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Cult Colony
- 292 statements
- 55 feature instances
- 61 referencing feature instances
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Cult Colony | comment |
If and when humanity ever goes out into space to establish colonies, unless we develop some sort of super-fast warp drive surprisingly early, the first few extrasolar colonies will be rather isolated for quite a while. They will also be rather expensive to set up. What sort of people would volunteer for such an endeavor? Who would willingly cut themselves off from all other human contact, leave all their friends, neighbors, and relatives behind, and strand themselves years away from any support, rescue, or even conversation quite literally light-years from home? And who could afford to build a Generation Ship, Sleeper Starship, or other large but low-tech means of journeying to another world with enough people and equipment to found a self-supporting colony on a brand new world? A band of religious fanatics, that's who. The sort of people who, in Real Life, build isolated compounds out in the middle of the desert. The sort who set out in leaky boats with names like Mayflower and cross vast oceans to build quaint little English villages in the middle of the wilderness on a foreign continent. Even once colonization really gets going, there will still be groups of like-minded religious individuals who pool together their worldly wealth and found themselves a colony of their own, where they will be free from persecution (or perhaps just free to persecute the heck out of any of their number who aren't theologically pure enough). This trope is for both colonies explicitly founded by monolithic religious organizations, whether mainstream or cult-like and for colonies which, some time after their founding, become religiously monolithic due to a sort of revival fervor or the rise of a local charismatic religious leader who converts the vast majority of the population. Frequently overlaps with Space Amish, when the rejection of technology is religiously based. Naturally qualifies as a Planet of Hats. If the cult develops unsavoury traditions that it hides from visitors, the result will be a Town with a Dark Secret. One possible outcome when Settling the Frontier. |
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Cult Colony | isPartOf |
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Cult Colony / int_1296e5f6 | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_1296e5f6 | comment |
The aptly named Colony from We're Alive. | |
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We're Alive (Audio Play) | hasFeature |
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Cult Colony / int_13bb4300 | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_13bb4300 | comment |
In The Wicker Man (1973), there is the pagan cult that lives on the remote Scottish island of Summerisle. | |
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The Wicker Man (1973) | hasFeature |
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Cult Colony / int_150c3efe | type |
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Cult Colony / int_150c3efe | comment |
Empire from the Ashes: Pardal from Heirs of Empire; this is the variety that didn't start out fanatical, but became so after the interstellar civilization that founded it broke down. Specifically, a super-bioweapon got spread by their matter-transmitters throughout the Empire; Pardal quarantined itself but heard the death of the rest of the empire on its "radio". Since technology had wiped out their civilization, they destroyed it all and went back to a preindustrial lifestyle, founding a church and theocracy to enforce that. | |
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Empire from the Ashes | hasFeature |
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Cult Colony / int_150d2b35 | type |
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Cult Colony / int_150d2b35 | comment |
The Para Imperium intentionally creates these through its memetic quarantine policies. Ideological groups deemed a threat to interstellar civilization are rounded up and exiled en masse to frontier planets with no advanced technology. | |
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Para Imperium | hasFeature |
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Cult Colony / int_169f043b | type |
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Cult Colony / int_169f043b | comment |
In the StarCraft Expanded Universe novel Speed of Darkness, Ardo Melnikov was raised on Bountiful, a benevolent version of this trope. Or was he? The trope appeared in other works, such as A Ghost Story, where a wrecked colony was raided for data the colony wasn't dead and is briefly mentioned in Uprising, where the main character was raised on a planet that had a number of radical religions that fled the central government to get there, although he himself wasn't a member. | |
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StarCraft (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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Cult Colony / int_17ace8e1 | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_17ace8e1 | comment |
Bioshock Infinite has it even worse with Columbia. In that case, they built a flying city so they could become All-American Nazis. | |
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BioShock Infinite (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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Cult Colony / int_22f7b306 | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_22f7b306 | comment |
Prospect: the protagonists are prospecting on an inhospitable alien moon where small societies of people have decided to live there full-time. We don't get many specifics on their culture, but their very odd behavior and customs suggest some weird beliefs. | |
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Prospect | hasFeature |
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Cult Colony / int_247422c7 | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_247422c7 | comment |
Honor Harrington: Grayson was founded by the Church of Humanity Unchained, a sort of Space Amish cult that wanted to escape from the corrosive effects of technology. Unfortunately, unbeknownst to them, the planet they landed on had such high concentrations of heavy metals that they needed a very high level of technology to simply survive. They later went through a civil war and schism and sent out their own colony of religious dissenters to exile, who formed their own Cult Colony on the nearby (and much more friendly to human habitation) planet of Masada. It crops up several times in the side stories. One is a relatively new colony formed from religious dissidents off Haven, in the novella The Service of the Sword in the anthology of the same name. Another crops up as part of the Tallbot Sector in much the same position as Grayson, though in this case it's a local bug killing their crops and they were able to relocate to another habitable planet in the other half of their binary star system very early on. Unlike Grayson, the current population is solidly atheist and rather bitter about their ancestors' fanaticism. The Haven-controlled world of Prague was settled by white supremacists who were out to create an Aryan paradise but only ended up with a dirt-poor backwater planet known best for the natural good looks of its prostitutes. Thandi Palane's homeworld was settled by black supremacists who, due to an unintentional side effect of genetic engineering, ended up with descendants who were practically albino. Weber also likes having ironic things happen to this type of colony. |
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Honor Harrington | hasFeature |
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Cult Colony / int_24a18ffe | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_24a18ffe | comment |
There are a few examples in The Ship Who... Sang. In the first story fanatics were attracted to the icy planet Chloe to live in ascetic contemplation, and when the star destabilizes they're quite reluctant to accept help evacuating them as they've come to regard outsiders, and the outside, as impure. In The Ship Who Killed Helva visits Alioth, a miserable colony ringed by active volcanoes and a crashed brainship turned into a kind of temple. Volcanic activity regularly floods the colony with hallucinogenic vapors, and the brainship, Lia, is a Death Seeker trapped in place and unable to die. Between Lia's maddened babblings and the gas, the Aliothans have formed a Religion of Evil that is very into Human Sacrifice. |
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The Ship Who... | hasFeature |
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Cult Colony / int_25b6c2f4 | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_25b6c2f4 | comment |
The Colony (2016) revolves around a young woman who goes into Colonia Dignidad (Dignity Colony), in an isolated area of the Chilean Andes during the reign of Augusto Pinochet. Colonia Dignidad was founded by German expatriate, Paul Schaffer, who rules over the other expats with an iron fist, insisting that men and women must be segregated from one another, because he preaches that the love between a man and a woman is wicked and sinful, however, he regularly rapes little boys, and leaving the commune is forbidden, with booby traps being set right outside the grounds. He's able to get away with this since the commune gladly accepts "disappeared" political dissidents, and to keep a good relation, the West German embassy is actively complicit in Scaffer's crimes. | |
Cult Colony / int_25b6c2f4 | featureApplicability |
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The Colony (2016) | hasFeature |
Cult Colony / int_25b6c2f4 | |
Cult Colony / int_2ae406c1 | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_2ae406c1 | comment |
The Lord's Believers in Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri seek to turn Planet into one of these. The Cult of Planet in the Expansion Pack also seeks to do this. The Spiritual Successor Pandora: First Contact has the Divine Ascension, led by Lady Lilith Vermillion. Originally founded by Lilith to gather blackmail information on her followers via social media, it has grown by leaps and bounds. At some point, a failed assassination attempt results in Lilith believing herself to be a genuine prophet. |
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Cult Colony / int_2ae406c1 | featureApplicability |
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Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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Cult Colony / int_31a48eed | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_31a48eed | comment |
A preacher in The Outer Limits (1995) episode "A New Life" led a group of followers to the woods to form a colony. It turns out that the preacher is an alien who wanted to enslave the followers' descendants. | |
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The Outer Limits (1995) | hasFeature |
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Cult Colony / int_35ada324 | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_35ada324 | comment |
In an Aliens Special, also by Dark Horse, a company is cutting costs by having a variety of cults help terraform a planet in return for being able to practice their religions in peace. Mentioned are a cult that worships an H. P. Lovecraft expy, Presleyans, and the Latter-Day Satanists. | |
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Alien (Franchise) | hasFeature |
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Cult Colony / int_39ed367b | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_39ed367b | comment |
Piecing Together the Ashes: Reconstructing the Old World Order notes that a few of these popped up in the former United States in the generations following the Deluge, though most have collapsed before the present day. For those that have gotten specific focus: The Ryke of Aryan, founded by a collective of Right-Wing Militia Fanatic types who set up a cult worshipping Qeq (an amalgam of Pepe the Frog and Q Anon's Q) that practiced ethnic cleansing and human sacrifice. Eventually their followers got tired of this and turned against the culture, with many of their descendants now worshipping the demon meant to represent the globalist boogeyman. Cheyenne Mountain fell victim to this, as descendants of the remnants of the Beast's government established supremacy over civilians and acted cruelly towards them. Eventually they rebelled and left the complex, with their descendants now treating the mountain as a Forbidden Zone. |
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Cult Colony / int_39ed367b | featureApplicability |
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Piecing Together the Ashes: Reconstructing the Old World Order | hasFeature |
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Cult Colony / int_3b623c5b | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_3b623c5b | comment |
Refugees: The characters live on a compound and engage in Communion, a religious meditation in which they travel to distant places. They also hold ceremonies and Big Sings. No one is allowed to question the Benefactors. | |
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Refugees | hasFeature |
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Cult Colony / int_3bdaf6fe | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_3bdaf6fe | comment |
Faction Paradox has the Remote, a group of colonists indoctrinated by corrupt Time Lords in an effort to convert them into effective shocktroopers. However, there were rather interesting effects when instead of being indoctrinated into a religion of any kind, said gentlemen used TV programs to control the colonists... | |
Cult Colony / int_3bdaf6fe | featureApplicability |
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Faction Paradox | hasFeature |
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Cult Colony / int_405243c7 | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_405243c7 | comment |
Sanctum from The 100. It wasn't intended to be this, but when the original colonists (called "Primes") discovered a form of immortality by uploading their Mind Drives into host bodies, they ensured all future generations were raised in a cult that worshipped the Primes, and would willingly surrender their bodies for the Primes' use. | |
Cult Colony / int_405243c7 | featureApplicability |
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The 100 | hasFeature |
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Cult Colony / int_45854dfc | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_45854dfc | comment |
In Starship Troopers, "Mormon Extremists" build themselves Port Joe Smith, a fortified human outpost on a planet considered by the Arachnids to be part of their sphere of influence. It didn't end well. | |
Cult Colony / int_45854dfc | featureApplicability |
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Starship Troopers | hasFeature |
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Cult Colony / int_515f36bb | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_515f36bb | comment |
Sharon Shinn's Samaria' series features a planet founded by Christians. There are genetically engineered humans with wings called angels, whose voices call out to a spaceship in the sky that runs the planet. | |
Cult Colony / int_515f36bb | featureApplicability |
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Samaria | hasFeature |
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Cult Colony / int_59da62aa | type |
Cult Colony | |
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In Fallout: New Vegas, the Bright Brotherhood wants to use rockets to blast their way to space to find a place where they won't be persecuted. The player can either help them or sabotage their flight so that the rockets blow up. The Distant Finale shows they end up landing back in the Mojave anyways, wander back in the direction they came from, and end up helping to evacuate Novac during the Legion invasion. Earlier, in Fallout 2, the Hubologists also plotted to launch a space mission from San Francisco to found one of these. This (doomed) effort ties into several end-game quests. |
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Fallout: New Vegas (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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Cult Colony / int_5bb406f8 | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_5bb406f8 | comment |
In The Expanse, the Church of Latter-Day Saints (AKA Mormons) are financing the construction of a massive Generation Ship - the first of its kind - destined for approximately 100 years of travel to a nearby star. When it is shown in the TV series, it's larger than a city and the only ship to have Centrifugal Gravity. | |
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The Expanse | hasFeature |
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Cult Colony / int_5ccce5a8 | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_5ccce5a8 | comment |
Tech Infantry has the Christian Federation, who turn themselves into this as part of their rebellion against the Earth Federation. Eventually they are crushed with the help of a force of volunteer Jewish mercenaries, who build themselves a Cult Colony called New Israel on the ruins of the former Christian Federation planets. | |
Cult Colony / int_5ccce5a8 | featureApplicability |
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Tech Infantry (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
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Cult Colony / int_5e1f3e40 | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_5e1f3e40 | comment |
In the Elite series of space-exploration games, there's a small colony in the van Maanen's star system, not far from Earth, which is home to an extremist cult of religious types. Rather than the usual pastoral approach, they live in underground caverns and mine for gemstones by hand, exporting the gems to buy the bare necessities for survival on the hostile planet. A very popular stop, both due to the gemstone exports (albeit at very low ammounts) and the HUUUGE ammount of 'Illegal Goods' you can smuggle in there from nearby star-systems at a healthy profit. | |
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Elite (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Cult Colony / int_5e1f3e40 | |
Cult Colony / int_5e91c7d | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_5e91c7d | comment |
In Resident Evil 4 and its remake, the very rural, very secluded village of Valdelobos has become a stronghold of the Los Illuminados cult. The remake further delves into the cult having once been run out of the village hundreds of years prior, only to take refuge on a nearby island to bide its time until it could take back over. | |
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Resident Evil 4 (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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Cult Colony / int_60156176 | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_60156176 | comment |
Vorkosigan Saga: In Ethan of Athos, the planet Athos was settled by a misogynistic religious order as an all-male colony. They used frozen eggs and artificial wombs to keep the population up. The inherent practical problems of maintaining a stable population on a planet where importing so much as a photograph of a woman involves considerable paperwork is the focus of the plot, and the Athosians are treated quite sympathetically by the standards of this trope. | |
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Vorkosigan Saga | hasFeature |
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Cult Colony / int_64ddf294 | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_64ddf294 | comment |
In EVE Online, the Amarr Empire is descended from a colony established by a fringe Catholic sect called the Conformists. Later on, the Blood Raiders flee the Amarr empire and into deep space in order to practice their religion in relative peace. | |
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EVE Online (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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Cult Colony / int_66394ca4 | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_66394ca4 | comment |
In Neuromancer a group of semi-Rastafarians live in a colony in Earth orbit; they are descended from the workers who built the orbiting pleasure stations. | |
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Neuromancer | hasFeature |
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Cult Colony / int_6c1d09b2 | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_6c1d09b2 | comment |
Earlier, in Fallout 2, the Hubologists also plotted to launch a space mission from San Francisco to found one of these. This (doomed) effort ties into several end-game quests. | |
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Fallout 2 (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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Cult Colony / int_71e42e05 | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_71e42e05 | comment |
The Starship Troopers prequel comic by Dark Horse Comics takes place in the Port Joe Smith colony founded by "Mormon Extremists." | |
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Starship Troopers (Franchise) | hasFeature |
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Cult Colony / int_739d59fc | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_739d59fc | comment |
At the end of Octavia Butler's Parable of the Talents, the second book in the "Parable" series, the followers of the new religion known as Earthseed (created by the main character, Lauren) go up in space to fulfill their "destiny", which is to establish a colony and "take root among the stars". One wonders how this would have progressed if she had gotten to write the scheduled third book. | |
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Parable of the Sower | hasFeature |
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Cult Colony / int_73d7930f | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_73d7930f | comment |
The Luddite colony from Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode "Paradise" is a dark and unwilling variation: rather than recruit like-minded potential colonists, the leader instead intentionally stranded her fellow shipmates/passengers and used a secret anti-technology energy field to force them to live according to her Luddite philosophy. When this is eventually revealed, most of the surviving colonists decide to remain and figure out for themselves whether to maintain their way of life, but she herself is arrested for the crimes she committed stranding them there and for the murder of those colonists who died since because of her enforcing the anti-technology (including medicine) lifestyle. | |
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Star Trek: Deep Space Nine | hasFeature |
Cult Colony / int_73d7930f | |
Cult Colony / int_76686539 | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_76686539 | comment |
Mass Effect has a mission where Shepard has to infiltrate a colony controlled by the cultists and abduct their leader. Said "colony" is two buildings with a combined population of fewer than 20. Three years later in-game, another of these is found in a cluster near Earth thought to be abandoned. A group of Asari explorers accidentally stumbled across a human colony established and forgotten about before Earth had its own FTL, and after some initial terror at the Asari's appearance, the colony was slowly integrated into the greater galactic whole. Then the Reapers flattened it. | |
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Mass Effect (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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Cult Colony / int_794817ad | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_794817ad | comment |
Bioshock: Andrew Ryan, a Corrupt Corporate Executive with money (and forests) to burn and serious beef with anything resembling communism, built an underwater city where he could build a cult of personality that didn't require inventing some kind of ridiculous, communist-inspiring god. And then they accidentally found evidence of a god, and it was a slug. And most of the city realized (A)they missed the sun and the surface of the earth, (B)they had evidence that it was partially shaped instead of naturally evolved, and (C) they could take it all by the balls if they used the bioaugmentations of the slug to become superhuman conquerors and be worshiped as gods. Ryan forced them all to stay inside and play with their toys. Insanity ensued. Bioshock Infinite has it even worse with Columbia. In that case, they built a flying city so they could become All-American Nazis. |
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BioShock (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_7ac9ac71 | comment |
Alexis Carew: The New London Fringe contains several, as the central government's general approach to annoying political and religious groups is to encourage them to go someplace else. The third book, HMS Nightingale, deals with two such planets in particular: Man's Fall is composed of neo-Luddites who eschew any technology more advanced than gunpowder firearms (they're also pacifists who only keep guns for hunting and dealing with livestock predators), only maintaining a bare minimum spaceportnote a single shuttle landing pad out in the middle of nowhere because, like all New London planets, they're required by Crown law to resupply Royal Navy warships (for payment) or else the Navy will withdraw its protection. They justify this with a religious belief that darkspace is in fact heaven and therefore forbidden to mortals. Al Jadiq is ruled by what amounts to Wahhabi Muslims. They have been known to kidnap and behead spacers for chatting up their women, and their leaders initially refuse to even acknowledge Alexis. She eventually retaliates by threatening at gunpoint to declare them to be in rebellion against the Crown unless they release two of her crew they've imprisoned. Also, the conflict of the book is set off by the Al Jadiqis insisting on trying to trade with the Man's Fallers against their wishes. |
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Cult Colony / int_7de8951a | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_7de8951a | comment |
Any world with the "theocracy" government type in Traveller might be one of these, and several of them are in canon. It's a fairly typical explanation for why a colony might have been established on an inhospitable world. | |
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Cult Colony / int_7de8951a | |
Cult Colony / int_81692f99 | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_81692f99 | comment |
Several planets in various Star Trek series: Chakotay hailed from one set up by Native Americans trying to preserve their heritage. Nimbus III in Star Trek V: The Final Frontier might qualify once Sybok takes over. The colony in "The Way to Eden", if it had lasted long enough to properly be called a colony. The Luddite colony from Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode "Paradise" is a dark and unwilling variation: rather than recruit like-minded potential colonists, the leader instead intentionally stranded her fellow shipmates/passengers and used a secret anti-technology energy field to force them to live according to her Luddite philosophy. When this is eventually revealed, most of the surviving colonists decide to remain and figure out for themselves whether to maintain their way of life, but she herself is arrested for the crimes she committed stranding them there and for the murder of those colonists who died since because of her enforcing the anti-technology (including medicine) lifestyle. The social experiment from "The Masterpiece Society", which follows a secular philosophy to a degree where it is basically a religion. The colony from "Up The Long Ladder" was said to have been founded by runaway "Neo-transcendentalists", which seems to amount to their being Space Amish with a heavy dose of Oireland flavor. Dukat sets one up for Pah-Wraith followers on Empok Nor in "Covenant". |
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Cult Colony / int_8614f3c0 | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_8614f3c0 | comment |
In The Worthing Saga by Orson Scott Card, protagonist Jason Worthing establishes one of these largely by accident. His Sleeper Ship is hit by a missile and survives with Subsystem Damage to the colonists. It destroys their memories and leaves each of them a Blank Slate. When they awake, in a regressed childlike state, they see Jason as a parental figure. From there it is a short step to revere him as a god, especially since Jason Worthing has Telepathy. Out of pragmatism, Jason permits this. | |
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Cult Colony / int_8614f3c0 | |
Cult Colony / int_87dbdaad | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_87dbdaad | comment |
"Jonestown" from The Perfect Stranger by Frank Zappa is a haunting classical composition written about the Jonestown Massacre in 1978 where cult leader Jim Jones ordered his followers to drink a cyanide cocktail. The end result was 900 deaths, including women and children. | |
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Cult Colony / int_87dbdaad | |
Cult Colony / int_8d86465d | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_8d86465d | comment |
Waco depicts a real-life example. Mount Carmel is a ranch in the middle of nowhere; its owner and the Branch Dravidians' leader David Koresh has "taken on the duties of the flesh" for the group. Married men remain celibate while Koresh has sex with their wives and fathers children on them. | |
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Cult Colony / int_9c0c6d38 | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_9c0c6d38 | comment |
The prequel novels feature many other planets settled by Buddhislamics (mostly Zensunnis and Zenshiites). However, since the League of Nobles has legalized the enslavement of Buddhislamics for refusing to aid them in their fight against the Thinking Machines, many of those worlds are raided by slavers. | |
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Legends of Dune | hasFeature |
Cult Colony / int_9c0c6d38 | |
Cult Colony / int_af6a4464 | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_af6a4464 | comment |
In The Secret World, the Morninglight have built one of these in South Africa called New Jerusalem. | |
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Cult Colony / int_b6ba8ee | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_b6ba8ee | comment |
This is the origin for the Archduchy of Crius in Lucifer's Star which was founded by Prophet Stephen Allenway. Allenway had some strange views about religion (specifically that Jesus was actually a redeemed Lucifer among other quasi-Gnostic beliefs) which made him unwelcome on the PREVIOUS Cult Colony his followers lived on. Eventually, the Crius cultists took in a bunch of refugees with laws that made them nobility above them and turned their home planet into a Feudal Future state. | |
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Cult Colony / int_b6e12f99 | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_b6e12f99 | comment |
In Pitch Black, Richard B. Riddick encounters Imam, a character determined to find the colony New Mecca, where multiple religious groups are alleged to co-exist without religious conflict. When Riddick journeys to the planet in The Chronicles of Riddick (2004), this turns out to be true, although it is soon invaded by a separate group of Omnicidal Maniac crusaders. | |
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Cult Colony / int_b99c0df3 | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_b99c0df3 | comment |
The planet of New Tau Ceti in Associated Space was founded as a "pastoral enclave" by a religious movement that decided only humans could sin, so if humans became animals again, they could live without sin. So the cult members turned themselves into sheep. But the sheep still sometimes did stuff that would otherwise be considered sin, so the solution was that the sheep were blameless, but the shepherd had to pay the price for the actions of the sheep under their protection. Random visitors to the planet are thus conscripted as shepherds and forced to fight for their lives in an arena against a genetically-engineered super wolf. If they do well enough, they have defeated sin and may depart in peace. If they die, well, they've paid the price for sin, as is only proper. | |
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Cult Colony / int_b99c0df3 | |
Cult Colony / int_bcadd7cb | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_bcadd7cb | comment |
Averted for the most part in Warhammer 40,000, as most Imperial cults end up different due to centuries of isolation rather than being different at the start (those are usually eliminated quite quickly). When these isolated planets rejoin the Imperium the more pragmatic Inquisitors and Ecclesiarchs just check that there's no real heresy and let them get on with life instead of purging them from orbit because the stained-glass window shows the God Emperor's eyes in the wrong color. In fact, they're willing to let quite a lot go, do you want to worship the Emperor in the belief that he was a simple farmer before being the Emperor, go ahead. Do you believe that the stars are the Emperor's eyes and that he is always watching you, that's fine too. Both of those are canon examples, the big point is that it is clearly the Emperor you worship and not chaos or something else. | |
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Cult Colony / int_c2297a9c | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_c2297a9c | comment |
Judge Dredd: Mega-City One's Dark Judges-worshipping death cult has built their own holy city on the desolate planet Thanatopia where pilgrims go to meet their demise. | |
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Cult Colony / int_c2297a9c | |
Cult Colony / int_cec99ed9 | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_cec99ed9 | comment |
The Safehold series is similar to Pardal, but the anti-technology religion was artificially created to prevent the planet from being visible (due to radio emissions) to the genocidal alien Gbaba. And also because its creators were a bunch of megalomaniacs that wanted to be worshipped. And may have ended up Believing Their Own Lies in the end. | |
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Safehold | hasFeature |
Cult Colony / int_cec99ed9 | |
Cult Colony / int_d578ee98 | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_d578ee98 | comment |
Nimbus III in Star Trek V: The Final Frontier might qualify once Sybok takes over. | |
Cult Colony / int_d578ee98 | featureApplicability |
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Cult Colony / int_d578ee98 | featureConfidence |
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Star Trek V: The Final Frontier | hasFeature |
Cult Colony / int_d578ee98 | |
Cult Colony / int_dbbf2001 | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_dbbf2001 | comment |
In the Prince Roger series, one of the major characters is from a colony that was originally this. It was originally strict Roman Catholic, but then the witch hunts started and in the present day the main religion of the planet is Satanism of the Satan Is Good variety. | |
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Prince Roger | hasFeature |
Cult Colony / int_dbbf2001 | |
Cult Colony / int_de8ae019 | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_de8ae019 | comment |
Mostly averted in the Star Carrier series due to the fact that most nations were forced to sign the White Covenant severely limiting religious expression in order to join the Confederation. Most Muslim states refused, though. The series starts with the Confederation fleet arriving to help evacuate a Muslim colony that has been attacked by the Turusch. Well, technically, the mission is to evacuate the Space Marine contingent on the planet, but Admiral Koenig decides to save as many colonists as possible, focusing mainly on women and children. The conflict comes from the Muslim men being horrified that their women would be among infidels without their husbands. Koenig has to threaten the colony with Death from Above for the colonists to finally allow their women to board the transports. | |
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Cult Colony / int_e7afca1f | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_e7afca1f | comment |
Infinite Space has the Holy Nation of Adis, which forbids people from traveling to space. | |
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Cult Colony / int_e7afca1f | |
Cult Colony / int_e7e37776 | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_e7e37776 | comment |
Firefly had one in “Safe” that kidnapped Simon and River because Simon was a doctor and they wanted his skills. Then River started using her psychic abilities and they tried to Burn the Witch!, leading to the Trope Namer Big Damn Heroes moment. | |
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Firefly | hasFeature |
Cult Colony / int_e7e37776 | |
Cult Colony / int_eaeeea9b | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_eaeeea9b | comment |
StarCraft II has the Protoss Tal'darim faction, a splinter of their society that split off so long ago that the mainstream Protoss seem to have forgotten they ever existed. Their culture is radically different, focused around Klingon Promotion, dominating leadership, and huffing Terrazine gas. Oh, and they worship a being called Amon, who happens to be a fallen Xel'Naga and the Big Bad of the entire franchise. | |
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Cult Colony / int_ec44d991 | type |
Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_ec44d991 | comment |
The worshippers of the Holy Cows living aboard the generation ship in Bill the Galactic Hero on the Planet of Ten Thousand Bars. They venerate dairy products over all other food groups. | |
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Cult Colony | |
Cult Colony / int_fcb6cd71 | comment |
In Surviving Mars, one of the available sponsors you can select for your Martian colony is called the Church of the New Ark. Their birthrate is doubled and all colonists get the Religious trait (higher base morale, low sanity never leads to suicide), but they start out with only one rocket, they don't generate research on their own, and hydroponic farms produce 50% less food. | |
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