Larry Niven's Ringworld is one of my very favorite novels, and lately I've been thinking about a Traveller adventure or mini-capaign set on a ringworld. Here's what I've got so far:
The Travellers are approached by a liaison from a small university. The institute is in possession of some First Imperium-era astronomical records, including some that indicate a strangely regular ring around a star in the local sector. Until recently, this has been regarded as no more than an oddity, as the university lacked the funds to mount an expedition. A few months prior, one of the university's noble patrons passed away, leaving the school quite a generous bequest in her will. They still don't have the money to mount a full-scale expedition, but they can hire a ship to travel to the system and conduct a fly-by imaging study.
Question 1: How much money should the university offer? Part of the payment will come in the form of installing Advanced sensors on the Travellers' ship, if it is not already so equipped.
Arriving in the target system, the Travellers discover that the ring is, indeed, shockingly regular: it is a single contiguous object, over a billion kilometers in circumference and 1.5 million kilometers wide. It is rotating fast enough generate about 0.8g of centrifugal force on its inner surface. Thousand-kilometer-tall walls at each edge hold in a human-breathable atmosphere, and the interior surface is landscaped to resemble many billions of square kilometers' worth of temperate planet.
On closer examination, the Travellers identify some of the exterior features as being many thousands of spaceports. Approaching one, their ship is captured by a tractor beam and pulled into a docking area. There is no answer to their transmissions; the spaceport machinery seems to be running on automatic. A gravitic field generator cancels out their M-drive, preventing the Travellers from leaving. Exploring the port, they discover a number of other spacecraft, of many different origins. Aslan, Vargr, Zhodani... they are clearly not the first to discover the ringworld. Parts of the docking facility seem to have been added on by one or more of these later species, but underneath it all, the original structure resembles Ancient engineering.
The idea I'm going for is that the ringworld has been discovered, lost, rediscovered, colonized, abandoned, and recolonized an unknown number of times over its multi-million year history.
Failsafes prevent the Travellers from disabling the tractor beam and anti-drive field on site, but there are indications that they might be connected to a control center in the ringworld's interior. One of the railways leading up into the interior is still powered...
The Travellers are approached by a liaison from a small university. The institute is in possession of some First Imperium-era astronomical records, including some that indicate a strangely regular ring around a star in the local sector. Until recently, this has been regarded as no more than an oddity, as the university lacked the funds to mount an expedition. A few months prior, one of the university's noble patrons passed away, leaving the school quite a generous bequest in her will. They still don't have the money to mount a full-scale expedition, but they can hire a ship to travel to the system and conduct a fly-by imaging study.
Question 1: How much money should the university offer? Part of the payment will come in the form of installing Advanced sensors on the Travellers' ship, if it is not already so equipped.
Arriving in the target system, the Travellers discover that the ring is, indeed, shockingly regular: it is a single contiguous object, over a billion kilometers in circumference and 1.5 million kilometers wide. It is rotating fast enough generate about 0.8g of centrifugal force on its inner surface. Thousand-kilometer-tall walls at each edge hold in a human-breathable atmosphere, and the interior surface is landscaped to resemble many billions of square kilometers' worth of temperate planet.
On closer examination, the Travellers identify some of the exterior features as being many thousands of spaceports. Approaching one, their ship is captured by a tractor beam and pulled into a docking area. There is no answer to their transmissions; the spaceport machinery seems to be running on automatic. A gravitic field generator cancels out their M-drive, preventing the Travellers from leaving. Exploring the port, they discover a number of other spacecraft, of many different origins. Aslan, Vargr, Zhodani... they are clearly not the first to discover the ringworld. Parts of the docking facility seem to have been added on by one or more of these later species, but underneath it all, the original structure resembles Ancient engineering.
The idea I'm going for is that the ringworld has been discovered, lost, rediscovered, colonized, abandoned, and recolonized an unknown number of times over its multi-million year history.
Failsafes prevent the Travellers from disabling the tractor beam and anti-drive field on site, but there are indications that they might be connected to a control center in the ringworld's interior. One of the railways leading up into the interior is still powered...