Greater APAC Co-prosperity Sphere
File:GACS flag.png | |
Greater APAC Co-prosperity Sphere | |
Motto | United We Stand - Divided We Fall |
Political data | |
Governmental form |
|
Declaration | Treaty of Pan-APAC Unity |
Common Law | Directives of the Sphere |
Ruler |
- High Command of the Sphere |
Head of State | High Command |
Head of Government | Supreme Chancelor |
Legislature | Grand Council |
Policy | To promote peace and co-prosperity existence |
Military |
|
Members | Member of the Spheres |
Founding members |
- The Group of Twenty |
Societal data | |
Alignment | Lawful good |
Archetype | Multiple |
Core galaxy | |
Capital world | Shakosato Celestial Station |
Currency | None - transitioning to post-scarcity |
Notable for |
- Stunningly technological and cultural sophistications. |
Population in prime universe | Uncountable |
Size | Omniverse |
General data | |
Tier level | Tier 1.7 |
Kardashev Scale | Type IV to lower V randomly |
Location | Spanning roughly 1/3 of APAC sovereign space |
Current status | Expanding |
The Greater APAC Co-prosperity Sphere, commonly known as GACS, the Gran APAC Axis, or to its members' citizens, the Sphere, is the oldest ruling meritocratic hyperpower in APAC and one of the largest of its kind across all known space. Originally much larger than current size, its members had since the last war diminised significantly, with various member races and polities split away or join other factions. Even so, the Sphere remains as powerful as ever, due largely to its 50 core members and their spheres, as well as their fast recoveries - almost miracularly - in the aftermath of the last great war.
First traces of the Sphere could be traced back to earliest ages, when mankind first attempted to reach outer space and its afterward difficult events. Formulated in secret as emergency plan by the great Asia-Pacific empires at the time, to counterpart to what they perceived as "threats from the West", the Axis - as they were called at the time - was united by the common belief in concepts of order, progress and culture, uniting much of Asian Pacific polities by appealing to their long, complex shared historical and cultural links - priding themselves on their past, sophistication and supposed exceptionalism.