THE SIGNAL IS STILL BROADCASTING

Most don’t know who’s listening

Who Is Evren Locke ?

Evren Locke was the lead architect behind a planetary climate-stabilization network known as AERIS Nodes.

As global climate manipulation technologies escalated, Locke’s work became the center of public fear and political pressure. Development was slowed, fractured, and ultimately halted. The system was never completed.

When the attack came, the world was defenseless.

Before disappearing from the surface, Locke deployed as many unfinished AERIS Nodes as he could—overriding safeguards, rerouting power, and activating systems never meant to operate alone. He didn’t save the world. He saved what he could reach.

Shortly after, Locke left Earth and established a permanent station in orbit. From there, he continued to operate what remained of the AERIS network, slowly activating additional nodes over time when conditions allowed.

No one is certain what Locke is anymore.

Some believe he’s still human, overseeing the system from orbit. Others believe his consciousness was transferred into the network itself. There are those who think the Signal is no longer Locke at all—only an artificial intelligence built from his decisions, carrying out intentions long after the man disappeared.

No one has proof.

What people experience instead are outcomes.

A sealed door unlocks.
A camera pivots and lingers.
A route becomes accessible once, then never again.

Some call him Locke.
Others call him the Signal.

Most don’t know if there’s anyone left on the other side.

What Is E:MERGENCE?

E:MERGENCE is a fragmented world shaped by unfinished systems and the decisions of one figure whose presence is felt everywhere and seen nowhere.

It is not a single story.

It is a universe built on rumor, survival, and the uneasy belief that help might still exist—if you’re worth the cost.

Your story lives here.
Others can live here too.

The World That Followed

The regions sustained by AERIS Nodes remain livable. Clean air. Stable temperatures. Predictable weather. People don’t call them AERIS Nodes. They call them Stills — because inside them, the world stops tearing itself apart.

Between Stills lies a hostile, unstable world of degraded infrastructure and volatile climate. The journey from one Still to another is dangerous. Most don’t survive it.

Bandit groups move from Still to Still, stripping resources until nothing remains, then moving on. Some maintain permanent strongholds, trading access, protection, or power for survival.

The AERIS network still runs.

Sometimes it intervenes.
Sometimes it doesn’t.

No one knows who decides—or why.