Subject: I like that.
Author:
Posted on: 2014-05-31 17:27:00 UTC

That's exactly the sort of extended theory I'd imagine people in HQ concocting, too. Remember, there were a lot of deep theoretical reasons why there could only be two multiverses - but then we discovered there were at least four. So someone needs to come up with a theory that says how many there are - and the icosahedron model certainly seems possible!

That would make for twenty multiverses - a fairly large number that means we won't run through them soon. It eliminates the Void as the primary background; instead, it makes each plane of interaction a 'Void between the Verses'. Bridge-type mergers would simply be the wall breaking down; perhaps a Bridge shuffles the internal portions of the pyramid, dragging two connected parts closer and closer to the wall until they touch.

Each multiverse would have three close contacts - Prime and Mirror, at minimum, have these, and Dafydd's trips to Steampunk suggest it does, too. If there were a consistent way of tunnelling through the wall, experiments could be done to map the Icosahedron - but I don't think that's possible yet.

As for the centre... making it the Real World would be a bit dubious, since the Prime Multiverse is very nearly our own (and also since it would claim the Real World has an in-story existence, which it, y'know, doesn't. Fictional people can't actually travel to reality). There may be some kind of nexus, or it may simply be an artefact of the model - it might not actually exist at all.

Of course, the question for the theorists then becomes, how do we know it's an icosahedron? How can we prove it? We could go into different multiverses and see which ones are easy to access from there - again, if we had easy trans-multiversal travel tech. Which it seems Dafydd does... perhaps he borrowed it from Lou? Doubtless the theory team need to talk to him.

hS

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