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No.64749389 - 欢乐恶搞


无标题无名氏No.64749389 只看PO

2024-12-20(五)01:38:45 ID:NCrtVwD 回应

2024太空漫游

“你写的什么?”
“科幻小说。”
“讲什么的?”
“另一个宇宙下的我们。”

无标题无名氏No.65448130

2025-03-05(三)19:41:15 ID: Gp7qPst

>>No.65448006
你挖的好啊(;´Д`)

无标题无名氏No.65448179

2025-03-05(三)19:45:59 ID: S3fd5ei

写的真好

无标题无名氏No.65452311

2025-03-06(四)02:18:11 ID: GaVE2A4

好久没有这样的短篇小说能看到一半就开始激动了!

无标题无名氏No.66001004

2025-05-05(一)11:58:57 ID: 9GGhe68

洛阳铲!

无标题无名氏No.66001123

2025-05-05(一)12:20:54 ID: F1hLern

再看一遍,写得真好

无标题无名氏No.66001149

2025-05-05(一)12:24:37 ID: EJCN8uX

写得真好啊

无标题无名氏No.66001273

2025-05-05(一)12:47:13 ID: SroDTAb

好看

无标题无名氏No.66001295

2025-05-05(一)12:52:59 ID: 4eNNEmh

天哪,写得太棒了(´゚Д゚`)bbb

无标题无名氏No.66008729

2025-05-06(二)11:47:36 ID: xIFOXOP

确实好,我试着翻译成了英文版,原谅我英文水平有限,但英文科幻小说总有那么一种说不出来的奇妙滋味

**2024: A Space Odyssey**

"What are you writing?"
"Science fiction."
"About what?"
"An alternate version of us. In another universe."

"How are they doing?"

"Better. I imagined that in the 1990s, an economic storm obliterated their space industry. Systemic space programmes never took off, so they turned all their focus earthwards."

"Their electronics would outstrip ours—semiconductors unshackled from aerospace constraints. No lunar bases, no Moon rovers or Disneyland in the Sea of Tranquility. But their entertainment industry? Far more advanced."

"They’d build screens dozens of metres tall. Dome-shaped megastructures plastered with panels, using insane resolutions for true 3D—no optical illusions needed."

"They’d craft wearable tech linking every device globally. Armies of coders, psychologists, and sociologists would design digital opiates to pacify the mind. An electronic narcotic tailored to human instincts. Glance at it, and you’d blissfully waste an afternoon."

"No space weapons, no orbital missile platforms. But they’d deploy swarms of precision drones to sanitise battlefields. Our toughest tanks—built to withstand artillery—would crumple against their micro-swarms. War wouldn’t be secret. People could watch live combat feeds from home, spliced into a thousand camera angles."

"Wouldn’t they get bored? If I couldn’t visit the Moon weekly, life’d feel grey."

"Oh, they would. Humans trapped under gravity? They’d adapt. Smother the stars with screens, pretend they’re in space. Like blind moles or subterranean shrews. They’d commodify the cosmos into scams, vent exploration lust in VR. Carve idols like Easter Islanders. Then kill each other."

"But sci-fi’s about imagining better worlds, yeah? So in theirs, I reckon they’d live far longer, stabler lives. No 10-hour flights to Moon bases for US-Soviet proxy wars. No fear of nukes raining from orbit. Unlimited Coca-Cola—Christ, *that’s* the bit I envy."

"Maybe their food’s piled high like Manhattan malls, available downstairs in seconds. Robot-driven cars on tap. Cities without phone directories, tabulators, or estate agents. And art—they’d have way more freedom to create."

"If we’re dreaming wild: maybe they’ve perfected human-like robots. Turing-test champions, chatting like old mates. Even artist bots! Raphael, da Vinci—none could match machine-made masterpieces. Tech-wise? With those bots, progress would skyrocket."

"Then maybe they’d catch up to us."

"Or we’d catch them. Once this war ends—once the West’s fate’s settled—NASA and Soviet Space might ceasefire. Cold War thaw lets Asia and the Middle East breathe. Bet their 2024’s got wars there too. Soviet auxiliaries marching from Ukraine through Siberia to back North Korea. War never dies. Unless..."

"Sci-fi geopolitics? Bit tacky."

"But their world’s got all our mess—different, not better. No star-worshipping cults, but similar faiths. No nationalised space supply chains, but maybe car factories. No craters or fallout zones, but refugees. Same petty squabbles over cats, dogs, men, women. Same hopes, freedom, love. They’d live grounded lives under the stars *we* gaze at."

"Would they write stuff like this? Imagine *our* world? Envy *us*?"

"By the anthropic principle, we exist in the universe most likely to sustain us. Maybe the reverse holds too."

The astronaut’s visor reflected Earth’s blue silhouette.

"We ought to believe—truly—that we’re in an imperfect universe. But the best possible one."