Monday, February 6, 2012
Tomorrow: Returning to normal life...sort of
Saturday, February 4, 2012
The Adrim


Alright, well, after messing around with SPORE for a while (for those of you who don't know, that's the video game where I've been making all the stuff you see in the pictures in Tomorrow) I decided to make some tribal aliens. Which I did. Thus the Adrim. One of the Adrim picture is riding a predatory bird which they use as mounts in combat. Better than a horse, because horses can't fly and can't cut a man in two with their beaks or gut him with their talons, now can they? So anyhow, the Adrim live in a culture that revolves around near-constant war on the plains of their homeworld, where the birds are very useful for obvious reasons. Most of them operate out of camps in the sporadically located forests, because the trees tend to get in the way of being dive bombed by a 15-foot bird with a razor sharp beak about as long as you are tall.
Wednesday, February 1, 2012
The end of Imperialism
Friday, January 13, 2012
Tomorrow: We need more maps!

ATL – 1882
The Atlantic War was heating up. Britain and Canada formed one side while France and the United States formed the other. As a sideshow to the current battle, Spain went to war with the Confederacy alongside the Mexican Empire. This, however, brought Austria and France into the war against the CSA. The USA, meanwhile, was eager to jump its southern neighbor and bring it back under its control, but the land campaign in Canada was keeping it busy. The British Empire was not able to field as many men as the United States, but they had technology on their side, including powerful railway artillery. Despite this, they were unable to prevent the Yankee seizure of key territory. With French assistance, Quebec was shorn from the rest of Canada and propped up as its own country. This put the remainder of Canada in serious jeopardy.
Down south, the Confederates were making great gains against Mexico and her Spanish ally. Cuba had been taken by amphibious assault, and the British West Indies provided naval support that kept Spain from retaking it. On land, Sonora, Chihuahua and Coahuila had fallen and the CS Army marched further southward. French naval assaults on ports such as Norfolk and Charleston kept the Confederates from receiving too much material help from Britain.
Meanwhile, in the American West, the Tsar launched a (rather stupid) attack from Alaska into the Northwest, while Confederate propaganda and some oppressive laws caused the Mormons to revolt and declare their proposed state of Deseret to be its own country. The USA, unable to fight on three fronts at the same time, was forced to temporarily ignore these new threats to deal with the one it judged to be more serious. Canada, even with Quebec torn off, was still a formidable threat, especially with the British armies still using it as a base of operations. And plus the Russians were botching their invasion, while the Mormons had next to no military capacity (though they were changing that).
Mexico, somewhat anxious to reclaim some territory, took California behind the shields of Deseret and the new Russian colony they were setting up, outraging the USA but not really doing much else. The US drive through the Canadian heartland ended up smashing into Ottawa, and the victorious US carved off most of western Canada as well and declared that the free state of Manitoba. Manitoba then seized Montana territory from the Russians.
The now-called American War resulted in the formation of the Republic of Deseret, Republic of Quebec, and the Federation of Manitoba. It also resulted in Confederate acquisition of important islands in the Gulf of Mexico (not least of which being Cuba) and of most of the Mexican states of Sonora and Chihuahua. The Dominion of Canada was reduced to a fraction of its former size, now mostly being restricted to Ontario. The Russians kept their territory and named the new colony Pacifica.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012
Tomorrow: The Workings of the World

With the return to the 1800s, the Confederate States succeeded in their bid for independence. Now that the two countries had separated, they and the United States pursued their separate goals. The Yankees provoked an incident on the Great Lakes and used it to invade Canada, bringing Britain down on their heads as well. A ruinous naval blockade was imposed by Britain, in particular semi-ironclad warships such as the infamous 16-gun HMS Huntress, which made a name for itself by almost single-handedly shutting down Boston Harbor. France jumped on the Yankee wagon, eager to attempt to separate Britain from her massive empire.
Down south, the CSA was rebuilding after the war. To obtain more land for their slave economy, they planned to seize Cuba and run canals through Panama and Nicaragua. At the moment this was not practical, but a fleet of ironclad warships was being constructed for the purpose of protecting these endeavors from the Yankees.
Britain and France duked it out on the high seas, while Prussia began to seek to gather the myriad German states under their control. On the Italian peninsula, Rome began gathering its power with dreams of becoming influential again. Japan continued their own industrial buildup, determined to get their own empire to rival the foreigners who still could largely order them around.
American forces in Canada pressed forward, capturing New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and Newfoundland. It declared these to be territories by the same names, largely to avenge the loss of the CSA’s territory. Dakota was admitted as a state in the meantime.
On Europe, Holland applied its trading power to begin maintaining an army, wary of the growing influence of Prussia, Austria and Russia to the east. Britain seized enough African territory to begin building their Trans-African Railroad, and Spain and Portugal began to suffer from turmoil caused by agitation by nationalistic groups. South America was largely quiet short of a small war in which Paraguay obtained Uruguay and the southern tip of Brazil, about doubling its size and obtaining a coast line.
Monday, January 2, 2012
Tomorrow: Back Again

The aliens, now dying of some mysterious disease, sabotaged their equipment to prevent human use of their technology. Meanwhile, the humans continued to try and destroy each other. The Americans, quickly shifting resources to deal with the new Japanese threat, employed the new Bell Strikers, the first attack helicopter worthy of the name. The Strikers were able to stop the Japanese advance in Washington, Oregon and Idaho in its tracks, though poor weather conditions in Canada meant the invaders enjoyed safety from such aerial assaults for the time being.
In Europe, Hitler’s Kriegsmarine participated in a three-way battle between itself, the Royal Navy, and the Red Navy, ending in a decisive victory for the British. The US Navy defeated the Spanish Armada off Cuba and began shipping their soldiers onto the mainland. In desperation, Hitler turned to a rare piece of captured alien technology, which happened to be a time machine. Here we go again…
A group of SS soldiers was sent back to the 1860s, where they virtually annihilated the Army of the Potomac. The Army of Northern Virginia, its way open, smashed into Washington, D.C. and burned it to the ground, killing Lincoln in the process. Its capital and president thus martyred, the Union was forced to accept a British offer to negotiate a settlement to the war. The Confederates were able to secure West Virginia and Kentucky, the former by military conquest, the latter by the choice of its inhabitants.
Thus disrupted, the timeline unraveled back to about 1863. A large quantity of ruined alien technology was also transported back, in Africa, the main site of alien control, sparking the beginnings of semi-industrial countries. The CSA had succeeded in its attempt to leave the Union and the United States summarily withdrew its troops from the now-separate country. A rapidly industrializing Japan seized Hawaii as a farming colony. And thus the world entered the 1870s…