The Temporad is over. But the Alienígenas Ancestrales are not gone. They are just… waiting. For the next crack in time. For the next Stone Gate to open.
The result: The Temporad’s twelve-thousand-year reign was compressed into a single, subjective second. Every event—birth, war, discovery, death—happened simultaneously. The Nexus Spires shattered. The flesh-tides of the Xylyx boiled. The Vordakai went mad, hunting everything across all times at once. The Yn-Sarrath gorged on the infinite unrealized timelines, growing so vast that they began to leak into real space. Alienigenas Ancestrales Temporad
The Obrimos probability of total reality collapse is 96.3%. The only way to reset the Spire is to introduce a paradox so small, so intimate, that the timeline hiccups —for example, having two different people remember the same unique childhood memory. But whose memory do you sacrifice? And what will the Vordakai, drawn by the paradox, do when they arrive? The Temporad is over
In simple terms: a paradox was born. A K’lahn Lord, , attempted to use a Stone Gate to retroactively prevent his own death. He succeeded. This created a double-exposure timeline—two realities overlapping like ghost images. The Obrimos, trying to resolve the contradiction, accidentally divided by zero in temporal mathematics. For the next crack in time
We will wish they hadn’t. End of Write-up.
The Alienígenas Ancestrales (Ancestral Aliens) were not visitors to prehistoric Earth. They were its first engineers —beings of semi-organic silicon, living metal, and crystallized neural matter. They arrived during the Cryogenian period, when the planet was a ball of ice and slush. They did not come in ships. They came through Lapidum Portae —the Stone Gates—remnants of a collapsed hyperdimensional empire.