Send your mind back to the grimy streets of Night City, circa 2045. What do you think you''ll hear from goons lounging in a dingy, neon-bathed bar about how they envision life today? Here are the chrome-plated fantasies that you''ll hear filtered through the haze of synthia smoke. "We''ll all be zooming around in flying cars!" they''d slur. Or, "Servbot butlers will bring me breakfast in my choomba pad!" Typical meatbag dreams, choom.
But flash forward to 2600, and the reality is as shocking as a cyberpsycho''s killing spree. Who could''ve predicted the Corps would orchestrate a bloodless global takeover? Their slick socialism smoothly seized total control. Under the shield of China, Kang Tao now steers everything. From the cheap plastic kibble we spoon into our mouths each morning to the scratchy synth-fiber socks on our feet. Gotta hand it to their collective cunning.
Still, not every citizen enjoys the fruits of this chrome-plated paradise. Poverty and squalor fester in the back alleys for those outside the system. The tech may be the slickest chrome, but human misery still seeps through the cracks. As the decades dragged on, the Corps consolidated their creepy socialist credit system. While nominally private companies still exist, they''re puppeteered by the iron fist of state oversight. Most times, profits get carved up collectivist-style. Choomers call it "prosperous sharing" with a choked laugh. The GovCorp skims a cut off the top, using it to control the global real estate market. See, individual ownership still drives the economy. No future without entrepreneurial innovation, right? But all the choicest ideas belong to those who can afford them. Namely, the chrome-plated elite living large on Kang Tao Station, a massive orbital habitat as big as old Venezuela. Gonks like them never taste the grimy life, crammed into a filthy 6 AM smartbus to the factory. At night, they get serviced by the slickest pleasure droids. They''ll never know the danger of losing a limb to some outdated robo, like down on the streets. Who cares about the little people right! As long as the corpo-citizens can wrap their bionic arms around their perfect synthetic lovers.Support creative writers by reading their stories on Royal Road, not stolen versions.
Trapped in a constant state of turmoil and upheaval, Brazil devolved into a strained mixed economy by the mid-21st century. Before the fall, the fractured nation faced countless political and social flashpoints. The delicate balance between tech, freedom, and sustainability collapsed entirely. Now distinct strata carve the country. The upper class dwells in sleek arcologies patrolled by corporate security. Meanwhile, the rest fester in decaying favelas down below.
Each night, Brazil''s orbit fills with illegal waste dumps from off-world colonies. The corporatocracy dumps tons of hazardous trash onto the surface, treating their airspace as a cosmic landfill. This deluge creates catastrophic security and environmental hazards for the people. Radiation, pollution, and the constant threat of a debris impact. Amidst the mess, daring edgerunners find valuable chances amid the wreckage and the hidden black market. They risk lives gathering dangerous treasures, selling to survivalist groups illegally.
Hyper-globalization has led to a world without borders, plugging everyone into something bigger than themselves. The heads of the 6 remaining megacorps formed an elite council they pretentiously dubbed the "Global Celebration Team" - as if running the world was a game. Those who think rigid socialism controls this new world order are dead wrong. Arasaka and Militech, the Japanese-American tech giants, still dominate exports. Stars and stripes intact, Uncle Sam clings to capitalist ways, even as corporate cabals pull the strings.
Brazil navigates this tangled web through the Guiding Party, helmed by Chairman Silver, preventing outright corporate wars. To many he''s an icon, but techno-terrorists see Silver as a puppet, propping up corrupt regimes while the planet burns. As corporations, camouflaged as countries, divide the last resources, one thing is certain - the old world of nations is never coming back. Everything is connected now, choom.