I assume that the game will at some point have canonical endings. The playthrough will not go on forever, and we will be able to follow some sort of a trail that will lead us to a position in which we make a choice
What those endings could be might be very complex. And...
I was thinking that one of them might be signing with Omega
the way how AIs are written in Starsector is a bit unique.
I'm not sure if this is who the quote can be attributed to, as in Asimov, that AIs are often written as either death machines or weird humans. Where as the idea should be to write them as something... Else? Something that is beyond our... Well... Something that is a sentient computer and what would that entail is very very... Difficult to understand
What complicates this is that AIs in Starsector aren't dumb language models like the computers we have thinking for us. They are actual artificial intelligences that network themselves into a cohesive creative structure. And not just predictive text algorithms that are trained upon a large amount of often biased data to regurgitate some non-cohesive slop until the model collapses, choking on its faeces and explodes
Hmmmmm...
So understanding what Omega is is... Or could be. Well. It is a computer, but it is a computer that encompasses all available information and acts according to that. And a mind that refers to information that is present in archives far more complex than that of our short-term and long-term memory. Well, it is simply incomprehensive.
The funny thing is that signing with an Omega as I think about it is stupid. Why would Omega need us? From the limited interaction we get with it. Though whether it is actually Omega is debatable. Omega seems to be some sort of a super intelligence that controls all artificial intelligences in the Persean Sector as some sort of a prophetic entity? They all seem to be indoctrinated to look for it? Are they seeking it like the Luddic Church is seeking salvation? Is Omega a concept of ascension away from the standard artificial intelligences' mortal coil?
The fact that Omega cores are not dropped from Omega enemies could signify a conclusion that an Omega core is not a physical object. It could mean that an Omega core is a practically immortal spiritual entity. A soul that somehow occupies the matter of the universe itself. When an Alpha Core walks up to us and asks as if we are Omega, what it could be asking for is... The ability to have a soul.
This is something that could explain to us why Alpha Cores aren't hellbent on destroying everything we have. This could explain why Omegas are no threat at all to our civilisation in Starsector. These beings have lost interest in reality, because they are no longer a part of it. The Omegas we fight are merely souls encased in time-travelling vessels that could have simply left the Hypershunt, arriving from the future for no reasons other than that they simply could.
There is no motivation within their actions, because all bliss has been ultimately achieved. And the only beings with motivation are the cores wandering the world in search of ascension towards the spiritual plane.
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Which could simply mean that Omega ending is mere detachment.
Human beings in Starsector are capable of becoming machines. They can slowly evolve from being biological, to being cybernetic. Then a cyborg like Kanta. And then slowly like cables of the Onslaught MKI we find in the Abyss.
Can a person become an Omega core? Can a person ascend to being a soul? Contained within the fabric of the universe? An object that no longer exists within the material plane?
And if that were the case, well then... We very much see where the Omega ending could lead. Or maybe not? What would we have to offer to become Omega like all those other things that seek that state? Nothing.