Cylindrites
Parent Clade: Hearthborn
Primary Habitats: O'Neill Cylinders, Bishop Rings
Summary: A Hearthborn subclade adapted to rotational habitats, with curvature-aware perception and gravity-gradient physiological tolerance.
Cylindrites
Overview
Cylindrites exist because artificial gravity isn’t uniform.
In rotating habitats like O'Neill Cylinders and Bishop Rings:
- Gravity varies with radius
- Orientation is relative
- “Down” is curved
Baseline humans can adapt.
Poorly.
Cylindrites were designed to treat curvature as normal.
Neurological Adaptations
Curvature Perception
Their brains:
- Integrate visual and vestibular cues into curved spatial models
- Maintain consistent orientation on non-linear surfaces
They do not perceive their environment as “tilted.”
They perceive it as correct.
Horizon Stabilization
They automatically:
- Compensate for visual curvature
- Avoid disorientation from non-flat horizons
Physiological Adaptations
Gravity Gradient Tolerance
Their bodies handle:
- Variation in effective gravity across short distances
- Movement between different radial levels
This is supported by:
- Flexible blood pressure regulation
- Adaptive muscle engagement
Locomotion Adaptations
Radial Movement Efficiency
They move efficiently:
- Along curved surfaces
- Across radial gradients
Climbing “up” the cylinder wall is not treated as abnormal motion.
External Presentation
Mostly baseline, with behavioral tells:
- Confident movement in unusual orientations
- Lack of hesitation near edges or curvature shifts
Development History
Developed alongside large-scale rotational habitats.
Problems included:
- Disorientation
- Uneven strain on the body
Solutions shifted from:
- Environmental standardization
to - Human adaptation
Environmental Tradeoffs
On flat planetary surfaces:
- Systems remain active but underutilized
Psychologically:
- Flat horizons can feel incomplete
- Preference for visible structure in space
They are built for Worlds that curve. Flatness feels like missing information.