Far away in a solar system three planets are inhabited by slimes common and unknown and three ranchers have been sent to explore.
The soul, closest to the sun a human can get (or whatever he is) in search of new ways to care for slimes and give them stable and healthy captive lives.
The heart, on a planet closest to earth, from what they remember atleast, here in search of new ways to make medicine and other healing sorta of things, and perhaps personal health
And, the mind, on the coldest planet, in search of materials for machinery, and materials to further advance science.
They have to communicate through a trade system to keep everything together and show thats everything is successful so they can stay part of the main trade syatem, but they have, budding, opinions and feelings to say the least.
(Ooc: I'm not good at writing so any ideas, suggestions, or better ways to represent characters, is greatly appreciated and heard!)
(Also I'm open to questions or anything about this au ^ ^ )
You know, an interesting tumblr transformation that's happened gradually, and which I've seen no one talk about: ask-culture has essentially dropped off to nothing.
By which I mean, asks used to be WAY more of the tumblr economy. They used to be more common to send, and receive, and see. They were integral to the collaborative, forum-like behavior of old tumblr communities, not even to speak on the HUGE number of ask-blogs that used to exist to only be interacted with in ask-form.
I'm not saying this in a vying-for-attention way but instead in an observational way: I used to get way way more asks in like 2015, even with a fraction of my follower count. I wonder if it's due to the homogenization of social media sites? There's a lot more of this divide between "content creator" and "consumer" instead of just a bunch of peer blogs who would talk to each other. "Asks" aren't really a thing on twitter, are they? And as I understand it, the closest thing to an "ask" on instagram or tiktok would be a creator screenshotting some comment and responding to it in a new reel or video or whatever those content mediums are. Are asks just too tumblr-specific? Is that aspect of the site culture dying out as more and more people converge to using all their social media sites in the same way?
Do not click on the link, this link it's a sex trafficking site. It's a site that puts on your phone that girls are missing. Do NOT go to this link, I'm not joking I'm serious!