Egon Stetmann maintained a research log aboard Hyperion during the Second Great War. The logs were primarily concerned with the protoss and zerg.
Protoss Entries[]
2133[]
I placed the crystal in saline solution for storage. Its density has increased 533% in the last twelve hours. Where does it get energy or raw materials for that? I have a terrible suspicion that it's... connecting to the ship somehow. If Swann suspects, he'll drop it out the airlock, and that would be a tragedy. This sample could lead to huge breakthroughs for the Raiders.
I Just have to be careful, and if there's any sign that it will harm the Hyperion, I'll destroy the crystal myself.[1] "2142[]
It is non-organic but has a molecular structure as diverse and complex as any organism's. It's developed an intricate matrix that makes it tough and surprisingly flexible. An alloy based on this crystal would have impressive damage mitigation. The structure of this matrix also suggests some sort of energy-storage system. There might be something to this.
The protoss are so far beyond us. We must seem amoeboid to them.[1] "2204[]
I tried scraping smaller samples, but all my tools broke. Luckily, I found some cast-off chips floating in the tank. Wonder how they came off? In any case, the chips revealed more of the matrix. It's keeping the energy in a vortex. How does it move energy so fast? It may be the fabled protoss warp technology. For all its complexity, the matrix is as solid as the strongest structure. Hm, I wonder if I could apply these dynamics to our own structures? Make a note.
I'm learning so much from this crystal, but I can't help feeling as if it's learning from me, if that makes sense. Late. Tired. Sleep now.[1] "2299[]
Breakthrough! The energy in this crystal is not kept in a vortex pattern. It was warping the energy around so fast that I couldn't detect it. In an odd coincidence, the warping slowed just enough for my sensors to pick it up. Not sure how or why. Everytime I reach my wits' end with this sample, something happens by... chance... and I get a breakthrough.
Is it helping me? Clearly I've been working too many hours. I'm going to go lose some more credits on Lost Viking.[1] "2318[]
2977[]
I'm a sham. I haven't truly learned anything from this crystal. I've just observed the smallest details from it and somehow wrangled a few tidbits when the crystal... helped me. I don't understand how the protoss can possess technology of this magnitude and not rule the known universe. Perhaps they simply don't want to?
Last entry on this sample. I figured out where it is putting all that excess energy. It's feeding the Hyperion. Subtly helping to power the ship, balancing out some of the more ragged systems. It's giving of itself, and has been since it got here. Swann is excited that the ship is running so well, but he has no idea why. And I'm not going to tell him.[1] "Zerg Entries[]
2103[]
Sample appeared dead when brought in, including tissue necrosis. However, tests now reveal frantic cellular activity, and it is moving.
This defies everything I understand about biology. I'm tracking massive generational changes in each cell. In the last hour, this thing has evolved more than humans did in 100,000 years.
If I can harness this, it could lead to huge military innovations for the Raiders.[2]"2139[]
2247[]
I'm learning how some zerg burrow as well. It's extremely sophisticated. They have billions of tiny muscles that vibrate at a low frequency, effectively loosening soil, crumbling rock, and snapping vegetation. They can "swim" through the ground. It's not quite as fast as running, but it's close.
I can see a way to put this knowledge to good use.[2]"2297[]
I used microscopic scrapings from the sample to test an electrical discharge field I'd been tinkering with for some time. The results were gratifying. As an interesting side effect, the zerg matter developed into a very dense but flexible material. This material could be used to reinforce the superstructure of those old Hercules-class cargo ships that Swann's always trying to find a use for.
I wish there were time to both pursue the discharge field and iterate on the hardened matter. I doubt there will be.[2]"2354[]
I noticed earlier that zerg alpha amino acids have unique R groups. I've run a full regimen on some. Results are stunning. Zerg aminos are able to combine dead cell matter with normal proteins to biosynthesize new cells. They don't suffer generational cell degradation. Simply put, a zerg will never die of old age. They can constantly renew themselves, albeit with radically changing cell structure.
We could never harness this for biological use with terrans: the results would be foregone and horrifying. But I wonder if I could alloy zerg tissue with some of our metals to make buildings that heal? The renewal process also throws off immense energy as a byproduct. Something there. I should see about harnessing that energy.[2]"2384[]
Breakthrough. I dosed some tissue with concentrated sigma radiation, and it slowed growth and movement severely. It would take a lot of work to safely deploy that much radiation on the battlefield, but it might be worth it.
Another breakthrough, and this one scares me. I mapped my way through the DNA of some brain tissue, peering back thousands of years, and I isolated the strain from which the zerg Overmind was derived. Not enough to clone the Overmind, but I could follow this strand to gain insight into how it controlled the zerg.[2]"Cut Lines[]
The following section contains information from a previous version of StarCraft II: Wings of Liberty which is no longer valid.
|
Cut lines found in Galaxy Map Editor indicate that Stettman had voiced lines that pertained to his research. They are listed before, grouped by subject:
Protoss[]
- The protoss excel at energy manipulation. As I understand it, arcthium gems are key to their technology. If we secure some of those I'm sure we can make a breakthrough.
- Ha! I was right about those arcthium gems! Even using tiny slivers of them to boost our reactors' output increases energy regeneration by twenty five percent!
- The memories in that ihan crystal are ideal for learning about the Dark Templars' battle strategies. Once you've studied it, we'll be able correlate the lessons learned and apply them to our troops!
- Huh. Ahh, well the Dark Templar have developed some highly unusual tactics. We can't mimic their kind of fluid combat style exactly but the improved coordination we've learned will net us an increase in firepower for all of our units.
- Ah those protoss relics are amazing. I've figured out a way to generate resonant kinetic fields that'll reinforce our vehicles' armor. Huh? Yeah![3]
Zerg[]
- Those hunter-killer hydralisks were just fascinating! I've developed a new pathogen that can be delivered via high velocity gauss rounds. This will make our marines' ammunition particularly effective against biological targets!
- We're really close to understanding zerg biology on a whole new level! I know it'll be tricky, but some samples from zerg queens would give me the last few genetic components I need.
- Well well well, ladies and gentlemen I've cracked it! The queens' dissection provided some real insight into the zerg's biology. On a practical level, I've advised Swann about fine tuning of our siege tank ammunition to cause maximum damage!
- Well I have completed the research on exo-dermal plating, thank you very much. I've suggested some adjustments to Swann that'll make our flame weapons much more effective against zerg flesh!
- Zerg evolve very rapidly, but if I could just examine some of their chrysalises, I know I can find a weakness.
- I've heard reports of hyper-rare mutant strains within the zerg gene pool. Studying some of those would be highly informative.[3]
References[]
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 Blizzard Entertainment. StarCraft II: Wings of Liberty. (Activision Blizzard). PC. Protoss research (in English). 2010.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 Blizzard Entertainment. StarCraft II: Wings of Liberty. (Activision Blizzard). PC. Zerg research (in English). 2010.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 2014-08-30, Unused HoTS Story Elements. StarCraft Legacy, accessed on 2014-09-04