I Really Didn't Mean To Be The Saviour Of The World-Chapter 893 - 539: Rainer’s Ambition【4300 words】_2
Chapter 893: Chapter 539: Rainer’s Ambition【4300 words】_2
Rainer laughed. “Absolutely worthwhile.”
Harrison Clark: “How do you figure?”
Rainer: “You said that the Solar System is very important to humanity, right?”
“Yes.”
“In the Ninth Timeline, you said that humanity’s main force should not give up on the Solar System easily. Although those who left have created a lot of new value in the Shadow Galaxy, it still hasn’t met your expectations.”
Harrison Clark nodded, “Yes. This time we will not easily give up the Solar System.”
...
There was something he didn’t say.
This time, he had new ideas about the war layout in the 31st century.
Assuming that the plan goes smoothly and the remaining human forces, with the help of Carrie Thomas’ additional works like “The Sun in the Universe” and “The Last Millennium,” develop immunity to the ZS bacteria, humanity will withstand the 26th century biochemical extermination. By 3020, the Dome will still be in the sky of the Solar System.
At that time, Harrison Clark would have future generations take advantage of the flaws in the Dome’s monitoring and keep the external appearance of the Solar System civilization similar to that of the Eighth Timeline while secretly accumulating technological strength.
Around 3000, they would use the mature Planting Battleship Technology to rapidly expand military power in just twenty years, catching their opponents off guard.
By then, the Compound-Eyed Observer would surely be deceived by the illusions within the Dome, and the first wave of main combat forces would be Prism Ships, not the formidable reinforcements that arrived later in the previous timeline.
Simultaneously, the primary target would still be the Solar System.
According to Harrison Clark’s rehearsal, the following situations might occur:
The prosperity of the Solar System is so high that the Compound-Eyed Observer decisively views it as the biggest threat.
If the Edge Ship Fleet could break through the blockade set up by the Morrowind Empire in advance and reach the Solar System:
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The enemy would maintain the Dome blockade, with a million Prism Ships fighting together, not dispersing to hunt down other humans in the Milky Way until the Solar System is completely destroyed.
But this time, Harrison Clark would not let the Solar System be easily captured by the enemy.
By then, the territory of the Morrowind Empire would be infinitely vast.
But the main battlefield of the first stage of war would only be the Solar System.
There are only two possible outcomes for the war:
First, the Compound-Eyed Observer finds that the Solar System is difficult to defeat, and a million Prism Ships can’t handle it. They will leave the Dome in the sky of the Solar System, with Prism Ships dispersing to hunt down soft targets one by one while simultaneously calling for reinforcements. They will leave the hardest bone, the Solar System, for last.
Second, the Solar System would use the Dome blockade to its advantage and adopt a desperate strategy to bury all of the million Prism Ships within the Solar System at the cost of heavily damaging itself. The enemy’s reinforcements would not arrive until around 3520 at the earliest.
The people of the Solar System would pay a heavy price for this, securing a possible stable development period for the entire Morrowind Empire.
This would maximize their benefits.
As for the second stage of the war, there are two possible scenarios:
Assuming that the first scenario occurs and the Solar System is left as a hard target for last:
In the 31st century, Harrison Clark would find a way to use the Grand Unified Formula to create a method for a small number of human forces to infiltrate the Dome and go outside to lead the Morrowind Empire in a war against the Compound-Eyed Observer, launching the second stage of the war.
If the second scenario occurs, even if it seemed selfish, he would have to lead the Solar System’s leadership team to survive and continue to guide the next 500 years of stable development, rapidly expanding their power to prepare for the arrival of another second-stage war.
If everything goes smoothly, humans could exterminate the Compound-Eyed Observer and counterattack their lair, completely destroying them or directly entering the third stage of the war, facing the higher-order civilization behind the Compound-Eyed Observer.
But regardless of the situation, Rainer’s proposal seemed to have great significance.
First, Rainer’s idea does not rely on too much higher-order technology and would not raise too much suspicion from the enemy.
The humans in the Eighth Timeline could have achieved this, but they were sealed by the Dome and couldn’t leave, so the development and exploitation of the Sun wasn’t intensive enough. They could only rely on the natural burning of the Sun for energy extraction.
With the available material production at the time, they only needed ships and other transportation tools to complete the task, so they didn’t do it.
But this time, Harrison Clark would leave the technology for rapid star development, build the ultimate stage of the Dyson membrane, and by then, material production capacity would completely surpass the transportation capacity of ships and vehicles.
Constructing Rainer’s proposed space rail network, which resembles blood vessels, would just meet the demand for production capacity.
Upon consideration, Harrison Clark felt pleasantly surprised, “Tell me how you came up with this idea?”
Rainer said: “I am studying the space-time topology you taught me.”
“Hmm.”
“Although I don’t have the experimental conditions now, you have already told me the clear answer. Mass-energy conversion is possible, right?”
“Yes.”
“Then you also described the Dyson membrane to me and described a method to stably increase the burning speed of the Sun. So, I deduced that after the arrival of the Dome, we could only rely on the resources within the Solar System. We might even burn out the Sun’s life within a thousand years and bid farewell to our nurturing homeland. Therefore, if we want to maximize the efficiency of our resource utilization, we must build a space vein network.”
Rainer spoke with conviction.
Harrison Clark remained silent for a long time.
He had to admit that he was shocked by Rainer’s sudden burst of astonishing analytical power.