У нас вы можете посмотреть бесплатно The Galaxy Ignored the Cry for Help, but the Deathworlders of Humanity Answered with Thunder. или скачать в максимальном доступном качестве, видео которое было загружено на ютуб. Для загрузки выберите вариант из формы ниже:
Если кнопки скачивания не
загрузились
НАЖМИТЕ ЗДЕСЬ или обновите страницу
Если возникают проблемы со скачиванием видео, пожалуйста напишите в поддержку по адресу внизу
страницы.
Спасибо за использование сервиса ClipSaver.ru
The Varnians were a species of poets and philosophers whose biology was as delicate as spun glass. When the Krell Empire—a race of chitinous conquerors who believed might was the only law—invaded their sector, the Council turned its back. "The Varnians are a Level-1 civilization," the High Councilor sighed. "Intervention would disrupt the natural order." The Varnians sent a desperate, wide-band distress call into the "Forbidden Void"—the empty sector surrounding the Sol system. They didn't expect an answer. They had been told the Deathworlders of Earth were extinct, contained by a galactic quarantine for being too "volatile." The Response On the Varnian capital, as Krell drop-ships began to darken the sky, every comm-link on the planet suddenly chirped. It wasn't the melodic trill of a Varnian device. It was a rhythmic, heavy pulse. Then, a voice—gravelly, deep, and vibrating with an intensity that made the Varnians’ hollow bones ache—broke through. "Varnian High Command, this is the UEF Wrath of Sol. We heard your signal. We don’t much like bullies, and we’ve been looking for an excuse to test our new engines. Hold tight. Help is three seconds away." The Arrival The "three seconds" wasn't a metaphor. The sky didn't ripple; it tore. Three human dreadnoughts—monstrous, blocky slabs of black iron and glowing fusion vents—dropped from "Warp-Fold" directly into the atmosphere. The sonic boom shattered Krell tanks on the ground. These weren't the elegant, light-based ships of the Council. These were Deathworlder machines, built to withstand the crushing pressures of the deep sea and the screaming winds of Earth. The Battle for the Sky The Krell fleet, thinking these were just more "fragile" aliens, fired their thermal lances. The beams hit the Wrath of Sol and simply... dissipated. The Shielding: Human ships didn't use energy shields; they used Ablative Gravity Plating. They literally bent the incoming fire around the hull using the same force that made their home planet a graveyard for others. The Counter-Attack: The Wrath of Sol opened its broadside ports. No lasers. No plasma. Just Mass Drivers. They launched five-ton slugs of depleted uranium at 5% the speed of light. Each shot didn't just hit a Krell ship; it deleted it from existence, leaving nothing but a cloud of glowing atoms. On the ground, Krell soldiers tried to swarm a landed human dropsuit. The Krell moved with "galactic standard" speed. The human, evolved in 1G gravity, moved like a blur. A single human punch, backed by a Deathworlder’s muscle density, sent a Krell commander through a reinforced stone wall. The Aftermath The Krell Empire didn't retreat; they were erased. Within an hour, the "unbeatable" invasion was over. The Council frantically contacted the human fleet, demanding they return to their quarantine. Admiral Marcus Reed appeared on the Council’s screen. He was eating an apple—a fruit with enough citric acid to blind a Council member. "You told the galaxy we were a plague," Reed said, his eyes cold as the void. "You said the Deathworlders were too dangerous to be free. But when the Varnians screamed, you stayed silent. We didn't." He leaned in, the shadows of the Wrath of Sol looming behind him. "The quarantine is over. We’re not the monsters you told stories about. But for anyone who touches a peaceful world... we’re exactly what you feared."