Atlus Arcadium Rex, the Monitors, and How It All Fits Together
or Why could the Cosmic Powers just drop a cyclops if they’re not gods?
The Cosmic Powers do some pretty extraordinary things. Early on in the season, we presumed that this was because they were some form of ascended/higher beings – with all the power that might imply.
But then we hit Episode 13 and get this bit of dialogue:
The ‘gods’ were AI (Forerunner Monitors) the entire time.
And well…that’s a revelation. So the question remains: if they were Forerunner AI the entire time, then how did they accomplish any of the feats we saw earlier in the season?
First, let’s take a look at what Monitors are, and then more specifically, what they can do.
A Short Intro – Forerunners
The Forerunners were, basically speaking, just a race of very technologically advanced beings. They had an empire that spanned star systems. They created the Monitors for a wide variety of functions, but most notably to maintain the Halo Array – or other important installations. These Monitors’ purpose was to be caretakers, whatever that meant for their specific assignment.
What Monitors Are
In Halo canon, the Monitor 343 Guilty Spark was responsible for safeguarding Alpha Halo; when it was destroyed, so too was his initial reason for being. He tells us again and again that ‘protocol’ dictates his actions. Though the way he interprets his directives ultimately determines his decisions, his purpose is always clear: to safeguard the Halo ring – to safeguard his installation.
The Cosmic Powers aren’t that different. We’re told that Chrovos created them with the express purpose of manipulating lesser powers, maybe to do his bidding on a smaller scale, maybe for some master plan (taking over the universe? – “a project of galactic proportions”) that we’re not entirely aware of yet. Their directive, then, was whatever he dictated to them – and as Monitors like 343, they were presumably free to interpret that in their own way as long as it served their ultimate purpose. Their conclusions guided their actions and ultimately led them to deceive and imprison their maker. Maybe they were trying to save the galaxy. Maybe they have their own plans to condemn or transform it. We’ll see.
Monitors Are Forerunner AI
They don’t look or act like the AI we’re used to seeing projected, sure, but that doesn’t diminish the classification: their abilities are equal to and greater than those of UNSC AI like Alpha. Monitors, for example, can infiltrate ship systems (like 343 Guilty Spark), influence a helmet display (Ebullient Prism 686 did this to a Spartan), and attack other AI – in much the same way Omega jumps from helmet to helmet in the BGC or how Sigma manipulated and brainwashed Maine into becoming the Meta.
What This Makes Chrovos
In short, a Forerunner – but most likely a Forerunner scientist or researcher who broke away from the empire and went rogue, studying time-travel so he could bend the galaxy to his will. It’s possible he started his research to serve the empire, maybe to undo their mistakes, maybe to go back and get a redo when something didn’t work out the way they wanted or needed it to. Maybe he wanted them to never encounter the parasites that drove them to create the Halo Array – and were eventually their downfall anyway: The Flood.
Whatever the case, his knowledge of time-travel is indicated by what Atlus tells us:
To influence a human (Loco) to build a time machine, first he had to know how to build a time machine.
What Monitors Can Do
Maintaining and safeguarding Forerunner installations is a monumental task. Monitors are equipped accordingly – but they don’t have or know everything. Their knowledge is highly specialized and very much directed toward their individual installation or task. This was a Forerunner protocol meant to prevent information from falling into enemy hands if one of the Monitors was captured by The Flood.
But Chrovos is a rogue. He doesn’t care about the rules. He only cares about his goal. Why, then, would he build any such stringent limitations into his AI – his Monitors, the Cosmic Powers? There’s an abundance of abilities to which general monitors never had full access – teleportation, other-dimensional realms where time can be manipulated or stopped entirely (slipspace bubbles or pockets) – and so on. If he fully intended for his AI to be perceived as gods, then it’s logical to conclude that he gave them at least some access to anything that served that purpose. After they imprisoned him, they retained these powers.
That’s not to say that Chrovos let the Monitors go completely unchecked. The firewall preventing them from harming the Reds and Blues is, of course, one such precaution. Considering they eventually imprisoned him, maybe he didn’t take enough of those.
Case in Point: The Cyclops
First, where did the cyclops come from?
The Forerunners kept a vast collection of beings from all over the galaxy, since they intended to repopulate worlds with these beings after they turned on the Halo Array and wiped out any hosts for The Flood. They were also scientists and conducted various experiments, all of them with varying degrees of success. The cyclops could have been a byproduct: a failure or an odd achievement.
Second, how did Atlus summon the cyclops?
There could have been a Forerunner installation near enough to Iris (the Vacation Moon) that Atlus could teleport the cyclops to attack Kai and Tucker
Chrovos may have given the Monitors access to small slipspace pockets, potentially ones that housed experiments that no one could find a feasible use for (like a cyclops)
Finally, why did the cyclops listen to Atlus and attack?
It’s been locked in a slipspace bubble for who knows how long. Maybe it’s bored.
Maybe it’s just an aggressor by nature.
We don’t know how much intelligence it actually possesses.
Assuming it has a degree of intelligence that permits it to at least roughly communicate, maybe Atlus and the other Cosmic Powers promised freedom, greater comforts, etc.
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TL;DR: The Forerunners built a lot of really advanced technology. The Monitors took care of it. Chrovos is a rogue Forerunner genius who gave his Monitor AIs too much power. They locked him up. The Monitors can do all of these god-like things because of said really advanced technology.
Headcanon A: realistic John is biracial. He is described in the books as having a lot of typically white features but that doesn’t mean he is white. If he hadn’t spent 30 years with no sunlight (i hope that boy’s getting his vit D supplements) he’d be brown-skinned for sure. This is the hill I will die on.
Headcanon B: while it may not be realistic it is hilarious I honestly don’t have very many funny headcanons for my tragic son… but I do love the idea of the Infinity’s Spartan-IV’s approaching Chief and trying to bond with him by inviting him the rec room with them. And they get him drunk. It’s not hard despite his size and muscle mass since he’s never had a drop of alcohol in his life, and he’s cuddly and keeps singing, then just to really rub it in gets no hangover at all the next day. But he’s so enthused about how much fun he had with his ~new friends~ that he keeps getting invited no matter how awkward it gets.
Headcanon C: heart-crushing and awful, but fun to inflict on friends John’s never seen a baby that’s alive.
Headcanon D: unrealistic, but I will disregard canon about it because I reject canon reality and substitute my own. Both of John’s parents evacuated Eridanus II before it was glassed and are still alive circa 2558. They were listening to Benjamin Giraud’s broadcasts and though they never got the chance to send him a message to confirm it the way the facts match up is undeniable. They know the son they lost 40 years ago is the Master Chief and though they don’t know how to contact him they’ll hold out hope until they see him again.
@veta-lopis Bringing this back to draw attention to Headcanon B, because honestly this is the dream.
it’s time for more fred because i have gotten 3 asks for him specifically and I have MANY headcanons to share
Headcanon A: realistic
Fred hates most standard rations with a burning passion and has developed a skill for cooking to make up for this
Headcanon B: while it may not be realistic it is hilarious
He really likes old Jazz music. The thought of him working out with saxophones blaring in his earbuds is hilarious, though perhaps only to me
Headcanon C: heart-crushing and awful, but fun to inflict on friends
He’s always had trouble shutting his brain off at bedtime, but ever since Reach he dreads lights-out because there’s nothing to distract him from the “leader of the op with the highest Spartan casualty rate” line looping endlessly in his head
Headcanon D: unrealistic, but I will disregard canon about it because I reject canon reality and substitute my own
He is going to retire on Onyx with Blue Team and Mendez and the Ferrets, where he will help Veta fight crime in order to not become unhinged by the freedom of civilian life
You get half and half!! ~800 words. Prompts from here
Ash rolled over onto his other side, for the sixth time in ten minutes. He’d been trying to fall asleep for the past two hours, but he couldn’t seem to get comfortable.
Well, that wasn’t exactly true. The bunk and temperature on the ship were the same as always, UNSC-standard, but it was his teammates that he was missing. He was used to Mark’s snoring and the sound of Olivia’s deep breathing, but they were both in the medbay now. Livi for a (thankfully minor) head injury, and Mark because he had to get a kidney replaced.
Ash couldn’t think of the last he’d been alone. Well, he was alone whenever he had to spend the night in the medbay, but memories of time spent there were never happy memories. And anyway, he was almost always in a drug-induced sleep while he was there. He didn’t have any sort of sleep aid now.