Black technology: a super empire spanning two worlds

Chapter 1: The Setting of Food Expensive and Scarce in the Blue Planet World

Chapter 1: The Setting of Food Expensive and Scarce in the Blue Planet World
In the setting of the world of Blue Star, the level of technology is far ahead of that of Earth. The scarcity and high cost of food are not simply technical issues on Blue Star, but a scarcity artificially created by the ruling class of Blue Star in order to widen the material gap between the upper and lower classes (the reasons why the rulers do this can be seen in Chapter 33 of the main text, which will not be elaborated here).

The rulers of Blue Star cruelly exploited the lower classes, so some people rose up in resistance and launched a revolution. Where there is oppression, there is resistance. This is a side storyline in the world of Blue Star.

According to the setting, there are uprisings, revolutions, wars, and troubled times on Blue Star, so there must be a "no man's land" where there will be no strict management. Such a setting can provide great convenience for the protagonist to transport large amounts of food to Blue Star in the future. After all, in troubled times, no one will care so much, so the protagonist can take advantage of the situation.

In the setting of the Blue Star world, the technological level is far superior to that of the Earth. As an Earthling, the protagonist needs to have his own exclusive advantages on Blue Star, which can also be understood as the protagonist's golden finger in the Blue Star world.

The author sets out to solve this problem from the "food" level. The protagonist can easily obtain a large amount of cheap food on Earth, while food is scarce and expensive on Blue Star, which becomes the protagonist's golden finger and asymmetric advantage on Blue Star.

However, this setting has given rise to a new logical bug that needs to be resolved. The Blue Star world is set to have a technological level far more advanced than that of the Earth. In theory, there should not be a problem of scarce and expensive food. After all, the Blue Star world has mastered the technology of artificially synthesizing starch.

Hence the above setting: the rulers of Blue Star deliberately create food scarcity for the sake of vested interests and exploitation of the lower classes.

In this way, the argument is self-consistent and logical (to insist that this is unreasonable and illogical is pure argumentation and disruption. In the real world, the food produced by humans has long been able to meet the needs of the global population, but hundreds of millions of people are still facing famine).

Some people may immediately wonder why the rulers of Blue Star do this? What is their reason for artificially creating scarcity? I will not elaborate here due to limited space. The answer is in the text of Chapter 33, and the details will be gradually improved in subsequent updates.

In general, because the Blue Star World is an imaginary world and the main plot is still on Earth, the Blue Star World is a branch and auxiliary plot. The length of the previous chapters is limited. Spending a large amount of space in the early stage to introduce the background of the Blue Star World will drag down the plot rhythm too much. Readers with less patience will just skip it. In that case, the probability of the new book's performance being a big hit will increase.

The early chapters are still mainly focused on advancing the plot. The world background and worldview of Blue Star will be gradually improved in subsequent updates, so don't rush to draw conclusions.

For example, the fact that the technology on Blue Planet is highly developed but food is scarce and expensive, the author saw someone glance at the comments or read it quickly without reading it, and then without saying anything, he made a post to draw conclusions and criticize: the logic is stupid, it is not reasonable at all, and they treat people as fools, etc.

The author also lives in Bengbu, so he had to write this setting overview and put it in the work-related section.

Sometimes it's quite frustrating. If you speed up the pace from the beginning without foreshadowing or laying the groundwork, the book will fall apart or have a bad ending before the middle stage. To write a novel that doesn't fall apart, you must spend a certain amount of space laying the groundwork, but readers don't have much patience, so they abandon the book and the results are bleak.

The author will try his best to find a suitable balance. Don't worry, this book will be finished slowly. Although the current performance of the book is average, it is higher than the author's psychological expectation.

This book mainly writes about commercial black technology. The main line is on Earth, and the Blue Planet is a straight line and acts as a golden finger for the protagonist.

After this book is finished and the background of the Blue Star world is complete, I will then write a spin-off chapter about the Blue Star world, or I can ask for everyone's opinions and start a new book about another protagonist's growth story in the Blue Star world.

(End of this chapter)

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