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They Called Earth a Deathworld — Then the Humans Started Colonizing Worse Ones | HFY | Sci-Fi Story The galaxy had 412 civilizations. They all agreed on one thing: Earth was a nightmare. Toxic air. Lethal oceans. Radiation storms. A biosphere that never stopped trying to kill everything living on it. Every alien species that surveyed Sol-Three filed the same report and quietly agreed to never go back. Then the humans built a faster-than-light drive. By themselves. Without any help. And showed up at the galactic door with a 47-page list of questions, six pre-modeled trade frameworks, and a color-coded economic integration plan. That was just the beginning. Because while the diplomats were talking, Commander Zora Pietersen was already on her way to Kelvar-9. A second deathworld. A planet with toxic atmosphere, violent tectonic activity, electromagnetic storms, and six competing apex predators sharing the same valley. The Galvori Hegemony sent a team there once. They came back missing two people and wrote a report that basically said: never again. Zora landed, looked at the yellow poisonous sky, and told her engineer to start drawing blueprints. This is the story of the moment the galaxy realized that the most dangerous thing about humanity was not their weapons, not their technology, and not their military. It was their relationship with the word impossible. Narrated from the perspective of Vorruk, Senior Field Analyst of the Galvori Hegemony, a 41-cycle veteran of the most boring job in the galaxy, whose assignment to observe the humans changed everything he thought he understood about civilization, survival, and what it means to look at a deathworld and say: good, I will take it. A full cinematic HFY science fiction story told in two complete parts. Over one hour of immersive alien-perspective storytelling with suspense, dark humor, jaw-dropping moments, and one of the most satisfying endings in the genre. TIMESTAMPS 00:00 — Intro and Story Setup 02:45 — Meet Vorruk, Galvori Analyst 05:30 — Earth is Classified a Deathworld 09:10 — Humans Build FTL on Their Own 13:00 — First Contact Begins 17:20 — Priya Okafor, Human Diplomat Arrives 22:00 — The 47-Page Question List 26:15 — Six Color-Coded Trade Frameworks 30:40 — Quelvin the Trade Rep Gets Humbled 34:10 — The Korvath-5 Launches for Kelvar-9 38:30 — Kelvar-9 — The Second Deathworld 42:00 — Surface Landing on Kelvar-9 46:20 — Zora Tells Lena to Start Building 50:05 — Finn Adeyemi Meets the Gruvak 54:30 — The Galvori Council Votes 58:15 — Hector Sorel and the Full Catalog Request 01:02:00 — Marveth-Prime — The Worst One Yet 01:06:45 — Sable Drifton and the Geysers 01:10:20 — The Catalog Gets Shorter 01:12:30 — Vorruk's Final Realization 01:14:10 — Story End and Closing Thoughts They Called Earth a Deathworld — Then the Humans Started Colonizing Worse Ones | HFY | Sci-Fi Story KEY HIGHLIGHTS ★ A full two-part HFY story told entirely from an alien's point of view — you see humanity through eyes that cannot quite believe what they are witnessing. ★ The moment Vorruk realizes the humans did not come to be impressed by the galaxy. They came because they needed more room. ★ Commander Zora Pietersen landing on a planet that ate two Galvori researchers and immediately asking her engineer to design foundation stabilizers. ★ Finn Adeyemi filing 112 pages of xenobiology field notes in 14 days on a planet the Hegemony gave up on in 40 days. ★ The 47-page Mitigation Strategies document that rewrites the alien understanding of what the word "dangerous" means. ★ Hector Sorel walking into a diplomatic meeting with a document folder that was prepared eight months before the meeting was scheduled. ★ Sable Drifton, who read about sulfur geysers at age eleven and never stopped wanting to stand next to one. ★ The deathworld catalog — 43 worlds the galaxy agreed were impossible — becoming a to-do list. ★ The Gruvak. You will understand when you hear it. ★ Sketh the xenobiologist laughing for the first time in 41 cycles when she realizes what the humans are going to do to the catalog. WHY YOU SHOULD WATCH THIS VIDEO If you have ever felt like the universe was too big, too hostile, and too indifferent for anything small to matter, this story is the answer to that feeling. This is not a story about humans winning a war. There is no war. There is no enemy. The conflict in this story is between a galaxy full of cautious, brilliant, ancient civilizations who learned to survive by being careful, and one single species that learned to survive by refusing to stop. The alien narrator Vorruk is not an antagonist. He is, genuinely and deeply, one of the best characters in this story. His journey from bureaucratic reluctance to something that looks a lot like awe is the emotional spine of the entire narrative. You will root for him the way you root for someone who is about to understand something beautiful for the first time.