Species: Arc’kha’to

The Arc’kha’to, often referred to as controllers, are a species of ugly, parasitic and predatory aliens.

Appearance

It is very hard to describe an Arc’kha’to as most of its appearance is determined by the host it currently uses. However, a host infested with an Arc’kha’to can be identified by the various protuberances and nodes that have pierced the host’s body.

Behaviour

The Arc’kha’to lay eggs in the corpses of other living beings, and the larvae which hatch then attach themselves to living hosts, hijacking their nervous system and taking complete control over their bodies. This very behaviour lead to the term “controllers”, which is commonly used by other species when referring to the Arc’kha’to.

Controllers are not picky about who they use as hosts and will be quite content to use any possible host, with a preference for relatively bulky hosts which provide them with higher chances of killing others, and therefore of laying the eggs of the next generation of controllers.

History

The oldest known ancestors of the Arc’kha’to were brainless parasites which survived merely by attaching themselves to their hosts. Over ages they started linking to the central nervous system of their hosts to better control their actions and thus obtain hosts which behaviour suited their needs. However the range of species controllers manage to parasite is vast; their high adaptability to newly discovered potential hosts make them even more deadly, as it will not take them too long to start controlling members of a species they didn’t know of.

While it is sufficient for rudimentary communication and very efficient when it comes to motor control, the neural link between an Arc’kha’to and its host is not deep enough to allow for advanced reasoning. In addition, their predatory habits tend to have them keep to themselves far from other members of their own species, as they constantly compete for preys. As such no real Arc’kha’to culture really emerged and no known internal history of the species has been passed along except through records in other species’ logs, such as spectacular breeding cycles resulting in heavy casualties. The Arc’kha’to themselves have long forgotten the name and location of their home world.

Individual names

Just like the name of their own species, Arc’kha’to individual names consist in short, guttural sequences of syllables. This is a consequence of their relatively weak connection to the host’s nervous system.

In-game effects

Due to their predatory and competitive habits, the Arc’kha’to tend to use up quite a bit of space - they don’t tolerate living too close to each other. Their natural growth rate is low and is very dependent on the availability of preys to eat and lay eggs in. Obviously, members of other species are not too fond of them, both because of their distasteful appearance and because of their tendency to kill you on the spot without warning.

Since they are not too bright because of the weak neural link to their host’s nervous system, they make poor researchers. This relative stupidity has an advantage, tho, as it makes them almost impossible to corrupt; propaganda is something way too clever to affect them.

Arc’kha’to are very efficient factory workers and absolutely brutal soldiers. Being quite undisciplined, they do not tolerate being overworked; furthermore, they don’t tolerate slavery at all - you don’t enslave Controllers, Controllers enslave you. High security doesn’t please them, as they feel threatened when feeding and/or breeding.

7 Comments

  1. Yuckwitte:

    Are these a race you can play or are these NPCs?

    If they are a race which you can play (which I figure they are), will they be able to join alliances, if someone takes a planet from them will it have 0 population, will they be able to transport people from other colonies onto their planets and wouldn’t having less brain power make you incredibly vulnerable to propaganda as you take what is being said to you as factual and therefore get affected by it?

  2. Johns9994:

    Where did you get the name from?

  3. ju:

    The player is considered as a human leader ruling a human empire. As such no species is “playable” except humans. However he can conquer planets hosting alien population. Therefore he ends up with mixed population planets or at least a mixed population empire.
    Non-player empires are usually of alien species too.
    Planets around the universe should be mostly empty and you’ll have to colonise them with population coming from your other planets.
    As for propaganda it can work both ways: either you believe everything you’re told and you’re very vulnerable to it or you don’t give a damn/don’t understand what you’re told…

  4. ju:

    As for the name it came from our imagination…

  5. Lemorsa:

    If someone attacks a controllers planet, isn’t there a good chance that their fleets will be infested, therefore, when the fleets travel to other planets, that planet would become infested also? It would just make sense to me.

  6. ju:

    We don’t want to put in place such very special cases. However if you gain control over a planet hosting controllers, or if one of them is very close to your empire and you have a high influence on it, since population migration occurs naturally between planets, they can end up infesting your other planets.

  7. TSeeker:

    @Yuckwitte:
    “[...] and wouldn’t having less brain power make you incredibly vulnerable to propaganda as you take what is being said to you as factual and therefore get affected by it?”

    Controllers are extremely stupid and extremely undisciplined - trying to get them to like you through propaganda is about as useful as talking to half a brick, although the brick won’t bite you in return. They are in fact very primitive, so it’d be like trying to tame wasps.

    Their being mostly immune to propaganda has a good side and a bad side if you own a planet with some of them on it - your influence upon them will solely depend on what you actually do to/with them, which basically means following the way they live (that is ok as long as you don’t care about any other type of population and don’t need any research done). It also means that, while you won’t be able to “tame” them, other empires’ spies will be useless against them.

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