Wednesday, 11 August 2010
The Logic Factory
Long before the creation of common sense and the internet it was a lot harder to come across practical solutions. Leading the way in the pioneering field of sense-making was an aspiring logic enthusiast (his real aspirations were never fully revealed) and Physics graduate of the Great College in the Sky; Harry Soundford.
Harry led a double life, by day he had been a modest student in the sky, surviving on super-noodles and cheap lager. But by night he made his way down to the ground and toured the nearby town's club scene as the most risqué male escort ever to walk on both air and ground respectively. By which I mean he worked the night shift at the local supermarket.
But that was all put behind him when he took up the position of Senior Logic and Knowledge Research and Discovery Professor at his own government funded (this term was but a technicality, but the rumours that he had burgled all the houses of the governors were never proven) Institute of Absolute Logic.
Within days the institute had exponentially increased humanity's capacity for practical and easily applicable knowledge of solutions to daily problems. Problems such as why boiling water was so hot and what exactly was so wrong with treason. However it was only upon the visit of the Inspector of Institute Credibility that quite possibly the greatest discovery was made.
Inspector Ian Irk stepped across the threshold and landed upon a red doormat.
“I say, Professor” he addressed Soundford with an entirely confused tone “What is this I am standing upon presently?”
“That, Mr. Irk, is a doormat” he answered with a face which could only be more smug if it were a ferret. He waited for the inevitable question which would allow him to stroke his ego to such an extent that its fur would become stuck down.
“What does it do?” there it was. There was the question. Following it was a warm and fuzzy feeling Harry hadn't felt since he had tipped a waiter with a five-pence piece. Harry was easily pleased. He was also a cheapskate.
“It captures the dirt from the soles of your shoes so that it doesn't dirty the floor” he responded, not trying in the slightest to hide his joy as Ian's mouth gaped in awe.
After a laborious and slightly tedious walk around the reception hall, Harry led his visitor down to the research labs. They walked through pristine white corridors, passing panoramic viewing windows showing the researchers in white coats going about their research.
“Here we are experimenting with urine” Harry gestured to a white-coat-clad man considering a number of beakers and containers.
“What exactly is he doing?” asked Ian asked, brushing greying eyebrows out of his eyes.
“He is finding which container would be optimum for storing the urine, so that he can research more efficiently”
“Ah, I see” his last word trailed off dreamily as he fondled his grey beard. Behind the researcher was a blackboard completely littered with notes and equations referring to various research and throwaway ideas. Harry squinted to view it more clearly before pushing the button next to the window, activating the intercom.
“Urine is yellow, Barry” the professor's voice echoed through the room, causing the researcher to dart a look upward and then to the board. He went to it, taking some chalk from his pocket. An equation on the corner of the board read 'Urine = Green'. Barry drew a diagonal line through the equals sign and returned to work.
“Well, Professor, I am very impressed with what I have seen today. I think I can safely say that this institute has proved beyond doubt its own credibility and there is no possibility of its forced closure” Ian smiled.
Later that week, the institute was handed its order of forced closure, destroying all of the world's logic and creating the positively insane world we live in presently. In my opinion, if the birds had just flown east for the winter instead of south, I don't think any of this would have worked out quite so badly. But if you have any ideas for practical systems of logic, Blue Peter would like to hear from you.
Saturday, 26 June 2010
Zed in Paradise 6
“So here we are, Earthican, what do you intend to do now?” Vengeance folded his arms.
“I intend to win this game for all the humans of the Earth. And to not pay for a meal I received fair and square”
“Heh, I see, but know this-”
“Hold on, did you actually just say 'heh'?”
“Yeah, I-”
“That doesn't happen, stop it”
“Right” Johnson made sure he was finished by pausing “well whatever the case, whether in the real world or here, I'll still beat you to a mushy, bloody pulp” he uncrossed his arms, curled his hands into fists and then grew to ten times his own size “This place works by using our mental power to fight” he slammed down with his massive fist, completely missing Zed by several miles, or so it looked, anyway.
“Not really” said Zed, appearing in front of Johnson's face “it uses our imaginations” he split into millions of versions of himself “Which is very bad for you” they said.
“Never shall I perish” said The Vindicator, gargling on his own blood “Oh deary me” he fell downwards into the black void they currently inhabited. A version of Zed stepped out of the corpse's giant mouth as it descended.
“Please nobody ask me how I got here” the version requested.
“Never!” shouted one, transforming into an octopus and garotting him with three tentacles.
“I can see this turning very bad, indeed” another Zed nodded to himself.
“Me too” said a version who had become a woman “because I am a woman”
In the outside realm of Gameworld, the audience stood in shock, awe and a range of other impressive exasperated emotions in response to the horrific and oh-so confusing images they had witnessed on the screens. But by far, the most disgusted was the emperor himself, who had taken time away from his meaninglessly important schedule to watch a completely pointless fight for no real reason. It was his presence that drove the bullet of hatred into the skulls of his people. It wasn't good.
“Things weren't like that in my day” said he, wrapping his long beard around his hand.
“With all due respect, sir” said a royal guard to the emperor's right, before being shot in the face.
“Sir?” asked another “I'd like to challenge you to Dice”
“That's better” said the emperor, remembering the time he himself had instated the game. It had been a sunny day, just like any other, since the walls of his royal chambers had been painted with a permanently smiling and yet somehow terrifying sunshine.
“Prince?” asked the maid who had just entered the room.
“I believe you need to win a game before you make a point, my faithful woman of the cloth” said the prince, not looking up from his annoyingly messy colouring.
“I'm not sure you quite know what that means, but I challenge you to a race, the finish line is the corpse in the attic” and with that they were off, their feet clashing the floor with a passion inflamed by the wordplay involved between the words 'sole' and 'soul'. And before you could say 'why is there a corpse in the attic?' the maid won the race. The Prince panted with stolen breath and rested his hands upon his knees in a bent-over type fashion.
“You win” he conceded “But only because of your advantageous height” he straightened his posture to one fit for a prince “Now lay down your point, good woman”
“I needed to tell you” she paused for some reason, the reason for which the Prince would find out in the next sentence “that your father is dead” wait, no, that doesn't explain the pause.
“I see” he looked on with a face which looked like it could possibly be made of stone. Or not, whatever “So why did you pause?” okay, here we go. Then she explained to him why she had paused.
“We hung his corpse up here” she motioned to the corpse they were standing in front of. “just in case you wanted to say any last words to him”
“Of course” he looked at the corpse and then back to the maid “But I cannot forgive your reason for the pause” he curled his fists. I mean he curled his hands into fists. He had fists, okay?
“But it was perfectly reasonable” she jumped backwards in shock.
“Almost” The Prince rubbed his chin thoughtfully “But what isn't acceptable is the fact that you've made four points without winning a game. Please execute yourself after I've left” and with that he walked back down to his bedroom.
“Balls” the maid cursed to herself, travelling down to the kitchen where she ate a piece of toast covered in salt, thus closing all the pores in her body and in turn choking her inside out. Or that was what the Prince had been told, anyway.
“Yes, much better in my day” The emperor mumbled. The surrounding king's men shuffled awkwardly.
Wednesday, 2 June 2010
The Issue
This issue has been around for too long. In 1996 I went to dinner with a certain politician who would later on turn out to be dead. After a series of conversational exchange with the waitress and an awkward moment as she adjusted her blouse, noticing that we had both took a peak at her breasts, I asked him.
“My friend” I said with curiosity “How can you explain this issue” and the words he said would stick with me to this very day.
“Good chum” he replied with a confident knowledgeable stride “If I knew that, I'd be a millionaire”
And that really summed up the issue well. The solution was and is, to this day, unknown. And how could anyone know of it? The issue itself is so obscure and little known that nobody has been able to ponder it long enough. But that is hardly an excuse, of course, we just haven't met anyone who has. And why? Because the funding my research institute (Think inc.) and that of any other establishment, government-owned or otherwise, has not been substantial enough to even begin to think about doing so.
This is a real problem and one which only perpetuates the issue in question. Since the economic downturn in recent years, all research laboratories have been hit hard, both in the wallet and workforce. This all adds up to one swift kick in the genitalia of this limb of the economy.
After my politician friend had finished his third beer, he turned to me, his eyes dancing in all directions as if he were about to vomit. But he did not. Right away, anyway. He told me “Look, I know you do a great job, I've seen you work, you're like a gazelle being ridden by an obese child from southern England. But the point I'm getting at isn't that the government is terrible. It's that everyone who ever existed is terrible” As I sat with a piece of steak suspended a few inches from my mouth, my mind was blown. Then he vomited everywhere. And I mean everywhere, which only impressed me further.
But I realised he was right. The blame for this issue cannot be placed so easily because there is no direct culprit. People, in general, are evil. This kept me awake for days on end. Soon I began foraging for food in my own garden, because it seemed to me to be easier than finding a shop. And as I was about to eat a squashed snail I realised that I needed to research the issue.
The library was less than helpful. The records of evil activity in mankind only went back around two years and they charged me for the privilege of even looking at those. It was then that I realised I had become a victim of evil behaviour. The fact that I had been charged by someone who didn't even work there was just a coincidence.
The earliest entry in the records was dated January 5th 1994 and explained that upon this day the library had chosen to keep a record of evil actions. There were no more entries for that year.
“Bullshit” said I, loud enough to be shushed. But then it hit me, after I got up I rubbed the lump on my head, kicked the child away and had a thought. The reason for the lack of recording of evil could be for one of three reasons. One: nothing evil happened that year. Two: the owners of the library or someone else had removed the records that were there. Or Three: the library staff simply hadn't registered any act as evil. I felt that the third was most likely.
Outside the library was a sandpit in which the children made poor quality castles and such. I lifted out the children, picked up a stick and drew a series of diagrams. After a few minutes of doodling a parent approached my, inquiring as to why I had removed her child from the pit, thereby causing it to cry.
“Madame” I addressed her, not looking up from my work “I am conducting research. It is my job, you know. Not all of us can make money from the pubic tax” at this point she gave up and took her child home. Without any more interruptions from the people around me who had either contracted a mental illness, had a career in economics or had had a sufficient amount of sleep, contrary to myself, I was able to make a significant amount of progress. So much so that I had drawn a summoning circle, causing Satan to appear to me. It was Halle Berry.
“Keep searching” she commanded, waking me from my slumber. Yes, most of the outing had been a dream, but it had still inspired me to continue my research. And I didn't want to anger Miss. Berry, of course, I had seen what she did to those who disobeyed her. I was there the night she brought judgement upon The Men in Black. It was not pretty.
Keen though I was to continue the search, I had met a dead end. With no-one and nowhere else to turn to, I visited the emperor of Japan.
“Mr. Emperor” I implored of him after explaining my predicament to him “Please impart your wisdom upon me” a few minutes past before he answered me. It was a relief when he finally did, I had thought he was dead.
“Kawaii desu” he had said, blowing my mind once more. Then he vomited, causing a fire to break out. The roaring of the ceiling collapsing blocked out the sound of the screams which ensued, though the approving laughter of Halle Berry was thumping through my ears like a heartbeat.
I continued to wonder why such extraordinary yet oh-so-terrible things continued to happen to me. I put it down to misfortune. And the opium. But drug-fuelled experience or not, I had at least found a clear definition of what I was looking for; the beginning of evil. It was because of this that I went to America.
America, as I soon found, was entirely dissimilar to the country that had been portrayed in the media and Back to the Future. For one thing, there was no time-travel yet. The source of the world's research funding and they hadn't been able to create a true flux capacitor yet? I was outraged. So outraged that I decided to stay awake for five days straight. This brought me to a 'coffee house' in the backstreet of some city.
I was downtrodden. It was now three months since my politician friend had told me what I needed to hear and I was no closer to the answer of the issue than anyone was. Since I only had a week to live according to the newspaper I was reading, I knew I had to act fast. Even more so, I mean.
In the coffee house was the weekly meeting of the local blood cult, The Seven Red Knives, who told me I was in the wrong place. They changed their tone as I showed them the revolvers I had installed into my fingers. They showed me the origin of their cult, an ancient scroll stuck to the ceiling of a 'basement' in a house in Detroit. As I removed it and wiped its dust away, it revealed a number. That number was 2055.
That's right, I had found the origin of evil. It was the future. At some point in less than a century from the day I found the scroll, evil would be created in order to be sent back in time to the beginning of Earth so that it could be possessed by humans when they came to be.
A tear was brought to my eye, I would be and am now able to die in peace. My politician friend had been right, there was no solution to the issue because it wouldn't be brought about until the introduction of evil in the future.
Unfortunately the scroll that proves this, as well as the cult it belonged to have now been eradicated from existence, not that it matter of course because the scroll will be created a little while after the creation of evil.
As for me, I died. But thanks to my own bond connecting me to both the scroll and Halle Berry, I was brought back to life and sent back in time with evil. It was myself who was my politician friend. I have served my use, I think it is safe to say.
So, in conclusion. The issue? There is no solution. Yet. Just wait a while. And give me some more research funding, damn it!
Monday, 24 May 2010
Zed in Paradise 5
*
For the waitresses, these were no longer games, but ways of life. They had long since become masters of board-games and sporting events and now facing the humans' mediocre skills was mere child's play. In a sense, the biggest difference being that children actually have fun when they're playing.
After a humiliating display of their best efforts, the grand majority of the humans that had entered the building left with empty stomachs. Those who remained to eat were met with troubles along the way. Whereas food and drink was assured, games were also required to be played to receive cutlery, napkins, toilet privileges and, of course, the bill. When it came to the latter, Zed had had enough.
“I demand to see the manager” he shouted as he stood atop a tabletop. Silence fell upon the crowd like sleet on a pleasantly cool winter morn. And after silence ruled came a blood-freezing roar of vengeful fury, followed by the doors to the manager's office exploding, revealing the manager himself.
Vengeance Johnson had a nickname, to those who knew him most intimately, obviously. This nickname was The Vindicator. Wait a minute, did I say most intimately before? I meant least intimately, as this was basically a stage name used by his many fans who didn't know him at all, past his buff, buff, oh-so-buff exterior. Anyway, the reason he had this nickname was because he once vindicated his way out of one hundred thousand paper bags, which was the standard measurement of vindication, in those days, at least. He wasn't too bright, but man could he vindicate. And he was presently going to vindicate all over Zed's face, if you know what I mean. I pray you know what I mean.
“Who just dared to challenge me?” Vengeance growled. Thanks to the wonders of medical advancement, Johnson had taken on wolf DNA, giving him the perfect growl and fangs that could almost stand to rival the great Warg King, whose teeth were so sharp that they could even cut through solid butter.
“It was I” said Zed, dismounting the table and calmly approaching The Vindicator “And I'd like to challenge you to something”
“Perfect” Johnson laughed a growling laugh “What for?”
“If I win, then my people eat for free”
“And if I win?” he wiped his own saliva off his face with a slightly furry forearm.
“Then I pay you” Zed paused for effect “the full amount” their audience gasped.
“Then it appears we have a game on our hands, I propose a good old-fashioned brawl!” he salivated more copiously.
“A good idea, but I propose a variation” he said “we shall brawl in our minds!” the people around them cheered a magnificent cheer of cheeriness.
“Let's do this” Johnson signalled for a member of the cleaning staff to sort out the large puddle of mouth juice he was standing in “to the stadium!”
Yes, they were off to the stadium. The Stadium of Psychological Endeavours to be more precise. This was a structure built by the great king Tamegame in the first era of games in order to satisfy his needs for a gaming environment that didn't 'suck mighty balls'.
Oh how picky a king he was, too. Instead of just bricks, he wanted it to be made from the bones of his people, which was damn hard because most of the population was needed just to build the damn thing. Compromising, he decided it would also be made of the bones of any animal they could capture, which led to Gameworld's extinction of the whale.
Zed, Johnson and a crowd of tens of thousands arrived and took their seats. Then Zed and Johnson remembered they were supposed to be fighting and entered the arena. In the middle of the 'stage', if you'd like, were two helmets attached by wires to a large metal cube of metal which was apparently the battle computer.
The two competitors took their seats in the old armchairs next to the computer, facing each other. Vengeance growled threateningly at Zed to no obvious effect. Zed was too busy wondering whether the iron in his breakfast cereal was enough to break a microwave. No, that's a stupid idea, he thought. I don't even have a microwave. Or cereal. Or iron. It all comes down to this.
“Gentlemen” said a referee, stepping onto the stage dressed in the traditional referee getup; a cocktail dress of purest white. Or what had once been white, anyway, now it was somehow brown. White wasn't a colour you saw much on Gameworld, since most white objects had already been won in games by the self titled Emperor Purity, the man with an obsession for the colour white that could obsess itself out of a billion paper bags if need be. There was only one person in the entirity of Gameworld who knew why he liked white so much and that was an old beggar by the name of Delor whom was on his deathbed and about to die. His knowledge would be the cause of his death and one day he would return to correct his death certificate.
“Are you both ready?” the referee continued.
“More ready than you'll ever be, you damn philistine!” The Vindicator shouted back.
“What was that about?”
“I'm even more ready than that!” shouted Zed.
“Seriously, what were you-”
“Let's begin!” Zed placed the helmet upon his head, rendering himself unconscious for the time being. Johnson did the same.
Wednesday, 19 May 2010
A poet is me!
Keep away from the jar,
that jar of squiggles
Never, ever open it,
not even for shits and giggles.
Beware, young boy
the things inside.
That stuff in there
you'll want to hide.
There's pain and death and black in there,
things to chew and burn your hair.
And soon this world will surely die
in the depths of Satan's eye.
You can hide and you can run,
you won't escape the squiggles, son.
Fly like a bird, run like a fox
you'll be seen inside a box.
For what it's worth
you should fight.
So punch and kick
into the night.
Through black and death
you won't be far.
So keep away boy,
from that jar.
Monday, 17 May 2010
Zed in Paradise 4
“Video games?” a boy asked with genuine curiosity.
“No!” said the man cheerfully, overseeing the boy's especially bloody demise. By this point, the majority of remaining Earth humans had seen the man who had welcomed them. This instilled in most a deep disgust. And in others a strange but fantastic pleasure. The man was wearing a black cape. He wore nothing else apart from fists resting on his hips “which of you is the leader?”
“That depends” said a person who had just decreased his life expectancy to around ten seconds “Who wants to know?” after eight more seconds of the greeter's deep contemplation had passed the man was shot in his armpits.
“I am Greeter Howard, I will oversee both your induction to the planet and your deaths, should you break any of the rules”
“What are the rules?” asked someone who had a large amount of guts, but not for much longer.
“I will address the rules” he said once he had finished with the person's innards “after I have met with your leader”
“Is our president still alive?” asked a person to the rest of humanity.
“No” said Jeremy Kyle “he acted more like a Gruffalo than an elephant”
“What's a-” someone started.
“Don't ask”
“Then it appears that I am your leader” Zed stepped out of the crowd and stood in front of the caped one, mimicking his pose and staring a powerful stare.
“Finally” said he, extending a hand for a shake with Zed, whom obliged to his silent request “So, do you live in a house?”
“I did before it was destroyed”
“I see” he said, continuing the shake “Did you have a toilet?”
“Except on Wednesdays, yes”
“Did you use toilet paper?”
“Only when necessary”
“I don't”
“Oh?” said Zed, his attention redirected from the elongation of the handshake to the strange concept that had been put before him “Then what do you use?”
“My hands” he said with a grin. Zed stopped shaking his hand, the other laughed a terrible, bad-tasting laugh “Come now, let me show you around”
“Interesting, Mr. Greeter, but how can you expect to show us around when you are unable to point?” Howard's gaze dropped to his own hands, which were no longer there. His eyes widened with shock and he fell to his knees, still staring.
“They're just in your sleeves, you stupid cock-nugget!” shouted a voice.
“Oh” said Howard, revealing his hands once more “Strange, really, because I was under the impression that I wasn't wearing anything with sleeves” an explanation to this was about to be uttered but this was interrupted by the remembrance that he was supposed to be explaining something else entirely “ah yes, the rules” these were so important that he had to begin speaking in another paragraph.
“Here in Gameworld, we wish to be fully prepared to meet with Satan and/or Death, so we have based our society's principles around game-playing”
“So you can win back your soul?” asked someone, whom was shot to the death after confirmation of this. You would have thought that they would learn not to speak by this point, but they didn't and subsequently did. Yes.
“But what's with all the killing you do?” asked Zed.
“Oh, to put a point across here you have to first challenge someone to a game first and then win. Otherwise you are killed”
“That sounds very impractical. Also, why haven't you killed me yet?”
“You know the answer to that, obviously it's because-” it was Howard's turn to be interrupted by a bullet blowing apart his skull. Taking his place was the emperor of Gameworld.
“I am the Emperor of Gameworld” he boomed. See, I was right.
“Just one more explanation, please” a woman had dropped to her knees.
“That rule only applies if you are in the presence of someone of a higher rank than yourself” explained the emperor, his majestic, high collared purple robes fluttering in the gentle breeze “Therefore, I hereby grant all humans honourary nobleman status, speak as you will”
“You smell!” said someone, experimentally, only to be eradicated from existence. Now they knew the boundaries. A lot of boring exposition later, all the remaining humans came to terms with the concept of Gameworld: to do anything, you must first win a game.
And that was that. Their new society was one based around game-winning, and for most of humanity and their new Gameworld counterparts, life was good. Except for the first time they all went out for a meal. As the rule went, to accomplish anything, a game must be won. Sitting in their seats which was somehow possible for several million people at once.
“Hello, welcome to Gamefood” said many waitresses at once “May we accept your game challenge in order for you to be in with the chance of ordering your food?”
“Yes” they all said after a deliberating process of discussion with one another.
“Well then, what'll it be?” their grins glued to their faces as if stuck down with hair gel, intimidating their opponents with the face of a leaner-than-average shark.
“Scrabble!” said some.
“Monopoly” said others.
“Fencing” offered someone.
“First one to punch you in the face wins” said a very clever person, winning their table food and their waitress a broken nose in the most efficient manner possible. For the rest there followed a tedious and drawn-out task of attempting to win games, made worse by the echo of hunger throughout the establishment
Tuesday, 11 May 2010
Zed in Paradise 3
“Humans” he bellowed “Your bland monotony is as such that it demands applause, however, unless you wish for me to clap my hands, I suggest that you do something interesting” he laughed the laugh of a god, causing the heads of priests all over the globe to explode.
“Quick!” shouted the current president who had no face so you could glue the face of anyone you'd like onto it. “Do something!” and the rest of humanity awkwardly shuffled about, too pressured to actually think of something. Their blank minds were clouded with so much fog that not even a thousand lighthouses could light the way.
But then another was lit, and with one thousand and one lighthouses people could see a lot clearer. This lighthouse came in the form of a cat, whom summoned all its energy and shouted a loud grunt.
“Grunt?” said a man in an unspecified and not so important part of the world “That's it!” and with that he pretended to be a monkey.
“No!” shouted a woman, vapourising the man with a copious amount of electric tenacity. She got down on all fours and pretended to be an elephant.
“Of course!” said a third man to her immediate right, whose words had slipped out more than they had been said, his fear towards this insanely powerful woman was so staggering that giraffes half the planet away were falling over “Let's all be elephants!” he stuttered, causing the majority of humans to do the same. By which I mean pretend to be an elephant, not exclaim that they should all do so.
“I'll provide the elephant noises!” said someone, taking out a harmonica and obliging in a bout of passionate and oh-so musical fury. All humans refusing to take example were terminated in the most painful way possible. Well, second most painful if you are counting the dreadful Soul-Rack, but as usual we are not doing so because of the whole grey area that a soul lies in between existence and fruit-flavoured. If you know what I mean. And if you don't then shut up.
Zed ceased laughing and instead watched intently as humanity grouped together and protected each other from damnation by pretending to become elephants. Worldwide unity had been achieved, and it was a glorious sight. A tear ran down the god's cheek and Zed returned to his human form, never to return to godhood, or at least, that's what he thought.
Unfortunately for everyone involved, when Zed had returned to his original human self, the black hole he had been holding as a god had not disappeared and sucked up their lovely planet.
“Whoops” said Zed, for that was all that needed to be said.
Now, occasionally (I speak from experience) when one enters a black hole, one is transported to another place in or out of the universe so that one can indulge in antics of a science-fiction nature. This was not the case in this particular event. The Earth fell victim to the most common result of entering a black hole; that of being destroyed.
*
When the humans who had not pretended to become elephants had been annihilated, the overall weight upon the Earth had decreased significantly (many had been sceptical of the effectiveness of the elephant impression and there was no room for such a concept in the world of Zed's), which turned out to be a great advantage as the planet was forced over the cliff of life.
The cliff of life is arguably the best system in place for dealing with the dead. Basically the idea behind it is that every living thing must jump off a cliff after they die. Wait, I'm not finished. At the bottom of the cliff is a portal leading to whatever comes next, which randomly switches between millions of possible worlds and afterlives. Had the Earth been a few million people heavier, then it would have landed in The World of Masochism, a dreadful land filled with needles, broken glass and disease-infected blood. But thanks to it's inferior weight in landed in the portal at the millisecond it had changed to Gameworld.
The Earth landed with a thump on hard ground, this was a strange sensation to all people involved, humans were so used to the Earth moving by now that the feeling of suddenly stopping was enough to churn their stomachs. And it did so. Five minutes of vomiting later (seriously, their was so much vomit that that description doesn't quite get across just how much was coming out of their mouths. This was five minutes of continuous regurgitation, not a night over the toilet seat's worth of drunken babbling between short spurts. Records regarding vomiting speed were smashed into dirt, but unfortunately all the world record representatives were too busy puking to acknowledge this. It was a shame, really) they were ready to get moving.
Upon the clicking of the fingers of a giant person standing over the planet, The Earth's inhabitants grew to a similar size, easily crushing the planet under their now comparatively gigantic feet. This traumatised a surprisingly small amount of people, these were immediately assimilated and, it goes without saying, were brutally and bloodily murdered.