From an [url=http://eclipsephase.com/persistence-memory-past-castaways-brave-new-worl... game:
Legacy Morphs
Quite simply, legacy morphs are morphs that are composed, at least partly, of DNA from people long dead.
Biography has always been a very rewarding field of study, if for no other reason than to not repeat the same mistakes of those biographed. In time, genealogical tables, then bloodlines, basic genetics, and finally full sequencing of the dead could be added to the intangible biographical information of any given person.
Before the Fall, several different technologies came together to spawn the Scarabot. Related to swarmbots, the Scarabot was a boon to archaeologists. Its purpose was simply to analyze and catalog human remains while disturbing them as little as possible. The tiny bots resembled the sacred Egyptian scarab beetles and this look was stylized further after the first few prototypes.
In general, the scarabot swarm works in this manner.
- Use advanced scanning technology to learn where human remains are.
- Get as close to the remains as possible by making a nano or microscale tunnel into whatever physical medium the remains are in.
- Once close, the tiny bots would get a DNA sample. Very little remains are needed for this extraction. In most cases, DNA can even be recovered from cremated remains.
- If there is enough corpse left to scan, the corpse is scanned for both internal injuries and external markings for accuracy. Nearby objects, hair samples and stomach contents can also be part of this scan.
- If there is anything left of the brain, it will be slowly scanned for memories. This process takes a great deal of time as the scarabots have to accomplish the difficult process of assembling themselves into a specialized ego bridge. The process will almost certainly get next to no information unless the corpse is very recent or frozen in a very particular way. Usuable freezing in this case could either be cryogenic storage (20th-Century attempts at this have been hit or miss) or dying under just the right conditions of cold. Despite the time and lack of general results, the brainscan was still attempted as the cost was neglible in the post-scarity, pre-Fall economy and the time was unimportant to the dead.
- With all data received, the scarabot swarm would leave, sealing up the tunnel they made by micro-fabbing a seal of the nearby material. This microscopic seal is flawless and invisible to the naked eye.
- For my upcoming game, legacy morphs are very useful for certain plot twists.
- But for other games, a lot of players want a real face to go with their character. You can see it often if players who are very particular about who they 'cast' as their character's photo. With legacies, your character doesn't just look like that movie star, they really are that movie star (or at least, all or some of that star's DNA).
- Legacy morphs are modelled after a real someone that actually existed. It is one more anchor to make this imaginary future a little more real.
- It also adds to the wonderful weirdness of the Eclipse Phase setting.
- It could be that some lost historical tombs are found between now and the Fall. If there is no way such remains could ever be found and/or identified, you can just state that, in your campaign, this historical character left remains that are both recoverable and conclusively identifiable.
- For some historical characters who only left an image behind, current Post-Fall technology can extrapolate a genetic profile that would be a perfect match to an image of sufficient quality. We may never know who the Girl with a Pearl Earring really was but advanced DNA extrapolation can finally match Rembrandt's vision. Yes, the same result could be achieved with plastic surgery but an extrapolated legacy would likely have children that in part resembled the legacy (just like other parents).
- DNA extrapolation can also be used if the bodies known relatives of the missing deceased can be sampled. Combined with image extrapolation, the results can be uncanny. A Cleopatra legacy could be created with the DNA of her half-sister, Arsinoe, as well as study of one the busts modeled on the last Pharoh. In fact, there might be several Cleopatra variations, all with different extrapolations but basically the same face. For some extrapolated characters, there can never be a guarantee that the legacy is 'genuine'. Conversely, past a certain attention to detail, it can never be proven that 'this' interpretation is not correct. There is not, and will likely never be, enough genetic or archeaological references to confirm either way.
- You make a perfectly historically-accurate flat legacy morph, a living artifact: That is, you essentially grow a identical twin sibling to the historical figure that is the inspiration for your legacy. The antique will have all of the genetic advantages and flaws of the original. The purist will also factor in the effects of old injuries, diseases, and sometimes the effect of the chronic malnutrition of earlier centuries. Typically, a antique legacy is aged to the age that the original inspiration was best known at. Living in a flat, let alone a deliberately unhealthy flat, is too much of a burden for most posthumans to wear. Such antique legacies are generally 'costumes' used by weathy, actors or historians.
- You improve the legacy to splicer level or beyond:As flat genetic flaws are easily edited out and flat advantages are so easily surpassed by Post-Fall genetics, an improved legacy simply 'looks' like the ancient wretch it is modelling. In every way, the morph is as capable as any other of the same type. Even simulated age is just that; simulated. An improved legacy may look old but is as spry as any other plastic-looking supermodel morph out there. Improved legacies could be made to pass along their 'family resemblence' genes quite easily. Most improved legacies are splicers as the others are too different from a flat for a legacy skin to really mean anything. In general, only splicer and neotonic (for famous children) morphs are legacies. But legacies of the rare female warriors are often used as a 'uniform' for squads of Furies. The famed Ginger Death platoon is made almost solely out of slightly battered Boudicas. Furies more commonly use a sex-switched copy of the more plentiful male warrior legacies. Georgina Pattons are very capable, ivory-handled lasers (with matching earrings) and all.
- Either of the above, but the single legacy's DNA is mixed with another set of human DNA, possibly another legacy's:This can come about 'the old-fashioned' way. But it is also possibly to pick and choose 'bits' of legacy from two (or more) donors. So, in effect, you can also make the children of any two historical legacies as legacies. If you like a particular historical figure but really like how that old-time movie star portrayed them, why choose? Mix those genes! Take a chromosome from each member of that famous classical sports team you always liked. In the end, genetic counseling can ensure that the morph will be healthy and human, if of strange parentage.
- There could be a database of the DNA of every species
- There could be an art and history database that are blueprints for perfect copies of any antique object. There was a Mack Reynolds story (and I can't remember the name) where matter replication was so perfect that the original Mona Lisa got lost amongst its copies and no one really cared as there was no physical difference.
- How many souls could a average hab hold?
Thanks again not just for the answers but the questions they raise...