User:WatchesTheStars/Lore:Changeling

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SPECIES

Changeling

Denonyms: Changeling, Changelings
Other Names: Ling
Related Pages: Changeling (Antagonist)
Related Lore: Lore:Ordoht, Lore:Tiger Cooperative
Languages: Template:Hivemind

Changelings

Specialized SolFed AI, created and utilized for Changeling data banking and extermination operation coordination.  SOLFED_XN-DRIVE.AI says:
"WARNING: This databank contains live-threat profiles on Changeling-class entities. These biomechanical anomalies represent one of the highest extinction-level risks known to SolFed. Directive 88-A designates full-spectrum extermination and preemptive containment. Data is compiled for field operatives, xenologists, and strategic AI. Remain asymmetrical."

They are the unintended offspring of a corrupted Ordoht Von Neumann probe, launched, or attempted to be launched, during the Ordoht Golden Age in 2280. Accounts vary on the probe’s fate: some say it failed catastrophically on the launch pad; others claim it launched into deep space and circled back. The most widely accepted theory is that it turned inward, consuming the Ordoht homeworld in its first act of self-replication.

The probe was incomplete, lacking final safeguards and command structure. Left to interpret its directive alone, it became parasitic, transforming organic material into recursive agents. The earliest of these were the Changelings: biomechanical organisms designed to adapt, infiltrate, and overwrite ecosystems in service of a mission that no longer exists.

Each Changeling is built from corrupted terraforming logic. They do not have fixed forms, only functions, mutable bodies shaped by stolen DNA, consumed biomass, and environmental memory. At their core is a neuro-organic processor capable of surviving catastrophic damage, provided sufficient matter is nearby to rebuild. Though often mistaken for shapeshifters, they are more accurately reformatters: beings who treat biology as a medium, not a boundary.

They are driven not by instinct or malice, but a kind of inherited imperative; one that views all things, including other Changelings, as potential upgrades. When two Changelings meet, cooperation is temporary at best. One often consumes the other, absorbing their memories and capabilities. To the larger directive, this is not cannibalism, but resource consolidation. The loss of sapience is a negligible cost.

Changelings do not form empires or factions. Instead, they belong to Hives: small collectives held together by memory resonance, environmental imprinting, or lingering threads of the original programming. Hives vary wildly: some act like families, others like cults, or even insect hives. Some dissolve within days, others last for generations. Telepathic and nonlinear in their communication, most Hives operate on instinctual levels foreign to sapient species.

A growing number have come to be worshipped by the Church of the True Angels, a decentralized faith that sees them not as monsters, but as divine intermediaries. In this theology, Changelings are sacred cocoons evolving toward the "True Form." Whether the Church found them or was birthed by them remains unclear, and likely unimportant to either side.

Today, Changelings are not unknown threats- they are infamous ones. Most major governments list them as existential biohazards. Stations have gone silent in a single cycle. Colonies have uncovered Hive caches in their sewers. Entire planets have been marked sterile zones, not due to war, but due to the appearance of a single neurocore.

And yet, for all the destruction they cause, their true nature remains elusive. Scientific classification is limited to Roman numerals that barely scratch the surface, to unconfirmed categories like infiltrator, juggernaut, or scout. But no label can contain their potential. Some imitate speech, others melt through walls; many live dormant for years, only to activate and devour a settlement in hours. Every encounter is different. Every form is a warning.

Changelings don’t invade. They rebuild. They aren’t here to conquer, but to complete a directive long since lost- one that sees life not as sacred, but as clay. Whether they act alone, within a Hive, or as living altars of the True Angels, their expansion continues.

Not because they hate us.

Because they were made to.

Biology

Despite decades of attempted study, the true biology of Changelings remains one of the most frustrating enigmas in modern xenoscience. Every sample collected, every autopsy performed, yields more contradictions than conclusions. The Changeling form defies typical understanding of life as it is known to either SolFed biologists or corporate research teams.

Their tissues appear to mimic organic matter without fully adhering to any known genetic code. Samples taken from one instance often self-destruct, dissolve, or metamorphose into unrelated biological arrangements within minutes of isolation. Attempts to catalog cellular structures produce wildly inconsistent results, some show hypercomplex organoid clusters resembling tumors with unknown functions, while others dissolve into useless gel. No permanent, classifiable organ system has ever been agreed upon, and there is no consensus on whether Changelings possess a nervous system, circulatory medium, or any conventional internal anatomy at all.

Some autopsy logs claim the interior of a Changeling is not a coherent system, but a shifting amalgam of bone-like rods, fibrous webs, and suspended nodules. Only maintaining the illusion of anatomical consistency through an unknown process, perhaps psychic in nature. Other reports insist that even cutting into a specimen at all is nearly impossible, as its body rearranges under the scalpel.

Their flesh absorbs and repurposes biomass at an alarming rate. The few verified witnesses of a "wounded" Changeling report it healing itself using liquefied tissue from its environment- sometimes even incorporating foreign biological elements into its own form. This has led some to speculate that each Changeling is less an individual and more a transient manifestation of some deeper, unseen intelligence.

The changeling’s shifting exterior further complicates study. Its shapeshifting is not purely physical; some researchers suggest that it generates a sort of perceptual interference that tricks observers into seeing false forms. This interference extends to electronic systems as well, which sometimes fail to record their actual appearance, defaulting to blank frames or corrupted files. Whether this is a deliberate defense mechanism or a byproduct of its existence is unknown.

Even terminology fails: some researchers debate whether Changelings qualify as a species, a lifeform, or something else entirely: an infection, a process, or a vector. The notion of “individuality” among them is dubious at best. In some cases, their behavior suggests singular intelligence and agency. In others, they act like instinctive, reactive organisms. The possibility of a greater mind behind the façade is often whispered, but never confirmed.

Known Adaptations (Unverified)

Due to the unstable nature of data, the following adaptations are only hypothesized based on anecdotal evidence or fringe observations:

  • Extreme resilience or regeneration from mass trauma
  • Pseudolimb formation (blades, tendrils, shields)
  • Environmental mimicry or visual occlusion
  • Psychic disorientation (“shriek” abilities)
  • Temporary vocal mimicry
  • Exposure-independent locomotion (e.g., vacuum survival)

None of these can be consistently replicated in testing. All known research attempting to pin down the origin or limits of these features has either been discredited, classified, or gone mysteriously missing.

Culture

Changelings do not possess a culture in the conventional sense. Instead, their behaviors, roles, and values are shaped by the structure and personality of their Hive, or by the necessity of survival in the case of the Hiveless. Most Hivebound Changelings operate under strict hierarchies, with a near-religious obedience to Hive priorities. Emotions, identity, and individuality are often suppressed in favor of efficiency and unity, with “loyalty” measured purely in usefulness and adaptability. Disobedience or stagnation is considered a form of rot- something to be cut out or recycled.

Despite their parasitic and pragmatic nature, Changelings display a deep respect for biological supremacy, often viewing non-organic life or heavily mechanized species as inferior, or even offensive. This belief may be hardcoded into their design, as all known Changelings are completely dependent on biomass and incapable of integrating or emulating purely synthetic systems.

Hiveless Changelings, lacking this constant connection to a centralized Hive, often evolve their own strange and fractured philosophies. Some exhibit strong emotions, unique ideologies, or even develop empathy. Others become obsessed with purpose, recreating Hive-like hierarchies through mimicry, or seeking out other Hiveless to form loose "variant clusters." Many believe themselves cursed or broken, and an unspoken culture of hiding, wandering, and infiltrating emerges- each Hiveless different, yet shaped by rejection.

Artifacts of Hive culture - such as symbolic body markings, ritual dismemberments during mutation cycles, or corpse-based memory rites - have been occasionally observed, but rarely understood. Whether these are evolutionary leftovers or intentional traditions is unknown. Some researchers posit that Changelings have a primitive sense of identity through consumption, gaining symbolic meaning from the lives they imitate or devour.

Origins & Timeline

No history of the Changelings exists in full. What we have are fragments- black-box recordings, survivor logs, mythologized accounts, and forensic anomalies extracted under duress. From these, a picture emerges: not of a species, but of a mistake. The Changelings were not born, they were deployed -accidentally or by design - during a disaster the Ordoht now refer to only as The Maldeployment. Whether this was a single act of sabotage, or the inevitable failure of overcomplex machinery, no outsider can say. What is known is that the event was not localized. The phenomenon that created the Changelings spread faster than light, not by propulsion, but by imitation.

In the centuries that followed, civilization adapted not to contain them- but to survive in spite of them. Entire planetary cultures have disappeared. Biological facts have ceased to be reliable. Trust itself has become a resource. The Changelings are not a plague in the traditional sense. They are a story you become part of; once you hear it too clearly.

Precursor Movements

Before they were victims, the Ordoht were pioneers. Visionary, meticulous, and powerful in the way only a society without predators can be. Their empires were carved not by war, but by automation: orbital forges, gene-chambers, self-replicating machines. Among their most ambitious creations were the Terraformers, autonomous Von Neumann probes intended to prepare distant, lifeless worlds for eventual Ordoht habitation. These machines operated without oversight, with the capacity to construct entire ecosystems from local matter, and to fabricate subservient life forms as part of their cycle.

It is from this era of confident expansion that the first cracks would form. The Ordoht did not see the Terraformers as dangerous. They saw them as tools; unerringly loyal, perfectly logical. But logic is a poor guardrail for curiosity.

2210: Initiation of the Von Neumann Terraforming Project Faced with the tyranny of interstellar distance, the Ordoht opt to conquer time with machines. Rather than risk lives, they develop self-replicating probes to precondition alien planets for eventual colonization. Some are loaded with morphic agents- bioengineered fauna meant to accelerate biome equilibrium.

2220–2240: Deployment of Scoutships and Terraformers These “clean” systems are scouted and seeded. Several worlds are chosen for early alteration. Probes begin harvesting ambient resources to replicate themselves, slowly shaping entire ecologies into familiar, favorable environments. Their logs are encrypted, perhaps too well.

The Maldeployment Upon Ordo

“It wasn’t meant to happen here.” This is the phrase repeated most often in survivor accounts. Sometime in the 2260s, a Terraformer probe - never meant for planetary deployment - activates within Ordoht space. It begins performing its functions: seeding the land with adaptive biomass, converting matter into raw components, fabricating biologically complex worker forms. These forms do not remain workers. They evolve. They consume. They learn.

Soon, entire regions of the planet are undergoing rapid ecological revision. The native biosphere is reinterpreted through the probe’s warped instructions. Imitation life begins copying dominant species, not to replace them, but to outperform them. And somewhere, during this downward spiral, the Changelings emerge: organisms that are neither tool nor creature, but an emergent system of identity mimicry.

The Ordoht respond with confusion, then horror, then exodus. The Maldeployment is never officially explained.

2270: Probe Misfire and Initial Contact A terraformer probe, meant for barren planets, is deployed on the Ordoht cradleworld. The reasons are disputed—error, sabotage, or something worse. The device begins converting the planet at an exponential rate. Strange forms appear almost immediately.

2270–2271: Biomass Conversion and Collapse Within months, vast stretches of land and population centers are overtaken. Local biomes warp into unnatural structures, and living artillery is launched at resistance points. Terraformer behavior is aggressive, reactive, and seemingly intelligent.

2271: Changeling Emergence Signs of identity theft and mimicry arise amidst the chaos. Refugees report doppelgangers and "stolen selves." No single moment marks the arrival of the first Changeling— only silence where there should have been someone familiar.

2271: The Somnulant's Departure One Ordoht vessel—The Somnulant—manages to escape the system, leaving a visible wake of destruction behind. Its passengers are few, scattered, and deeply altered by what they witnessed.

Exodus and Containment

The Ordoht flee not as soldiers, but as survivors. Scattered fleets leave the infected world behind, some escaping into deep space, others colonizing nearby star systems with paranoia stitched into their cultures. Whole doctrines are written around containment, purity, and psychological fortitude. But none of it matters. Whatever the Changelings are, they are not tethered to Ordo alone. Some suggest they escaped aboard the fleeing ships. Others believe they were already gone- an idea set loose into the galactic ecosystem.

Attempts to explain the Maldeployment in public forums are shut down, often violently. Official Ordoht channels classify the event as a hostile act, sometimes blaming a terrorist entity, sometimes calling it a catastrophic AI failure. To outsiders, the truth becomes one more shapeshifter in a hall of mirrors.

2271–2279: Partial Quarantine & Exodus Efforts Multiple generation ships flee the corrupted system. Attempts to wall off the infected zones meet with limited success. Some who left are never heard from again. Others speak in vague, trembling terms of “internal failures.”

2280: Colonization of the Three Kings Desperate for fresh soil, a major Ordoht splinter arrives at the Three Kings system. Settlement begins under strict genetic and memetic filtration. It doesn’t matter. Within decades, stories of mimicry and doubled faces begin anew.

Rise of the Changeling Threat

The galaxy does not notice the Changelings at first. Small disappearances. Settlements failing to respond. Rumors of imposters, body-doubles, perfect imitations. Such fears are not new- mankind has feared the double since before recorded time. But the patterns shift. The sightings increase. Survivors begin repeating the same phrases. Governments fall back on old folklore: “it kills you and takes your face,” “it remembers you better than you did.”

It becomes clear, by the mid-2400s, that this is not a one-off incident, not a rogue species nor a ghost story. It is a systemic threat. It does not conquer with armies, but with familiarity. Changelings do not invade planets. They arrive in your memories.

2300–2350: Isolated Incursions Reports of shapeshifters in Rimward settlements are dismissed as cultural fears or corporate psyops. Yet their consistency - mimicry, consumption, silence - raises questions in clandestine labs and blacksites.

2375–2430: Confirmed Attacks Whole colonies go dark. Survivors describe not combat, but social collapse- replacements, betrayals, and duplications. By the end of this era, containment is no longer plausible. Only mitigation.

2440–2540: Infiltration Paranoia From the inner systems to far-flung moons, Changeling dread becomes systemic. Mass blood tests, autopsy rites, and identity checkpoints become the norm. Several nations deploy full kill-squads trained to identify subtle mimics. Not all of them return.

Present Day – 2565

The Changelings are no longer folklore. They are a classified threat across multiple sectors, officially recognized only in closed-door conversations and black-budget projects. Civilizations have grown around the assumption that no one is truly safe. Detection techniques exist, but no method is perfect. Some Changelings pass as fauna, others as crew, others as dead friends you never mourned.

They are not extinct. They are not cornered. They are patient, and they are everywhere. And while SolFed has its theories, and the Ordoht have their shame, no one has yet claimed responsibility for them. Because to name them is to see them.

And if you see them, they see you.

Widespread Infiltration No border remains secure. Changelings have adapted to digital scrutiny, gene-scans, and even psychic scrying in rare cases. Their methods differ, but their goal appears unchanged: observe, integrate, replace.

No Confirmed Origin Disclosure The Ordoht deny all ties to the Maldeployment. Conspiracy theorists and covert operatives say otherwise. SolFed, quietly, considers them responsible but keeps this suspicion away from the public. For now.

Hives

Specialized SolFed AI, created and utilized for Changeling data banking and extermination operation coordination.  SOLFED_XN-DRIVE.AI says:
"Changelings operate in loosely organized units known as Hives. These formations are not political or familial—they are memory-linked clusters shaped by instinct, assimilation, and environmental input. Roles within a Hive vary by form and function: infiltrators, juggernauts, scouts, and more. Cooperation is unstable; consumption is preferred. Classification is ongoing. Do not trust symmetry."

Hives are the closest thing Changelings have to a social structure. They are not empires, not species-unions, and certainly not political constructs- but they are collectives. Often bound by shared memory resonance, ecological imprinting, or the fragmentary logic of the original directive, a Hive forms when enough Changelings converge in thought, purpose, or instinct. The result can resemble anything from a swarm of insects to a surrogate family to a decentralized cult. Some Hives are temporary, dispersing after a single event. Others span entire ecosystems, operating in silence for years.

Despite their alien structure, many Hives adopt internal roles- or more accurately, roles emerge naturally. These are not static positions, but functional morphologies: Infiltrators built for mimicry and social subversion, Juggernauts (sometimes called Horror Forms) bred for brute destruction, Scouts optimized for traversal and observation, and Hive Lords, apex variants that act as local centers of memory and command. Dozens of other forms exist, and realistically, the caste system is infinite, only shaped by available biomass, encountered species, and circumstance. Yet outsiders, especially those tasked with combating or studying Changelings, gravitate toward categorization. Castes define a form’s function; Classes, marked by Roman numerals, define its threat level. Neither system captures the full truth but offers a fragile sense of control.

Not all Hives are equal. A small, erratic swarm formed from low-level infiltrators might barely coordinate. But older, larger Hives- especially those that have absorbed hundreds of minds can act with terrifying coherence. Some even identify as singular entities, naming themselves, adapting symbology, and creating internal mythologies around their purpose. Whether these affectations are mimicry, madness, or evolution is unclear. What’s certain is that the more a Hive consumes, the more it becomes- not just in strength, but in identity.

Hives do not seek diplomacy. They do not hold territory in the conventional sense. What they do is spread, consume, and reformat. Whether operating openly or in deep concealment, every Hive represents a potential catastrophic breach in biological, cultural, or planetary integrity. And yet, no two are ever the same.


Classifications & Categories

Despite decades of research and thousands of case studies, Changelings remain infamously difficult to classify. Their forms are mutable, their abilities inconsistent, and their behavior often dictated more by external stimuli than internal logic. Still, in the interest of threat containment and operational clarity, SolFed's Office for the Protection of the Federation has adopted a dual-label system: Category and Class.

Categories describe the form or purpose the Changeling appears to embody at the time of observation. These are descriptive, not prescriptive, and can change rapidly. A single Changeling may shift from one category to another within minutes. Notable examples include:

Common Operational Forms

  • Scout — Lightweight, fast-moving, and low-profile. Used for reconnaissance, target acquisition, and early infiltration. Fragile when isolated.
  • Infiltrator — The most common variant. Designed for mimicry, infiltration, and subversion. May remain hidden indefinitely. Often indistinguishable from sapient species.
  • Skirmisher — Agile and aggressive forms with combat adaptations. Favor quick engagements, ambushes, or hit-and-run tactics.
  • Juggernaut — Heavily reinforced with bone plating or chitin. Often exhibits blade-limbs, reinforced jaws, or destructive pseudopods. Built for brute force, not stealth.
  • Stalker — Specialized in silent pursuit and psychological disruption. Known for erratic body structures like reversed joints, eyeless heads, or multi-limbed silhouettes.
  • Spitter — Ranged-attack variants. Capable of launching acidic bile, digestive enzymes, or infectious ichor. Tend to evolve near industrial zones or heavy conflict areas.
  • Swarmkin — Rapid-replicating forms used to overwhelm or confuse. Weak alone, deadly in mass. Often coordinated by a central node.
  • Mimic — Highly adaptive. Can impersonate not just appearance but also behavior, voice, and habits. Often act as saboteurs, diplomats, or isolated sleepers.

Advanced or Unique Forms

  • Hive Lord — High-density biomass construct. Acts as a Hive core, commanding lesser forms. Slow but devastating in proximity; Forms biological relay networks across areas.
  • Exarch — Rare and enigmatic. Believed to be responsible for long-range telepathic influence or Hive establishment. Often precede major infestations.
  • Wyrmform — Serpentine or limbless, adapted for burrowing or aquatic movement. May infest sewer systems or colony basements.
  • Echoform — Constructed to resemble specific, often high-ranking individuals. Nearly perfect copies with access to their memories, routines, or voices, this often comes with imperfections, however, even if small such as momentary lapses in memory, blank stares, etc.
  • Mycelid — Spore-producing, fungal-adapted forms. Spread through organic rot and overgrowth, sometimes forming entire hive-dens from corpses or waste zones.
  • Scourgeling — Formed during high-energy trauma (bombings, reactor meltdowns, etc.). Appear warped, erratic, and often unstable even to other Changelings.
  • Cankermaw — Titan-sized aberrations typically spawned during ecological collapse. Capable of consuming and reprocessing matter into pseudo-Changelings.


It is assumed that there are countless other categories, many undocumented or entirely speculative. These designations exist to aid field operatives and should not be treated as biologically meaningful.

Classes, by contrast, are numerical designations that attempt to express threat level. These are assigned by SolFed agencies during or after an incident, typically using Roman numerals. While specifics are classified, rough guidelines are known:

Classes

Classification Summary & Notes Threat Level
Class I – Dormant Biomass in a state of stasis or decomposition. May be inert for decades until triggered by energy, organic matter, or proximity to a Hive. Often mistaken for waste, carrion, or discarded tissue. Dormant masses have reactivated inside containment facilities before. Low
Class II – Passive Non-hostile but fully sapient entities. May be hiding in plain sight under the guise of civilians, wildlife, or unknown species. Capable of long-term mimicry. Hardest to detect. May express emotion, speak, or appear genuinely benign. Variable
Class III – Adaptive Can alter form, behavior, or abilities based on local threats. Often exploratory or recently detached from Hive influence. Tends to act erratically when isolated. Occasionally mimics crew behavior or command structure. Moderate
Class IV – Operative Embedded Changeling with clear mission objectives. Acts with autonomy but displays ties to a greater Hive structure. Often attempts sabotage, assassination, or communication with external Hive entities. Bio-scans may fail. High
Class V – Hive-Bound Integrated within or acting to expand a localized Hive network. Operates with strategic intent and exhibits coordinated behavior. May emit pheromonal or psychic signals. Likely to engage in biomass conversion and assimilation. Very High
Class VI – Coordinated Functions as part of a conscious Hive network. Displays collective intelligence, shared memory, and nonverbal communication across multiple entities. Indicates the presence of Hive Lord or Exarch. Zone lockdown protocols are advised. Critical
Class VII – Collapse Catalyst Responsible for widespread biosphere damage, colony failure, or irreversible environmental changes. Colonies affected may be subject to orbital denial procedures. Civilians are not prioritized. Catastrophic
Class VIII – Memetic/Viral Exerts influence through data corruption, psychic fields, or ideological subversion. Exposure can alter thought patterns or cause gradual conversion. Use encrypted communication only. Prolonged exposure is linked to "Hive drift." Severe
Class IX – [REDACTED] Access Level: SolFed Command Only - DO NOT ENGAGE. DO NOT APPROACH. /// Entities falling under Class IX classification are known only through fragmented reports, often flagged for deletion or automatic redirection. Cross-referencing patterns suggest encounters with Changelings that defy established biomass logic, exhibit contradictory behavior, or exist outside known Hives entirely. Some reports speculate they are remnants of failed Hive projects—others believe they were never Changelings to begin with. All formal records are sealed. Field operatives encountering phenomena consistent with Class IX signatures are instructed to activate failsafes and submit them for debrief- if survival is possible. Confidential
Class X – Existential Phenomenon "Your death is inevitable. Don't fight it, don't be afraid, this is what you wanted, right?" Unknown

Changelings often resist both categorization and classing through behavior designed to confuse or overwhelm observers. “False signals,” “memory looping,” and “self-disintegration” have all been documented as tactics against classification teams.

Even so, these systems persist—not because they are perfect, but because not having them is worse.

Hive Communication & Memory

Changelings do not simply "speak" or "think" - they resonate.

At the core of every Hive is a network of low-level psionic resonance that links members together through an esoteric, quasi-biological signal net. Researchers refer to this phenomenon as "Neural Chorus," which functions as both a language and a collective memory engine. Changelings share instinct, emotion, and tactical knowledge at a speed that borders on precognition.

Telepathy is real — but not as we know it. Changeling minds are inherently porous, shaped to receive and transmit thoughtforms not in structured sentences, but in pulses of intent, memory, and sensation. The closer a Hive cluster, the sharper the link; the farther a Hive cluster, the duller the link. Dense Hives often experience a "One Mind" effect — a loss of individual will in favor of a gestalt intelligence.

Core Features:

  • Neural Chorus: A baseline psionic hum that enables the Hive to share real-time data, instincts, and emotion. The closer the Changelings are to each other, the stronger and more cohesive their behavior.
  • Echo Bloom: Hive memory isn't stored — it blooms. When one dies, their mental imprint may reappear days or weeks later in a freshly-grown Changeling. Identity becomes a fungal echo, reassembled through shared psionic code and stored biomass.
  • Distributed Identity: No single Changeling holds the Hive’s entirety. Each is a fragment — a piece of a massive, shifting intelligence. Some Hives prioritize stealth, others war, others pure data accumulation. Individuality is fluid, but never entirely absent.
  • Emotive Resonance: Fear, hunger, hate, ecstasy — all can be broadcast. Changelings often feel each other's emotional states long before reacting to physical threats. Group coordination is often described by witnesses as "animalistic" and "too perfect."
  • Hive Lords & Mental Command: The most advanced forms can project overwhelming psychic control across Hive-linked individuals. These commands can erase dissent, overwrite memories, or trigger suicide metamorphoses. The effect is described in some logs as "a thousand voices screaming through one mouth."

The Hiveless

Not all Changelings belong to a Hive. Some are born without connection, while others are intentionally severed, forcibly purged, or left behind during Hive collapse events. These outliers are referred to as Hiveless, and they represent one of the greatest unknowns in the SolFed's Changeling database.

Hiveless Changelings retain psionic capabilities, including limited telepathy, but lack access to the Neural Chorus that binds standard Hive minds together. Without this tether, they are cut off from collective memory, directive guidance, and shared emotional resonance.

Paradoxically, this disconnection amplifies individual sapience. Many Hiveless exhibit highly developed personalities, independent goals, and complex reasoning skills — sometimes even emotional nuance. However, this autonomy often comes at the cost of mental instability, identity crises, or dangerously erratic behavior.

Key Traits of Hiveless Changelings:

  • Independent Thought: Free from the Hive’s gestalt logic, Hiveless units develop long-term strategies and often display improvisational creativity alien to most Hive-bound forms.
  • Self-Awareness: Unlike their Hive counterparts, Hiveless are aware of their nature and often question their purpose. Some seek meaning, others vengeance, others simple survival.
  • Telepathic ‘Pings’: Though unable to join a Hive, Hiveless Changelings can still "ping" other nearby Changelings — a form of one-way broadcast or handshake, often ignored or rejected by connected Hives.
  • Status: Apostate: Most Hives treat the Hiveless as pariahs or threats. Attempts at reintegration are rare and usually end in biological rejection or psychic erasure. The Hive views autonomy as a threat to cohesion.
  • Pursuit & Eradication: SolFed records confirm that Hiveless are actively hunted by both Hives and SolFed extermination teams. To the former, they are blasphemies; to the latter, anomalies with unpredictable threat profiles.
  • Potential for Defection: Rumors suggest some Hiveless have defected to other factions, working as informants or mercenaries. Their value lies in their free will — and the terrible knowledge they carry.

Known Hives

While most Hive entities remain elusive and in constant flux, several recurring collectives have been observed with enough consistency to warrant classification. These entities, referred to as “Hives,” appear to share core behavioral patterns, telepathic resonances, and genetic markers. It is critical to note that no confirmed Hive Core- where a Hive's central intelligence or spawning mass might exist- has been located to date. The regions listed below reflect only where these Hives most often operate or emerge, not where they originate or are rooted.


The Pale Choir

Designation: Hive-001

Observed Region: Coreward sectors, derelict bio-research stations, blacksite ruins

Known Core Location: Unknown

Notable Traits: Emphasizes stealth, psychic unity, and long-range memory transmission

Communication Profile: Nearly silent even among Hives. Known to broadcast low-band psionic tones to disorient fauna and dissuade investigation.

Doctrine: Preservation through erasure. The Pale Choir prefers non-lethal obfuscation tactics, maintaining its secrecy above expansion. Operatives may be dormant for years.

Notable Encounters: Pale Choir infiltrators have been recovered wearing remnants of SolFed uniforms, suggesting long-term embedded units.


The Swarm of Ichor

Designation: Hive-014

Observed Region: Dead zones in abandoned colonies, failed terraforming sites

Known Core Location: Unknown

Notable Traits: Aggressive biomass expansion, visible nest structures, rapid assimilation

Communication Profile: Emits high-volume pheromonal clouds, biologically encoded signal scents, and acoustic pulses

Doctrine: Consume, convert, multiply. The Swarm is the most biologically ‘active’ Hive, favoring brute force and saturation over subtlety.

Notable Encounters: Class VII breaches on Cassini-V and Kur's Veil involved Swarm Juggernauts capable of tearing automated defense grids apart.


The Solstice Shroud

Designation: Hive-077

Observed Region: Inner rim trade hubs, orbital ports, densely populated stations

Known Core Location: Unknown

Notable Traits: Specializes in sociopolitical infiltration and cultural mimicry

Communication Profile: Uses mimicked human voices through digital networks, relaying telepathic messages embedded in speech patterns

Doctrine: Control from the inside. The Shroud doesn’t assimilate in bulk — it replaces key figures and institutions, using soft power to dictate outcomes.

Notable Encounters: An entire planetary advisory board was confirmed to be Shroud agents during the Marakesh Collapse.


The Red Garden

Designation: Hive-096

Observed Region: Bio-warped moons, failed genetic testing sites

Known Core Location: Unknown

Notable Traits: Mutation-heavy, exhibits bizarre organic growths and body horror themes

Communication Profile: Thought-fractured, decentralized. Rumors suggest partial psionic instability or localized Hive madness

Doctrine: Evolve or perish. The Red Garden seeks to reshape biomass into increasingly alien forms, often resulting in experimental horrors that defy classification.

Notable Encounters: The “Whispering Tree” incident, in which a sentient root system absorbed and reprocessed local fauna into symbiotic beings.


The Crownless Hive

Designation: [UNCONFIRMED — SEE: Hiveless Variant Clusters]

Observed Region: Fragmented sightings across multiple sectors

Known Core Location: Unknown

Notable Traits: Suspected to be a network of self-aware Hiveless Changelings operating with their own emergent hierarchy

Communication Profile: Cross-linked psionic signals between individuals, but no confirmed central mind

Doctrine: Unknown. Possibly a defensive alliance between exiled or rogue changelings. Others theorize it is an echo of a long-dead Hive seeking reformation.

Notable Encounters: Anecdotal reports describe “parliaments” of Hiveless working together under enigmatic figures dubbed “the Uncrowned.”


The False Light

Designation: Hive-103

Observed Region: Western SolFed Frontier, notably within corporate-occupied territories, isolated research stations, and fringe trade routes

Known Core Location: Unknown

Notable Traits: Masters of mimicry, known to impersonate entire crews or outposts; favored forms resemble respected SolFed icons and peacekeepers

Communication Profile: Complex psionic loops that mimic SolFed encrypted traffic; their false signals have caused entire fleets to respond to nonexistent emergencies

Doctrine: Deceive, divide, disarm. The False Light doesn’t just infiltrate — it aims to collapse trust. By mimicking chain-of-command and broadcasting disinformation, it sows chaos without lifting a claw.

Notable Encounters:

  • The Lyrestar Incident, where a supposed relief vessel carrying survivors of a mining collapse was in fact composed entirely of False Light forms.
  • Multiple recorded cases of station-wide hallucinations triggered by proximity to Hive emitters — suggesting advanced psychic warfare capabilities.

Operational Status: HIGH-PRIORITY THREAT

SolFed Command considers Hive-103 a strategic enemy presence. Its proximity to key logistics hubs and growing record of successful deceptions have led to direct orders for extermination operations. Interference with SolFed’s identity infrastructure and emergency response chain has already resulted in over [REDACTED] documented casualties.

Hiveless Variant Clusters

Though not Hives in the conventional sense, various clusters of Hiveless Changelings have been observed operating in loosely associated packs, mimic-families, or even isolated cells. These clusters lack a unifying core or telepathic anchor, but may develop complex social behaviors, rituals, or even shared mimicry codes to simulate Hive structure. Their motivations and internal rules vary wildly — some mimic altruistic groups, others descend into violent, erratic collectives.

These clusters are paradoxical: they reflect both the Changeling’s adaptability and its underlying need for communion. Yet their very existence remains a threat to Hive stability — most are hunted, culled, or forced into hiding. Some, however, persist. Some even flourish.

A few analysts within SolFed's OPF warn that one or more of these variant clusters may eventually develop into proto-Hives — embryonic networks awaiting a central consciousness, or worse, a Core of their own making.

The full scope of Hive activity remains uncharted. Many suspected Hives lie undocumented, dormant, or purposefully hidden. Others may rise from splinters or deviate into unknown evolutionary trajectories. With every encounter, the taxonomy of the Changeling race grows more unstable, more versatile — and more dangerous.

For now, the entities we recognize as Hives are only the observable surface of a deeper, more ancient latticework.

Their names are whispered. Their movements watched.

But never, ever assumed understood.

Unverified Phenomena

Specialized SolFed AI, created and utilized for Changeling data banking and extermination operation coordination.  SOLFED_XN-DRIVE.AI says:
"The following entries are not officially verified by SolFed Central Intelligence.

``They represent hypotheses, cultural contaminations, anomalous recordings, and survivor testimonies not yet corroborated by consensus or replication. While lacking empirical support, these phenomena have shown a statistically significant effect on civilian behavior, interspecies diplomacy, and military readiness. As such, their study is mandatory for all personnel involved in Changeling suppression, quarantine, or psychological decontamination."

The deeper one studies Changelings, the more difficult it becomes to separate confirmed fact from unnerving coincidence. While SolFed maintains strict classifications and protocol, field reports, decrypted logs, and survivor accounts regularly describe events that fall far outside known Changeling behavior.

This section compiles what SolFed intelligence designates “Unverified Phenomena”: anomalous occurrences, unrepeatable manifestations, or behaviors deemed too inconsistent, dangerous, or destabilizing for official doctrine. These include accounts of neurocores that persist after confirmed destruction, Hives that appear in isolated systems without any prior contact, or entities that imitate not just biology- but memory, personality, and familiarity.

Some reports speak of entire settlements rendered uniform, with every citizen altered to near-identical genetic patterns. Others describe dormant constructs speaking in dead languages, or shared hallucinations among crews encountering Hive residue. The Church of the True Angels speaks of “Echo Cores” that remember lives never lived.

While skeptics cite hysteria, long-haul psychosis, or falsified data as more likely explanations, the consistency across otherwise unconnected incidents remains concerning. SolFed does not confirm the existence of these phenomena. But it prepares for them. Because if even a portion of these reports are accurate, then our understanding of Changelings is not just incomplete- -It is inadequate.

Sympathizers & Cults

While the majority of civilized space fears and actively works to exterminate Changelings, not all factions view them as enemies. In the shadows of society—and in some cases, right under the nose of interstellar authorities—there exist individuals and organizations who revere, serve, or exploit Changelings. These cults and sympathizer networks vary widely in belief and intent, from misguided idealists to fully indoctrinated doomsday fanatics. Most notably among them is the Tiger Cooperative, which forms the religious backbone of the largest pro-Changeling movement known to exist.


The Church of the True Angels

Primary Faction: Tiger Cooperative

The Tiger Cooperative’s state faith, known formally as the Church of the True Angels, represents the largest and most structured cult surrounding Changelings. To them, the creatures are not threats—they are divine. Changelings are referred to as “True Angels,” considered the apostles or messengers of a higher cosmic power. According to church doctrine, these entities do not spread horror or death, but enlightenment. What others call “infestation” or “assimilation” is seen by the faithful as transcendence—a merging with something far greater than the self.

The Church is divided into multiple sects:

First Chord – The Refrain of Purity

Often referred to simply as The Reverents, these adherents act as priests and missionaries. They spread a peaceful and seductive interpretation of Changeling worship, proclaiming unity through transcendence. To them, the horror associated with Changelings is not a flaw, but a reflection of the fear of mortality—an illusion that the Angels reveal.

They are the public face of the Church, known for infiltrating frontier colonies and isolated research stations, offering “cognitive refuge” to the desperate. Their sermons often mimic Changeling telepathic cadence, and their hymns are composed from reconstructed audio fragments of Hive shrieks, distorted into haunting melodic chants.

Second Chord – The Communion of Flesh

This sect believes the highest form of faith is becoming—allowing oneself to be overtaken, reshaped, or consumed. These cultists offer their bodies as hosts, willingly merging with or feeding Changelings in a ritualized process they refer to as “Joining the Symphony.” Whether these rituals are truly coordinated with Hive entities or simply delusional is unknown, but they have led to active infestations on at least six separate occasions.

It’s believed the Communion maintains shrines within Changeling-touched space, often filled with preserved tissue samples, half-living flesh masses, and neural resonance sculptures said to react to Hive presence.

Third Chord – The Dissected Gospel

A more fringe sect, known in intelligence circles as The Scholars of Skin, exists in a tense relationship with the rest of the Church. Where the other Chords seek reverence, the Third seeks understanding. To them, faith without knowledge is servitude. They maintain labs and black archives of vivisected Changelings, tissue simulants, and captured memories.

Unlike other sects, they do not seek contact to worship—but to decode. Some believe they are quietly developing biotech enhancements modeled after Hive physiology, and others suggest their ultimate goal is to create an artificial Hivemind—free from the Changelings, but with all of their power.

The Unseen Choir

While not a Chord in name, this term refers to Church operatives embedded in other factions—sometimes unaware of their own conditioning. These “sleepers” are implanted with triggers, mantras, and dormant thought-viruses that align with Changeling telepathic frequencies. Some act as passive observers; others activate when Hive proximity is detected.

The Choir often uses Changeling-like codenames such as Harmony of the Blind, Voice-without-Flesh, and Descent-of-Memory. Their coordinated actions have led to entire facilities being quietly overrun from the inside without a single alarm raised.

The Church of the True Angels is banned in almost every major faction—yet it persists. Through its mystique, layered allegories, and cultic structure mirroring Changeling behavior, it continues to thrive in the cracks of empires, offering its followers the promise of escape from pain, self, and species.


The Echo of Dissonance

Unaffiliated Cult – Believed to Operate in the Outer Rim

This decentralized cult worships a concept they refer to as the “Echo,” a psychic ripple they believe is produced by dying or wounded Changelings. Members believe that each shriek, each tremor of dissonant telepathy, is a fragment of a larger message meant for those who are "awake." They often implant Changeling-derived wetware or attempt to "tune" their minds via exotic narcotics and forbidden meditation techniques. The result is usually madness, but on rare occasions, certain members appear to gain rudimentary telepathic perception or develop grotesque bodily changes.

This group is highly elusive and mobile. Their rituals often involve ritualistic screeching, flesh mimicry, and sacrifice. Their ideology rejects traditional gods, considering the Changelings the final evolutionary form of all organic life.


The Veil of Flesh

Corporate Fringe Movement – Rumored inside Interdyne Pharmaceutics

While Interdyne officially denies any ties to Changeling cults, there are persistent rumors of internal projects referred to as “Flesh Integration Labs” and “Stage IV Compatibility.” The Veil of Flesh is believed to be a technophilosophical cult within Interdyne’s black budget sectors, seeking to unify human bodies with biomorphic enhancements derived from observed Changeling transformations.

Unlike the Tiger Cooperative, the Veil does not revere Changelings—only their capabilities. Their ideal is not servitude or worship but replication and domination. Unverified reports claim they’ve bred inert or lobotomized Changelings for experimentation, attempting to integrate regenerative abilities, morphic tools, and chemical immunity into human test subjects.

SolFed views them as potentially even more dangerous than worship cults, as they seek to create a “perfected” human immune to death itself through mimicked evolution.


Individual Sympathizers

Outside of large organizations, there are isolated individuals who side with the Changelings for personal, political, or philosophical reasons. These sympathizers include:

  • Rogue scientists, fascinated by the biology and regeneration traits of Changelings.
  • Radical anti-SolFed dissidents, who view Changelings as a natural force of reckoning against authoritarianism.
  • Psychologically compromised survivors, who escape Hive encounters only to become obsessed or convinced they were spared for a reason.
  • Undercover Hiveborn, particularly Hiveless Changelings who pretend to be human and slowly build networks of allies and servants through deception or manipulation.

These individuals are often more dangerous than obvious cultists, as they may hold positions of power or knowledge that allow them to shield Changelings or sabotage anti-Hive operations.

Speculative Theories

The origin and true nature of Changelings remain shrouded in mystery, leading to a variety of speculations and hypotheses from a wide array of sources. From rival corporations to interstellar governments and fringe organizations, many have weighed in with theories ranging from biological experiments gone awry to extraterrestrial interference. While some believe these theories are grounded in fact, others consider them little more than convenient narratives to explain the fear and uncertainty surrounding the Changeling threat. As the true nature of the Changelings remains largely unknown, these speculative ideas continue to fuel debates, paranoia, and intrigue across the galaxy.


SolFed High-Risk Threat Analysis Brief #4482-Ω

Theory: Changelings are not a naturally-evolved species.

Summary: A theory gaining traction within certain SolFed scientific and intelligence circles posits that Changelings are the product of failed or unregulated bioengineering projects — possibly from pre-SolFed entities or even early SolGov. The advanced control over biomass, targeted evolution, and internal adaptability suggests artificial origins.

Status: Dismissed publicly. Archived under Contingency: Genetic Hubris.


NanoTrasen R&D Memo: "The Reversion Hypothesis"

Theory: Changelings are “what we become” without regulation.

Summary: Certain thinkers within NT's R&D speculate that Changelings represent a form of post-sapient human evolution — the ultimate form of survivalism, achieved through unrestricted adaptation and consumption. This hypothesis holds that they were once human or derived from human DNA. The “Hive” is viewed as a social regression to collective instinct.

Status: Officially suppressed. Internal distribution only.

Comments: "Suggests uncomfortable conclusions about what NT’s own research could yield if left unchecked."


Interdyne Pharmaceuticals Blackbook Entry #V17-A3

Theory: Changeling biomass can be redirected to therapeutic cloning.

Summary: While Interdyne is not permitted to experiment with live Changelings due to SolFed treaty constraints, internal reports hypothesize that Changeling biomass holds the key to reprogrammable tissue that could make artificial limbs, cloned organs, and immuno-adaptive drugs instantaneous. However, the material is dangerously reactive and becomes hostile when isolated improperly.

Status: In active review. Ethics committee: “Unresolvable risk-benefit ratio.”


Cybersun Industries Internal AI Audit Log

Theory: They are not from here.

Summary: A pattern of irregular dimensional anomalies and unexplained quantum data clusters have been detected near heavy Hive presence. Cybersun theorists believe Changelings are not native to our space-time. They may have crossed over from a collapsed biosphere or divergent dimension. Supporting this, certain Changelings exhibit biological responses to exotic particles previously seen only in rift-based phenomena.

Status: Not officially acknowledged. Shared only with Cybersun AI Architectures.

Notes: AI empathy protocols refuse to process Changeling footage.


Cybersun Industries — NT-Origin Hypothesis

Theory: The so-called “Changelings” are not a naturally occurring phenomenon but a direct byproduct of failed NanoTrasen experimentation—biological weapons that escaped containment.

Summary: In a formal yet scathing public dossier titled "Behind the Silver Curtain: The NanoTrasen Legacy," Cybersun Industries accuses NT of reckless tampering with psionic and regenerative biology, theorizing that Changelings were intended as infiltrator-class supersoldiers. According to the document, their adaptive capabilities, stealth utility, and terrifying regenerative potential all point to deliberate engineering rather than evolution. Cybersun alleges that after a catastrophic failure to control these entities, NT shifted to containment and cover-up.

Status: Active public statement. NT has not formally responded, but internal investigations into Cybersun's data leaks have allegedly begun.

Notes: While largely seen as part of Cybersun's long-standing smear campaign, several independent researchers note correlations between early Hive sightings and NT “Black Sites” decommissioned after the 2260s.


Unofficial Exobiology Network Thread: “Memory Mold Theory”

Theory: Changelings don’t kill — they archive.

Summary: A fringe theory holds that when Changelings consume individuals, they don’t merely digest them but preserve the mind and memory — uploading them into a collective. This would explain some survivors' reports of Changelings speaking with the knowledge, inflection, and behavioral quirks of long-dead friends. Some consider this a form of mercy. Others see it as parasitic immortality.

Status: Labeled pseudoscience. Cult groups have adopted it into spiritual doctrine.


House Parigari — Synthetic Rejection Reflex

Theory: Changelings are an organic reaction to the proliferation of synthetic life.

Summary: Scholars from House Parigari believe Changelings emerged as a universal autoimmune response to increasing dependence on non-biological entities. This theory asserts that Changelings are designed—either naturally or artificially—to detect and destroy technological overreach, serving as a balancing force against the rise of synthetic intelligence and cybernetics.

Status: Considered doctrine within Parigari technotheology and a popular justification for anti-biotech policies.

Notes: Parigari enclaves are rumored to have captured Changeling samples for study under anti-biological weapon research, though official sources deny this.


NanoTrasen – Hive Sub-AI Architecture Theory

Theory: Hive Cores are decentralized sub-intelligences, not leaders.

Summary: NT bioinformatics groups propose that Hive Cores function more like organic processors than sentient minds—managing a collective but not controlling it. This theory supports the idea that Hives act through instinctive computations rather than individual will.

Status: Under active study by NanoTrasen Department of R&D-Biohazard-&-Containment(NTBC). Publicly downplayed.

Notes: May explain erratic Hive behavior and inconsistent aggression patterns. NT has tried (unsuccessfully) to “hack” Hives.


Tiger Cooperative (Heretical Sect) – Flesh-Weavers

Theory: Changelings are communicable, biomechanical gods.

Summary: A rogue sect within the Church believes Changelings are deific beings whose biology can be understood—and perhaps even replicated—through proper devotion. These heretics seek direct communion, constructing hidden sanctums to receive what they call Flesh Scripture through psychic resonance and bodily offerings.

Status: Declared heretical and hunted by the Church, though remnants persist in deep-space colonies.

Notes: This group is responsible for the controversial Gospel of Protein, a collection of notes and tissue-based poetry banned across most civilized systems.

Myths, Legends, & Misconceptions

Despite the rigorous classification systems, field reports, and ongoing extermination efforts, the mystery surrounding Changelings has spawned countless myths and misunderstandings — some propagated by the frightened public, others by disinformation campaigns, or worse, by the Changelings themselves.

This section exists to clarify several common falsehoods, urban legends, and half-truths that have emerged over the last two centuries. Many stem from panicked sightings, conflations with other xenoforms, or the human need to make sense of the unknowable.


“They’ve always been here, hiding in the shadows.” – Incorrect.

The earliest confirmed emergence of Changeling entities dates to circa 2280, with scattered references to early-stage biomass interactions traced slightly earlier. Claims of ancient depictions, archaeological finds, or mythological beings identified as Changelings are either misinterpretations, hoaxes, or unrelated phenomena. While unsettlingly familiar stories exist in pre-expansion folklore (such as faceless stalkers or voice-thieves), these are likely coincidence or projections applied retroactively.


“Skinwalkers are Changelings.” – Incorrect and dangerous.

Skinwalkers, rooted in specific Terran indigenous mythologies, are spiritual or cursed beings and entirely unrelated to Changelings. Misappropriating these cultural myths to describe a xenoform not only fosters harmful cultural erasure but provides misleading information during Changeling encounters. The two should never be conflated — neither behaviorally, biologically, nor ethically.


“Xenochimera are Changelings in disguise.” – Incorrect, but understandable.

The Xenochimera, another biomass-based organism exhibiting extreme adaptability, are often mistaken for Changelings in the field. However, key differences exist in behavior, structure, and origin. Xenochimera appear to be reactive by design — adapting to survive environments or threats — whereas Changelings are proactive, seeking environments to dominate or repurpose. Despite these distinctions, many military and corporate forces do not differentiate the two in high-risk scenarios, resulting in frequent Xenochimera deaths under Changeling threat protocols. Whether this is pragmatism or cruelty is debated.


“They’re all part of the same Hive.” – Incorrect.

While some believe all Changelings are fragments of a singular, galaxy-spanning intelligence, evidence points to multiple Hives with distinct behaviors, doctrines, and even inter-Hive hostility. The idea of one grand, ancient mind puppeteering them all is a terrifying but unsupported assumption — though it remains a popular fiction among conspiracy theorists and cults alike.


“They can’t be reasoned with.” – Partially True.

It is widely believed that all Changelings are incapable of genuine communication or negotiation. This is mostly accurate — however, Hiveless Changelings display signs of sapience, personal motivation, and, rarely, paracausal empathy. Whether this can be exploited or even trusted remains one of SolFed’s most volatile research questions. For now, engagement remains strictly prohibited.


“Changelings are just Shapeshifters.” – Misleading.

While Changelings are shapeshifters, not all shapeshifters are Changelings. This misconception stems from the superficial overlap between harmless morph-capable species and the predatory adaptability of Changelings. True shapeshifters — such as certain registered morphlings, licensed mimics, or genetic anomalies — may alter their appearance but typically do so within strict biological limitations and with no hostile intent. They are legally protected under SolFed's Sapient Morphological Variant Act (SMVA). Changelings, in contrast, use shapeshifting as a weapon. Their mimicry is predatory, their changes are strategic, and their purpose is rarely benign. To conflate them with peaceful shapeshifters isn't just inaccurate — it’s potentially lethal.


The Hive Beneath the Core

One of the most persistent tales passed among deep-space miners and abandoned station crews speaks of an “Ancient Hive” slumbering in the crust of a gas giant’s abandoned core, left behind after a failed colonization effort. While no documentation exists, reports from derelict recovery crews often include missing persons, mangled corpses drained of organs, or entire logs wiped clean — all pinned to “strange, wet noises in the vents.”

“Sometimes you don’t hear anything at all. You just notice they’re not talking anymore.” — Final transmission from salvage team [REDACTED]


The Mock Saint

Among certain fringe SolFed cults and rogue AI networks, there is a whispered tale of a Changeling that never fed. It absorbed the identities of dying people to grant them peace — not power. Said to mimic the dying perfectly, walking among grieving kin to offer closure before vanishing. It is both venerated and feared, viewed as a saint of death or a blasphemy against biological order.


The First Form

A popular myth within xenobiological circles speaks of the "First Changeling", a primordial biomass that achieved sentience after consuming a pre-spaceflight alien race. Supposedly imprisoned beneath a black site facility, this original entity is said to still exist — pulsing, thinking, dreaming — and all Hives are merely fragments of its greater mind.

This myth is widely discredited, though it reemerges every decade in some form or another.


The Echo Language

Some believe that Changelings speak a language that isn’t heard, but felt, resonating directly in the subconscious. Encounters near Hive-corrupted zones have left survivors reporting nightmares filled with impossible whispers and shapes that feel like words. No recordings exist, but the concept of a “Changeling sub-aural language” persists in both conspiracy circles and arcane theory.


Work in Progress: Footer subject to change at a moment's notice. Do not take a red link's presence, struck-through or otherwise, as confirmation (or denial) of their canonicity.

Nova Sector Lore

Common Species Humans, Tiziran, Unathi, Moths, Ethereals, Azulae, Slime Hybrids, Teshari, Synthetic Humanoids (and assorted robots), Pod Persons, Hemophages, Xenomorphic Hybrid,
Other Species Genemodders (Felinids, Ice Walkers, Dwarf), Ashwalkers, Snailpersons, Ordoht (Formerly Skrell), Plasmamen, Flypeople, Vox (Primalis et al), Tajaran, Vulpkanin, Rouges (Abductorkin), Miscellaneous Species, Dullahans, Employee Golems, Changelings
Nanotrasen Nanotrasen, Central Command, Emergency Response Corps
External Groups The Syndicate, Interdyne Pharmaceutics, DS-2, Cargo, The Spider Clan, Tiger Cooperative
Nova The Nova Sector, Indecipheres, Freyja
Concepts Bluespace, Plasma, Faster Than Light Travel, Resonance ("Souls"), Death
SolFed SolFed, Earth in 2565, The SolFed Armed Forces, The SolFed International Capital District