How could a humanoid creature completely form within the span of 24 hours? [closed]How would humans be affected by a 12-hour day?Is it possible for a skelecopter to fly?What would make scientists realize they were on a flat world?Biological explanation of age stopping in near-human aliensAlien Biological Temperature Control?How could I explain why a humanoid, intelligent creature melts when splashed with pure water?How could a small human sized humanoid creature hang upside-down?The Multi-Purpose Horse: Stage I: Icelandic x YakutianExplanation to period in a sterile societyWhat (modern) weapons could be used to destroy skeletal enemies as completely as possible?
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How could a humanoid creature completely form within the span of 24 hours? [closed]
How would humans be affected by a 12-hour day?Is it possible for a skelecopter to fly?What would make scientists realize they were on a flat world?Biological explanation of age stopping in near-human aliensAlien Biological Temperature Control?How could I explain why a humanoid, intelligent creature melts when splashed with pure water?How could a small human sized humanoid creature hang upside-down?The Multi-Purpose Horse: Stage I: Icelandic x YakutianExplanation to period in a sterile societyWhat (modern) weapons could be used to destroy skeletal enemies as completely as possible?
$begingroup$
I have a strange idea, I want to reality-check. But first, there's a thing to elaborate on.
So, there are these undead creatures, zombies, skeletons, Michael Jackson, who appear in large numbers during the night and disintegrate once the sun comes up. The UV light causes their tissues to rapidly decompose, and sometimes even catch on fire.
Zombies have human levels of strength and size (~175 cm in height) and enhanced endurance through redundancy, lacking centralized vital points (i.e: the entirety of the body is used in circulating blood), and faster blood-clotting. Skeletons actually have transparent tissue but need power magnification through bows to be lethal.
Undead are created in underground pods. The resources, needed to make them, are acquired from the earth by a gigantic network of fungus strands.
The problem is that they supposed to form within a day, from scratch. Sure the number, that has to be replenished, can be lower as some zombies will hide in caves or bury themselves. Still, some have to be replaced from day to day.
The technology, undead pods are created with, allows for pretty much unlimited genetic modification. The pods and undead, however, are still (mostly) made of carbon hydrogen and oxygen, have cells and whatnot.
If it's possible at all, how can these undead form under 24 hours?
The criteria are a bit complicated, like time-traveling in Marvel movies, but it boils down to:
They are as strong (physically) as they could be (at least strong enough to kill an adult human) without compromising their ability to keep showing up every night for the rest of eternity.
- That means strong and resilient undead...
1.2. Who'll always show up every night. - They can grow in rather harsh conditions without any detrimental side-effect to the final product.
- They come on a daily basis, and never seem to stop. Though a method,
that actually creates them from scratch every day, would be nice it only comes a poor second.
science-based biology
$endgroup$
closed as primarily opinion-based by JBH, elemtilas, Arkenstein XII, Mołot, Frostfyre May 7 at 12:11
Many good questions generate some degree of opinion based on expert experience, but answers to this question will tend to be almost entirely based on opinions, rather than facts, references, or specific expertise. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
|
show 3 more comments
$begingroup$
I have a strange idea, I want to reality-check. But first, there's a thing to elaborate on.
So, there are these undead creatures, zombies, skeletons, Michael Jackson, who appear in large numbers during the night and disintegrate once the sun comes up. The UV light causes their tissues to rapidly decompose, and sometimes even catch on fire.
Zombies have human levels of strength and size (~175 cm in height) and enhanced endurance through redundancy, lacking centralized vital points (i.e: the entirety of the body is used in circulating blood), and faster blood-clotting. Skeletons actually have transparent tissue but need power magnification through bows to be lethal.
Undead are created in underground pods. The resources, needed to make them, are acquired from the earth by a gigantic network of fungus strands.
The problem is that they supposed to form within a day, from scratch. Sure the number, that has to be replenished, can be lower as some zombies will hide in caves or bury themselves. Still, some have to be replaced from day to day.
The technology, undead pods are created with, allows for pretty much unlimited genetic modification. The pods and undead, however, are still (mostly) made of carbon hydrogen and oxygen, have cells and whatnot.
If it's possible at all, how can these undead form under 24 hours?
The criteria are a bit complicated, like time-traveling in Marvel movies, but it boils down to:
They are as strong (physically) as they could be (at least strong enough to kill an adult human) without compromising their ability to keep showing up every night for the rest of eternity.
- That means strong and resilient undead...
1.2. Who'll always show up every night. - They can grow in rather harsh conditions without any detrimental side-effect to the final product.
- They come on a daily basis, and never seem to stop. Though a method,
that actually creates them from scratch every day, would be nice it only comes a poor second.
science-based biology
$endgroup$
closed as primarily opinion-based by JBH, elemtilas, Arkenstein XII, Mołot, Frostfyre May 7 at 12:11
Many good questions generate some degree of opinion based on expert experience, but answers to this question will tend to be almost entirely based on opinions, rather than facts, references, or specific expertise. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
$begingroup$
Are these creatures built from the same material as humans or, for example, can the skeletons have scavenged sticks for bones?
$endgroup$
– Muuski
May 6 at 19:50
$begingroup$
@Muuski Well, if it's strong enough, then yes.
$endgroup$
– Mephistopheles
May 6 at 19:57
1
$begingroup$
Meph... you can't ask "how" with a reality-check question. You're supposed to be presenting us with a complete idea and we evaluate it according to the rules of your world. Asking us to offer explanations for the process makes this a POB question. If you really are asking a RC question, please remove the "how" query. If you're asking "how," remove the tag and explain how you'll judge the best answer (limitations, criteria, etc.)
$endgroup$
– JBH
May 6 at 22:39
4
$begingroup$
Easy: Narrative Necessity! These undead form within a day, because they form within a day. How? That's up to you! Snap your fingers and click your heels, you aren't in Kansas anymore! If you want us to come up with how it works in your world, your query is by definition "opinion based". I usually don't mind opinion based queries, but I draw the metaphorical line when querents actively solicit opinions. VTC.
$endgroup$
– elemtilas
May 6 at 23:16
1
$begingroup$
Why do they have to form in a day? If you consider human soldiers, they take close to 20 years to form (depending on how mature and capable you want them), yet you can throw new soldiers to the war every day if needed. New ones are born every day, there's just that bit of lead time you need to manage.
$endgroup$
– hyde
May 7 at 5:54
|
show 3 more comments
$begingroup$
I have a strange idea, I want to reality-check. But first, there's a thing to elaborate on.
So, there are these undead creatures, zombies, skeletons, Michael Jackson, who appear in large numbers during the night and disintegrate once the sun comes up. The UV light causes their tissues to rapidly decompose, and sometimes even catch on fire.
Zombies have human levels of strength and size (~175 cm in height) and enhanced endurance through redundancy, lacking centralized vital points (i.e: the entirety of the body is used in circulating blood), and faster blood-clotting. Skeletons actually have transparent tissue but need power magnification through bows to be lethal.
Undead are created in underground pods. The resources, needed to make them, are acquired from the earth by a gigantic network of fungus strands.
The problem is that they supposed to form within a day, from scratch. Sure the number, that has to be replenished, can be lower as some zombies will hide in caves or bury themselves. Still, some have to be replaced from day to day.
The technology, undead pods are created with, allows for pretty much unlimited genetic modification. The pods and undead, however, are still (mostly) made of carbon hydrogen and oxygen, have cells and whatnot.
If it's possible at all, how can these undead form under 24 hours?
The criteria are a bit complicated, like time-traveling in Marvel movies, but it boils down to:
They are as strong (physically) as they could be (at least strong enough to kill an adult human) without compromising their ability to keep showing up every night for the rest of eternity.
- That means strong and resilient undead...
1.2. Who'll always show up every night. - They can grow in rather harsh conditions without any detrimental side-effect to the final product.
- They come on a daily basis, and never seem to stop. Though a method,
that actually creates them from scratch every day, would be nice it only comes a poor second.
science-based biology
$endgroup$
I have a strange idea, I want to reality-check. But first, there's a thing to elaborate on.
So, there are these undead creatures, zombies, skeletons, Michael Jackson, who appear in large numbers during the night and disintegrate once the sun comes up. The UV light causes their tissues to rapidly decompose, and sometimes even catch on fire.
Zombies have human levels of strength and size (~175 cm in height) and enhanced endurance through redundancy, lacking centralized vital points (i.e: the entirety of the body is used in circulating blood), and faster blood-clotting. Skeletons actually have transparent tissue but need power magnification through bows to be lethal.
Undead are created in underground pods. The resources, needed to make them, are acquired from the earth by a gigantic network of fungus strands.
The problem is that they supposed to form within a day, from scratch. Sure the number, that has to be replenished, can be lower as some zombies will hide in caves or bury themselves. Still, some have to be replaced from day to day.
The technology, undead pods are created with, allows for pretty much unlimited genetic modification. The pods and undead, however, are still (mostly) made of carbon hydrogen and oxygen, have cells and whatnot.
If it's possible at all, how can these undead form under 24 hours?
The criteria are a bit complicated, like time-traveling in Marvel movies, but it boils down to:
They are as strong (physically) as they could be (at least strong enough to kill an adult human) without compromising their ability to keep showing up every night for the rest of eternity.
- That means strong and resilient undead...
1.2. Who'll always show up every night. - They can grow in rather harsh conditions without any detrimental side-effect to the final product.
- They come on a daily basis, and never seem to stop. Though a method,
that actually creates them from scratch every day, would be nice it only comes a poor second.
science-based biology
science-based biology
edited May 10 at 20:20
Mephistopheles
asked May 6 at 19:40
MephistophelesMephistopheles
2,44921039
2,44921039
closed as primarily opinion-based by JBH, elemtilas, Arkenstein XII, Mołot, Frostfyre May 7 at 12:11
Many good questions generate some degree of opinion based on expert experience, but answers to this question will tend to be almost entirely based on opinions, rather than facts, references, or specific expertise. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
closed as primarily opinion-based by JBH, elemtilas, Arkenstein XII, Mołot, Frostfyre May 7 at 12:11
Many good questions generate some degree of opinion based on expert experience, but answers to this question will tend to be almost entirely based on opinions, rather than facts, references, or specific expertise. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
$begingroup$
Are these creatures built from the same material as humans or, for example, can the skeletons have scavenged sticks for bones?
$endgroup$
– Muuski
May 6 at 19:50
$begingroup$
@Muuski Well, if it's strong enough, then yes.
$endgroup$
– Mephistopheles
May 6 at 19:57
1
$begingroup$
Meph... you can't ask "how" with a reality-check question. You're supposed to be presenting us with a complete idea and we evaluate it according to the rules of your world. Asking us to offer explanations for the process makes this a POB question. If you really are asking a RC question, please remove the "how" query. If you're asking "how," remove the tag and explain how you'll judge the best answer (limitations, criteria, etc.)
$endgroup$
– JBH
May 6 at 22:39
4
$begingroup$
Easy: Narrative Necessity! These undead form within a day, because they form within a day. How? That's up to you! Snap your fingers and click your heels, you aren't in Kansas anymore! If you want us to come up with how it works in your world, your query is by definition "opinion based". I usually don't mind opinion based queries, but I draw the metaphorical line when querents actively solicit opinions. VTC.
$endgroup$
– elemtilas
May 6 at 23:16
1
$begingroup$
Why do they have to form in a day? If you consider human soldiers, they take close to 20 years to form (depending on how mature and capable you want them), yet you can throw new soldiers to the war every day if needed. New ones are born every day, there's just that bit of lead time you need to manage.
$endgroup$
– hyde
May 7 at 5:54
|
show 3 more comments
$begingroup$
Are these creatures built from the same material as humans or, for example, can the skeletons have scavenged sticks for bones?
$endgroup$
– Muuski
May 6 at 19:50
$begingroup$
@Muuski Well, if it's strong enough, then yes.
$endgroup$
– Mephistopheles
May 6 at 19:57
1
$begingroup$
Meph... you can't ask "how" with a reality-check question. You're supposed to be presenting us with a complete idea and we evaluate it according to the rules of your world. Asking us to offer explanations for the process makes this a POB question. If you really are asking a RC question, please remove the "how" query. If you're asking "how," remove the tag and explain how you'll judge the best answer (limitations, criteria, etc.)
$endgroup$
– JBH
May 6 at 22:39
4
$begingroup$
Easy: Narrative Necessity! These undead form within a day, because they form within a day. How? That's up to you! Snap your fingers and click your heels, you aren't in Kansas anymore! If you want us to come up with how it works in your world, your query is by definition "opinion based". I usually don't mind opinion based queries, but I draw the metaphorical line when querents actively solicit opinions. VTC.
$endgroup$
– elemtilas
May 6 at 23:16
1
$begingroup$
Why do they have to form in a day? If you consider human soldiers, they take close to 20 years to form (depending on how mature and capable you want them), yet you can throw new soldiers to the war every day if needed. New ones are born every day, there's just that bit of lead time you need to manage.
$endgroup$
– hyde
May 7 at 5:54
$begingroup$
Are these creatures built from the same material as humans or, for example, can the skeletons have scavenged sticks for bones?
$endgroup$
– Muuski
May 6 at 19:50
$begingroup$
Are these creatures built from the same material as humans or, for example, can the skeletons have scavenged sticks for bones?
$endgroup$
– Muuski
May 6 at 19:50
$begingroup$
@Muuski Well, if it's strong enough, then yes.
$endgroup$
– Mephistopheles
May 6 at 19:57
$begingroup$
@Muuski Well, if it's strong enough, then yes.
$endgroup$
– Mephistopheles
May 6 at 19:57
1
1
$begingroup$
Meph... you can't ask "how" with a reality-check question. You're supposed to be presenting us with a complete idea and we evaluate it according to the rules of your world. Asking us to offer explanations for the process makes this a POB question. If you really are asking a RC question, please remove the "how" query. If you're asking "how," remove the tag and explain how you'll judge the best answer (limitations, criteria, etc.)
$endgroup$
– JBH
May 6 at 22:39
$begingroup$
Meph... you can't ask "how" with a reality-check question. You're supposed to be presenting us with a complete idea and we evaluate it according to the rules of your world. Asking us to offer explanations for the process makes this a POB question. If you really are asking a RC question, please remove the "how" query. If you're asking "how," remove the tag and explain how you'll judge the best answer (limitations, criteria, etc.)
$endgroup$
– JBH
May 6 at 22:39
4
4
$begingroup$
Easy: Narrative Necessity! These undead form within a day, because they form within a day. How? That's up to you! Snap your fingers and click your heels, you aren't in Kansas anymore! If you want us to come up with how it works in your world, your query is by definition "opinion based". I usually don't mind opinion based queries, but I draw the metaphorical line when querents actively solicit opinions. VTC.
$endgroup$
– elemtilas
May 6 at 23:16
$begingroup$
Easy: Narrative Necessity! These undead form within a day, because they form within a day. How? That's up to you! Snap your fingers and click your heels, you aren't in Kansas anymore! If you want us to come up with how it works in your world, your query is by definition "opinion based". I usually don't mind opinion based queries, but I draw the metaphorical line when querents actively solicit opinions. VTC.
$endgroup$
– elemtilas
May 6 at 23:16
1
1
$begingroup$
Why do they have to form in a day? If you consider human soldiers, they take close to 20 years to form (depending on how mature and capable you want them), yet you can throw new soldiers to the war every day if needed. New ones are born every day, there's just that bit of lead time you need to manage.
$endgroup$
– hyde
May 7 at 5:54
$begingroup$
Why do they have to form in a day? If you consider human soldiers, they take close to 20 years to form (depending on how mature and capable you want them), yet you can throw new soldiers to the war every day if needed. New ones are born every day, there's just that bit of lead time you need to manage.
$endgroup$
– hyde
May 7 at 5:54
|
show 3 more comments
7 Answers
7
active
oldest
votes
$begingroup$
It is possible to 3D print a car in a day.
So your biological version of a 3D printer needs to operate within a day. The human body may be more complicated than a car, but it is also smaller. The energy needs would be high.
It seems like it also might be able to operate in parallel to some extent. The initial framework is bone, which is comparatively simple. While that's happening, other printers would be creating cells. Then put the cells into (marrow) and onto the bones.
You also don't need them to form within a day. If they take a month to form, that's OK. You have some hatching every day. And you have a backlog of partially formed ones. That would make the energy needs less intensive. More like an elephant pregnancy.
Note: technically what you are describing is more of a flesh golem rather than an undead. An undead would be in some ways simpler, as that would just take an existing body and fix it. This apparently requires assembling the body. Of course, if you have damaged bodies, it may be quicker to repair them than to make new ones. So you might be better off starting with bodies than making new ones from scratch. And then you actually would have undead.
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6
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Worth noting is that much of what takes time in growing a body is getting it right. If your creature plans to have a very short lifespan, it can grow rather rapidly
$endgroup$
– Cort Ammon
May 7 at 1:36
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Looking at the fastest reproducing cells in the natural world, algae (see: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macrocystis_pyrifera )...
https://www.answers.com/Q/What_is_the_world's_fastest_growing_algae
Tells us that we could get 3.8 doublings in a day. Not a lot. But we can work with that. 2^3.8 = 14ish... So we need to divide our final weight by 14 to get our starting weight. If we want a 200 lb human, that's grown in a day that means we need to start with 14 pounds. No, too much for a spore (a Chihuahua or a large bowling ball)
However if we fill the body with water (supposing that water is free to move around, see below), we have a slightly thinner biological substrate (say onion skin paper at 25–39 g/m² ). 25g / 14 is 1.75g and that's closer to spore size. So you'll need a large-ish sized almond or a raisin or a thumbtack as your spore size doubling those essential 3.8 times in a 24 hour peroid. (https://www.reference.com/science/things-weigh-1-gram-65dfb5924fe9321b )
Now that we have the skin, we need to fill it. That's actually surprisingly easy. Our 200 pound person is 90 kilograms and 90 kilograms of water is 90 liters (metric is awesome) and 90 liters is 190 pints. Modern dehumidifiers about the size of a mini-fridge can do 70 pints a day. So, just get three of those.
Overall it's going to take a lot of energy (which creates heat) and great conditions (very humid) to make your 24 hour zombie, but it's doable (with a lot of caveats). It'll be thin skinned and mostly water and require a large spore that then turns into the full organizm.
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2
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As @Brythan shows above, with have several days' production going at once, you can have a bit over an ounce double to a pound in a day, to 14 pounds the second day, and 196 pounds the third.
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– Monty Harder
May 6 at 22:52
1
$begingroup$
Correct, if we're going from OP's explanation. I was going from a literal interpretation of the title. Given a more assembly line production the problem is much easier than growing a single autonomous organism from a single spore (my constraint).
$endgroup$
– kleer001
May 6 at 23:10
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Slime Mold
Slime mold is a collection of single cell organisms that can choose to join up and form a single multicellular organism
Upon daybreak the undead cells break apart and return to the soil and upon nightfall, pull themselves together into a body to hunt for food.
Since the cells already exist, they don't need to grow but only assemble themselves into a humanoid shape. Slime molds have been shown to form themselves as simple brains with an ability to learn.
This method wouldn't require any pods. The mold cells would exist in the soil and pull themselves together to form a body before bursting out of the ground. Daylight can harm the cells so the body melts and the cells return to the ground and so the cycle continues.
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add a comment |
$begingroup$
Fungal cell repurposing.
The parent fungus has a lot of biomass, made of cells. The cells are functioning as part of the fungus, or perhaps a rootlike reserve. The fungus can assemble mobile life forms from these undifferentiated cells, which swarm together and differentiate as needed. Growth and division of cells is time and resource intensive. But once grown, these cells can be assembled and differentiated in hours.
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add a comment |
$begingroup$
The resources, needed to make them, are acquired from the earth by a gigantic network of fungus strands.
If it's large enough, then simply have multiple pods growing at the same time, but only a few mature per day. If it takes 10 days for one to grow, and 10 are growing per group, then statistically you could have 1 fully mature per day. Have 10 groups at once and now there's 10 per day. Maybe even have them act like fleas and wait for something to come by before emerging. Having them take so long to mature also would help to know when the day night cycle is since some of the ground would be a little warmer during the day in many areas.
This might also allow for the "non-zombies" to be able to do some preemptive attacking. Seeing a large ~.8 meter bump growing would look suspicious.
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add a comment |
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Look at metamorphosis where a caterpillar moves every single cell in its body to a new location and becomes a butterfly.
In your case the raw material is just a slurry of cells of various types. Each type is stored in huge vats (where they are fed and constantly multiply - perhaps have separate maturation vats, and storage vats), and then are piped into development pods in the necessary proportions when needed.
In the development pods a process similar to metamorphosis moves each cell into the right location and out comes whatever creature you need. Different creatures would get the source cells in different proportions according to type.
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add a comment |
$begingroup$
You have these fungus creepers already, right? So you use them. Have normal people be snatched/ trapped/ spirited away in the middle of the night. Put them in your pod for a day and enhance them, change them, and you have a fully functioning creature, zombie, skeleton, Michael Jackson.
OR
So you don't want to go to all the work of reaping the living. After all, they tend to run. Let's find some that are already dead. See, humans have this funny habit of putting their dead bodies in the ground, where it is easy for a fungus-creeper-pod-undead-factory to get to them. How nice. From there, it's the same as above: enhance it, revive it, and send it on it's merry way to conquest and moonwalk.
OR
Drat. The humans got wise and started to cremate their bodies. So now you need to get creative. It's honestly so much easier to use preexisting materials, but hey, you gotta work with what you got. The first two are much more desirable, but I feel you wanted this one. At this level, you want replicator cells around your pods, which create other cells that swim together and form an undead. The bigger the pod, the faster it forms the human.
As for the uv sensitivity, you can have the speed with which they form, or the modifications to their body, alter their DNA. This leads to all sorts of interesting adaptations and, indeed, spontaneous combustion.
Thanks for reading, and I hope you get the info that you need!
$endgroup$
add a comment |
7 Answers
7
active
oldest
votes
7 Answers
7
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
$begingroup$
It is possible to 3D print a car in a day.
So your biological version of a 3D printer needs to operate within a day. The human body may be more complicated than a car, but it is also smaller. The energy needs would be high.
It seems like it also might be able to operate in parallel to some extent. The initial framework is bone, which is comparatively simple. While that's happening, other printers would be creating cells. Then put the cells into (marrow) and onto the bones.
You also don't need them to form within a day. If they take a month to form, that's OK. You have some hatching every day. And you have a backlog of partially formed ones. That would make the energy needs less intensive. More like an elephant pregnancy.
Note: technically what you are describing is more of a flesh golem rather than an undead. An undead would be in some ways simpler, as that would just take an existing body and fix it. This apparently requires assembling the body. Of course, if you have damaged bodies, it may be quicker to repair them than to make new ones. So you might be better off starting with bodies than making new ones from scratch. And then you actually would have undead.
$endgroup$
6
$begingroup$
Worth noting is that much of what takes time in growing a body is getting it right. If your creature plans to have a very short lifespan, it can grow rather rapidly
$endgroup$
– Cort Ammon
May 7 at 1:36
add a comment |
$begingroup$
It is possible to 3D print a car in a day.
So your biological version of a 3D printer needs to operate within a day. The human body may be more complicated than a car, but it is also smaller. The energy needs would be high.
It seems like it also might be able to operate in parallel to some extent. The initial framework is bone, which is comparatively simple. While that's happening, other printers would be creating cells. Then put the cells into (marrow) and onto the bones.
You also don't need them to form within a day. If they take a month to form, that's OK. You have some hatching every day. And you have a backlog of partially formed ones. That would make the energy needs less intensive. More like an elephant pregnancy.
Note: technically what you are describing is more of a flesh golem rather than an undead. An undead would be in some ways simpler, as that would just take an existing body and fix it. This apparently requires assembling the body. Of course, if you have damaged bodies, it may be quicker to repair them than to make new ones. So you might be better off starting with bodies than making new ones from scratch. And then you actually would have undead.
$endgroup$
6
$begingroup$
Worth noting is that much of what takes time in growing a body is getting it right. If your creature plans to have a very short lifespan, it can grow rather rapidly
$endgroup$
– Cort Ammon
May 7 at 1:36
add a comment |
$begingroup$
It is possible to 3D print a car in a day.
So your biological version of a 3D printer needs to operate within a day. The human body may be more complicated than a car, but it is also smaller. The energy needs would be high.
It seems like it also might be able to operate in parallel to some extent. The initial framework is bone, which is comparatively simple. While that's happening, other printers would be creating cells. Then put the cells into (marrow) and onto the bones.
You also don't need them to form within a day. If they take a month to form, that's OK. You have some hatching every day. And you have a backlog of partially formed ones. That would make the energy needs less intensive. More like an elephant pregnancy.
Note: technically what you are describing is more of a flesh golem rather than an undead. An undead would be in some ways simpler, as that would just take an existing body and fix it. This apparently requires assembling the body. Of course, if you have damaged bodies, it may be quicker to repair them than to make new ones. So you might be better off starting with bodies than making new ones from scratch. And then you actually would have undead.
$endgroup$
It is possible to 3D print a car in a day.
So your biological version of a 3D printer needs to operate within a day. The human body may be more complicated than a car, but it is also smaller. The energy needs would be high.
It seems like it also might be able to operate in parallel to some extent. The initial framework is bone, which is comparatively simple. While that's happening, other printers would be creating cells. Then put the cells into (marrow) and onto the bones.
You also don't need them to form within a day. If they take a month to form, that's OK. You have some hatching every day. And you have a backlog of partially formed ones. That would make the energy needs less intensive. More like an elephant pregnancy.
Note: technically what you are describing is more of a flesh golem rather than an undead. An undead would be in some ways simpler, as that would just take an existing body and fix it. This apparently requires assembling the body. Of course, if you have damaged bodies, it may be quicker to repair them than to make new ones. So you might be better off starting with bodies than making new ones from scratch. And then you actually would have undead.
answered May 6 at 20:42
BrythanBrythan
21.8k84388
21.8k84388
6
$begingroup$
Worth noting is that much of what takes time in growing a body is getting it right. If your creature plans to have a very short lifespan, it can grow rather rapidly
$endgroup$
– Cort Ammon
May 7 at 1:36
add a comment |
6
$begingroup$
Worth noting is that much of what takes time in growing a body is getting it right. If your creature plans to have a very short lifespan, it can grow rather rapidly
$endgroup$
– Cort Ammon
May 7 at 1:36
6
6
$begingroup$
Worth noting is that much of what takes time in growing a body is getting it right. If your creature plans to have a very short lifespan, it can grow rather rapidly
$endgroup$
– Cort Ammon
May 7 at 1:36
$begingroup$
Worth noting is that much of what takes time in growing a body is getting it right. If your creature plans to have a very short lifespan, it can grow rather rapidly
$endgroup$
– Cort Ammon
May 7 at 1:36
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Looking at the fastest reproducing cells in the natural world, algae (see: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macrocystis_pyrifera )...
https://www.answers.com/Q/What_is_the_world's_fastest_growing_algae
Tells us that we could get 3.8 doublings in a day. Not a lot. But we can work with that. 2^3.8 = 14ish... So we need to divide our final weight by 14 to get our starting weight. If we want a 200 lb human, that's grown in a day that means we need to start with 14 pounds. No, too much for a spore (a Chihuahua or a large bowling ball)
However if we fill the body with water (supposing that water is free to move around, see below), we have a slightly thinner biological substrate (say onion skin paper at 25–39 g/m² ). 25g / 14 is 1.75g and that's closer to spore size. So you'll need a large-ish sized almond or a raisin or a thumbtack as your spore size doubling those essential 3.8 times in a 24 hour peroid. (https://www.reference.com/science/things-weigh-1-gram-65dfb5924fe9321b )
Now that we have the skin, we need to fill it. That's actually surprisingly easy. Our 200 pound person is 90 kilograms and 90 kilograms of water is 90 liters (metric is awesome) and 90 liters is 190 pints. Modern dehumidifiers about the size of a mini-fridge can do 70 pints a day. So, just get three of those.
Overall it's going to take a lot of energy (which creates heat) and great conditions (very humid) to make your 24 hour zombie, but it's doable (with a lot of caveats). It'll be thin skinned and mostly water and require a large spore that then turns into the full organizm.
$endgroup$
2
$begingroup$
As @Brythan shows above, with have several days' production going at once, you can have a bit over an ounce double to a pound in a day, to 14 pounds the second day, and 196 pounds the third.
$endgroup$
– Monty Harder
May 6 at 22:52
1
$begingroup$
Correct, if we're going from OP's explanation. I was going from a literal interpretation of the title. Given a more assembly line production the problem is much easier than growing a single autonomous organism from a single spore (my constraint).
$endgroup$
– kleer001
May 6 at 23:10
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Looking at the fastest reproducing cells in the natural world, algae (see: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macrocystis_pyrifera )...
https://www.answers.com/Q/What_is_the_world's_fastest_growing_algae
Tells us that we could get 3.8 doublings in a day. Not a lot. But we can work with that. 2^3.8 = 14ish... So we need to divide our final weight by 14 to get our starting weight. If we want a 200 lb human, that's grown in a day that means we need to start with 14 pounds. No, too much for a spore (a Chihuahua or a large bowling ball)
However if we fill the body with water (supposing that water is free to move around, see below), we have a slightly thinner biological substrate (say onion skin paper at 25–39 g/m² ). 25g / 14 is 1.75g and that's closer to spore size. So you'll need a large-ish sized almond or a raisin or a thumbtack as your spore size doubling those essential 3.8 times in a 24 hour peroid. (https://www.reference.com/science/things-weigh-1-gram-65dfb5924fe9321b )
Now that we have the skin, we need to fill it. That's actually surprisingly easy. Our 200 pound person is 90 kilograms and 90 kilograms of water is 90 liters (metric is awesome) and 90 liters is 190 pints. Modern dehumidifiers about the size of a mini-fridge can do 70 pints a day. So, just get three of those.
Overall it's going to take a lot of energy (which creates heat) and great conditions (very humid) to make your 24 hour zombie, but it's doable (with a lot of caveats). It'll be thin skinned and mostly water and require a large spore that then turns into the full organizm.
$endgroup$
2
$begingroup$
As @Brythan shows above, with have several days' production going at once, you can have a bit over an ounce double to a pound in a day, to 14 pounds the second day, and 196 pounds the third.
$endgroup$
– Monty Harder
May 6 at 22:52
1
$begingroup$
Correct, if we're going from OP's explanation. I was going from a literal interpretation of the title. Given a more assembly line production the problem is much easier than growing a single autonomous organism from a single spore (my constraint).
$endgroup$
– kleer001
May 6 at 23:10
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Looking at the fastest reproducing cells in the natural world, algae (see: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macrocystis_pyrifera )...
https://www.answers.com/Q/What_is_the_world's_fastest_growing_algae
Tells us that we could get 3.8 doublings in a day. Not a lot. But we can work with that. 2^3.8 = 14ish... So we need to divide our final weight by 14 to get our starting weight. If we want a 200 lb human, that's grown in a day that means we need to start with 14 pounds. No, too much for a spore (a Chihuahua or a large bowling ball)
However if we fill the body with water (supposing that water is free to move around, see below), we have a slightly thinner biological substrate (say onion skin paper at 25–39 g/m² ). 25g / 14 is 1.75g and that's closer to spore size. So you'll need a large-ish sized almond or a raisin or a thumbtack as your spore size doubling those essential 3.8 times in a 24 hour peroid. (https://www.reference.com/science/things-weigh-1-gram-65dfb5924fe9321b )
Now that we have the skin, we need to fill it. That's actually surprisingly easy. Our 200 pound person is 90 kilograms and 90 kilograms of water is 90 liters (metric is awesome) and 90 liters is 190 pints. Modern dehumidifiers about the size of a mini-fridge can do 70 pints a day. So, just get three of those.
Overall it's going to take a lot of energy (which creates heat) and great conditions (very humid) to make your 24 hour zombie, but it's doable (with a lot of caveats). It'll be thin skinned and mostly water and require a large spore that then turns into the full organizm.
$endgroup$
Looking at the fastest reproducing cells in the natural world, algae (see: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macrocystis_pyrifera )...
https://www.answers.com/Q/What_is_the_world's_fastest_growing_algae
Tells us that we could get 3.8 doublings in a day. Not a lot. But we can work with that. 2^3.8 = 14ish... So we need to divide our final weight by 14 to get our starting weight. If we want a 200 lb human, that's grown in a day that means we need to start with 14 pounds. No, too much for a spore (a Chihuahua or a large bowling ball)
However if we fill the body with water (supposing that water is free to move around, see below), we have a slightly thinner biological substrate (say onion skin paper at 25–39 g/m² ). 25g / 14 is 1.75g and that's closer to spore size. So you'll need a large-ish sized almond or a raisin or a thumbtack as your spore size doubling those essential 3.8 times in a 24 hour peroid. (https://www.reference.com/science/things-weigh-1-gram-65dfb5924fe9321b )
Now that we have the skin, we need to fill it. That's actually surprisingly easy. Our 200 pound person is 90 kilograms and 90 kilograms of water is 90 liters (metric is awesome) and 90 liters is 190 pints. Modern dehumidifiers about the size of a mini-fridge can do 70 pints a day. So, just get three of those.
Overall it's going to take a lot of energy (which creates heat) and great conditions (very humid) to make your 24 hour zombie, but it's doable (with a lot of caveats). It'll be thin skinned and mostly water and require a large spore that then turns into the full organizm.
answered May 6 at 21:01
kleer001kleer001
4996
4996
2
$begingroup$
As @Brythan shows above, with have several days' production going at once, you can have a bit over an ounce double to a pound in a day, to 14 pounds the second day, and 196 pounds the third.
$endgroup$
– Monty Harder
May 6 at 22:52
1
$begingroup$
Correct, if we're going from OP's explanation. I was going from a literal interpretation of the title. Given a more assembly line production the problem is much easier than growing a single autonomous organism from a single spore (my constraint).
$endgroup$
– kleer001
May 6 at 23:10
add a comment |
2
$begingroup$
As @Brythan shows above, with have several days' production going at once, you can have a bit over an ounce double to a pound in a day, to 14 pounds the second day, and 196 pounds the third.
$endgroup$
– Monty Harder
May 6 at 22:52
1
$begingroup$
Correct, if we're going from OP's explanation. I was going from a literal interpretation of the title. Given a more assembly line production the problem is much easier than growing a single autonomous organism from a single spore (my constraint).
$endgroup$
– kleer001
May 6 at 23:10
2
2
$begingroup$
As @Brythan shows above, with have several days' production going at once, you can have a bit over an ounce double to a pound in a day, to 14 pounds the second day, and 196 pounds the third.
$endgroup$
– Monty Harder
May 6 at 22:52
$begingroup$
As @Brythan shows above, with have several days' production going at once, you can have a bit over an ounce double to a pound in a day, to 14 pounds the second day, and 196 pounds the third.
$endgroup$
– Monty Harder
May 6 at 22:52
1
1
$begingroup$
Correct, if we're going from OP's explanation. I was going from a literal interpretation of the title. Given a more assembly line production the problem is much easier than growing a single autonomous organism from a single spore (my constraint).
$endgroup$
– kleer001
May 6 at 23:10
$begingroup$
Correct, if we're going from OP's explanation. I was going from a literal interpretation of the title. Given a more assembly line production the problem is much easier than growing a single autonomous organism from a single spore (my constraint).
$endgroup$
– kleer001
May 6 at 23:10
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Slime Mold
Slime mold is a collection of single cell organisms that can choose to join up and form a single multicellular organism
Upon daybreak the undead cells break apart and return to the soil and upon nightfall, pull themselves together into a body to hunt for food.
Since the cells already exist, they don't need to grow but only assemble themselves into a humanoid shape. Slime molds have been shown to form themselves as simple brains with an ability to learn.
This method wouldn't require any pods. The mold cells would exist in the soil and pull themselves together to form a body before bursting out of the ground. Daylight can harm the cells so the body melts and the cells return to the ground and so the cycle continues.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Slime Mold
Slime mold is a collection of single cell organisms that can choose to join up and form a single multicellular organism
Upon daybreak the undead cells break apart and return to the soil and upon nightfall, pull themselves together into a body to hunt for food.
Since the cells already exist, they don't need to grow but only assemble themselves into a humanoid shape. Slime molds have been shown to form themselves as simple brains with an ability to learn.
This method wouldn't require any pods. The mold cells would exist in the soil and pull themselves together to form a body before bursting out of the ground. Daylight can harm the cells so the body melts and the cells return to the ground and so the cycle continues.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Slime Mold
Slime mold is a collection of single cell organisms that can choose to join up and form a single multicellular organism
Upon daybreak the undead cells break apart and return to the soil and upon nightfall, pull themselves together into a body to hunt for food.
Since the cells already exist, they don't need to grow but only assemble themselves into a humanoid shape. Slime molds have been shown to form themselves as simple brains with an ability to learn.
This method wouldn't require any pods. The mold cells would exist in the soil and pull themselves together to form a body before bursting out of the ground. Daylight can harm the cells so the body melts and the cells return to the ground and so the cycle continues.
$endgroup$
Slime Mold
Slime mold is a collection of single cell organisms that can choose to join up and form a single multicellular organism
Upon daybreak the undead cells break apart and return to the soil and upon nightfall, pull themselves together into a body to hunt for food.
Since the cells already exist, they don't need to grow but only assemble themselves into a humanoid shape. Slime molds have been shown to form themselves as simple brains with an ability to learn.
This method wouldn't require any pods. The mold cells would exist in the soil and pull themselves together to form a body before bursting out of the ground. Daylight can harm the cells so the body melts and the cells return to the ground and so the cycle continues.
answered May 7 at 3:24
ThorneThorne
20.3k43061
20.3k43061
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Fungal cell repurposing.
The parent fungus has a lot of biomass, made of cells. The cells are functioning as part of the fungus, or perhaps a rootlike reserve. The fungus can assemble mobile life forms from these undifferentiated cells, which swarm together and differentiate as needed. Growth and division of cells is time and resource intensive. But once grown, these cells can be assembled and differentiated in hours.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Fungal cell repurposing.
The parent fungus has a lot of biomass, made of cells. The cells are functioning as part of the fungus, or perhaps a rootlike reserve. The fungus can assemble mobile life forms from these undifferentiated cells, which swarm together and differentiate as needed. Growth and division of cells is time and resource intensive. But once grown, these cells can be assembled and differentiated in hours.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Fungal cell repurposing.
The parent fungus has a lot of biomass, made of cells. The cells are functioning as part of the fungus, or perhaps a rootlike reserve. The fungus can assemble mobile life forms from these undifferentiated cells, which swarm together and differentiate as needed. Growth and division of cells is time and resource intensive. But once grown, these cells can be assembled and differentiated in hours.
$endgroup$
Fungal cell repurposing.
The parent fungus has a lot of biomass, made of cells. The cells are functioning as part of the fungus, or perhaps a rootlike reserve. The fungus can assemble mobile life forms from these undifferentiated cells, which swarm together and differentiate as needed. Growth and division of cells is time and resource intensive. But once grown, these cells can be assembled and differentiated in hours.
answered May 6 at 20:42
WillkWillk
123k28229511
123k28229511
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
The resources, needed to make them, are acquired from the earth by a gigantic network of fungus strands.
If it's large enough, then simply have multiple pods growing at the same time, but only a few mature per day. If it takes 10 days for one to grow, and 10 are growing per group, then statistically you could have 1 fully mature per day. Have 10 groups at once and now there's 10 per day. Maybe even have them act like fleas and wait for something to come by before emerging. Having them take so long to mature also would help to know when the day night cycle is since some of the ground would be a little warmer during the day in many areas.
This might also allow for the "non-zombies" to be able to do some preemptive attacking. Seeing a large ~.8 meter bump growing would look suspicious.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
The resources, needed to make them, are acquired from the earth by a gigantic network of fungus strands.
If it's large enough, then simply have multiple pods growing at the same time, but only a few mature per day. If it takes 10 days for one to grow, and 10 are growing per group, then statistically you could have 1 fully mature per day. Have 10 groups at once and now there's 10 per day. Maybe even have them act like fleas and wait for something to come by before emerging. Having them take so long to mature also would help to know when the day night cycle is since some of the ground would be a little warmer during the day in many areas.
This might also allow for the "non-zombies" to be able to do some preemptive attacking. Seeing a large ~.8 meter bump growing would look suspicious.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
The resources, needed to make them, are acquired from the earth by a gigantic network of fungus strands.
If it's large enough, then simply have multiple pods growing at the same time, but only a few mature per day. If it takes 10 days for one to grow, and 10 are growing per group, then statistically you could have 1 fully mature per day. Have 10 groups at once and now there's 10 per day. Maybe even have them act like fleas and wait for something to come by before emerging. Having them take so long to mature also would help to know when the day night cycle is since some of the ground would be a little warmer during the day in many areas.
This might also allow for the "non-zombies" to be able to do some preemptive attacking. Seeing a large ~.8 meter bump growing would look suspicious.
$endgroup$
The resources, needed to make them, are acquired from the earth by a gigantic network of fungus strands.
If it's large enough, then simply have multiple pods growing at the same time, but only a few mature per day. If it takes 10 days for one to grow, and 10 are growing per group, then statistically you could have 1 fully mature per day. Have 10 groups at once and now there's 10 per day. Maybe even have them act like fleas and wait for something to come by before emerging. Having them take so long to mature also would help to know when the day night cycle is since some of the ground would be a little warmer during the day in many areas.
This might also allow for the "non-zombies" to be able to do some preemptive attacking. Seeing a large ~.8 meter bump growing would look suspicious.
answered May 7 at 2:57
BlergBlerg
1512
1512
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Look at metamorphosis where a caterpillar moves every single cell in its body to a new location and becomes a butterfly.
In your case the raw material is just a slurry of cells of various types. Each type is stored in huge vats (where they are fed and constantly multiply - perhaps have separate maturation vats, and storage vats), and then are piped into development pods in the necessary proportions when needed.
In the development pods a process similar to metamorphosis moves each cell into the right location and out comes whatever creature you need. Different creatures would get the source cells in different proportions according to type.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Look at metamorphosis where a caterpillar moves every single cell in its body to a new location and becomes a butterfly.
In your case the raw material is just a slurry of cells of various types. Each type is stored in huge vats (where they are fed and constantly multiply - perhaps have separate maturation vats, and storage vats), and then are piped into development pods in the necessary proportions when needed.
In the development pods a process similar to metamorphosis moves each cell into the right location and out comes whatever creature you need. Different creatures would get the source cells in different proportions according to type.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Look at metamorphosis where a caterpillar moves every single cell in its body to a new location and becomes a butterfly.
In your case the raw material is just a slurry of cells of various types. Each type is stored in huge vats (where they are fed and constantly multiply - perhaps have separate maturation vats, and storage vats), and then are piped into development pods in the necessary proportions when needed.
In the development pods a process similar to metamorphosis moves each cell into the right location and out comes whatever creature you need. Different creatures would get the source cells in different proportions according to type.
$endgroup$
Look at metamorphosis where a caterpillar moves every single cell in its body to a new location and becomes a butterfly.
In your case the raw material is just a slurry of cells of various types. Each type is stored in huge vats (where they are fed and constantly multiply - perhaps have separate maturation vats, and storage vats), and then are piped into development pods in the necessary proportions when needed.
In the development pods a process similar to metamorphosis moves each cell into the right location and out comes whatever creature you need. Different creatures would get the source cells in different proportions according to type.
answered May 6 at 22:33
ArielAriel
101
101
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
You have these fungus creepers already, right? So you use them. Have normal people be snatched/ trapped/ spirited away in the middle of the night. Put them in your pod for a day and enhance them, change them, and you have a fully functioning creature, zombie, skeleton, Michael Jackson.
OR
So you don't want to go to all the work of reaping the living. After all, they tend to run. Let's find some that are already dead. See, humans have this funny habit of putting their dead bodies in the ground, where it is easy for a fungus-creeper-pod-undead-factory to get to them. How nice. From there, it's the same as above: enhance it, revive it, and send it on it's merry way to conquest and moonwalk.
OR
Drat. The humans got wise and started to cremate their bodies. So now you need to get creative. It's honestly so much easier to use preexisting materials, but hey, you gotta work with what you got. The first two are much more desirable, but I feel you wanted this one. At this level, you want replicator cells around your pods, which create other cells that swim together and form an undead. The bigger the pod, the faster it forms the human.
As for the uv sensitivity, you can have the speed with which they form, or the modifications to their body, alter their DNA. This leads to all sorts of interesting adaptations and, indeed, spontaneous combustion.
Thanks for reading, and I hope you get the info that you need!
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
You have these fungus creepers already, right? So you use them. Have normal people be snatched/ trapped/ spirited away in the middle of the night. Put them in your pod for a day and enhance them, change them, and you have a fully functioning creature, zombie, skeleton, Michael Jackson.
OR
So you don't want to go to all the work of reaping the living. After all, they tend to run. Let's find some that are already dead. See, humans have this funny habit of putting their dead bodies in the ground, where it is easy for a fungus-creeper-pod-undead-factory to get to them. How nice. From there, it's the same as above: enhance it, revive it, and send it on it's merry way to conquest and moonwalk.
OR
Drat. The humans got wise and started to cremate their bodies. So now you need to get creative. It's honestly so much easier to use preexisting materials, but hey, you gotta work with what you got. The first two are much more desirable, but I feel you wanted this one. At this level, you want replicator cells around your pods, which create other cells that swim together and form an undead. The bigger the pod, the faster it forms the human.
As for the uv sensitivity, you can have the speed with which they form, or the modifications to their body, alter their DNA. This leads to all sorts of interesting adaptations and, indeed, spontaneous combustion.
Thanks for reading, and I hope you get the info that you need!
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
You have these fungus creepers already, right? So you use them. Have normal people be snatched/ trapped/ spirited away in the middle of the night. Put them in your pod for a day and enhance them, change them, and you have a fully functioning creature, zombie, skeleton, Michael Jackson.
OR
So you don't want to go to all the work of reaping the living. After all, they tend to run. Let's find some that are already dead. See, humans have this funny habit of putting their dead bodies in the ground, where it is easy for a fungus-creeper-pod-undead-factory to get to them. How nice. From there, it's the same as above: enhance it, revive it, and send it on it's merry way to conquest and moonwalk.
OR
Drat. The humans got wise and started to cremate their bodies. So now you need to get creative. It's honestly so much easier to use preexisting materials, but hey, you gotta work with what you got. The first two are much more desirable, but I feel you wanted this one. At this level, you want replicator cells around your pods, which create other cells that swim together and form an undead. The bigger the pod, the faster it forms the human.
As for the uv sensitivity, you can have the speed with which they form, or the modifications to their body, alter their DNA. This leads to all sorts of interesting adaptations and, indeed, spontaneous combustion.
Thanks for reading, and I hope you get the info that you need!
$endgroup$
You have these fungus creepers already, right? So you use them. Have normal people be snatched/ trapped/ spirited away in the middle of the night. Put them in your pod for a day and enhance them, change them, and you have a fully functioning creature, zombie, skeleton, Michael Jackson.
OR
So you don't want to go to all the work of reaping the living. After all, they tend to run. Let's find some that are already dead. See, humans have this funny habit of putting their dead bodies in the ground, where it is easy for a fungus-creeper-pod-undead-factory to get to them. How nice. From there, it's the same as above: enhance it, revive it, and send it on it's merry way to conquest and moonwalk.
OR
Drat. The humans got wise and started to cremate their bodies. So now you need to get creative. It's honestly so much easier to use preexisting materials, but hey, you gotta work with what you got. The first two are much more desirable, but I feel you wanted this one. At this level, you want replicator cells around your pods, which create other cells that swim together and form an undead. The bigger the pod, the faster it forms the human.
As for the uv sensitivity, you can have the speed with which they form, or the modifications to their body, alter their DNA. This leads to all sorts of interesting adaptations and, indeed, spontaneous combustion.
Thanks for reading, and I hope you get the info that you need!
answered May 7 at 1:25
H FranklinH Franklin
1686
1686
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Are these creatures built from the same material as humans or, for example, can the skeletons have scavenged sticks for bones?
$endgroup$
– Muuski
May 6 at 19:50
$begingroup$
@Muuski Well, if it's strong enough, then yes.
$endgroup$
– Mephistopheles
May 6 at 19:57
1
$begingroup$
Meph... you can't ask "how" with a reality-check question. You're supposed to be presenting us with a complete idea and we evaluate it according to the rules of your world. Asking us to offer explanations for the process makes this a POB question. If you really are asking a RC question, please remove the "how" query. If you're asking "how," remove the tag and explain how you'll judge the best answer (limitations, criteria, etc.)
$endgroup$
– JBH
May 6 at 22:39
4
$begingroup$
Easy: Narrative Necessity! These undead form within a day, because they form within a day. How? That's up to you! Snap your fingers and click your heels, you aren't in Kansas anymore! If you want us to come up with how it works in your world, your query is by definition "opinion based". I usually don't mind opinion based queries, but I draw the metaphorical line when querents actively solicit opinions. VTC.
$endgroup$
– elemtilas
May 6 at 23:16
1
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Why do they have to form in a day? If you consider human soldiers, they take close to 20 years to form (depending on how mature and capable you want them), yet you can throw new soldiers to the war every day if needed. New ones are born every day, there's just that bit of lead time you need to manage.
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– hyde
May 7 at 5:54