Getting a Technology System in Modern Day-Chapter 933: The Effects on Imperial Ctizens
It seemed the fear of death had become an excellent motivator for the officials who had met with Kumakar. They had already begun implementing their share of the plan, and gradually, their hatred toward the Empire deepened, fueled further by worsening economic conditions that had finally started to impact them directly. Most of them chose the easiest path available: to hate and blame the Empire for their suffering, branding it as tyrannical.
Aided by the very real economic hardships that were now beginning to bite, the message took root. As trade slowed and the flow of goods from other systems dried up, it was easier to blame the distant, faceless Empire than their own leader's pride. Hatred, once a spark, was fanned into a flame.
The first real flashpoint occurred, as most things now did, in the virtual world.
Attacks targeting imperial citizens began to occur, imperial businesses were vandalized, and anything associated with the Empire became a target of hostility. Those involved in these acts knew the consequences—they would receive a strike, and two more would permanently ban them from VR. Yet, they proceeded anyway, seemingly viewing the first strike as a worthy price to pay for venting their rage. fɾēewebnσveℓ.com
Kumakar's government played a significant role in encouraging this behavior. Through third-party channels, they framed these acts as patriotic defiance and a necessary form of pressure to force the Empire to reverse its decisions.
The situation also reignited debates about precedent within the Empire. People generally prefer predictability in governance, and the Empire had established clear guidelines for VR-related offenses. So long as a crime occurred solely within VR, like theft, assault, or even murder, and didn't involve special violations such as human trafficking, the punishment was limited to a strike and a short-term suspension.
But that precedent now seemed far too lenient. The Bilakis were clearly exploiting the system, committing virtual atrocities with the knowledge that the consequences would amount to only a temporary ban lasting a few months.
Imperial citizens who had found themselves on the receiving end of these outbursts were now voicing their frustrations in the Empire-only section of Pangea.
The Empire had gone to great lengths to ensure that each civilization had its own exclusive Pangea space, a protected environment where they could speak freely without fear of external observation or interference. A unified, open Pangea accessible to all civilizations had yet to be implemented. The Empire understood that deep-rooted hatred between civilizations could not be undone quickly. Only after enough time had passed and after people began to understand the actual truths behind their histories would it be safe to consider such integration. Rushing it now would risk shattering the fragile fabric of the Conclave, and the Empire had no intention of being the cause of that collapse.
At present, the only way to communicate across civilizations was through face to face in VR, and through messengers for long-distance communications, but only if individuals have added one another as friends. As a result, most imperial citizens had never had any meaningful interaction with these outsiders until now, when they suddenly became the targets of aggression without any warning or context. Understandably, they had turned to their private Pangea space to share their confusion, fear, and anger, struggling to make sense of why they were being attacked by people they had only just met.
@Justiciar_Prime: {This cannot stand. We established the three-strike rule to be lenient, to encourage adoption, not to provide a consequence-free playground for state-sponsored thuggery. If we do not amend the rules, we are signaling that our laws are suggestions, not mandates. We will look weak.}
@Conclave_Realist: {And if we change the rules now, how does that look? It will be perceived as a direct, reactionary punishment against the Bilakis. Kumakar will frame it as further proof of our tyranny. We risk alienating the other civilizations who are watching this unfold. Trust in our legal framework is paramount.}
@Empress_Rina_Simp_#1: {I agree with @Conclave_Realist. This is like that classic holodrama trope: the girlfriend tells her partner she loves him so much she'd forgive him for cheating once. A partner who hears that and sees it as a permission slip is not a partner worth keeping. But a girlfriend who changes her promise and breaks up with him after he cheats looks just as fickle. We must be firm, but we must also be consistent. We cannot change the rules of the game mid-play.}
@Skeptic_Savant: {@Empress_Rina_Simp_#1 Why does your analogy sound so… specific? Personal experience?}
@Meta_Paladin: {Can we not derail with relationship drama metaphors again? We're literally being hunted in VR, and you're quoting soap operas. Focus.}
@Protocol_Archivist: {Let's not forget: the three-strike system was a calculated risk. A measured gamble. But clearly, we underestimated how far some governments would go to manipulate their populations into weaponizing it. If a law enables repeated abuse, it's not justice—it's liability.}
@Architect_of_Worlds: {The safety protocols are the issue. People are bold because they believe there is no real danger. But what about psychological trauma? What about the one-in-a-trillion chance that the safeguards fail? Are we willing to risk that?}
@DeepSpace_Thinker: {A one-in-a-trillion chance is like being found wet in space. It's a statistical impossibility. The Emperor would not have rolled this out without redundant, failsafe systems. The core issue is perception and politics, not safety.}
@Citizen_Inquisitor: {Which brings us to the real question: Why has the Empire been so silent on this? These attacks have been escalating for days. They must have known about this long before it reached the public channels. Their passivity is… unusual.}
@Conclave_Realist: {Perhaps they are afraid of the diplomatic fallout. Or perhaps there is something else at play, @VR_Sovereign… something we do not yet see.}
@VR_Sovereign: {Afraid? We own the damn VR. Why should we care what anyone thinks when we change a rule in our own house?}
@Aronite_Loyalist: {Correction: You don't own it. Emperor Aron does.}
@VR_Sovereign: {He is a human. I am a human. There is no difference.}
@Memory_of_Phoenix: {That's cute until you realize you're comparing yourself to a man who built a neural interface while leading an empire. Let's stay grounded, shall we?}
@Nova_Supporter_8492: {Has anyone filed for an official redress request yet? All this talk means nothing if nobody puts pressure on the review boards. We do have protocols for this.}
@Dreamseeker_Reborn: {Good luck with that. Bureaucracy moves slower than a slug in zero-g. By the time they respond, half of us will have our first strike.}
@GhostOfEarth: {You seem to have just been thawed now, based on your experience related to the empire's way of dealing with things?}
@Orion_Rage: {This whole situation reeks of cowardice. If the Empire can't even protect us in a digital space we invented and control, how are we supposed to believe they'll protect us when things get real again?}
And still, the Empire remained silent.
No statements. No clarifications. No policy amendments.
Just watching from behind the digital veil as anger surged and discourse boiled over. To the average citizen, it felt like being trapped inside a sealed kettle, with the pressure building by the minute. Everyone could hear the whistle forming. If the current trajectory continued without intervention, it wouldn't be long before the entire system ruptured under the weight of unchecked resentment and retaliatory justifications.
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