Talk:Patient (Map Game)/@comment-5590986-20180223065816

December 12, 2032

Today marks the day where history can be made. Today, touch down and construction of a lasting base on Mars has been complete. Several corporations gathered together, led by the efforts of PeterCorp, to make a possible last bastion for humanity. Logically, the moon would be a convienant choice. However, recent discoveries of evidence of water and other resources has set many corps' sights on Mars.

The several space corporations formed the conglomerate MarsCORP to send thousands of scientists, government officials, engineers, etc. to the red planet. Thanks to investors, like the late Elon Musk, MarsCORP's smaller arm, TerraCORP (mainly in charge of Earth related space science) early forms of what they call "Terraforming" has been made possible. Demonstrations of the prototype has been seen in the Outback of Australia. After a year of progress, a small area within the testing zone had shown signs of strange weather patterns that later led to concentrated rainfall from manipulation of carbon dioxide and oxygen. It is considered imperfect and requires further testing. However, plans to send the prototypes of the device to Mars has already been set in stone.

However, it is predicted that at the rate of the Zalgo virus' infection, Earth would be almost totally infected and converted by 2040. It has been estimated that MarsCORP's rockets alone could only send approxamitely 500 to 600 humans to space per year. While this may suffice to an estimated 4000 people at least, along with several animals and pets, this is not enough for development of an ecosystem on Mars. Successful cloning technology has been dated back to the 90s and has been more developed by 2030s.

Five cases will be sent to Mars by the end of 2034, each containing thousands of DNA samples. First case will include DNA of hand picked humans, the second would be animal life of the more known and crucial animal species, the third would be plant species, the fourth would be underwater aquatic life, and the fifth would include frozen (less harmful) microbial life.