Sirrah

Sirrah is the home system of the prepetua and the seat of the Orij Directorate.

History


Ckolesh
Ckolesh is a small, rocky planet, tidally locked to Sirrah. It possesses no moons, and its only notable settlement is a medium-sized research complex dedicated to studying the geology of the planet.

Xalasect
A medium sized, so-called 'red planet', Xalasect's surface is craggy with extensive ice caps. Deep beneath its surface are vast underground seas of water where the majority of its local prepetua population reside. No multicellular organisms are native to the planet, however bacterial life existed in the underground seas even before prepetua colonisation. It is notable for being the primary shipyard and industrial area of the Orij Directorate, and the largest settlement is New Xala, sprawling across and up to the ceiling of the largest of Xalasect's underground seas.

Xalasect has a single moon:

Crasas
Crasas is medium-sized moon, with rich iron and copper deposits. Its surface is home to mining operations and metal mills.

Laelosect
An average sized rocky world, Laelosect's surface is almost completely covered in water oceans. The composition of the ocean gives it a greenish hue. In addition, Laelosect experiences a great deal more fog and cloud cover than most planets, and the clouds have a green aura to them as well. The planet is the homeworld of the prepetua, the largest area of settlement in Directorate space, and the capital world of the Directorate itself. The seabed is plastered with all manner of buildings and machinery, which extends up to surface in many areas.

Laelosect has three moons:

Windigo
Windigo is a medium-sized moon, with a barren surface. It is home to a number of hydroponics farms and biolabs.

Sae
Sae is an utterly unremarkable tiny moon, with a barren surface. Its only notable building is an observatory housing some of the most detailed star maps in the galaxy.

Chauros
If Sae is unremarkable, Chauros is even more so. It is even smaller than its sister and has no notable structures on its surface.