The 2 free background story of Alpha Centauri that were available on the now defunct website can still be downloaded from there on the bottom of this page :
http://alphacentauri2.info/official/Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri The Story_cfm.htm
"Journey to Centauri" is the one that setup everything from before the start of the game and in the end the journal of the murderer, just usual nihilism crap , cert
Sarah Jaydo's Journal
Why have we come to the stars? Why didn't we surrender when we had the chance? Are we so blind, that we believe this new world will be different, immune to suffering and crime and violence?
The Unity mission was a feeble candle flickering in a blasted night. We rode this illusion into the sky, and now we will die here, or, perhaps worse, die on Planet. Those of us onboard rode an illusion into the night; those who stayed behind took their chances on a dying world.
As for now, we continue to do what humans have always done. We eat, sleep, make love, hone our skills, pass the time. And deep down we wait for someone, some special human, to rise above it all and make the thousands of years of history, of suffering, all worth it. To enlighten us, by which I mean end our pain, heal our wounds, take away the uncertainty.
But I have seen the sweep of history, and we are no better off now than we have ever been. Just more aware. Planet will be no different.
Unless...
Thanks for sharing this! I vaguely recall a short fic describing the factions racing towards an alien monolith, which I think supported the Santiago-as-assassin theory, but I think it incorporated a lot of Expansion content. Which is allowed in this thread, but I don't think holds up as well as the original seven factions. Anyway, I don't think the game itself ever explains who did it.
That writing though. Ugh. Nihilistic crap is right, really doesn't measure up.
I generally see Lal's Peacekeepers as the only faction that actually wants to rule with the other factions. They WANT to bring the other factions into the fold. Every other faction basically wants to rule alone.
I also find the Spartans hard to characterize, other than the brute force need to survive. Once the basic threats of survival are over, what are they offering? When they have become masters of Alpha Centauri, what is their goal? Fortify in fear? I'd actually respect them more if they tried galactic dominion in order to keep humanity secure.
I've been thinking about this. Some factions are more suited to a military victory than others. Conquest always helps, but Diplomatic or Economic victories are very possible without painting the map. Whereas the "tech" victory is basically impossible unless the player is intentionally holding back.
Which factions would be happy letting the others exist?
I say the Morganites would. As the literal Power Company, secure to pursue hedonistic bliss.
The University - why not? They only want to study. Atoms, stars, humans - If they are allowed their little projects, why should they care that other people exist?
The Spartans, ironically. Yes they're geared for war, but Santiago's quotes are not about conquest. Simply obsessive self-defense. Sure they probably want a shitty police state where weak babies are thrown in the vats (little nod to Earth's Sparta there) but maybe - *maybe* they're so obsessed with training that they'll never need to use their arms against others. I'll give them the benefit of the doubt there, maybe they're not just a repeat of fascism. Maybe.
The Hive, perhaps. Yang wants to transform humanity. Does he need to transform all humanity? Much like the Spartans and University, I see the Hive as looking inwards for perfection. I see Yang as a true believer, who would rather that people join his little... experiment, willingly.
The Peacekeepers obviously. They're willing to form a coalition like the UN, and chat ruefully about the human rights abuses. Maybe even enact those "sanctions" as the game jokes about.
But not the two remaining factions. The Gaians and the Believers cannot abide the others. The Gaians cannot watch as Planet is stabbed deep by boreholes and scorched with fungicide. The Believers... have an evangelical doctrine.
The transcendence ending superficially looks like it's tailored for Gaians (obviously), or maybe University (Zakharov's shooting the collected works of humanity into a literal god, and thus becoming god). What unnerves me is that it's more of a Hive victory. There is no way for the Centaurans to keep their humanity, not forever. Imagine how awful that is for the Spartans or Peacekeepers. Perhaps the Believers, depending on how their faith adapts.
I feel like the Morganites are fine sipping stardust, though.