The Group of Spirits and the Loss of Form
The image presents a group of awakened spirits wandering through the inner domains of Ordiman, the colossal spiritual colony of the Space Ordiman RPG universe. Even after awakening from the simulation that imprisoned them since 2030, during the event known as the Great Reset, these spirits still retain remnants of their former human shape. The last elements to fade are the physical characteristics they once possessed while living on Earth, as these features are deeply embedded in the most profound layers of conscious memory.
Visually, the scene depicts ethereal figures with partially defined faces, expressions worn down by time, and bodies that no longer emit full luminosity. These remaining traits act as anchors of identity, keeping each spirit connected to its personal history. However, not all are able to preserve this form. Spirits that awakened in the early 3000s and wandered through Ordiman for more than a decade without achieving spiritual projection gradually lose their faces, transforming into conscious shadows—unstable silhouettes drifting within the colony.
Within the narrative framework of Space Ordiman, spiritual projection is the only true means of escape from Ordiman. Unlike mental projection, it requires the elevation of vibrational frequency, attained through enlightened thought, inner clarity, and detachment from dense emotional states. The image highlights the contrast between spirits struggling to maintain their form and those who have already been partially absorbed by the environment.
The greatest obstacle lies in the very design of the spiritual colony. Ordiman was engineered to generate confusion, fear, and mental fragmentation. This environment directly interferes with a spirit’s ability to elevate its frequency, trapping consciousness in cycles of dense thought. The longer spirits remain in this condition, the more incompatible their vibration becomes with the layers required for escape, making spiritual projection increasingly difficult.
This scene reinforces Space Ordiman as a science fiction RPG, a spiritual dystopia, and a deep narrative-driven experience, where the primary struggle is not against external enemies, but against the limits of consciousness itself. The image symbolizes the danger of time: remaining within Ordiman for decades does not merely delay escape—it leads to the gradual erosion of spiritual identity.

Comments
Post a Comment