notable sights in Harmony include the Museum of Aeronautics and Astronautics, where the original landers of the Soviet Union and United States of America were moved after the city’s establishment. Most of Harmony City’s satellite cities are home to corporate employees or employees of the Lunarian government itself, and few were designed for industrial use. Residents of Harmony City are often negatively stereotyped by other Lunarians as social climbers and backstabbers who are all too willing to betray even their family for minor political or social gain.

Nouvelle Caen, originally settled by French climate refugees, is the heart of Luna’s culture and home to many of its corporate offices. Known for its art galleries and high society functions, the residents of Le Nouvelle – as they often refer to their dome city – pride themselves on being the highest echelons of modern Solarian culture, and on enjoying the finer things in life. The city’s government has taken the unusual step of turning all of its former industrial satellite cities into upper- and middle-class housing, making Nouvelle Caen the only dome city without any industrial satellites. It is home to most of Luna’s small Dominian expatriate noble population, and is the only dome city to have an Imperial consulate aside from New Odesa. Sights in Le Nouvelle include its entertainment district, where one can find theaters, opera houses, and playhouses in an architectural style known as Nouveaux Beaux-Arts which deliberately calls back to French history, and its numerous art galleries, some of which are the only galleries in the Sol System to feature prominent non-human artists. It is the richest dome in terms of raw wealth, and many Venusian stars have homes away from home in its satellite cities. Residents of Le Nouvelle are stereotyped as foppish and somewhat aloof by other Lunarians, and it is commonly joked that most speak French – a dead language – at home, and Solarian Common only when inconvenienced by those not of Le Nouvelle.

Hangzhou is Luna’s academic center, and traces its origins to a joint project between NASA and the Federal Republic of China’s Space Agency. Viewed by many as the Alliance’s brain, the central dome city of Hangzhou trades conventional Lunarian styles of zoning for a number of universities, student houses, and laboratories. More middle-class Lunarians live in Hangzhou’s central dome city than in the rest of Luna’s central domes combined, and some rich Lunarians from elsewhere on the moon look down at Hangzhou residents as unworthy of the prestige of living in a central dome. The dome city has a large Solarian military presence due to numerous proving grounds and testing facilities, some originally built by the Solarian Armed Forces and some seized from corporate actors in 2463. Hangzhou is a key medical research hub in the Orion Spur due to housing the Lunar University of Medical Science, the city’s largest employer, and many Zeng-Hu Pharmaceuticals facilities. Zeng-Hu. Residents of it often brag they may not be the richest dome, but they are undoubtedly the longest-lived. Hangzhouers are stereotyped by other Lunarians as shy intellectuals who are issued a pair of glasses and a degree at birth by the city’s government.

Gagaringrad is the largest dome city founded by the Soviet Union and the largest dome city on the dark side of the moon. It was the heart of the moon’s mining and refining industries before the USSR moved most of these operations to Pluto as the city’s Helium-3 deposits began to dry up, causing Gagaringrad to fall on hard times as thousands emigrated to Pluto, returned to Earth, or became unemployed on Luna. Many Lunarians see Gagaringrad as a dome city on its last legs, only one economic shock away from total collapse, with many of its once-proud industrial satellite cities now being abandoned relics of a better time. The high unemployment rate of the city has led to a rise in crime, and Gagaringrad is unofficially known by many Lunarians as the moon’s crime capital. The one remaining bright spot for the moon’s Soviet city is the presence of a still-active shipbuilding industry affiliated with the Solarian Navy, and the domes associated with this industry are home to the last remnants of the Lunarian Soviet man. Residents of Gagaringrad are stereotyped as gloomy, due to living in darkness for most of the year, and easily irritable people who may or may not have organized crime links.

New Odesa is the administrative hub of the Solarian government on Luna, and is home to literally millions of government bureaucrats and most of the moon’s foreign embassies. Abroad, it is rumored by some to be the heart of the Lunarian conspiracy to control the Spur, a claim Odesans find absurd. The youngest satellite city, it is the moon’s transit hub and has a twice-hourly shuttle to Unity Station utilized by many Solarian government employees and elected officials. It is also home to Yuri Kondratyuk Shuttleport, the moon’s primary interstellar shuttleport. It is also home to the headquarters of Pan Solarian Interstellar. New Odesa’s central dome has the lowest population of any dome city as most of its space is taken up by government offices, though its population rises during the week as many bureaucrats are known to sleep overnight in government-owned dormitories. Most workers commute from its satellite cities and suited bureaucrats asleep on high-speed trains are common sights. Sights in New Odesa include the Zvezda Museum, which chronicles early colonization of the moon, and New Lviv Satellite City, which has been carefully zoned to ensure all buildings are in the antique Hustul Secession style of architecture. Odesans are stereotyped by other Lunarians as underslept and overworked bureaucrats twitching from caffeine (or stimulant) abuse in their desperate struggle to conquer the Alliance’s endless tide of paperwork.