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w:c:the-rick-hernia-omniverse>Fabafaba32 Created page with "thumb|Orra 4 Orra 4 was old. Incredibly, incredibly old. The planet almost certainly predated the rest of the Orra system, including the system's sun itself. Advanced scientific instruments from the best laboratories in the Omniverse were assumed incorrect when Orra 4's age came back as being roughly 40 Nonillion years. Nevertheless, repeated tests by the NCRI found that the planet was mind-breakingly ancient. Readings also indicated ther..." |
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[[File:Orra 4.png|thumb|Orra 4]] | [[File:Orra 4.png|thumb|Orra 4]] | ||
Orra 4 was old. Incredibly, incredibly old. The planet almost certainly predated the rest of the Orra system, including the system's [[Orra|sun]] itself. Advanced scientific instruments from the best laboratories in the Omniverse were assumed incorrect when Orra 4's age came back as being roughly 40 Nonillion years. Nevertheless, repeated tests by the [[NCRI]] found that the planet was mind-breakingly ancient. Readings also indicated there was a metal-rich, icy surface below Orra 4's thick cloud cover. Many suspected it might have had vast, habitable oceans, similar to [[Orra 2]] & [[Orra 3|3]]. However, every expedition sent beneath the planet's cloud cover, including unmanned satellites or probes, lost signal after descending less than 100 feet into the planet's oxygen-rich atmosphere. As such, the true nature of Orra 4 remained a mystery for eons. | Orra 4 was old. Incredibly, incredibly old. The planet almost certainly predated the rest of the Orra system, including the system's [[Orra|sun]] itself. Advanced scientific instruments from the best laboratories in the Omniverse were assumed incorrect when Orra 4's age came back as being roughly 40 Nonillion years. Nevertheless, repeated tests by the [[NCRI]] found that the planet was mind-breakingly ancient. Readings also indicated there was a metal-rich, icy surface below Orra 4's thick cloud cover. Many suspected it might have had vast, habitable oceans, similar to [[Orra 2]] & [[Orra 3|3]]. However, every expedition sent beneath the planet's cloud cover, including unmanned satellites or probes, lost signal after descending less than 100 feet into the planet's oxygen-rich atmosphere. As such, the true nature of Orra 4 remained a mystery for eons. | ||
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Revision as of 01:20, 6 May 2024

Orra 4 was old. Incredibly, incredibly old. The planet almost certainly predated the rest of the Orra system, including the system's sun itself. Advanced scientific instruments from the best laboratories in the Omniverse were assumed incorrect when Orra 4's age came back as being roughly 40 Nonillion years. Nevertheless, repeated tests by the NCRI found that the planet was mind-breakingly ancient. Readings also indicated there was a metal-rich, icy surface below Orra 4's thick cloud cover. Many suspected it might have had vast, habitable oceans, similar to Orra 2 & 3. However, every expedition sent beneath the planet's cloud cover, including unmanned satellites or probes, lost signal after descending less than 100 feet into the planet's oxygen-rich atmosphere. As such, the true nature of Orra 4 remained a mystery for eons.