The Frontrooms is what would be considered the baseline 'reality', as it is where the human species originated from, and thus what we're all familiar with.
Differences from the Backrooms
The Frontrooms, also known as The Universe[1], is the juxtaposition of the Backrooms; a parallel Dimension that, while seemingly similar at face value, is full of many contrasting subtleties.
Like the Backrooms, the Frontrooms is a Dimension of infinite[2] size divided into an infinite[See 2] amount of distinct regions, called Galaxies. However, the Frontrooms vastly differs from the Backrooms in the following metrics:
- Stability - it is considered far stable than the Backrooms, as geometry is by default completely linear.[3]
- Consistency - no Galaxy or area in between Galaxies is dramatically different than any other region.
- Fuzziness of distinct regions - unlike Levels in the Backrooms, Galaxies oftentimes have no well-defined boundary. Instead, they are spread or smeared over vast regions of space, with only a few more solid parts near their center.
- Intra-dimensional travel - unlike the Backrooms, noclipping does not allow travel across different regions, nor travel in one region. Instead, noclipping in the Frontrooms can only lead to the Backrooms.
- Scale - it is almost incomparably larger. A single Galaxy can be as large as 1023 meters in radius. Likewise, Galaxies can be as far as 1027 meters apart. This, along with the sheer impotence of noclipping, makes travel nightmarishly sluggish at best; practically impossible at worst.
- Depth - In the Backrooms, space is divided into clusters, then levels, then sublevels, then locations/areas. However, in the Frontrooms, space is divided into structures, then three separate tiers of clusters, then galaxies/dwarf galaxies, then star systems, then celestial bodies, and then locations/areas. In practice, this means the Frontrooms is far more complicated than the Backrooms as a dynamic system.
Relevant cosmography
Earth is a large, habitable terrestrial planet in the star system Sol[4]. Earth currently houses ~10.472 billion humans, in addition to innumerably many of countless other species. Earth is also the first and currently only planet in the Frontrooms to host life, having had lifeforms first arise billions of years ago. Earth has a diameter of 12.7 thousand kilometers, a surface area of 510 million square kilometers, a mass of 6*1024 kilograms, and a gravitational acceleration of 9.81m/s2 at the surface.
The Sun is a star and Earth's dominant light and heat source, with a habitable zone in the range of roughly 140-200 million kilometers away from the surface of the star. The Sun is 150 million kilometers away from Earth, is 1.39 million kilometers in diameter, 6 trillion kilometers in surface area, 333 thousand Earths equivalent in mass, and a luminosity of 4*1026 watts. The Solar system, its star system, possesses multiple other planets similar to Earth and otherwise, along with countless smaller celestial bodies.
The Milky Way is a spiral Galaxy containing hundreds of billions of stars, including The Sun and its system. It is the second largest Galaxy in the Local Group. The Milky Way has a diameter of 90 thousand light years, an average thickness of a few thousand light years, and a mass equivalent to 1.1 trillion Suns. About 90% of this mass is dark matter, a form of matter that only interacts via gravity. It is considered that this form of matter is entirely unique to the the Frontrooms
References
- ↑ As it is the first Dimension (then more commonly referred to as Universe) discovered.
- ↑ To our knowledge. Like the Backrooms, the Frontrooms is so large that we are simply unable to determine whether its size is finite or not.
- ↑ On rare occasions, space can be curved and warped rather dramatically; this is due to gravitational effects, many of which can never be encountered in the Backrooms.
- ↑ Belonging to the Sun.
Author: Pexy
Images are from Wikimedia Commons.
Levels: | The Neon Paradise • Last Light • null |
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Other: | The Frontrooms • Uncharted Territory |
Joke: | Rewriticism |