Elara lived on the fringes of the Cytos Cluster, a region of space where the stars didn't just shine—they hummed. As a Freelance Scrapper, her job was to sift through the particulate clouds of dead suns. But the "Stardust (Nebula) 256x" wasn't a natural formation. It was a legendary graveyard of high-density data shards, a digital nebula born from the crash of a trillion-tier supercomputer.
She saw them then: the Chrono-Wraiths. They weren’t ghosts, but echoes of the data stored in the dust. Projected images of a forgotten civilization played out against the backdrop of the stars—children running through gardens of light, scientists arguing over glowing blueprints. They were beautiful, but they were dangerous; their static could fry a ship's nervous system in seconds. stardust (nebula) 256x
The dust displays "ghosts" of the information it contains. To help me tailor the next part of this world or story: Should we focus on the civilization inside the data? Elara lived on the fringes of the Cytos
She fired. The harpoon pierced the cloud, but the moment it touched the grain, the entire nebula went silent. The swirling colors froze. Then, the 256x compression began to unwind. The dust expanded with the force of a supernova, pushing the Mote backward at impossible speeds. It was a legendary graveyard of high-density data