Skill Tree Update

Name:Tree of Aeons Author:
Skill Tree Update

Year 219

Assimilating by force is easy for an institution like me. Its easy, to use my way, the way that worked so far, and apply it elsewhere. That is a set of actions with no room for negotiation, and the reason why I disliked that, was because I wasnt sure whether my way was the right way.

My main goal of expanding is mainly to grow my mana pool, and gain valuable talent. Thinking from this angle, whether the Central Continent or Branchhold has similar or different culture, doesnt have much significance. In fact, the only reason to really mold culture is to grow a culture that feeds into the talent pipeline.

Which thus, leads to the issue of assimilation via force.

Force, as pleasant as it sounds, makes it a lot harder to get genuine cooperation, and true loyalty among those who have the talent or capability. Any relationship with my new followers would start from a defensive position, instead of one where we met in the middle.

All these assimilation hiccups need to be weighed against the future loyalty and value of any high-leveled individuals such a system would produce.

The system encourages conflict. Ive thought about this at length many, many times. As a consequence of that, Im also viewing that cultural uniformity is a weakness. Genetically identical plants, for example, all have the same vulnerability to a virus, and I apply that same concept to cultures and societies when faced with demon kings.

They also encouraged different sorts of talent, and even if its hard to see, this culture managed to create multiple level 85s through constant war.

In a way, the Mountainworld Culture could be summarized to a war and survival culture. I wanted a stronger, better version of that war or survival culture, as the culture of Treehome had now changed over time to take an industrial, specialization and technological-superiority focus.

These two types of culture had different focus. Treehome spent a lot of time on crafting, on development, on education. This was a consequence of my multi-decade education program, and the various research and manufacturing initiatives.

I believe that the war and survival would be a lot easier to transfer to newly settled worlds, or restore old worlds. Worlds where things are lacking, and the people of Mountainworld were thus tougher, even if the Treehome folks had more levels and far better equipment. They had a scrappy, can-do attitude who sought out how to get things to work with nothing.

In my own Valthorns, they also have that self-sufficiency, but we had an entire training system that focused on creating that sort of ability.

I saw these cultural differences in how a normal Treehome citizen behaves when they face a problem they were unfamiliar with. The first thing they would do was to talk to a Valtrian official. For the Mountainworld citizens, they had very little dependence on the government, and they would think for themselves, throw solutions at a problem and see which stuck, or live with it if its not too painful or difficult.

Like it or not, on Treehome, we created a competent governmental structure, and this led to reliance on that structure, as is sensible to do.

There are merits to outsourcing certain decisions to the government. It took the mental load away from them, so they could focus on other areas. A persons ability to gain levels in a chosen field, was ultimately a constraint.

85-100 levels scattered over multiple classes, and 85 levels in a single class had very different combat outcomes. The Mountainworld folks are more generalists, because they had to be self-sufficient. Treehome encouraged specialization, and that meant outsourcing segments they were not good at, to others.

I remembered my dear friend Jura, who kept his villager classes until quite late, until a sheer fluke merged the villagers classes with his warlord class.

Its quite common for the people of Mountainworld to have many classes, and when added up, it is usually slightly more than Level 85. This was because the soul energy requirement of multiple low level classes, was not that high.

The way I thought about this, was that the soul is this huge power supply, and it could power many small appliances, or one large machine, and higher-tier machines were significantly more power hungry than smaller weak machines.

***

My adventurers on the Mountainworld trawled through multiple cave chambers over the past two to three years, and they found various trinkets and artifacts, dating to just a slightly earlier time of Mountainworld.

Not that old, just a few centuries or so. Weapons of war, and fortifications. The cave chambers were home to hideaways and secret military stashes forgotten to time. Theyve not been touched for ages.

Or perhaps, they were not meant to be touched for ages.

My adventurers found tomes of magic, hero items, and generally, just weapons. I was personally quite disappointed by the haul, since these things were relatively mundane, but my adventurers were happy, and the mages were more than delighted to study old tomes of lost magics.

I found the protectors hidden in these caves to be a lot more interesting. They pulled out giant snakes, robot-like golems, and strange tree creatures that I eagerly studied.

We had golems on our world, the hero Hafiz and Chung took significant attempts to recreate robots from Earth, but they had not seen widespread adoption due to the relatively poor quality of the golem makers.

On the Central Continent, we did attempt to train our own golem masters but progress in this front was fairly slow. The strongest golem maker we had was Level 70s, and he could control ten elephant-sized golems simultaneously.

Strong, for sure, but we struggled on the autonomous aspects.

I could insert my artificial minds into them, but that felt like cheating, because the whole goal of having golem masters was for them to develop self-aware golems.

***

Training other types of units or subordinates was naturally where I spent most of my idle time.

We sent them on various missions, to let them gain experience and build knowledge. Some of them spent time as adventurers, some of them spent a lot of time in the dungeons.

Others rotated between Branchhold and Treehome. Our academies throughout the Continent was filled with students, as we expanded new training systems to train all the other kinds of units.

[Adapting potato mana storages to core mana... High Density Potato Cores unlocked]

[Adapting potato storages to core mana... Potato Cores unlocked]

[Warning : Core Mana in its raw form cannot be used by mobile creatures as it will decay to normal mana once it leaves contact with the soil of the planet.]

That was a step forward, and I informed Stella of the issue.

***

Angelworld was a land of incredible wealth. It was fragmented, ruled by various Angel-Lords and Arch-angels, but war in the Angel World was mainly through tournaments. The concept of total wars were only relevant against demons or monsters, but outside of these things, the Angels didnt fight amongst themselves.

Instead, they selected champions, and wagered territory in their tournaments. Territories were exchanged through such tournaments, and everything else followed. Tournaments happened daily, and the tournaments were large affairs.

Groups of hundreds fought against other groups of hundreds. The Angels themselves encouraged it, and it was soon clear that the gods they followed had rather similar views.

The God they believed in, seemed to believe in Peace through War, and Order through Conflict.

Constructive conflict, and they saw it as structured warfare. These angels, while resembling the angels commonly seen on earth, were more of the combative kind.

The Angel-lords of the world formed a council of some kind, as a discussion channel. That, of course, didnt conflict with the battles they constantly waged in the Coliseums.

It was also strange that the battles were always fought by humans, not angels themselves. The angels were more than happy to sit it out, so-called-enemies could enjoy a cup of nectar together, even making merry and laugh while their champions fought to near-death.

As Stella described, These angel-guys are like some kind of lawyers, and behave like two-faced snakes. They mean what they say, but only in the specific context that they said it. They have absolutely no qualms contradicting themselves in different contexts.

So any alliances must be super-tightly worded.

Which could bite both ways. They seem more than willing to maneuver themselves into situations where they can bend those agreements.

I found it ironic that these angels were like snakes, but then again, I wasnt better.

So, what is the news? Stella asked as she rested in one of the Angelworlds cities. Their cities were large, gleaming places. Towers of ivory and marble.

I have core mana.

Stella paused and purred.. Oooooooooooh. Thats good. Yknow what, I think we can revisit this world at a later date. Lets work on the core mana, I cant wait to hack the next demon king that should be headed our way..

Lumoof groaned as he remembered what it meant.

They arranged a meeting with the angels, and soon returned to Treehome.

***

Stella observed the path through the void forest and we see one bright, glowing path to this other world. Treehome. Treehome would see its demon king next year, and Mountainworld just two to five years later.

Two demon kings are so close together. I mentally groaned. To me, it felt like just last month we fought a demon king, and now we have to fight another one. Its so darn tiring, though my domainholders clearly dont think that way.

I needed to space them out, but my people say its the best way forward. The levels gained from each of the demon kings were the building blocks, and we would construct a path out of this stupid cycle.

The goal is to get more people to that level, and round out our abilities, so well field more Level 125-149s, just so that they can get the experience needed.

Roon and Johann met them regularly, those who are on the path, and for m

Lumoof will lead the charge as usual, well attempt to infiltrate this world and look for the demon kings pit. And well repeat what happened in the anti-magic world. Approach, and support Lumoof as he floods the demon king with mana. Johann explained.

The heroes were interested to see how Lumoof did it, since they missed it the previous time.

Once everyone was ready, Stella hacked into the demons astral path, and opened a portal with our rift gate. Stella gently tapped a little of the core mana and the link to the astral path stabilised.

Alright. Lets give the demons a taste of their own freaking medicine.

Didnt we do that already? Edna sighed.

I know, but I still love saying it. Stella said.