Invader Zim Headcanon - Tumblr Posts
I have some more !!!
I like the idea of irken blood being a pink/orange color and also bioluminescent, no reason other than its funky to draw I like it
I'll add some headcanons or something under the cut so !! Yay i guess !!
Don't tag my art as ship stuff or be blocked, thanks š
Headcanon time!! These have little to no reason to exist other than "its fun why not" and "I said so"
- I already mentioned the irken blood thing but it's one of my favorite little things
- irkens have tapetum lucidum and it can show thru in their disguises (mostly zims) so it can be a good way to clock them if needed
- irken antenna function a lot like dog ears, which is more so Canon than a headcanon, but still. Like, example, they're pinned back when angry, down when sad, up when curious etc etc. It's a fun little idea
I'd like to delve into some more stuff but a lot of it is au stuff and I don't wanna blabber about that yet !! But I will add tiny little ones maybe
- irken paks, as well as keeping them alive, also "programs" each irken to be the best invader they can be. It all depends on what they'd NEED to be successful. For some, it's power and strength, and for others it's wit and smarts. So the pak, basically shifts their identity to fit the task they need to accomplish.
- paks also prevent irkens from being themselves, their personality is locked behind a barrier basically. They ARE their own people deep down, they are just physically unable to show it due to the pak preventing it
- however an irken CAN be themselves, but only for a while. They'd need to take the pak off and permanently make sure it cannot go back on, which would free them. It would also kill them!! So they can live a long life being nothing but a slave, or live as themselves for mere minutes.
That's all I'll get into for now but if u want more lmk āØļø I like blabbering about random stuffs
Another reminder to NOT tag my stuff as ship āØļøš„°
Something funny Iāve noticed here is that many of you decided to latch onto the hypothetical head regrowing ability of Irkens when Iām still instead kinda caught up in the skin crawlingly horrifying potential of cross species head/brain-stealing-and-transplanting in a pinch implications.
cough cough tags
New (Cursed AF) Invader Zim Headcanon:
Barring the potential for major acute blood loss, Irkens can actually survive a full decapitation.
And I brought substance to make the case with.
Cockroaches, one of the most infamously durable of real life animals, can live for several days, sometimes even weeks without their head. And for the most part, they still even act like normal roaches- crawling about, reacting to touch, standing around, etc. it seems the only reason this eventually catches up to the critter is because no mouth = no way to keep bringing necessary food and water into the body. If that were bypassed, however, it stands to reason the little zombie could thrive just as much as a headed roach.
Almost disturbingly, the head itself can actually last a surprising amount of time solo as well. Experiments with decapitated roaches show that after body separation, roach heads can still move their antennae for hours before succumbing- much longer even if kept refrigerated and supplied with nutrients.
One of the neat things about roach bodies that makes such a feat possible is how their nervous system is set up- simplified ref against what yours looks like below
Now, anyone who has ever said a roach can survive for a while without its brain is not being entirely accurate. Functionally, they actually have two sort-of brains: the main point of nerve centralization is contained in the head, which for the most part is a primary brain responsible for movement coordination, certain technical functions, interpreting stimuli that comes in from the antennae, and more. The second main point of interest in this system is a series of nerve clusters running down the insectās abdomen known as ganglia (singular: ganglion). These bundles of neurons are not exactly brains in their own right, but they do function as an extended CNS that handles the control over the digestive tract, reacting to stimuli, leg movement, and other more basic bodily functions. These can operate the body on a primitive level after the loss of the main brain, up until thirst/starvation begins to run the wind out of the sails.
You know what sort of creature actually DOES have two entire complete brains? One up top, and an auxiliary backup a little further down?
If you were nodding along and saying āirkens!ā Then you would be correct! One peanut and five more days in the bunker for you š„ ~
As is obvious to anyone familiar with the show, the PAK is an essential cybernetic addition to Irken biology, holding their gear as well as an entire digital backup of their personality and memories. While it serves many functions to the user, the first and foremost priority of one is to protect the existence of the meaty entity it needs in to carry itself around.
To that end weāve seen some autonomous acts from time to time with Zimās close calls. If you recall āPlague of Babiesā, he⦠kind of died for a moment there, caught up in a wave of GIRās lethally amplified stupidity. In response, his PAK appears to resuscitate him with a quick jolt. ļæ¼The would-be events of ā10 Minutes to Doomā emphasize the necessity of the PAK for any Irkenās survival beyond several minutes, which directly implies PAKs facilitate a major biological process their natural bodies are no longer capable of alone. Personally, I think it might be something either neurological or related to respiration, on a hunch.
Well, whatever it is, they are toast without it in swift manner, and the PAK doesnāt prefer to be without its other piece anymore than the body does. Dibās revelation about the technology described their relationship with its body like that of driver and car, but I think heās missing something. The PAK is actually more than capable of carrying itself around without the body⦠at least for a time.
When I think about those things, a little dilemma pops up in my head concerning how they.. well, how theyāre powered. It is never explained or demonstrated that they are given time off of the body in order to charge; however, irkens are probably advanced enough to have some smaller and sci-fi wildly potent and small energy source up their sleeves, but actuallļæ¼y, that wouldnāt quite make sense here. ļæ¼Because Irken bodies still produce their energy the same way every other lifeform in the known galaxy does, with food. Lots of food, actually. They can mow through snacks at about the same rate as Augustus Gloop. PAKs donāt need to produce their own independent energy source, they just need to efficiently make use of what this organism is already evolutionarily fine tuned to do naturally. Now thatās smart engineering.
And so, like any respectable auxiliary life support feature, they hļæ¼old some of that energy in a reserve for those crisis moments like in āPlague of Babiesā, and also in a deleted scene made for āAbductionā!
Fun trivia fact, but originally that episode was supposed to feature a sequence where Zim ļæ¼nearly game overs again. He takes a gnarly hit and a literal plunge through open flames that knocks him out in a free fall.
Despite his incapacitated state, the PAK extends its spider legs in order to catch a walkway railing, both saving his life and proceeding to keep carrying his limp body to a safer location, until of of course, he comes to about a moment later and carries on.
And neither of these are the only times itās sprung into action the moment it detects something has gone horribly wrong. When accidentally detached from its own host, an emergency response will be triggered within the PAK in an attempt to reattach with its body. Failing that, it attaches instead to⦠well, whatever it can find.
In ā10 minutes to Doomā, this was unfortunately Dib, an incompatible match (or maybe it just picked an improper attachment site), and in the comics⦠things got interesting at a point or two.
So, I already know what happens when you separate an Irken from their spinal brain, but what about the cranial one?
Because, they actually donāt seem on the same level of urgent necessity? Now that I think about it?
The time machine kerfuffle and the brain eating parasite escape were both events this guy evidently survived, albeit not comfortably or ideally until the problem was fixed (I have to assume in part with GIRās or the Computerās help). Now that I think about it Zimās incredibly fortunate that most of these more serious mishaps happened inside of his base. But itās theory time.
So, we do this, to a hypothetical green bug bastard
For fun letās say, hypothetically again, like the hardy earth roach, he blood clots quickly.
Well, first and foremost, that higher up nervous system blackout is probably going to cue the PAK in to begin the following protocol:
1. Activate an emergency response to quickly access the situation.
2. Immediately scurry the body the hell away from whatever manner of threat just shaved a little too much off the top, engaging in all possible defensive measures if necessary.
3. Devote the entirety of its remaining backup power (of which it would have much more stored within the headless body than if it were itself detached) into making a beeline for the coordinates of the nearest Irken source of assistance. On the homeworld, or any fully colonized planet, this would be a cut and dry matter of finding the nearest theoretical space clinic or whatever those freaks have (maybe those dbz regeneration tanks? Idk that would be cool wouldnāt it?). For the lone invader⦠home base is the next best alternative, being a secured location with plenty of resources and advanced technology at the ready. I would bet my own head that situations like this are a huge highlight to the prime value of a personal SIR companion.
Now, best case scenario for what this help looks like depends on whether we can save and bring the head along too. Reattachment and repair at that point should be a pretty simple matter at the tech level we are working with, afterall. But thatās again, ļæ¼the ideal case scenario. Could they just⦠regrow the head eventually? We donāt really have a clear answer on what the limits and capabilities of what the Irken healing factor is, but I want to at least guess that having a personal lab and assistant on hand is going to help. Bare minimum, a solution can get worked out to supply the body with needed blood sugars again to buy more time.
The PAK itself retains a pretty much perfect digital backup of its bodyās memories, experiences,ļæ¼ and identity, so itās not like information has been permanently been lost with primary brain damage. Replacing the primary brain entirely might be as easy as backing up your iPhone and downloadingļæ¼ everything into some shiny new hardware. Hell, it may not even need be Irken hardware!
Do you know the real disturbing things from āDark Harvestā NOBODY brings up are???
Why the fuck was an instantaneous organ-swapping device already just something Zim was carrying around in his toolset?
And
Zimās morphology was horrifically receptive to those dozens of xenographs.
Those human organs were actually beating, pulsing, absolutely redundant and unnecessary in his body, but completely still functional and healthy in the name of selling his act to the school nurse. He didnāt just clumsily cram a bunch of offal into himself, he competently integrated them into his biology and somehow wasnāt suffering like⦠the tons of complications youād expect from trying a stunt like that.
And in the comics, thereās this other fella I just adore for how skrangly he looks, and believe it or not, his actual fucking name is Skrang.
Heās a smart guy, though. Donāt be fooled. And I mean like, a smart guy. And itās all thanks to a little help from a little upgrade heās been fitted with :)
So, I hope you take all the implications Iāve been building here and make what you will of them. I genuinely think an Irken has a decent chance of making it out of a beheading alive to seek ļæ¼sadistic vengeance another day. Do I think ZIM could do such a thing? Tbh, I think heād have to rely on GIR to come in clutch, and we may know thatās a complete roll of the dice in any case.
Wow, this got morbid, but, par for the course really.
This Single Oversight Will Bring Irken-Kind to Its Knees
I have a little riddle for you.
What does an ant nest, a computer, and the ancient city of Troy have in common?
While you ponder the significance of this question and consider your answer, thereās a few things I want to analyze about the worldbuilding of Invader Zim.
We may have heard it said before, least I have (and agree), that the fate of the IZ universe appears to be a rather bleak picture.
Through our lens of focus, being upon Earth and an oh-so specific nutball waging his battle upon humanity, we often donāt do as much thinking about the larger cosmic war taking place meanwhile. Not between the Meekrob and Tenn, not between the Tallest and every dumb luck threat they are thrown against, but between the Irken Armada and all life in the entire universe, sentient or not.
Their intentions will not be made any more clear, between outright eradication or eventual enslavement of every lifeform they set their sights on. While they have alliances and neutral treaties, those agreements seem few and far between, as well as born from temporary conveniences. The cards have already been dealt, and all available evidence has indicated that every planet they are aware of is doomed from the moment The Massive was operational.
Though littered with inefficiencies and incompetency that could suggest an empire in internal decline, the development of the control brains and other centralized command crutches of the species suggests the Irkens can still keep a well oiled machine running, no matter how many mishaps happen along the way. At least, that machine and their plundered resources will definitely outlast the survival of their enemies, for sure.
To speak of their enemies, there has not been a single competitive race within the show that demonstrates any credible threat to Operation Impending Doom II- only those that can resist the conquest a little bit longer than others, or those who survive by appeasing Irk (or evading its detection). The fall of Vort, which stood as the homeworld of the only aliens with the technological ability to match the armadaās firepower isā¦. Really bad news. Thatās to say the least of comparatively primitive, TINY planets like Earth or Blorch, standing zero chance in the way of whatās eventually coming. This is a war that has continued despite the death of two.. FOUR Almighty Tallests if you follow the movieās events⦠and Irkens wholly are still thriving for it across the Galaxy.
So, given all of these facts, and the perception that the Irkens (like any invasive species or colonial force) donāt seem to be a society that will make responsible and/or sustainable use of their ill-gotten territory⦠it seems like this is how life across the universe ends in Invader Zim one day: Not with a bang, not with the whimper of heat death, but through screams muffled under the bloody boots of a dominant predator- a predator that is, itself, doomed to cannibalize its own once it hits the carrying capacity of all existence.
Bleak, concrete, and horrific as that may sound, thereās still a āhoweverā here to consider!
Yep, thatās me about to point one of my big fat fingers to the sky and protest- Irk just might be,
Not so Undefeatable, after all!
And not only have I figured out exactly what sort of countermeasure you need to destroy these invaders, I have reason to suspect itās a plan already long ago set into motion.
Letās break it down,
An Irksome Achillesā Heel
True, individually, the bug bastards are irritatingly tough to kill through conventional means. True, collectively, they are nigh impossible to outmatch. And more than most anything else, they owe this tenacity to two things: numbers, and R&D. Possessing some of most state of the art pinnacles in transportation, communications, and military equipment, the Armada found a knack for being able to steamroll most lesser planets before it.
The genius of the individual PAK unit grants each and any one Irken a theoretical path to partial immortality itself, by route of consciousness archiving. I strongly believe that kind of cybernetic progress was also one of the stepping stones that led to the creation of the Control Brains. Nonetheless, this very same strength of the Irkensā has also proven to be the source of their greatest vulnerability.
Paks, Paks⦠Oh Paks. The entire raceās civilization revolves around such technology the way we do around our own brains, our own hearts, and our communicative network. For all intents and purposes, and as Iāve gone on about ad nauseum in my other spills about the show, a PAK is all and at once
⢠Synonymous with the holder of their soul, consciousness, being, whatever you want to call their personhood.
⢠Able to have their data repurposed by future generations, in the result of an Irkenās permanent death.
⢠A universal necessity shared by the entire population.
⢠Susceptible to alterations, sometimes by intelligent enough individuals (as demonstrated by the Zimvoid comic arc), but usually by a Control Brain, directly.
In addition to that last quality, thereās another way the code in a PAK can be changed, for better or worse- Via evolution. Though I am talking about digitized neurology, the actual data in a PAK is a lot more comparable to biological DNA or a āself-learningā AI than it is a rigid computer program. By this, I mean that its code is subject to certain changes over time, perhaps both directed and completely random, particularly during the recycling of its information back into the Smeeteries.
And this is actually good design on the control brainsā part, the same way not reproducing Irkens as genetically identical clones was. Genetic and digital diversity are desirable goals to keep in mind if you want a healthy and versatile stock of workers, engineers, soldiers, and everything in between. Weāre talking about highly sentient, highly intelligent, and emotional organisms here. A static drone mindset is going to offer them inadequate ability to adapt to their lengthy life experiences or be unique persons. How else would social mobility have purpose in their world? How else could the cream of the crop rise so far above their peers? That positive was deemed worthy of an obvious risk, however: computational errors.
When the Bugs Get Bugs
ļæ¼ IZ does not clearly lay out what it means for an Irken to be defective, but it gives us a general idea. Defectiveness is not something diagnosed from a code scan for this missing value or that incorrect variable. Itās not judged by one specific character trait or quality thatās abnormal for an Irken to display. āDefectiveā is a judgement stamp, wielded by the Control Brains when they gauge the total sum value of a lifeās contribution to the species. And itās not one given to Irkens which are merely incompetent, no. Anyone proven to be unfit for their standing is given generous opportunity for redemption or simply reassigned a more suitable occupation. If it were based on likability, weād have seen Skoodge sent to Judgementia years ago.
Rather, itās given to those who are viewed as so twisted that they are proven to be an existential danger to their brethren. Irkens that are so destructive to the essence of the collective that their memory must be purged from the record and their identity erased.
I adore the enthusiasm behind fans who want to view this as an analogy for disability or neurodivergence against a conformist society, but the metaphor Iām seeing is ļæ¼one of extreme antisocial behavior. A defective Irken screams less āadhd/autismā to me than they do serial murderers (of their own) or outright traitors. ļæ¼Pardon the use of a gross phrase, but itād seem we were talking about an Irken equivalent of what the outdated gens would have dubbed the ācriminally insaneā. No one on screen has ever shown Skoodge or Tak the sort of concern that would get them sent to the Spike of Judgement, but when Zim was in that hot seat? NO one was doubting what his verdict would be.
^ courtesy of āThe Trialāsā transcript
I think about the 40 shmillion mistakes a lot.
Itās such a vague ļæ¼quantity. But it sure sounds like a hell of a big one. And what mistakes⦠what did the lil squirt even have to compare them to? Thereās no standard one person an Irken can be. Every presentation of the flaws in that code to the control brains hasnāt ended up a flaw to him.
I only started writing this because I really couldnāt stop thinking about the 40 shmillion. Thereās no chronological room for bad self-modding to add up to that so quickly. ļæ¼ DNA replication, natureās own sloppy and random process of creating new life, can be excused around 120,000 hiccups when duplicating with a 6 billion pair-long protein. But this kind of shuffling is under a futuristic AIās precise eye. Yes, defects happen, but as bad as him? From birth??? How could you possibly get that many detrimental deviations from the mechanical fucking god-queen(s) of their entire homeworld?
And then it hit me.
You donāt. Not from Irk.
The hot take Iāve been charging for this entire time is thus.
Zim is not defective by any random accident. In fact, I smell the tampering of foreign sabotage.
Not only is this guy the thing his kind fears more than any else, they have every right to be shaking in their stance.
That puzzle i posed at the beginning of this journey, have you seen what Iāve seen yet?
Because the answer I was looking for as to what similarity connects an anthill, a PC, and a city from Greek legend was a most effective tactic for taking them down.
Do you know the best way to deal with a bad ant infestation? Cuz you can lay down all the raid and crushing action you want, but you wonāt really be getting anywhere unless you target the pests directly at their queen. To that end, ļæ¼liquid ant baits ļæ¼are marvelous inventions- a sweet substance hiding a small amount of slow acting poison. Poison to be peacefully delivered by the stomach of an ant to the rest of her colony, poisoning her kin, who sicken more members, on and on until the queen is destroyed and the entire nest perishes. An insidious toxin to do all the work while its user never lifts a finger, pretty ingenious.
And when it comes to computers, we also have ways to attack entire networks at source, from quietly and far away. āTrojanā was a category of malware responsible for 64.31% of all cyber attacks on Windows systems in 2022, and they still make up a majority of active malware hits today. The concept is deviously simple. The malicious code is hidden within an innocent looking program, maybe even within a legitimate software that does what itās supposed to. Once the stowaway is invited into the system, it can get down to it some sneaky, nasty, destructive work on your device. As for what those acts could look like, well, malware exists to do all kinds of things. Mostly something involving trying to get money/information from you or hijacking your computer for whatever its creator wants to use it for. And some of them will just up and wreck your shit, disable your antivirus software to open you up to more infections, disable important operations, wipe your data. Use your imagination.
And as for Troy.. well, where do you think Trojan programs got their name? ĀÆ\_(ć)_/ĀÆ
So, Irkens have their Armada, bionic drones, and homeworld- in other words, the thriving swarm of army ants, the billions to trillions of computers they so rely on, and their nigh untouchable fortress, always at war.
And some damn crafty bastard(s) in the stars said
āHere is their sugar-bait,ā
āHere is their cyber attack,ā
āHere is their wooden horse.ā
And one particular race is going to be getting the last laugh before long.
Nerds That Are GOATed With the Sauce
Thatās right, I thought about this all the way through to finding our prime suspect.ļæ¼ And let me tell you, NO ONE in the Galaxy reeked of fish like the Vortians did. Get over here and lemme show you my whiteboard with all the red circles and polaroids on it.
- The Means
In a way of tragic irony, Vort has contributed more than any else to the same Irken conquest that turned on them in the end. A natural talent for cutting edge engineering and technical development actually does not seem to be what Irk already came into the ring with. For how mighty and superior they view themselves, the greatest achievements of their military can actually be owed to Vortian outsourcing. When we would have gotten a look at Tallest Miyukiās very own āfinest mindsā during her reign, notice something interesting about these guys below,
Zim there is the ONLY Irken to be found! Yes, transferred there because of the punchline explanation of āhe breaks everything he touches so maybe heāll have an affinity for weapons researchā but damn right he actually did! ļæ¼And still does; I donāt want it to go unsaid that Zim has shown MUCH ļæ¼more technological skill and innovation than near any other Irken weāve seen.
Another fun thing to note about this is that Lard Nar was also part of this lineup, and in the transcript he was in the process of working on the blueprints for The Massive. (which leaves you with the cursed knowledge that Zim, Prisoner 777, and Lard were all familiar coworkers long before the events of the show) And that brings me back to what Iām saying about the real reason the Vort natives were enslaved and imprisoned instead of outright sweeped after conquering. The Armada needs their skills, because Vortian advancement is something their own scientists couldnāt come close to. Left to their own devices, Vort could have easily outmatched them at an earlier point in history. Itās a people that figured out infinite power sources and potentially wormhole technology, while PAKs were something a disfigured human tween with a lot of time on his hands was able to crack. If anyone could outpace and outsmart the defensive measures of the Control Brains, itās going to be them. And what better, cleaner way to sabotage the enemy than from within. ļæ¼
The very same strings of inserted codļæ¼e that cursed Zim with his delusions, paranoia, lust for destruction, and horrible tactics may also have blessed him with a determination and intellect higher than almost any creature alive. The saboteur gave Irk the most powerful racecar in history, and then fitted it with bicycle brakes. No matter how hard Zim tries to conform to what will give him admiration, no matter how competent he is at keeping himself alive, itās as if he is instinctually compelled toward whatever actions will cause the MOST damage to his allies in the process. Dib may think heās the bulwark against the invasion when, ironically, heās fighting against the one being thatās predetermined to be the arrow that strikes Irken leadership right in their dumb, green heels. (There is also an instance in the comics where Dib figures out that Zim is the ace in the hole for total Irken eradication but thatās another fun story.)
Oh, oh HO HO, and thatās only what heās capable of doing before the empireās actual immune system against defects like him wakes up and notices!
Three planetary blackouts, two dead generals, and a whole swath of dead invaders was just the fucking warm up, babey! All that is merely the kind of loud disruption that you need in order to fulfil the real thing this Trojan horse exists for in the first place.
What a celebration of hubris the Spike of Judgement was. Yeah, letās take our method of filtering the corrupted data from the hive mind, and completely centralize it on a single planet! As well, letās have the very purging agents also be the same ones to perform the evaluations themselves, Iām sure that it would be unthinkable for any outsider to design a worm that could make it through the brainsā firewalls. Goddamn spectacular. Like inserting an infected USB into your laptop, the Tallest never realized what kind of beast they woke up by plugging that PAK into the Spikeās mainframes. Those brains were meant to handle an expected spectrum of deviation when it came to defective Irkens, never a sleeper virus of this complexity.
From here it probably wonāt even matter if Zim survives much longer on Earth, his virus has already spread to the very thing relied upon to keep things like him out of the data pool in the first place. With the Judgementia brains corrupted and no higher authority to overrule them, the firewall is effectively broken, and you know what that means? Bigger cracks for future defectives to start trickling through, both spontaneous and artificial. The ideal scenario is one where a degenerating and glitched population accelerates the incompetency of the empire to the point where it just implodes on itself; nevertheless, even a disease that only slows down Operation Doom could be a game changer, by giving the rest of the little guys more time to band together a coalition strong enough to strike back when the time is right.
- The Motive
The history of these two racesā alliance is something I lament us not having more lore to pull from- how far back it goes, what the character of the Vort was like during that time, what the Irkens had offered in return- a few among dozens of questions it rears. ļæ¼ The implication behind how it ended lies in Zimās creation that slayed Tallest Miyuki. Interestingly, the Empire never received the memo of ļæ¼what exactly went down, or, perhaps, stubbornly denied the account of the other scientists who were there that day. Neither Red/Purple nor the Judgmentia Brains had any idea that Zimās actions led to the death of a Tallest. So, makes sense that the Vortians became the unintentional scapegoat (no pun intended) ļæ¼for the incident, and the rest is history.
Note: Itās also in the realm of possibility that Vort was actually the one to withdraw from the alliance instead, given that the same blob that devoured Miyuki (purely the fault of their Irken transfer) also went on to cause untold amounts of devastation. Redās reaction to the real story stuck out to me as more telling, although.
But why am I even talking about this? Zim was ļæ¼decades old before war was declared on them, and either peopleās regard to each other seemed strangely⦠respectful, if anything.
But, was Vort really a monolithic bunch? Irk was already an empire by this point, and diplomacy with those they needed something from did not mean they werenāt otherwise an aggressive force in the universe. For all we know, the alliance itself might have been coerced, or result of depraved leadership among the Vortians. ļæ¼ Any citizen with a conscience who could see the writing on the walls would be disgusted byļæ¼ giving so much aid and brown nosing to such a menace, no? ļæ¼I know who would have seen that writing before anyone else. Brainiacs who are smart enough to build something like The Massive and all its bells and whistles would know better than anyone just what it was all capable of in the wrong hands. The collateral damage against your own people might be a sacrifice worth making in the face of the alternative.
- The Oppurtunity
So.. thatās all well and good, yeah? A why, and a what, yet this is actually the tricky part of saving the galaxy,
Sneaking your StupidifyIrk.exe file onto the assholesā homeworld without alerting either them or your own treacherous, weak, collaborator superiors to your actions. Infecting and releasing a random Irken alive would be far too dangerous, far too noticeable to the point where they could just be destroyed outright before given a chance to wreak real havoc.
But what about releasing a dead Irken? š¤
PAKs are only screened for criminal flaws when errors begin to affect their bodyās behaviors in destructive ways. A fully competent scientist, or soldier, or navigator performing a lifetime of loyal service to the empire and then meeting an unfortunate end? Their mindsā shadows can be accepted back into the data pool no questions asked. Thatās only business as usual.
That almost makes new smeets something of a reincarnation of their ancestors. Personally, I see it kind of like replaying a video game and re-rolling your stats, ļæ¼even if youāre reusing your characterās name and general play style.
Either way, we come full circle to my theory about Zimās actual origin. Maybe not āourā Zim, but the previous iteration of data that was shuffled to create his person. Whoever they were, Iām convinced ļæ¼that they were also an exceptional individual. They were probably pretty arrogant, but it was a more earned confidence, and they were a prodigy genius, the likes of which that was drawn to work alongside Vortian allies, as another researcher. Then, an untimely demise befell them. I couldnāt say they fell victim to some unfortunate accident, considering the cockroach durability of their body. No, I find it a lot easier to imagine they met their end in one of the more embarrassing ways for an Irken to die- A PAK stolen, disabled or forcefully detached by an assailant they might have allowed a little closer than they should have. To the homeworld, itās a small matter. One more PAK recovered by the natives of the friendly planet, brought back home to be repurposed by the smeeteries, right?
Well, thatās what one smartass might have been hoping for.
And they really were a clever cookie, because that scheming seed is fruiting beautifully.
A Messy, Sedulous Necropsy of Zib Membrane
Thatās what we call him right? Not Invader Zib? Hell if I know, weāll let the tags decide.
Whatever he is christened by his author, enemies, or fans, this titular villain of the Zimvoid is such a mind blaster to me. I wish we had more time with him within the comics. I wish he had been a concept explored in the show. I wish he had a movie. I am having fun with a little hyperbole here, but I truly do find him just as interesting and potentially pivotal of an antagonist as Tak was, if not even more.
Both, of course, were so badly underutilized for sake of the series status quo. To that, Zib was a much bigger threat than Tak, and especially to that of the comicsā own. He potentially changes everything, and somehow absolutely nothing by the end. The TV show always had a more overt tone of cruelty and the macabre floating about its themes. These print issues? I donāt dislike them. Itās still recognizably invader Zim, and the more the merrier, content-wise, but longtime fans can feel that there was this change of essence in the transition. More obviously, in the art, but more subtly, there was an audible softening of that bluntly darker, cynical tone the show was made iconic for. To put it very generally, they lean a little more into the whackiness of this world, thereās a lot more dark comedy to be found in what Iāve seen so far rather than in your face darkness, and in the absence of the ost and voice acting the show accustomed us to, the comics leave a lot more room to be read as you wile. To me, theyāre goofier and more episodic in spirit.
This all is not a critique or rating on the comics.. Itās purely, I feel, why Zib stuck out to me all the more jarringly in his context. His reveal was a genuine twist that brought forth stakes higher than arguably any other threat in the entire franchise. He represents a plausible while horrifying prophecy of our main characters if only they made worse decisions. The most interesting of all, for every piece of amazing information he fed to us, he bred dozens more questions about everything than he answered, from Irken machinations, to his ambivalent backstory, to the secrets hidden by the sum of his parts.
Though he was left evidently alive at the end of his story, I donāt see any chance for him making a return, so he is memorialized as another defeated one-off the writers have brisked past and left behind for good. Therefore, Iām here today to take what we got and present it on the metaphorical autopsy table. I want to really pull apart why this character alone pulled me back into the TV series, really just flay open the bits I canāt get out of my own head and dig harder until we find something or we run out of threads to tug at. Starting with the one already hanging out of my mouth, but
⢠B.E.F
āBad End Friendā is a term I learned the meaning of within the last 12 hours or so of writing this, and Iām exuberant over that discovery. Itās a niche trope i didnāt know ive been a giant fan of since I was a child. Summed up, fictional characters from beloved media, typically, animated child protagonists⦠given the worst case scenario treatment. Their ābad endingā, whether that means a corruption arc, demonic possession, a lovecraftIan tragedy⦠usually something thatās anywhere along the lines of a fate worse than death to a full villainous turnover. As a treat. The concept is strongly associated with fanworks and AUs of popular media, but just as often this is something that becomes explored in the source material as well. A couple great examples I know would probably be Ice Prince Finn from Adventure Time or what happens in Undertale when you decide you want to run the most depraved playthrough possible. From a more mature story, āEvilā Morty is another validly arguable sample.
Besides a bit of a fondness I got going for certain dark or spooky themes in general, what I REALLY love about canonical BEFs the most is their utility as characterization tools. Theyāre the āhaving your cake and eating it tooā option! The perfect way for an author to explore certain things about any character without actually committing to well⦠a bad ending.
Almost always, they are necessarily hypothetical or reversible. If theyāre not reversible, they go often hand-in-hand with a little universe tampering to make happen. Sometimes, this means the story goes the way of time travel and branching off butterfly effects. Sometimes it means confirming multiverse theory, which can be the same thing depending on your semantical position.
And Zib crossed off the BEF qualifications by far and away. His implications are extremely dark given any pause think about them, and heās a living, disturbing tragedy in aftermath. If you want to view a rigamarole about that aspect of his characterization as he appeared in the comics, someone else long beat me to that and Iām enthusiastically recommending a peek at their own work. Iām thrilled to do so and build a little upon that with those extended what-if-wonders.
⢠Lessons From a Lost Episode
Elephant in the room I havenāt seen someone ask yet, uh..
By show rules, isnāt Zib supposed to be a clear case of the writers committing the sin of retcon? By show Iām including the unaired scripts, including ā10 Minutes to Doomā. In that one we had what looked like the potential setup for a Zib case, and it was deconstructed across the whole episode.
In short recap, Dib learned the hard and reckless way about the true nature of what Irken PAKs actually are. This is not an inventory bag, it is not āgearā. Itās the actual Irken entity- at least, the primary component.
Detaching it from the organic shell essentially caused a temporary split into two instances of Zim, desperately trying to connect back together under threat of obliteration.
Like let me be very clear about this,
The PAK is an autonomous instance of Zimās consciousness, and itās the main one. Weāve seen it act to save his life when his body has been out cold or flatlined, and he doesnāt appear the least bit disoriented or confused once āheā wakes and jumps back into the action. Thereās no known separate computer assistant AI or security autopilot in there. That code, that program, IS Zim. As Long as the PAK is active, he is capable of staying fully conscious and able to react to whatās happening around him, and thatās what weāve been seeing, his own actions.
Zim proved me right when Virooz tried to replace him and detached the PAK. Take note of his phrasing after the chair eventā¢.
āIā activated the protocol. Immediately after Virooz ran off with my shell.
āIā Voluntarily chose to do so.
I donāt remember it playing out like that in ā10 Minutes to Doomā.
Attaching to a new host wasnāt the first reflex. Dib was not the least bit aware that that he has literally holding the actual Zim captive in sense, and the latter was fighting like a cornered animal to escape him. Failing that, alongside the distance between him and his original body growing fast, he made a last desperate gambit, and he willingly connected himself into Dibās body.
I can see why he thought this was better than nothing, no matter how repulsive the notion might have been. If he couldnāt fend Dib off physically, he could incapacitate him in some fashion by trying to overtake his will. Maybe give the shell a better chance to catch up, maybe in the longshot hope of being able to pilot dib in order to become whole with the correct host again. And you can say he succeeded, at least in dominating bodily control away from Dib, but at the cost of his already tenuously held sanity. This could be because of the interference of Dibās own mind still resisting to fully submit, or malfunctions because of the biological incompatibility; however, the thing that Dib mentally becomes is only the basic idea of what āZimā is. Instead of remembering it needs to reunite with its shell ASAP, the PAK mistakes Dibās body for its own and goes through the manic motions of following the Invader mission. And it does this, weirdly enough, with almost no regard for blowing its cover.
When things are set right again, Zimās later words near the episode ending revealed that he knew that was an unsustainable state.
Such a risk was not just accounted for, he was actually banking on it if that clock had hit zero. If Zim had truly lost, if he was really doomed to meet his end on this nasty rock in the middle of Nowhere, Space, then by every damned circuit in his being, he was going to take down this insolent fool boy and as many other humans possible with him. A dying act of vengeful rage.
⢠The Exceptional⦠Exception
Now, wouldnāt all of this be the definitive reason for Zibās existence to be an aberrant impossibility? Yes, but actually no. Fun thing about multiverses is if something doesnāt work in one setting, you can just tweak a few dials and suddenly you have a world where the impossible becomes possible. But thatās a pretty cheap answer, isnāt it? So, what exactly was that crucial difference?
What happened in Zibās timeline that went down so, so divergently from the events of 10 Minutes to Doom?
Because the only one who was in any position to explain it for us was Zib himself, and heās proven to be one of the most unreliable of narrators. Itās as @dana-chan-the-control-brain already spared no effort to demonstrate, when he does tell us something about his past, his story is pocked with contradicting half-truths or outright lies. Ergo it helps to break down each recount of events to pick out the real facts.
Version 1: This is an alternate version of dib who defeated his complementing Zim (logically sensible) and went on to achieve all of the success and respect he sought after in his timeline (absolute bullshit). He kind of gestures and only implies about what has happened to his body while explaining that he came to his current understanding of Irken technology by studying it through Zimās lab (a partial truth). He lets slip in passing that he has in fact fused with the PAK in order to learn how to alter and reprogram its coding, lessons he has applied to Number 2 in order to have a brainwashed pawn (also apparently true).
Version 2, when cornered and red handed: This is an alternate version of Dib who managed to specifically stop Zim's mission (Again, makes sense) but somehow could not convince the world of his findings or his warnings about the Irken Armada (*VERY eyebrow raising). Frustrated with the peopleās lack of cooperation, he decides he has no choice but to physically merge with Zimās PAK post-mortem (concerning and evidently mostly accurate), dominate the Earth himself, and enslave humans to help him in his efforts (highly troubling and probably true). The construction of his EMP super-weapon is successful, but ultimately led to the creation of the Zimvoid when the device was field tested (self evident, absolutely horrifying).
You know what I noticed was missing from both of these accounts? Exactly how his Zim was defeated. Which honestly could have been some beyond useful wisdom to pass along to the main Dib??? More than anything else? Iām not going to fault our boy for not pressing that matter better under the awing circumstance; however, thereās an implication Iāve been reading between lines.Ā
When Zib mentions ādefeatingā his own Zim, heās talking about something different than ours.
When our Dib has always talked about ādefeatingā Zim, heās meant incapacitation and capture. Throughout the show he explicitly wants to present Zim before an audience alive and whole. Yeah, he fantasizes about other people torturing or disassembling him for study, but HIS role was supposed to be reaping the fame for an undeniable, ground-breaking discovery. Conspiracies and cryptids are all this kid breathes and lives by! And as long as pop culture has always been fascinated with the paranormal, and he has to know this full well, people keep bringing forward hoax after hoax after scam. I mean thereās a freaking current one or few still going IRL about this exact topic. Dib would want no room left for being dismissed as another one of those con artists.Ā
Nonetheless, I actually doubt this is the reason Zib couldnāt get through to the scientific community. A genuine alien lifeform, even a dead one, could still be confirmed by any basic medical examination. The world thinks Dib is too crazy to listen to, but his father is still Professor Membrane. In "10 Minutes to Doom" OUR Dib got as close as having Membrane literally analyzing a PAK, or at worst, preparing to. āUltimate Dibā gets his hands on the same thing and pulls a move Iād expect from an HP Lovecraft Protagonist instead.
Weāre assuming way too much to what these two Dibs have in common, because this ^^^ is really what made the Zimvoid an outlier in the multiverse. That world didnāt only have a very different, more threatening Zim from the main timeline, it had the Dib who proved even more formidable, cunning, and ruthless, even before the fusion.Ā
He didnāt obtain that PAK ala the ā10 minutes to Doomā accident, itās a personal trophy. This is extra strange remembering that capturing an Irken is realistically more easy than killing one. Theyāre seriously more tenacious than kudzu and will even fight back in PAK form alone. Iām convinced that whatever sort of final showdown made the Ultimate Dib the victor, there are two optional endings on the table.
Option 1: There was not a body even left intact enough to bring in to research. Maybe Dibās fault, maybe an accident, maybe even Zimās own luck running out and his incompetent antics finally swallowed him (and possibly GIR). This theory assumes that the PAK was the only sort of remains to come into Dibās recovery/possession.
Option 2: Curiosity Killed the cat,
but satisfaction brought it back.
Or, the one I personally headcanon. Dib⦠all Dibs, I assume, donāt just hate the Irken species. They are mesmerized by them, and all that they represent from his perspective. Firstly, the epic villain he gets to roleplay nemesis to in order to feel his own worth and importance. Secondly, an unknown wonder from beyond the boundaries of the cosmos. Heās not really a ghost buster or a Men In Black agent at heart, but a scientist, like his father. Underneath his contempt for Zimās plans to destroy the world is a genuine and appropriately childish awe for alien presence, especially for Zimās technology. His silent, dopey smile when Takās ship ended up in his backyard said more than words ever will..Ā
Earlier in the show, a great deal of Dibās time and effort was spent on trying to infiltrate the lower levels of Zimās base. Sneaking into the house was hard enough, but the computer security canāt be bypassed like the gnomes. Not even by Zim himself unless he really is all himself. Perhaps youāre starting to sniff where Iām going with this one when I refer back to āBolognius Maximusā. Iāve another reference thatās a little more on the nose, and a lot more⦠dark.
Were an expired Irken husk before you, you too might take your victory and cash in then. Still, who knows what sudden impulse may run through the head of a less humble version of yourself, one some could call greedier, obsessive to a fault, a screw or two loose, yet, a hell of a smart cookie. Smart enough to see it for what it actually was, the keys to a whole world of discovery that went so many layers deeper than they could ever imagine. Itās possible the Ultimate Dib already learned beforehand the same hard lessons about the PAKs that our own did, and took that understanding toward not repeating the same mistake this time. What happened to Zim? I think he was murdered in cold blood, body, and entity. ā10 Minutes to Doomā showed us a fight between 2 brains clinging to one body, struggling until one overpowered another, but thatās not what this is. Through whatever means of science were available to him, this Dib has probably tried to ādisarmā the technology by either erasing Zimās consciousness out of it altogether, or by forcing the autonomous code into a kind of dormancy. His intentions were to render it back to its basic hardware without losing its precious knowledge and usefulness, something like the brain-filled tank that was wired into Skrangās head. Zimās PAK doesnāt cling onto his body like a parasitic teratoma this time; itās merged in a literal sense with his nervous and circulatory system. As well, he has fooled the deviceās ability to detect and reject a foreign host shell, the exact same way he deceived the the baseās security AI. If an Irken biology is what these measures authorize to command them and their secrets, then he had the tools on hand to give them just that- in an atrocity I like to call
the darker harvest.
Within this theory, there is not as much room to wonder exactly what became of Zimās organic remains.Ā
But where Dib fucked up was, for the second time, in his ignorance to the true nature of what he was even playing with. That was a mistake that even the mighty Elder Brains of Judgementia lost themselves to; How much more vulnerable was the weak, human mind? Though Zim can be devoured, he can never be digested. In that fact was born this aberration against nature, sanity, and humanity alike.
"Have you ever heard of insect politics? Neither have I. Insects⦠don't have politics. They're very⦠brutal. No compassion, no compromise. We can't trust the insect. I'd like to become the first⦠insect politician. Y'see, I'd like to, but⦠I'm afraid, uh⦠I'm saying⦠I'm saying I - I'm an insect who dreamt he was a man and loved it. But now the dream is over⦠and the insect is awake." - Seth Brundle, The Fly, 1986
By fusing what is half-mad and what is utterly mad, neither being was cured, only assimilated into the birth of a new madness. The madness of the creature that snickers behind the curtain in the Zimvoid. I rightfully fear that lonesome thing, but not I think as much as I pity him.
⢠Dejavu, or Re:Plagarism
One more thing about the Zimvoid arc I find curious is the way it makes you question more and more just how much of the aberration is actually still Dib, and how much of it is Zim's infection haunting him. He does nothing with all of his intellect, his resources, and his time in the void doing anything but surrounding himself in everything he claims he despises. He decries alien tyranny in one breath while lording over a homemade, cruel dictatorship in another. He calls for eradication of the very race who's technology and physiology he has thoroughly appropriated. He laments feeling unable to protect the Earth from the Armada alone, yet sneers literally through Irken teeth to insult humans as inferior and of no value to him any longer. Our Dib spent the whole damn show longing for the support of other people, but Zib pushes away potential allies in his arrogance. His broken timeline never became a Dibvoid instead because while only half of his mind can't stand Irkens, both of the souls inside him remember that they loathe and look down upon a Dib, deep inside.
The corruption goes as far as even subverting his own creativity. None of Zib's plans are wholly original. His anti-Irken weapon was already a concept blueprinted inside of that PAK before the merge. Our Dib has several times shown a propensity for some DIY ingenuity, sometimes dipping a toe into the supernatural. Zib entirely calls upon, scavenges and regurgitates Irken designs with a few modifications or upgrades. The Dib Virus, I think is his most uninspired creation yet, for it's original form was always something inside of Zim, even if the latter himself was not aware of the fact. Like all else, it is a weapon he has plundered, customized, and turned around on everyone else for his own selfish ends. This brief point I will end on one ļæ¼ more reflection. The one kind of help Zim ever allowed at his side were the likes of GIR and his own creations. Unable to connect and cooperate with his peers and own kind, his ego preferred to be around those defective machines he related to- drones to be owned by him and always loyally at his beck and call. A slave to admire him unconditionally is the only companionship he's ever been willing to admit to desiring.
And what was Number 2's purpose again? What role exactly were the arena combatants auditioning for, when you think about it?
today in āIZ realizations Iām surprised didnāt hit me years agoā:
THE RESISTY MADE A STOP OR TWO AT SCHLOOGORGHāS FLAVOR MONSTER
You might know about that one Vortian who shows up a couple times on screen in āThe Frycook that Came From all that Spaceā yeah? This one
Now I remembered them all this time too, but in my head, I just said to myself that this was just another Vortian. After all, weāve seen so few of them, it would be kind of a stretch to assume any grey member of the species on screen has to be a Lard cameo, right?
Except the longer I looked at this guy the more I noticed they had Narās look copied down to the outfit.
Well, itās not too out of line for animators to reuse models a bit for quick background extras, either, thatās still no concrete-
oh hi, Spleenk
Oh hi Shloonktapooxis
OH HI THREE HEADED GUY WHO WAS ALSO A MEMBER OF THE CLUB
Well hot shit on a stick, now my tune has giddily changed to āthe Resisty freaking cameoād chilling around together on Foodcourtiaā and i wish I could relay how absolutely funny it is now to know Iāve seen what Lard Nar looks like without his goggles since I was a kid,
And itās just as ridiculous as I have always dreamed it would be
Personal Vort Headcanons
(And not as a true essay because really, the show gave out so little in specific details for this race that any real attempt to put together a thorough analysis or theory about them necessarily will arise from or give way to fanon fodder at best. Such freedom and gaps in information remains a blessing and a curse.)
- The modern Vortian people evolved from highly intelligent, predatory ancestors which had to adapt to an erratic, competitive ecosystem. Like Homo sapiens, they once filled a niche as both hunter and the hunted, until the development of primitive weaponry and an apt for problem-solving helped them eliminate their natural predators and claim the mantle of dominant species over their home world.
- This origin coincides with a preferred diet high in protein and calorie-dense foods. Itās assumed that Vort dogs, implied to be a kind of processed sausage, are a culinary signature particularly enjoyed by this species. This suggests that Vortians are likely either obligate carnivores, or opportunistically omnivorous. Such a hypothesis is further supported by their jagged teeth, suited for ripping and tearing animal flesh.
- It is possible that their hornlike appendages might be hollow and serve an important role in their hearing; alternatively, they may actually be blood-rich and act as thermoregulating organs. They are shown to be capable of some degree of movement and functionally help a Vortian emote extreme amounts of stress. It may also be that they continue growing throughout the life of the individual, designating a visible marker of wisdom and age.
- Vortās inventive history is one filled with hyper militarization, not in the pursuit of war, but in dissuading would-be marauders from the outside, such as the Planet Jackers. Their alliance with Irk was one born of shared commercial and strategic interest: While the Irkens began initially behind the Vort in technological prowess, their sheer numbers, connections with other powerful organizations, and continued expansion throughout the galaxy offered an invaluable level of protection to Vort by virtue of being an ally. On the other end of the table, Irk enjoyed a golden era of prosperity and dominance over their territory, directly fueled by Vortian ingenuity.
- The Vort do not have a binary understanding of gender and are a single-sexed people, reproducing either through the use of technology (like the Irkens) or naturally by some form of parthenogenesis. Evidence available indicates that they have a concept of family units, and Vortian fathers are dedicated parents toward their offspring.
- Pre-Invasion, Vortian society was a technocratic republic which selected out its leader(s) by experience. The appearance and significance of the āuniverseās most comfortable couchā leads me to believe that it was a luxury designated for the highest ruling despot of the planet, who was either assassinated or usurped by invader Larb to complete his mission. If Vortian growth continues beyond adulthood, then the couch could theoretically be tailored to seat a single incredibly old, enormous individual. This is an idea that draws inspiration from DBZās Namekian society , and their Grand Elder Guru.
- Regarding the end of their connections with the Irken Empire, a severe miscommunication was what led to the diplomatic bridge burning on both sides of the exchange. While it was Irk who blamed the scientists of Vort for the death of Almighty Miyuki, the Vortians had correctly identified an Irken transfer as the true perpetrator of the disaster, and decidedly cut ties in retaliation of what they perceived as an attack instigated by the Empire to justify future aggression.
- Following their civilization being brought to heel by Larb, the majority of escaped Vortians by and large have no real leadership and exist as scattered fugitives across and beyond the Empire. Due to their technological marvels and pride falling into Irken hands, as well as their brutal time within the research prison, most of these escapees have had their wills to rebel against the armada beyond a state of āevery man for himselfā survival broken. Lard Nar is an exception that many of these peers would probably view as moronic and foolhearty for his endeavors leading The Resisty head-on against the Empire.
- Their thin, wormlike tongues hold vestigial remnants of when they were once used as a tool to feed on small tree or crevasse dwelling arthropods.
- Above all else, Vortian leg structure baffles a human-perspective evolutionary analysis, at least at first. Their legs appear to follow an ungulate-like shape, ending in pointed, stilt-like tips; Earth has no surviving carnivorous ungulates, let alone one that has transitioned into an obligatory biped. Both of the latter concepts alone would make for a most inefficient strategy when working with this leg structure. A bipedal gait would suggest a need for stronger, developed legs to support the whole animal, but the Vortiansā remain almost dainty. Their appearance, intellect, and food suggests a history of hunters and prey, but such a leg structure would undoubtedly leave them horribly equipped for fast sprinting or even stable ground holding against a threat.
Sure, there are some gazelle to observe here that can stand for long periods⦠to feed on vegetation. There are kangaroos and other digitigrade bipeds⦠which have adapted counterbalancing tails and other means of stabilizing their gait. None of it could make sense to me until I realized I was thinking far too narrowly. Grasslands are where our hooved things thrive, but theyāve managed in more extreme situations before. No one ever said that Vortians were operating under the rules of Earthās environments anyway. I mean, what hinderance is a weaker gravity to thinner legs? Iāve been thinking at this like a dumb primate that went from an arboreal ancestry to endurance running over long stretches of plains, but what if the people of Vort didnāt follow such a path?
Itās come to my best guess now that Vortians originated not from distance runners, but exceptional climbers.
Performing meme necromancy aside, consider the humble ibex or mountain goat. Fascinating animals for sure, seen not only scaling damn near vertical cliff sides, but able to nimbly navigate up at down them about as easily as they scamper over flat ground, and all for the sake of a good salt lick. How on earth does something tiptoeing on a hoof pull that off? The first neat trick up their sleeve is that itās a very specialized, split hoof in fact- Cloven toes and rough inner pads that allow them to really grip onto the rock surface, even amid strong gales and other harsh alpine weather. Vortian forelimbs have taken this to the next step, aiding them with a dexterous upper grip as well, equally fit for higher tool use and traversing heights. A less visible adaptation that mountain goats also utilize is their enlarged inner ears, which provide them an incredible innate sense of balance and coordination over their relatives. Itās absolutely a possibility that the organs on a Vortianās head may even play some similar, if not well understood advantage on this front as well. Alongside the development of their larger skulls and and sapient-like intellect, their evolution spared no waste to giving them a sure-footed agility. And this lifestyle neednāt have been for the soul sake of licking rocks, for weāre free to interpret what we may about the threats and prey that old Vort was packing. Under this idea Iād like to think that the first Vortians congregated in tribal packs like early anthropoids, but taking to the cliffs, or maybe even the trees as their prowl. From higher vantage points they could both elude larger predators as well as feed upon all manner of smaller life forms they could pluck off of the rocks and out from hidden crevices. If larger game was an option, it was likely either scavenged, or taken down collectively, the whole group enacting a precise ambush from above.