Sarengo
From StarCraft Wiki
The Sarengo was a supercarrier launched from Earth. It would crash on the world that would be known as Umoja.
[edit] History
In the aftermath of Project Purification, a brilliant young scientist named Doran Routhe made plans to consolidate his power within the United Powers League by creating a colonization project to collect minerals and other resources from outside the solar system. It was very risky, but he had no problem with sending political prisoner lab rats to their potential deaths. Fifty six thousand prisoners were (secretly) prepared for transport, and of these, forty thousand were loaded into four sleeper-ships. The Sarengo was one such ship, following the Nagglfar alongside the Reagan and Argo on an intended one year journey to Gantris VI.[1]
However, the guidance system failed, and the ships traveled through warp space for twenty-eight years, traveling 60,000 light years from Earth. Eventually the warp engines failed, and the ships emerged within the Koprulu Sector in a star system which contained a myriad of barren, if habitable, planets. This event would become known as the Long Sleep. The four supercarriers engaged their emergency protocols and plummeted towards the nearest habitable worlds.[1]
Alongside the Reagan, the Sarengo headed for the world that would be named Umoja. However, it suffered massive system failures during its atmospheric descent, smashing into the planet and killing all 8,000 of its passengers.[1] The impact was so powerful that a new landform was created on Umoja-Sarengo Canyon.[2]
Two centuries later, a Kel-Morian Combine research team set about accessing the data banks of the wreckage. They received some...interesting revelations as to the nature of Easter as a result.[3]
[edit] References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Underwood, Peter, Bill Roper, Chris Metzen and Jeffrey Vaughn. StarCraft (Manual). Irvine, Calif.: Blizzard Entertainment, 1998.
- ↑ 1998-12-11. Sarengo Canyon. SCC: Map Archives. Accessed 2008-06-10
- ↑ 1999-02-04, Egg Madness. StarCraft Compendium Map Archives. Accessed on 2008-11-06

