Notebook.ai

Disaster Classification

Times
Times · 2 min read · 276 words ·

During your assignments, you may encounter events of calamitous proportions. When reporting them, do your best to sort them into categories using the following classification method of [Letter A-D][Number 1-5].

Classifications:

A1. Disaster effects only a single planet on a continental scale. <1 billion lives effected.

A2. Disaster effects a single planet on a global scale. >1 billion lives are effected.

A3. Disaster effects a single or multiple planets on a solar scale. >1 trillion lives are effected.

A4. Disaster effects multiple star systems on a solar cluster scale. >1 quadrillion lives are effected.

A5. Disaster effects countless star systems on a galactic scale. Number of lives incalculable.

B1. Disaster effects multiple galaxies on a galactic cluster scale. <100 galaxies effected.

B2. Disaster effects multiple galaxies on a pan galactic scale. <1,000 galaxies effected

B3. Disaster effects multiple galaxies on a minor universal scale. <1,000,000 galaxies effected.

B4. Disaster effects multiple galaxies on a major universal scale. >1,000,000 galaxies effected.

B5. All galaxies on a total universal scale. Utter destruction and ending of a timeline.

C1. Disaster effects correct growth of a chronal twig. Single timeline effected.

C2. Disaster effects correct growth of a chronal branch. Multiple timelines effected or in danger.

C3. Disaster threatens to sever a chronal branch. Multiple branches in danger.

C4. Disaster threatens to cause major trunk damage. Chronal tree in danger.

C5. Disaster threatens a chronal root. Tree could collapse, causing a domino effect in other universes.

D1. Multiple chronal trees threatened. All of reality hangs in the balance. There has never been a D1 scale disaster recorded. Any events that may lead to one must be prevented at all costs.

Times

Times

Writer

campaign

Share to Stream

account_circle

Sign in to share

You need to be signed in to share content to the stream.

Sign In