Bacterial Lunarversity (comic story)
From Jenny Everywhere Wiki
Bacterial Lunarversity was a standalone Jenny Everywhere story written by Alex Hernandez and John Miers.
Contents
Plot
Jenny Everywhere, having shifted into a universe in which the geniuses of Earth are sent to the Moon's Lunar College of Selene to stifle their intelligence, has devised a plot to overthrow the institution in charge of the Moon. But will she and her friends be able to pull off the plan? Or will the university's guards catch them first?
Worldbuilding
Jenny
- Jenny Everywhere can sometimes shift into universes where she may not have existed before without anyone noticing.
- Jenny is rebellious and good at coming up with plans
Universes
- Jenny remains within one universe for the duration of the story.
- Space travel is commonplace in this universe, and a society has been established on the Moon.
- Young geniuses of Earth are sent to the Lunar College of Selene to have their intelligence stifled, presumably to prevent some sort of uprising.
- The Lunar College of Selene appears to be run by the universe's version of NASA.
Other
- The Lunar College of Selene has a greenhouse.
- It is possible to be expelled from the Lunar College of Selene for bad behavior.
- The Lunar College of Selene is patrolled by both Video-Bots and ordinary human guards.
- A type of fertilizer found in the Lunar College of Selene will cause anything to grow, including bacteria.
- Travel across the surface of the moon is possible via lunar roving vehicles stationed at the Lunar College of Selene.
- The entire program of the Lunar College of Selene is being filmed to produce an IMAX documentary so as to make back some of the costs of the endeavor.
- The guards of the Lunar College of Selene wield rayguns.
- Jenny used the powerful fertilizer to multiply the bacteria in her saliva into the trillions. She then released them onto the surface of the Moon in the hopes that they would multiply and create advanced life.
Behind the scenes
Bacterial Lunarversity was originally available on John Miers' personal website and on queergranny.com, both of which are now offline.