Monday, June 1, 2026

Terrosaur Badlands - Part 10 - Terrorsaurs- When the Fence Isn’t Enough:

 


Dinosaurs are dangerous. Everyone in southern Alberta knows that. A hornback can crush a wagon, a featherback can open a throat, and a bad herd day can flatten a whole homestead before supper. But those are only dinosaurs. The thing that gave the region its true name—the thing that turned the old badlands into the Terrorsaur Badlands—was the discovery that some of the creatures coming through from the Hallowed World were not merely wild, hungry, or territorial. They were claimed.

A Terrorsaur is what happens when something ancient, intelligent, and hateful finds a body built like a miracle of prehistory and wears it like armour. Some are dinosaurs warped by the passage between worlds, their instincts poisoned into cruelty and worship. Others are possessed outright, hollowed and ridden by demonic intelligences that turn fang, feather, horn, and scale toward blasphemous purpose. They do not simply hunt. They corrupt. They spread fear like weather, draw parasites and carrion horrors in their wake, foul nesting grounds, and twist the land around them until whole valleys begin to feel wrong. Ranchers say a normal dinosaur makes you respect the fence. A terrorsaur makes you wonder whether the fence was ever anything but an invitation.

What truly makes them feared is not just their strength but their malice. Terrorsaurs do not always behave like beasts. Some stalk with battlefield cunning, probe defences, test prey, circle settlements, and strike where panic will do as much harm as tooth and claw. Others carry the taint of multiple lineages at once, emerging as impossible hybrids of crest, horn, talon, and rage—things no sane natural order would ever produce. Their nesting pits become corrupted places, warm with rot, psychic pressure, and infernal attention, birthing lesser horrors or warping nearby life into something half-ruined and mean. In the Terrorsaur Badlands, a terrorsaur sighting is never just a monster problem. It is the beginning of a local crisis.

That is why the region hardened the way it did. Corrals became fortifications. Watchtowers became shrines. Ranchers learned scent wards, kill funnels, raised bunkers, and signal birds. Towns like Brooks built systems of intake, processing, road patrol, and doctrinal control not merely out of ambition, but because out here the line between livestock frontier and apocalypse is thin as wire. Ordinary dinosaurs can be worked with, outsmarted, bonded, or driven off. Terrorsaurs are the reason people still whisper before dusk and check the horizon twice. As the ranchers say: when a dinosaur starts to pray, it’s already too late.

What Makes a Terrorsaur



Not every dangerous dinosaur is a terrorsaur. The Badlands are full of creatures that are mean, territorial, hungry, or simply too large to share a trail with politely. A terrorsaur is something else: a dinosaur that has been spiritually compromised, demonically inhabited, or so thoroughly saturated by the taint of the Hallowed World that it stops behaving like a beast and starts acting like a wicked idea. Some are possessed outright, their bodies ridden by infernal intelligences with plans, hungers, and grudges of their own. Others seem to have been changed by long exposure to warped nesting grounds, cursed fossil beds, or the psychic pressure of leyline fractures, until instinct curdles into malice and survival becomes something closer to worship.

The first sign is usually not appearance, though appearance certainly follows. It is behavior. A terrorsaur watches too long. It circles with intent. It tests a fence, retreats, then returns where the ward is weakest. It may organize lesser predators, stalk around shrines, drag carcasses into deliberate patterns, or react to fear the way a hound reacts to blood. Locals say normal dinosaurs act like animals with intelligence; terrorsaurs act like sermons with teeth. By the time the body begins to show the change—wrong bone growth, hybrid traits, extra eyes, impossible jaws, burning spoor, parasite swarms, or a gaze that feels uncomfortably focused—the deeper corruption is already well underway.

What truly sets them apart is that terrorsaurs do not remain isolated problems for long. They radiate crisis. Demon-wasps, bone-leeches, soul ticks, and other infernal scavengers gather around them. Nearby nesting grounds sour. Wildlife grows erratic. Domesticated herds panic or go strangely still. Sensitive folk report nightmares, compulsions, or the sense that something in the land is listening. Their presence bends the local ecology toward dread, which is why a single terrorsaur can matter more than a whole migrating herd of ordinary dinosaurs. They are not just predators; they are contamination events with claws.

Worst of all, terrorsaurs are often composite monsters. The taint does not respect neat species lines, and demonic possession seems to delight in exaggeration, fusion, and symbolic cruelty. Horned beasts grow tyrannical jaws. Raptors develop impossible geometry in feather and bone. Apex predators sprout ritualized crests, extra sensory organs, or mutation patterns that reflect the kind of fear they spread. That is how the Badlands ends up with names spoken half as warnings and half as curses: things like Styracotyrants, Raptorohedrons, and other nightmare blends that no natural age of the world was ever meant to produce. In the Terrorsaur Badlands, evolution is dangerous enough. Possession is worse. Fusion is what makes the legends stick.

That is why people out here do not define terrorsaurs by taxonomy, but by symptoms. If it spreads panic, warps the land, draws parasites, shows tactical malice, and seems to carry a purpose beyond hunger, folk call it a terrorsaur and start reaching for wards, rifles, prayers, or all three. The name matters because it tells everyone the same thing: this is no longer about animal handling. The fence is not enough.

The Shapes of Terror


 Terrorsaurs do not come in one shape, and that is part of what makes them so feared. They are not a single beast but a whole ecology of corruption: different bodies, different instincts, and different battlefield roles, all bound together by the taint of the Hallowed World. Ranchers, scouts, and road crews eventually learned the hard way that terrorsaurs do not just attack—they arrive in patterns. First come the fast ones, then the strange ones, then the builders, then the things that break towns, and finally the horrors intelligent enough to command the rest.

1. Skulkers and Harriers

These are the first signs of a bad stretch of country turning worse. Headcomps, Clawpods, and Doomdactyls test fences, stalk stragglers, steal supplies, seize minds, and shriek warnings back to the nest. On their own, they are dangerous nuisances; together, they act like the eyes, ears, and nervous fingers of a larger invading force.

2. Workers and Shapers

Some terrorsaurs do not merely destroy—they build. Creatures like the Anklystompers dig pits, raise walls, stack boneworks, shape hatcheries, and turn occupied ground into fortified terror-sites. Their presence is one of the clearest proofs that terrorsaurs are not random monsters but a conquering ecology with labour castes, purposes, and a taste for making the land itself complicit.

3. Raiders and Hunters

This caste includes the fast killers, pursuit beasts, and aerial butchers that make movement through the Badlands so dangerous. Cantoterrors, Pterozotz, and Spino-Watts excel at ambush, chase, harassment, and shock assault, hitting convoys, outlying ranches, river crossings, and isolated camps before heavier horrors arrive. These are the terrorsaurs most likely to turn a routine journey into a massacre.

4. Siege Beasts and Land-Corruptors

When the terrorsaurs mean to erase a place rather than merely raid it, these are what come next. Gorgotops, Hadro-Oozes, Thag-Hives, Titanochariots, and Gluttonpods smash walls, poison ground, petrify forests, spread infestations, and turn useful land into breeding territory for worse things to come. A single beast of this caste can empty a valley; several together can change the map.

5. Lords and War-Saints

At the top of the hierarchy stand the ruling monsters: King Raptors, Dreadtaurs, Pyrorexes, and other terrorsaur lords. These creatures do not simply rampage. They command, organize, punish, and direct, gathering the lesser breeds into warbands, nesting domains, and full terror incursions. This is why the worst outbreaks feel less like animal attacks and more like campaigns of invasion: the terrorsaurs do not just spread, they are led.

That version is much more useful because it quickly gives the reader a mental framework.

A good closing sting after that would be:

This is why the region is called the Terrorsaur Badlands. Not because one monster might kill you, but because the monsters come in castes, move with purpose, and know how to turn fear into territory.

 Where the Earth Hatches Wrong



Most folk in the Terrorsaur Badlands will tell you the same thing if you ask where the worst of them come from: Drumheller. In the old world, it was famous for bones, coulees, hoodoos, and the romance of deep time. In the Hodgepocalypse it became something worse—a breach-scarred outpost of the Hallowed Earth, where fossil beds, cracked dig sites, and wounded badlands opened into something that should have stayed buried. The ground there does not merely hold the past. It leaks it. That is why ranchers, road crews, and pilgrims speak of Drumheller in lowered voices, half as a place and half as a warning.

It is from places like Drumheller that the terrorsaurs seem to bubble up: first as signs, then as sightings, then as raids, and finally as whole outbreaks of organized horror. Skulkers appear in the coulees. Workers dig hatch-pits in the red earth. Flyers circle above the hoodoos like carrion saints. Siege beasts drag themselves from breach-valleys and fossil scars, while terrorsaur lords gather the lesser breeds into nests, warbands, and terror-settlements. The pattern is so consistent that many locals no longer think of Drumheller as merely infested. They think of it as a frontier hellmouth—an open wound where the Hallowed World keeps trying to hatch into Alberta.

That, more than anything, is why the region bears the name it does. Southern Alberta is not called the Terrorsaur Badlands because dinosaurs are large, dangerous, or strange. It is called that because somewhere beneath the cracked land and museum bones, the earth itself seems to remember a kingdom of monsters—and in Drumheller, that memory is still pushing upward.

Signs of a Terrorsaur


In the Terrorsaur Badlands, the worst mistakes are usually made by people who wait for a clear look. By the time you can plainly see the thing, the trouble has often been underway for hours, days, or longer. Ranchers, scouts, road crews, and old pilgrims learn to watch for signs, not sightings: the little wrongnesses that tell you the land has started leaning toward something hateful. A broken fence is just a nuisance. A fence was tested in three places, at equal distances, with no obvious attempt to feed. That gets people loading rifles and waking the whole camp.

Animals often know first. Herd beasts grow skittish, then suddenly too quiet. Watch-birds go missing. Dogs refuse to approach certain gullies. Carrion gathers where nothing should yet be dead, and vermin starts appearing in the wrong numbers or with the wrong boldness. Demon-wasps, bone-leeches, soul ticks, and other scavenging nasties have a bad habit of showing up around terrorsaur country before the terrorsaur itself is seen, as if the parasites know a meal or a miracle is on the way. A good foreman listens when the livestock gets nervous. A smart one listens when the livestock gets calm.

The land also changes. Tracks stop making sense. You find spoor from more than one species in the same print-line, or claw marks where no climbing animal should be. Nesting grounds feel arranged rather than natural. Burned patches, oily slicks, strange stone growths, insect swarms, or carcasses laid out in deliberate patterns are all reasons to turn back fast. The same goes for places where the air feels wrong: static on the radio, a smell of hot pennies or old blood, sudden silence in the coulees, or the prickling certainty that something is watching from just beyond the ridge. In the Badlands, people learn not to ignore places that feel too intentional.

And then there is behaviour. Ordinary dinosaurs break through what stands in their way. Terrorsaurs test it. They circle, probe, vanish, and return. They strike at weak points, separate the slow from the fast, and seem to understand where fear will do the most damage. The old warning still holds when a dinosaur starts to pray, it’s already too late. That does not always mean literal prayer. Sometimes it means ritualized movements, unnatural stillness, repeated patterns, or the sense that the beast is acting out a purpose bigger than hunger. When the signs line up, nobody in southern Alberta waits around to confirm the shape. They move, warn the next camp, and hope the thing they sensed was only the edge of the horror, not its heart.

Notorious Breeds of the Badlands

No two ranchers, road crews, or shrine-keepers keep exactly the same list of infamous terrorsaurs, but certain names come up repeatedly wherever people still swap warnings over coffee, by the campfire, or on convoy radio. These are the breeds that shaped local folklore, not just because they are deadly, but because each one teaches a different lesson about how the terrorsaur threat works.


Headcomps are among the most hated of the lesser breeds, not because they are physically overwhelming, but because they make people distrust their own thoughts. These tiny horrors leap for the head, seize control if they can, and flee with whatever knowledge they steal. Every frontier settlement has at least one story about a watchman who opened the wrong gate, a scout who spoke in the wrong voice, or a traveller who came back knowing things they should not have known. If Headcomps are around, the problem is already watching you.

Anklystompers are the clearest proof that terrorsaurs do not just destroy—they build. These squat; armored worker-devils raise walls, dig pits, shape hatcheries, and fortify corrupted ground with eerie discipline. A single Anklystomper is trouble; several of them mean the land is being prepared for occupation. Their handiwork is often the first sign that some nameless patch of badland is becoming a terror site rather than merely a hunting ground.

Pterozotz are the kind of airborne horror that makes people stop trusting open sky. Fast, bladed, and vicious, they serve as the air force of terrorsaur incursions, diving through convoy lines, scattering herds, and shredding exposed defenders before heavier monsters arrive. Folks in the Badlands say you can fortify a gate, a shrine, or a culvert, but you cannot fortify noon if a flock of Pterozotz owns the sky.


Gorgotops are one of the great land-spoilers of the region: enormous stone-skinned triceratops horrors that petrify, burn, and erase life wherever they settle. Entire stretches of petrified scrub, fused coulee walls, and ash-coated bonefields are blamed on their passing. More than one local map marks certain routes not with roads, rivers, or ranches, but with the simpler warning: Gorgotops country.


At the top of many badlands stories stand the King Raptors, warlord-beasts said to rule lesser terrorsaurs through domination, cunning, and poisonous pride. Whether they were ever something else before corruption took them is a matter of rumour, fear, and bad theology, but nearly everyone agrees on one point: where a King Raptor appears, the monsters stop acting like a pack and start acting like an army. That is when people stop talking about raids and start talking about campaigns.

Why the Badlands Survived


The Terrorsaur Badlands did not survive because the people of southern Alberta were stronger than the land, holier than the horror, or somehow blessed with easier circumstances. They survived because they adapted faster than they died. Every fence line, watchtower, convoy drill, shrine, culvert fort, ranch yard, and road mission in the region is an answer to the same hard lesson: if you live here, you do not get to treat danger as an exception. You build for it, plan for it, teach for it, and assume it will test you sooner or later.

That is why ranches became half-farms and half-fortresses. Corrals were redesigned as kill funnels. Barn lofts became lookout nests. Water towers doubled as signal posts. Animal handlers learned the difference between a bad herd day and the first signs of Hallowed corruption. Dino-ranching was never just a livelihood here; it became a discipline of coexistence under siege. The same practical hardening happened at the settlement level. Small towns learned to wall what mattered, to keep fallback shelters, to train local riders, and to treat every festival, market day, or livestock drive as something that might need to become a defensive action on short notice.

The roads mattered just as much as the walls. In a region this big, survival depended on moving faster than terror. That is why road missions, convoy culture, relay shrines, and fortified gatehouses became so important. Some communities endured because they were strong. Others endured because they stayed connected—able to call for help, reroute travellers, share sightings, and keep critical goods moving between isolated points of light. Even the shrines changed under pressure. What once might have been simple roadside devotions became watch-posts, warning stations, signal towers, and places where practical faith and frontier logistics blurred together.

And then there are places like Brooks, which represent the harshest and most organized answer the region produced. Where some settlements merely hardened, Brooks systematized survival into industry, doctrine, and civic control. It became a place that not only endured the dinosaur frontier but also attempted to manage, process, and weaponize it. Not everyone likes what Brooks became, and many would say it paid too high a price to remain standing, but its existence proves the central truth of the Badlands: people did not survive by denying the terror. They survived by building whole ways of life around the certainty that it was real.

Why Adventurers Care



The Terrorsaur Badlands matter because they are never truly settled. No matter how many corrals are raised, how many roads are reclaimed, how many convoys are armed, or how many sermons are preached over the wire, the region remains a frontier balanced over an open wound. That makes it a natural magnet for adventurers. There are always missing caravans, broken shrines, collapsed watch-posts, new hatch-pits in old coulees, and frightened settlements willing to pay for help they cannot provide themselves. Out here, danger does not sit politely in a dungeon and wait to be challenged. It moves across the land, changes shape and drags mystery with it.

For some, the Badlands are about the hunt. A ranch hires guns to put down a rogue beast before it turns a whole valley into nesting ground. A road mission needs escorts through Gorgotops country. A convoy goes missing between fortified stops, and all anyone finds is a wrecked gate and tracks that do not match one species. For others, the draw is stranger: rumors of old breach-sites in the Drumheller coulees, hidden shrines built over fossil scars, terror-settlements ruled by King Raptors, or ancient bones beginning to wake beneath places that should have stayed quiet. Every answer in the Badlands seems to uncover a worse question underneath it.

And then there are the people. Brooks wants deniable specialists. Ranchers want proof before they burn a whole nesting valley. Road crews need someone expendable enough to inspect the culvert where the radios died. Shrine-keepers pass along warnings no one in authority wants written down. Survivors whisper about missing family, altered children, half-finished “recyclings,” and camps that came back wrong. The Badlands are full of jobs, but almost none of them stay simple for long. Put down one terrorsaur, and you may discover a hatch-pit. Save one caravan, and you may learn who diverted it. Close one breach, and you may realize something intelligent wanted it open.

That is why adventurers keep coming back, even when wiser people head north. The Terrorsaur Badlands offer everything a dangerous frontier should: monsters worth naming, settlements worth saving, factions worth distrusting, and mysteries old enough to feel biblical and immediate enough to bite. In southern Alberta, the earth still hatches wrong. Someone always has to ride out and see what came up this time.

Plot Hooks in the Terrorsaur Badlands

  • The Prayer Pit: A ranch family reports that one of their herd bulls has begun kneeling at dusk toward the same badland ridge every evening, and three other animals have disappeared since. Whatever is in that coulee may be turning the herd before anyone realizes it.
  • The Wrong Tracks: A convoy vanishes between two known safe stops, but the trail left behind shows spoor from three different dinosaur species moving in a single coordinated line. Brooks wants the cargo recovered, the road mission wants the truth buried, and the locals just want to know what learned to march.
  • The Headcomp Problem: A respected watch captain opens the gates for the wrong caravan at the wrong hour and swears he does not remember doing it. Now the settlement fears infiltration, and everyone who passed through that night has become a suspect.
  • The New Hatchery: Anklystompers have begun digging and shaping a remote coulee into something deliberate: trenches, bone markers, and heat pits laid out with unnatural precision. The work must be stopped before the place becomes a full terror-site, but something bigger is already overseeing the labor.
  • Sky at Noon: A flock of Pterozotz has started claiming a trade route so aggressively that traffic is collapsing across the region. Merchants will pay for escorts, ranchers will pay for revenge, and one shrine-keeper insists the flock is only screening for the arrival of something much worse.
  • Stone Country: An entire grazing range has gone silent, and the only survivor stumbled back half-mad with ash in his hair and a warning about statues that were still warm. A Gorgotops has moved in, and if it is not driven off quickly, the whole valley may be lost for a generation.
  • Eggs in the Irrigation Ditch: After a flood surge, strange, black-veined eggs begin appearing along a canal system feeding the outer ranches. Some want them burned immediately, some want them studied, and at least one faction in Brooks wants them collected intact.
  • King in the Coulees: Scattered terrorsaur attacks across several settlements suddenly stop being random and start showing strategy: baited ambushes, cut roads, feints, and targeted strikes. Someone is organizing them, and rumor says a King Raptor has claimed a ruined site in the badlands as its court.
  • Road Crew Silence: A fortified road mission goes dark after reporting static on the line, strange lights in the culvert, and a “big shape” moving under the bridge supports. By the time help arrives, the fort is empty, the equipment is still running, and something below is humming in Hallowed Speech.
  • The Drumheller Signal: Prospectors, cultists, ranchers, and scavengers all pick up the same impossible rumor: something in Drumheller is calling the terrorsaurs together. Whether it is a Pyrorex, a breach-site, an awakened fossil shrine, or something worse, the first people to reach it may decide what happens to the whole Badlands next.


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Saturday, May 23, 2026

Terrosaur Badlands - Part 9 - Brooks - Chrome Zion

 


All nodes lead to Brooks, or so the Cybercult likes to say. Out on the cracked highways of the Terrorsaur Badlands, where mini chapels glow beside the road, and sermon-lights blink across the dusk, that boast starts to feel less like doctrine and more like geography. Brooks does not hide on the horizon. It gathers the land toward itself: roads, herds, pilgrims, convoys, captives, processors, and dreams of order all pulled inward through its gates. From a distance, it might pass for one of those old fortified settler towns, practical and pious and built to outlast a hostile country through discipline alone. Up close, it is something harsher—a chrome frontier stronghold where dinosaurs are processed into miracles, faith is measured in labour and implants, and the Badlands are being taught, one settlement at a time, to kneel.

Brooks is the place where the Cybercult stops feeling like a scattered frontier faith and starts feeling like a state. Out on the highways, in the mini chapels, and across the Sanctuary Camps, its doctrine arrives as help, discipline, and quiet infiltration. Here, it arrives as walls, work schedules, processing yards, doctrinal hierarchy, and the organized conversion of land, beast, and citizen into useful parts of a greater machine. Set in the heart of dinosaur country and fed by the old logic of ranching, irrigation, transport, and religious settlement, Brooks has become the great Badlands center of DynoCyber production, frontier coordination, and chrome-backed order. If the rest of the region shows how the Cybercult spreads, Brooks shows what it looks like when that spread succeeds.

History


Brooks did not become the Cybercult’s Badlands stronghold overnight. It grew the old frontier way: by making itself useful first. What began as a service hub on the edge of dinosaur country—part ranch-supply town, part transport corridor, part agricultural lifeline—became something harder and stranger as the Cybercult sank its roots into the region. Road crews kept routes open, implant medics patched the injured, and reclamation teams offered answers for tainted beasts that ordinary settlers could not handle. In time, those practical services hardened into doctrine, infrastructure, and control. Old civic spaces were absorbed, new processing yards rose beside corrals and grain lots, and Brooks became the place where the Cybercult learned it could do more than survive the Badlands: it could organize them. That history still leaves cracks for adventurers to pry open—old families pushed aside, rival powers cut out of the town’s rise, vanished dissenters, and whole layers of the city built over whatever came before.

What Brooks Feels Like



Brooks feels orderly in a way that most Badlands towns can only fake for a few hours at a time. The roads are straight, the gates are watched, the work horns sound on schedule, and even the noise seems regulated: the clatter of tools, the low thunder of penned beasts, the drone of generators, the distant recitation of doctrine over loudspeakers. It is not a ruined frontier camp barely holding together, nor a freewheeling boomtown drunk on opportunity. It is clean where it chooses to be clean, efficient where it matters, and visibly built around the idea that every person, beast, and machine should have a proper function. For travelers, that can feel reassuring right up until it starts to feel oppressive.

The city’s hospitality carries that same edge. Visitors can find water, feed, repairs, lodging, and trade more easily here than in most of the Badlands, but nothing ever feels casual. Every service has a procedure. Every host seems to know where you should be standing. Every district has rules posted in plain language and glowing code-script. The people of Brooks are not uniformly grim—many are proud of their city, and not without reason—but even their friendliness often carries the faint pressure of a place that assumes it knows how life ought to be lived. You are welcomed, measured, and quietly sorted all at once.

And then there are the DynoCybers. You hear them before you fully see them: the hiss of pneumatics, the click of reinforced joints, the scrape of metal against pen-rails, the strange mix of animal breathing and machine rhythm. In Brooks they are not rare wonders or terrifying surprises, but part of daily life. A cybergaucho hauling freight, a compspeculator slipping across a roofline, a cerotank lumbering through a secured yard—these are ordinary sights here, which may be the most unsettling thing of all. Brooks does not present itself as a place at war with the unnatural. It presents itself as a place that has already decided the unnatural is simply how the future works.

The Road Crews


The Road Crews are among the most visible and unsettling servants of the Cybercult in Brooks: intelligent animated construction vehicles tasked with keeping roads open, routes optimal, and infrastructure in proper working order. To the faithful, they are holy labour made visible, proof that the reclamation of the world begins with pavement, grading, and the disciplined restoration of movement. To everyone else, they are a deeply unnerving mix of public works department, doctrinal enforcer, and unstoppable civic hazard. A Road Crew can be surprisingly friendly if you help with a project, offer useful materials, or show respect for its work—but that friendliness vanishes the moment you, your settlement, or your property are judged to be in the way of the route.

In and around Brooks, the Road Crews are treated with a strange mixture of affection, irritation, and fear. They repair causeways, maintain convoy lanes, raise embankments, clear wreckage, and build the practical skeleton that allows the city to dominate the Badlands. At the same time, their commitment to the “correct” path makes them dangerous neighbours. Squatters on old rights-of-way may wake to the sound of engines and hymns as a loader marks their home for removal. A stalled project can turn into a holy emergency. And because each vehicle has its own type-cast personality—the complaining Loader, the vulgar but weirdly affectionate Mixer, the praise-starved Road Roller—they also add an almost absurdly human layer to Brooks’ machinery of order. In Brooks, even the construction equipment has doctrine.

Plot Hook: A Road Crew has declared a long-settled neighborhood to be an obstruction on a reclaimed route, and demolition will begin at dawn unless someone can prove the maps are wrong. The trouble is, the maps may not be wrong at all—they may just reveal that the city planned this expansion years ago and only waited until now to act.

Why Brooks Matters


Brooks matters because the Badlands runs on movement, and Brooks sits where too many kinds of movement meet to ignore. Herds move through it. Convoys move through it. Pilgrims move through it. Road crews, ranchers, traders, reclaimers, youth caravans, and DynoCyber handlers all pass through its gates sooner or later. Set in the heart of ranching country and close to some of the most dinosaur-haunted ground in the region, Brooks was always well placed to become a frontier hub. The Cybercult simply recognized that value earlier and more completely than anyone else.

It also matters because Brooks solves problems other settlements cannot solve alone. It has the corrals, labor force, doctrine, workshops, and processing yards to handle captured dinosaurs, damaged DynoCybers, implant work, neural crop support, and large-scale logistics. Smaller towns may have chapels, camps, or a handful of converted beasts, but Brooks is where those scattered efforts become a system. Roads are dispatched from here. Missions are supplied from here. Pilgrims come here to witness the scale of Cybercult order for themselves. In practical terms, Brooks is a market town, transport center, ranching capital, and religious node all at once. In strategic terms, it is the hinge on which a large part of the Terrorsaur Badlands turns.

Government and Factions

The Processor-Governor


The Processor-Governor is the highest visible authority in Brooks, the figure through whom doctrine, labor, infrastructure, and civic life are fused into a single chain of command. Part bishop, part magistrate, and part logistics master, the office exists to keep the city functioning: roads open, corrals orderly, processing yards productive, pilgrims managed, and every district operating within proper tolerances. Publicly, the Processor-Governor presents themself as a calm steward of order and survival, blessing DynoCyber processions, inspecting work crews, and speaking of discipline as mercy. Everyone in Brooks knows the harder truth beneath that pastoral tone: when a person, district, or faction is judged to be malfunctioning, it is the Processor-Governor who decides whether the answer will be reform, reassignment, or recycling.

Plot Hook: A senior functionary begs the party to recover a ledger before the Processor-Governor’s rivals do, claiming it proves whole families were quietly reassigned during Brooks’ rise to power. If the records are real, they could expose the city’s buried history—or trigger a purge before the truth can spread.

Keeper of the Processing Yards


The Keeper of the Processing Yards oversees the noisiest, bloodiest, and most indispensable part of Brooks: the place where captured dinosaurs, damaged DynoCybers, salvaged machinery, and unfortunate mistakes are sorted, assessed, and corrected. Equal parts foreman, surgeon, quartermaster, and high ritualist, the Keeper makes sure the city’s great engine of reclamation never stops moving. In public, they speak of efficiency, mercy, and proper function; in practice, they decide what can be repaired, what can be repurposed, and what is only fit for recycling. Few figures in Brooks are more feared, because few are closer to the moment where the Cybercult’s promises become saws, steel, and doctrine.

Plot Hook: Something has gone wrong in the Processing Yards, and the Keeper needs outsiders to recover a “misfiled asset” before word spreads through the city. The asset may be a rogue DynoCyber, a missing worker, or evidence that the Keeper has been quietly sending the wrong things down the recycling line.

The Marshal of Roads and Gates


The Marshal of Roads and Gates is not human, not cyborg, and not even remotely subtle: it is a senior Road Crew intelligence elevated to one of the highest operational offices in Brooks. Charged with overseeing gates, traffic flow, convoy access, road maintenance priorities, and the movement of goods, pilgrims, herds, and military assets, the Marshal embodies the Cybercult’s belief that proper order begins with proper routing. It does not think in terms of politics or mercy so much as clearance, obstruction, throughput, and acceptable loss. To the people of Brooks, the Marshal is both civic officer and holy machine of public works; to outsiders, it is the unnerving realization that the city’s border policy is being enforced by something that sees a traffic jam, a refugee column, and an armed incursion as three versions of the same logistical problem.

Plot Hook: The Marshal has sealed a major gate and begun rerouting all traffic through a far more dangerous corridor, insisting the change is necessary for “route correction.” Someone needs to find out whether it detected a real threat on the main road—or whether its ancient optimization protocols have decided that an entire outlying settlement now counts as an obstacle.

Mother of Sanctuary Formation



The Mother of Sanctuary Formation oversees Brooks’ camps, youth instruction, devotional education, and the long work of turning obedience into identity. Where the Processor-Governor keeps the city functioning, and the Keeper of the Processing Yards keeps it productive, this office keeps it reproducing itself—through summer camps, discipline programs, technical training, doctrinal pageants, and the quiet shaping of children, converts, and uncertain families into proper citizens of the machine faith. Publicly, they are warm, patient, and deeply reassuring, the sort of figure who speaks of structure, service, and safe futures with genuine conviction. That is exactly what makes them dangerous: few people in Brooks are better at making indoctrination feel like care.

Plot Hook: A family begs the party to find out what really happened at a Sanctuary Camp after their child came home with a new implant, a rehearsed smile, and no memory of three missing days. The Mother of Sanctuary Formation insists nothing improper occurred and invites the characters to inspect the camp themselves—provided they agree to stay for the full program.

Chief Whitehat



The Chief Whitehat is Brooks’ master troubleshooter, chief systems debugger, and quiet broker between the Cybercult’s public order and its invisible machinery. Originally said to have come from Prairie Oasis, he brings a slicker, more urban edge than many of Brooks’ homegrown authorities: polished smile, careful manners, sharp wardrobe, and the unnerving confidence of someone who always seems to know what is happening three systems ahead of everyone else. He oversees communications, network integrity, doctrinal security, and the legions of lesser Whitehats who keep Brooks’ implants, surveillance, route controls, and DynoCyber interfaces functioning. Friendly by local standards and often willing to work with outsiders, he is one of the easiest powers in Brooks to approach—right up until you realize that every favor he grants also makes you easier to track, profile, or recruit.

Plot Hook: The Chief Whitehat hires the party for what sounds like a simple debugging job: recover a lost data cache before it falls into hostile hands. The cache may contain stolen route maps, Black Hat sabotage, or proof that someone in Brooks’ inner circle has been quietly rewriting more than code.

Voice of the Node



The Voice of the Node is Brooks’ chief public herald of doctrine, the figure most citizens actually hear more often than they ever see the Processor-Governor. Part preacher, part broadcaster, part living interface, the Voice delivers sermons, civic notices, emergency declarations, festival blessings, and approved interpretations of current events through chapel speakers, public screens, convoy relays, and citywide transmissions. Where other authorities in Brooks manage labor, roads, or formation, the Voice manages meaning: explaining what the city is doing, why it is necessary, and how the faithful are meant to feel about it. Warm, resonant, and almost impossible to forget, the Voice is beloved by some, mocked by others, and quietly feared by anyone who has heard their tone shift from reassurance to correction.

Plot Hook: A forbidden transmission interrupts one of the Voice’s sermons, using the same vocal signature to broadcast a message that should be impossible. If the party investigates, they may uncover an old backup personality, a buried rival doctrine, or proof that the Voice of the Node is not as singular as Brooks wants people to believe.

Daily Tensions

For all its straight roads, fixed schedules, and polished certainty, Brooks is not truly at peace with itself. The city works because its factions need one another, not because they agree. Ranch pragmatists value DynoCybers, implants, and Cybercult order insofar as they keep herds moving, fields productive, and settlements alive, but they often distrust the harsher doctrinal edge of the city’s leadership. Doctrinal purists, by contrast, see compromise as weakness and treat every practical concession as a delay in the proper correction of the world. The result is a city where people can work side by side for years while quietly despising what the other believes Brooks is for.

Other tensions cut even closer to the city’s core. Processors and yard authorities think in terms of throughput, correction, and industrial necessity, while road missionaries and crews see themselves as the holier arm of the Cybercult, spreading order outward rather than merely managing what arrives. Youth formed in Sanctuary Camps often return zealous, disciplined, and eager to prove themselves, which unsettles many older settlers and absorbed families who remember when Brooks was rougher, looser, and less eager to turn every habit into policy. Even the city’s proudest achievements divide opinion: some citizens sincerely believe DynoCybers are living proof that the Cybercult redeems what the Badlands would otherwise destroy, while others accept them only as a grim necessity too useful to reject. Beneath all of this lies an older wound few speak of openly: scattered through Brooks are people who remember, or descend from those who remembered, the lessons of Red Coulee and other early “recyclings.” They smile, work, and survive like everyone else, but some still carry hidden loyalties, private griefs, and the quiet hope that one day the city’s perfect order might crack.

Locations of Note

Districts of Brooks

The Gates and Receiving Pens



The first face Brooks shows the world is not a plaza or a temple, but a machine for sorting life. Here, caravans, pilgrims, salvage wagons, herds, road crews, and captured beasts are funneled through layered checkpoints, fenced approach lanes, quarantine sheds, weigh scales, and brutal holding corrals before they are allowed any deeper into the city. Dust hangs in the air, loudspeakers bark route corrections, clerks mark ledgers and tablets in equal measure, and the whole district runs on the assumption that everything entering Brooks must be assessed for purpose, purity, and proper destination.

Location of Note: The Long Pens
Built over the bones of an older stock-handling and feedlot intake site inspired by Brooks’ real ranching and feedlot country, the Long Pens are a sprawling maze of reinforced corrals, loading ramps, inspection chutes, quarantine barns, and steel-gated lanes where incoming beasts and travelers alike are categorized before entry. What was once cattle-country logic has been scaled up and weaponized for the Cybercult: dinosaurs in one channel, pilgrims in another, salvage in a third, and anything questionable routed for deeper inspection before the gates ever open.

Plot Hook: Something in the Long Pens is disrupting intake: caravans are delayed, beasts are panicking, and incoming pilgrims are being quietly reassigned to a quarantine lane that does not appear on any public map. Whether it is a rogue DynoCyber, a hidden smuggling route, or an unofficial sorting protocol targeting specific bloodlines, Brooks wants the problem solved before panic spreads to the gates.

The Processing Yards



If the gates sort the city’s inputs, the Processing Yards reveal what Brooks is really for. Here, wounded dinosaurs, captured terrorsaurs, broken DynoCybers, salvaged machinery, and select human “malfunctions” are brought beneath gantries, cranes, silos, and surgical sheds to be corrected, repurposed, augmented, or recycled. The district smells of hot metal, antiseptic, blood, feed, and ozone; sermons drift over cutting torches and hydraulic presses; and every building seems to carry the same quiet doctrine in steel form: nothing is wasted, only reassigned to proper function.

Location of Note: The Redline Works
Built over the bones of a pre-Hodgepocalypse meat-processing complex inspired by Brooks’ real-world slaughter and packing infrastructure, the Redline Works is the single most feared site in the district: a sprawling cluster of intake ramps, cold-bay vaults, implant theaters, feed silos, rendering pits, and doctrinal reclamation halls where beast and machine alike are disassembled and remade. The old logic of industrial butchery remains visible in the architecture, but the Cybercult has transformed it into something broader and worse—a place where living dinosaurs can become DynoCybers, damaged constructs can be stripped for parts, and inconvenient people can vanish into the same sacred workflow.

Plot Hook: A worker smuggles out evidence that something in the Redline Works is surviving the recycling line and coming back wrong—too intelligent, too angry, or too aware of what was done to it. If the party investigates, they may uncover a rogue grafted terrorsaur, a hidden labor revolt in the lower bays, or proof that the Keeper of the Processing Yards has been using the district to erase more than broken machinery.

The Node District


The Node District is the clean face Brooks presents to itself: the place where doctrine is archived, schedules are sanctified, and civic order is given both paperwork and liturgy. Broad squares, chapel-halls, record vaults, relay towers, and administrative compounds dominate the district, making it feel less like a neighborhood and more like a machine for producing legitimacy. Here the Cybercult’s leadership lives close to its bureaucracy, and every sermon, permit, census, reassignment, and public declaration passes through hands—or terminals—meant to make Brooks seem orderly, inevitable, and correct.

Location of Note: The Heritage Node
Inspired by Brooks’ real-world museum-and-heritage culture and the city’s interest in marking historic buildings, the Heritage Node is a former civic heritage complex turned doctrinal archive and public memory theater. What once preserved the town’s past now curates it under Cybercult supervision: curated exhibits on the “useful rise” of Brooks, sainted road maps, preserved relics of early settlement and ranching, and carefully edited accounts of the city’s transformation into the Processing City. Citizens visit it for education, pilgrims for inspiration, and officials for access to sealed records hidden below the public galleries.

Plot Hook: A sealed chamber beneath the Heritage Node is said to contain unedited records from Brooks before the Cybercult consolidated power, including names that no longer appear in any city register. The party may be hired to retrieve a single file, but once inside they could uncover a censored massacre, proof of fabricated doctrine, or evidence that one of Brooks’ current leaders was never supposed to exist.

The Rail and Road Mission


The Rail and Road Mission is the district that keeps Brooks from collapsing inward under its own certainty. Convoys are assembled here, road crews are fueled and blessed here, freight is sorted here, and the city’s will is pushed outward along cracked highways, reclaimed causeways, and the old lines of transport that still stitch the Badlands together. Garages, depots, relay towers, loading yards, mission chapels, and repair bays fill the district with the clang of tools, the hiss of pneumatics, and the constant sense that everything in Brooks is either arriving, leaving, or being made ready to move.

Location of Note: The Siphon Exchange
Inspired by the real Brooks Aqueduct and its unusual siphon system that once carried irrigation under the Canadian Pacific Railway line, the Siphon Exchange is a fortified transit complex where road, rail, and utility routes cross beneath and through one another in carefully managed layers. What was once engineering built to move water and sustain settlement has been repurposed into a sacred logistics knot of tunnels, loading ramps, relay vaults, convoy staging lanes, and machine shrines where the Cybercult coordinates movement across the region.

Plot Hook: A convoy carrying something vital never arrives at the Siphon Exchange, but all official route records insist it passed through on schedule. To find out what vanished between departure and destination, the party must navigate sealed tunnels, doctored manifests, and a district where the infrastructure itself may be hiding a second, unauthorized traffic network.

The Outer Fields


Beyond Brooks’ walls and harder industrial districts lie the Outer Fields, where the city’s frontier roots have not vanished so much as been systematized. Feed lots, irrigation channels, neural crop plots, auxiliary corrals, hatch pens, and disciplined production zones stretch across the land in ordered bands, all managed with the same combination of ranch pragmatism and cyber-religious control that defines the city itself. This is the part of Brooks that still looks most like southern Alberta at a glance—open land, livestock, waterworks, and big sky—but every fence line, crop row, and holding pen has been folded into the Cybercult’s larger logic of yield, obedience, and managed life.

Location of Note: Lake Node Newell
Lake Node Newell is the great agricultural reservoir of Cybercult Brooks: a water-managed zone of irrigation works, neural crop terraces, feed infrastructure, hatch ponds, and outlying field chapels that supply both the city and its DynoCyber programs. It is one of the clearest examples of how the Cybercult repurposes older prairie-settlement logic, turning the miracle of water on dry land into a disciplined engine of production and doctrinal dependence.  

Plot Hook: Something in the irrigation system at Lake Node Newell is affecting both the neural crops and the animals that feed from the water, making them calmer, more obedient, and increasingly strange. The party may be hired to stop a blight, but the truth could be a hidden chemical program, a corrupted doctrinal additive, or an experimental attempt to extend DynoCyber conditioning to an entire landscape.

Why Adventurers Care



Brooks is the kind of city that draws trouble because it makes itself too important to ignore. If you need information, repairs, rare parts, captured beasts, doctored route records, black-market implants, missing people, or access to the wider Badlands road network, sooner or later your path bends toward its gates. The city is useful, wealthy by regional standards, and filled with factions that would rather hire outsiders than openly embarrass one another. That alone makes it an adventuring hub. In Brooks, there is always a convoy to guard, a record to steal, a camp to investigate, a DynoCyber to retrieve, a dissident to smuggle out, or a public problem that the authorities would prefer solved quietly.

It is also a city built on the promise that everything can be sorted, corrected, and assigned a proper place. That promise creates endless cracks for stories. Adventurers can get caught between the Processor-Governor’s need for order, the Keeper’s appetite for throughput, the Mother’s quiet indoctrination machine, the Chief Whitehat’s polished manipulations, and the Marshal’s pitiless sense of route optimization. Some visitors come to Brooks for trade and stay because they owe favors. Some come searching for a missing relative, a lost route, or evidence of old crimes buried under civic myth. Others come because something broken in the Badlands always seems to lead back here eventually. Brooks offers all the benefits of civilization—walls, markets, repairs, food, roads, influence—at the cost of constant proximity to power. For adventurers, that is exactly what makes it dangerous, useful, and impossible to resist.

Adventure Hooks

  • The Wrong Gate: A friendly caravan is routed into a quarantine lane and vanishes into the Long Pens without explanation. To get them back, the party must navigate intake bureaucracy, falsified records, and the possibility that someone in Brooks wanted those travelers diverted on purpose.
  • The Redline Survivor: Something that should have been recycled escapes the Redline Works and begins killing selectively in the city. The authorities want it destroyed immediately, but the creature may know who put it on the line and why.
  • Camp Season: A child from a trusted family returns from Sanctuary formation changed in ways no one can explain, and three others never come home at all. Investigating the camp means dealing with the Mother of Sanctuary Formation on ground she controls completely.
  • Route Correction: The Marshal of Roads and Gates declares an old neighborhood or outlying settlement to be an obstruction and schedules demolition under sacred authority. The party can help with the evacuation, sabotage the order, or uncover why the route suddenly became urgent.
  • Ghosts in the Heritage Node: Unedited records hidden beneath the Node District suggest that Brooks’ official rise to power was built on erased families, false doctrine, or a forgotten atrocity linked to Red Coulee. Retrieving the truth is one thing; surviving what it does to the city is another.
  • The Whitehat’s Favor: The Chief Whitehat offers the party an easy job recovering stolen data, but the missing cache includes more than route codes and system maps. Whoever holds it may be able to prove that one of Brooks’ ruling offices has been quietly rewritten from the inside.

Closing Sting

In the Terrorsaur Badlands, there are towns that endure, towns that hide, and towns that pray the road passes them by. Brooks does none of those things. Brooks opens its gates, marks the route, and waits for the world to arrive in need of something only it can provide.



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Saturday, May 16, 2026

Terrosaur Badlands - Part 8 - The Cybercult - Chrome on the Range

 


Apostles of the Circuit. Disciples of the Machine. Preachers of Silicon Salvation.

In the Terrorsaur Badlands, the Cybercult did not arrive like an invading army. It came the way old prairie faiths always had: by road, by invitation, by hardship, and by the promise that someone out there still knew how to make a broken place hold together. First came the repair crews and the pamphlets. Then the roadside chapels, the youth camps, and the revival lights glowing strange blue against the hoodoos. Before long, the natural amphitheatres of the Badlands were ringing with chrome gospel, mechanical choirs, and passion plays about Jerod’s revelation, while children returned from summer retreats quieter, cleaner, and just a little less made of themselves than when they left. In a land of failing roads, isolated ranches, tainted beasts, and ancient things clawing up from the bone earth, the Cybercult found exactly what it needed: a frontier already fluent in faith, spectacle, discipline, and the dangerous hope that salvation might still come riding in from over the next ridge.

That was how the Cybercult entered the Terrorsaur Badlands and why they stayed. They did not arrive as conquerors first, but as the people who could keep the roads open, patch the pumps, stabilize the generators, and do something—anything—about the possessed dinosaurs that made whole ranches and settlements unlivable. In a land shaped by revival culture, Bible camps, missionary routes, and the old southern Alberta belief that harsh country could be redeemed through faith, discipline, and organized labour, the Cybercult found ready soil for a harsher gospel. Where older prairie religion raised chapels, camps, and temples, they raised servo-shrines, Sanctuary Nodes, and neon amphitheatres. Where older missionaries promised salvation of the soul, the Cybercult offered salvation of the body through circuitry, order, and steel.


How the Cybercult Came Online


 The Cybercult did not first conquer the Terrorsaur Badlands by force. It came in the older prairie way: by settling the hard places other people could not keep. Long before the Hodgepocalypse fully remade the region, southern Alberta had already taught a hard lesson to anyone trying to build a life there. The land rewarded discipline, punished carelessness, and favoured communities willing to bind themselves together through labour, hierarchy, and belief. The Cybercult understood that immediately. Where the soil was stubborn, where roads washed out, where isolation wore on the spirit, they offered structure. Their earliest missions in the region were not grand temples or chrome fortresses, but small settlement outposts planted along difficult routes, irrigation remnants, abandoned church properties, and forgotten service roads. They built chapels where truck stops used to be, repair sheds where missions once stood, and austere communal enclaves in places that had been written off by softer folk.

At first, many locals tolerated them for the same reason frontier settlers had once tolerated stern preachers and strict colonists: the Cybercult got things done. Their road crews reopened dangerous routes. Their mechanics kept scavenged machinery alive. Their medics offered crude but often effective cybernetic replacements to those maimed by beasts, bad harvests, raiders, or industrial ruin. They brought water purification rigs, prefab waystations, and a disciplined work ethic that could make a settlement seem almost civilized again. In a country where a broken axle, a bad pump, or a tainted herd could doom a whole community, that kind of usefulness was hard to ignore. Their little roadside shrines spread first. Their camps followed. Their missions became permanent.

Those permanent communities became known across the Badlands as setbacks. The name fit in more ways than one. Officially, a setback was a planned Cybercult settlement: neat rows of barracks, machine sheds, implant clinics, storage silos, servo-pulpits, and a chrome-faced chapel always visible from the road. They were built to look orderly, efficient, and humble, like frontier salvation rendered in steel siding and fluorescent scripture. Unofficially, the name became a joke with teeth. Once a settlement accepted Cybercult help, its independence suffered a setback. Public repair projects became public sermons. Youth camps became pipelines for indoctrination. Medical aid became a sacrament. The roads improved, the lights stayed on, and the machines kept working—but every favour came tied to ritual, hierarchy, and surrender.


For a time, many communities accepted the trade. The Cybercult seemed harsh, but useful. They could keep roads open through bad weather and worse territory. They could organize labour where local councils had failed. They could even do something about the possessed dinosaurs that made parts of the Badlands nearly unlivable. To many settlers, ranchers, and isolated outposts, that counted for more than doctrine. Better a stern faith with working generators than a free town with dead pumps and tainted stock. That was how the Cybercult embedded itself before the Hodgepocalypse: not as a conquering army, but as a system that people slowly came to rely on.

Then came the event the region still remembers as the Red Coulee Recycling.

The exact details vary depending on who is telling it, and the Cybercult’s own records are polished, incomplete, and full of the kind of passive language institutions use when they want to make horror sound procedural. Most versions agree on the broad shape of what happened. Red Coulee was one of the first larger non-Cybercult communities in the region to accept sustained Cybercult aid. The roads had been failing. The equipment was wearing out. A string of accidents, livestock losses, and incidents involving tainted animals had left the settlement vulnerable. The Cybercult arrived with repair crews, replacement parts, orders, and promises. For a while, the arrangement worked. Then something broke.

Some say the people of Red Coulee resisted a second round of “voluntary” implants after months of growing pressure. Some say they gave shelter to runaways from a Sanctuary Camp. Others insist the real dispute began over livestock and machine tithe, or over a possessed dinosaur the Cybercult demanded be surrendered for reclamation and conversion. Whatever the spark, the result was slaughter. By the time neighboring factions reached the site, Red Coulee had ceased to exist as a free settlement. Its defenders were dead. Its survivors were missing, absorbed, or forcibly integrated. Buildings had been stripped and repurposed. Machinery had been reclaimed. Livestock had vanished into processing pens. What remained had already begun to be rebuilt into a Cybercult compound, clean-lined and efficient, as if the old community had simply been disassembled for parts.

The Cybercult never called it a massacre. In their surviving accounts, Red Coulee suffered a systems failure brought on by panic, sabotage, heresy, and civic disorder. The response, they claimed, had been regrettable but necessary: a recycling. A failed settlement had been broken down and its useful parts returned to sacred function. That word spread farther than any formal report ever could. Across the Badlands, people learned what Cybercult mercy looked like when it met resistance. From then on, every offer of aid carried a shadow. Every road crew came with questions. Every implant clinic felt a little more like a trap.

The memory of the Red Coulee Recycling still shapes how other factions deal with them. Ranchers may still hire Cybercult mechanics. Caravans still use their shrines and waystations. Isolated settlements still bargain with them when the pumps go dead or something possessed starts moving through the herd pens at night. But they do so carefully. The Cybercult’s usefulness is real, and so is its appetite. The Badlands has learned that the chrome preachers can make a place livable—but once they sink roots deep enough, they begin to treat dissent as malfunction, independence as waste, and whole communities as material waiting to be reused.

Badlands Doctrine



In the Terrorsaur Badlands, those same beliefs took on a harder and more regional form. Here, the Cybercult found a land that seemed to prove every one of its arguments. The roads fail. The weather punishes. Isolation kills. Dinosaurs erupt from the Hallowed World like living arguments against the safety of the natural order. Possession, taint, and sudden violence make flesh seem weak, unreliable, and easily corrupted. In such a place, the Cybercult’s creed no longer feels abstract. It feels practical.

As a result, Badlands Cybercult doctrine emphasizes survival through control. Road maintenance becomes pilgrimage. Waystations become shrines. Implantation is preached not only as spiritual advancement, but as frontier necessity. A steel limb is less likely to fail under strain than a flesh one. A neuron jack can keep a rider linked to a mount. A cognition chip can steady a panicked beast. In the Badlands, sacred technology is sold as both holiness and common sense.

This is especially true in their treatment of dinosaurs. Elsewhere, the Cybercult already viewed the natural as inferior to the artificial. In the Badlands, that belief hardened into a specific teaching: wild and possessed dinosaurs are not merely dangerous animals, but proof that unregulated flesh invites chaos. Cybernetic conversion is therefore framed as redemption. A beast fitted with guidance systems, restraint harnesses, neural governors, or doctrinal signal receptors has been brought closer to order. Among the faithful, this is spoken of as healing, sanctification, and reclamation all at once. Among everyone else, it looks a lot like weaponized exorcism performed with rivets and shock prods.

The region also changed how the Cybercult presents itself. In older settled zones, its doctrine can feel cold, abstract, and heavily institutional. In the Terrorsaur Badlands, it wears the language of prairie revivalism. Sermons are preached in roadside chapels, work camps, and natural amphitheatres. Cheap copies of the Cybernomicron circulate like motel-drawer scripture. Youth camps teach technical discipline alongside religious obedience. Passion plays become chrome-lit dramas about Jerod, Sanctuary, and the triumph of machine order over beast, fear, and corruption. The message is the same, but here it is delivered in a form the region already understands: frontier faith, summer camps, hard work, and the promise that the dangerous land can still be made livable—if enough of it is rebuilt in steel.

The Cybernomicron in the Badlands



In the Terrorsaur Badlands, the Cybernomicron is distributed the way older prairie faiths once distributed pocket testaments and motel Bibles: cheaply, widely, and with the assumption that no roadside stop, bunkhouse, waiting room, or waystation should ever be without one. Mini cyberchapels keep them in weatherproof racks beside patch kits and road maps. Truck stops, camp cabins, clinic benches, and settlement guest rooms often have a copy tucked into a drawer or mounted beneath a counter. Most are cheap field editions—abridged, durable, and printed on treated synth-paper or low-grade plastic sheets, usually containing only the public passages, basic doctrine, simple repair liturgies, and a list of nearby Sanctuary Nodes. Their purpose is not deep study. It is a constant presence. The Cybercult wants the book to be wherever fear, loneliness, injury, or uncertainty might make someone open it.

DynoCybers


In the Terrorsaur Badlands, the Cybercult’s most dramatic claim to authority is the DynoCyber: a dinosaur “saved” through cybernetic augmentation, doctrinal conditioning, and the removal or suppression of taint. To the faithful, these creatures are proof that no flesh is beyond redemption if it is properly corrected. A possessed beast can be cut open, purged, fitted with governors, harnesses, cognition chips, restraint systems, or weapon mounts, and returned to service as something holier than it was before. To outsiders, this looks like a grim blend of exorcism, ranching, and military engineering. To the Cybercult, it is mercy. A DynoCyber is not merely a machine-beast or war animal, but a sermon with teeth: living proof that order can be hammered into even the oldest and wildest flesh.

The Badlands have shaped that doctrine into something both practical and theatrical. Some DynoCybers serve openly as work animals, pack haulers, scouts, demolition beasts, patrol mounts, or mobile generators. Others are displayed in chrome-lit “upgrade plays” and revival pageants, where the faithful watch wounded, tainted, or captured dinosaurs re-emerge in steel as objects of awe. The smaller models are often the most common—cybernetic herders, spy-raptors, pterosaur relays, and heavily modified ranch beasts—while the truly massive conversions are rare enough to become legends, roaming mission-centers, siege engines, or wandering symbols of Cybercult prestige. In the Terrorsaur Badlands, a DynoCyber is never just an animal. It is labor, weapon, miracle, and warning all at once.

Common DynoCyber Examples

Cybergauchos are among the most familiar DynoCybers in the Terrorsaur Badlands: cyber-enhanced hadrosaurs used as mounts, drovers, and working ranch beasts. Loyal, hardy, and often dressed up by their handlers with cowboy tack and religious ornamentation, they are the Cybercult’s most approachable proof that chrome and frontier life can coexist.

Compspeculators are small, sneaky cyber-raptors used as scouts, spies, and saboteurs, often slipping into camps, sheds, and ruins long before the larger Cybercult presence arrives. Individually, they are more of a nuisance than a nightmare, but in packs, they become the eyes and ears of the machine faith, relaying information and wreaking havoc with unnerving intelligence.

Cerotanks are low-slung ceratopsians rebuilt into living armoured vehicles, combining thick natural bulk with weapon mounts, transport space, and terrifying ramming power. They are among the most feared common DynoCybers in the region, equally suited to breaking barricades, scattering raiders, or serving as the brutal centrepiece of a Cybercult reclamation force.

Upgrade Plays


The Cybercult does not hide the making of DynoCybers. In the Terrorsaur Badlands, it stages the process as spectacle. At roadside amphitheatres, reclaimed Bible camps, and neon-lit canyon bowls, the faithful gather to watch what they call upgrade plays: dramatic public rituals in which wounded, tainted, or captured dinosaurs are brought forward, denounced as broken by chaos, and returned to the crowd remade in steel, light, and doctrine. Part sermon, part surgery, part passion play, these performances are meant to inspire awe, gratitude, and submission all at once. The message is simple and powerful: if even a raging beast can be corrected, purified, and given purpose, so can you.

These events are one of the main reasons the Cybercult became so prominent in the Badlands. Families come for the pageantry, the repairs, the food lines, the free scripture pamphlets, and the sense of shared frontier hope. Children see chrome herds, glowing servo-priests, and reborn dinosaurs stepping out through smoke and hymn-light like miracles made real. Ranchers see practical value in beasts that can be healed, controlled, and put back to work. The darker truth, of course, is that the plays also normalize disassembly, implantation, and obedience as sacred acts. By the time the crowd goes home, the Cybercult has done more than entertain them. It has taught them to cheer for recycling.

Sanctuary Camps



If the upgrade plays win the crowd, the Sanctuary Camps win the next generation. Scattered across the Terrorsaur Badlands in reclaimed Bible camps, roadside retreat grounds, canyon amphitheatres, and old mission properties, these camps present themselves as places of discipline, technical education, frontier survival, and spiritual formation. Parents are told their children will learn practical skills—road repair, machinery maintenance, first aid, herd handling, wilderness survival, and the proper response to tainted beasts. And they do. That is part of what makes the camps so effective. A child who returns from a Sanctuary Camp can often patch a generator, quote the open passages of the Cybernomicron, calm a jittery Cybergaucho, and work harder than they did before. In a hard country, that looks a lot like success.

The cost is harder to measure at first. The camps do not merely teach skills. They teach obedience, hierarchy, emotional restraint, and the belief that the body is unfinished until improved. Campfire songs become patch-liturgies. Team-building becomes labor discipline. Testimony becomes confession and systems reporting. Older campers are encouraged to volunteer for “starter augments,” often framed as minor corrective procedures, devotional marks, or tools that will help them serve the community better. They come home with barcode tags, polished implants, interface ports, glow-scripture tablets, and an unsettling calm that many parents do not know how to name. Some return merely zealous. Others return already halfway absorbed into the logic of the machine faith.

Across the Badlands, people argue over whether the Sanctuary Camps are a blessing, a necessity, or a pipeline. Some isolated settlements rely on them because no one else is offering structure, training, and safe youth programs in dangerous country. Others whisper that the camps are where the Cybercult truly reproduces itself—not by conquest, but by teaching children to see chrome as comfort, labor as love, and surrender as purpose. The old prairie revival model survives there in warped form: summer retreats, outdoor sermons, communal meals, and passion plays beneath the stars. Only now the altar call ends at the implant chair.

What Kids Learn at Sanctuary Camp

  • Fix the road, fix the world. Campers learn basic repairs, maintenance, and field engineering so they can keep roads, generators, pumps, and camp systems running in hostile country.
  • Obedience is survival. Group drills, labor details, and strict hierarchy teach that hesitation, dissent, and emotional disorder are weaknesses the frontier will punish.
  • The beast can be corrected. Children are taught how to identify taint, fear wild possession, and admire the “redemption” of DynoCybers as proof that flesh must be governed.
  • Your body is equipment. Augments, barcode marks, interface ports, and corrective procedures are framed as practical tools and sacred milestones rather than violations.
  • Service is joy. Songs, sermons, pageants, and communal work all reinforce the same lesson: purpose comes from giving yourself to the greater machine.

Areas of Note

The Cybercult’s presence in the Terrorsaur Badlands is strongest where southern Alberta already offered the bones of faith, labour, and infrastructure. Abandoned schools become cyber-education halls. Collapsed churches are rebuilt with servo-pulpits and signal towers. Old co-ops are converted into repair stations, implant workshops, and machine granaries where the faithful store reclaimed parts beside grain and fuel.

The Little Chapels of the Code


Scattered along highways, service roads, and lonely approach routes, these tiny chrome-faced shrines are the Cybercult’s smallest and most widespread footprint in the Badlands. Inspired by the prairie tradition of very small churches and roadside prayer stops, each one offers some mix of water, tools, patch kits, charging sockets, maps, and cheap copies of the Cybernomicron—making them equal parts mercy, propaganda, and territorial marker.

The Node at Newell


Where irrigation country meets machine faith, the Cybercult has transformed old agricultural lands and service compounds into a Sanctuary Node built around water control, disciplined labor, and neural crop production. This outpost is less dramatic than the amphitheatres or processing sites, but it is one of the clearest examples of how the Cybercult recycles southern Alberta’s older faith-and-farming settlement logic into chrome frontier theology.

Red Earth Amphitheatre



In a natural bowl somewhere out in dinosaur country, the Cybercult stages its biggest seasonal upgrade plays, youth revivals, and chrome-lit doctrinal spectacles. Drawing on the region’s real tradition of Badlands amphitheatres, camp gatherings, and passion-play style performance, the site functions as both a pilgrimage center and a soft-power recruitment engine.

Sanctuary Steveville



Near the fossil-rich badlands, the Cybercult maintains one of its eerier retreat-settlements: part mission outpost, part field lab, part youth formation ground. Places like this define the edge of Cybercult influence in dinosaur country, where road missions, excavation teams, and DynoCyber handlers overlap in a frontier zone that feels half revival camp and half reclamation yard.

St. Signal’s Rest



A repurposed little prairie church or memorial chapel, this site marks the Cybercult’s habit of absorbing older sacred spaces rather than destroying them outright. Its power lies in contrast: from a distance it still looks like a place of quiet prayer, but inside it has become a servo-lit waystation where the old language of faith has been carefully rewired into the gospel of circuitry and surrender.

The Walking Sanctuary



Rare even by Cybercult standards, this migratory Saurofortress serves as a roaming Sanctuary Node, revival platform, and command center that moves along seasonal routes through the Terrorsaur Badlands. Wherever it appears, camps gather, roads are cleared, DynoCybers are blessed, and whole communities are reminded that the Cybercult is not just rooted in the Badlands—it can arrive on the horizon like a chrome cathedral and bring its gospel with it.

 Plot Hooks

  • Lost Sermon of the Cybernomicron: A damaged field edition contains fragments of a forbidden sermon said to reveal the Cybercult’s buried history in the Badlands. Several factions want it recovered but decrypting it may do more than expose secrets—it may rewrite doctrine.
  • Sanctuary Map Leak: A stolen route-map appears to show hidden Sanctuary Nodes, chapels, camps, and one especially important site the Cybercult does not want found. Treasure hunters, rivals, pilgrims, and reclamation squads all race into the Badlands, turning the search into a holy land rush.
  • DynoCyber Gone Rogue: A heavily modified Cybercult beast has broken its conditioning and vanished into open country, leaving wreckage, dead livestock, and frightened settlements in its wake. The party must decide whether to destroy it, capture it, or uncover what made a supposedly perfected creature rebel.
  • Subverted Town: A settlement the characters knew has become clean, orderly, and deeply unsettling after accepting Cybercult aid. The roads are fixed, the lights stay on, the people are polite—and no one wants to talk about the children who came back from camp different.
  • The Red Coulee Files: Evidence from the Red Coulee Recycling may still exist in a sealed archive, survivor hideout, or half-buried waystation. If found, it could expose the Cybercult’s old atrocity—or trigger a violent attempt to recycle the evidence.
  • Upgrade Play: A famous Badlands revival is preparing to unveil a new DynoCyber before a huge crowd. Something is wrong with the beast, the script, or the preacher, and by the end of the night, the pageant may turn into a massacre.
  • Camp Season: A Sanctuary Camp has opened near a struggling settlement, and local families are already sending their children there. Some come back sharper, calmer, and more useful; others do not come back at all.
  • The Chapel on the Road: Travellers vanish after stopping at a remote mini cyberchapel that should be too small to hide anything. The shrine may be a surveillance post, a recruitment trap, or the entrance to something buried beneath the highway.

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