Narrative Web
Location
Planetary Mining Settlement
Garran-Four

Gamelan Four

Gamelan Four hangs in orbit as a peaceful inhabited world, its surface leadership under Chairman Songi broadcasting urgent distress amid a radiation crisis. A derelict waste vessel, snared by the planet's gravity well, leaks lethal emissions that climb steadily, endangering all life below. Enterprise holds position nearby, sensors locked on the threat while crew debates deflection paths toward the system's sun. The planet's vulnerability presses the crew—defenseless against the unmanned hazard, its fate hinges on swift Starfleet action.
2 events
2 rich involvements
1 sub-locations

Sub-Locations

Detailed Involvements

Events with rich location context

S4E9 · Final Mission
Riker chooses risky waste disposal

Gamelan Four looms on the viewscreen as a vulnerable, inhabited world, its surface population unknowingly threatened by the derelict waste vessel. The planet’s role in this event is that of a silent victim, its fate hinging entirely on the Enterprise crew’s actions. Chairman Songi’s distress call and the crew’s subsequent discussions about radiation sickness paint Gamelan Four as a place of desperation, where time is running out. The location’s atmosphere is one of looming disaster, its people’s lives reduced to a ticking clock. The crew’s ability to save Gamelan Four is both a test of their competence and a moral imperative, reinforcing the high stakes of their decisions.

Atmosphere

Desperate and tense, with an undercurrent of quiet panic. The planet’s fate hangs in the balance, and the crew’s urgency is palpable.

Functional Role

Victim location in need of immediate intervention to prevent catastrophic radiation poisoning.

Symbolic Significance

Embodies the crew’s duty to protect civilian lives, even at great personal cost. Gamelan Four represents the greater good that must be served, regardless of internal conflicts or emotional attachments.

Access Restrictions

The planet is inaccessible to the crew without risking radiation exposure. All interaction occurs via comms or long-range sensors.

The planet’s surface is visible on the viewscreen, its blue and green hues contrasting with the ominous derelict vessel. Chairman Songi’s voice carries the weight of his people’s desperation, a reminder of the human cost of failure. The radiation levels are represented as rising data points on the bridge’s consoles, a visual countdown to disaster.
S4E9 · Final Mission
Riker faces impossible choices on the bridge

Gamelan Four is the victim location in this event, its fate hanging in the balance of the crew’s decisions. Though it is not physically present on the bridge, its presence is felt through Chairman Songi’s distress call and the crew’s discussions of rising radiation levels. Gamelan Four’s role is to serve as the moral counterweight to Picard’s disappearance: while the shuttle’s fate pulls at the crew’s personal loyalties, the planet’s survival demands immediate action. The location’s stakes are made visceral through Songi’s report of ‘dangerous levels’ of radiation, which forces the crew to confront the question: How many lives are worth saving, and at what cost?

Atmosphere

Desperate but dignified—Gamelan Four’s people are not shown in panic, but their plight is conveyed through Songi’s measured urgency. The planet’s atmosphere is one of quiet desperation, where the threat is invisible but inescapable. The radiation is a silent killer, creeping closer with each passing moment, and the crew’s inaction would be a death sentence.

Functional Role

The primary victim in the immediate crisis, requiring the Enterprise crew’s intervention to avert catastrophe. Gamelan Four’s role is to embody the greater good that Riker must prioritize, even as it conflicts with his personal instincts.

Symbolic Significance

Represents the collective over the individual—a planet’s survival versus the fate of one captain and his crew. Gamelan Four’s crisis forces the Enterprise crew to confront the ethical core of Starfleet’s mission: Who do we save when we cannot save everyone?

Access Restrictions

The planet is inaccessible to the Enterprise crew without risking radiation exposure. The waste vessel’s gravity well and the asteroid belt create physical and logistical barriers, forcing the crew to act from a distance.

The planet’s surface is visible on the viewscreen as a blue-green orb, its beauty contrasting with the looming threat of the waste vessel. Sensor data overlays on the viewscreen show rising radiation levels in specific regions, highlighting the urgency of the crisis. Chairman Songi’s transmission is the only direct link to Gamelan Four, his voice the sole human connection to the planet’s plight.

Events at This Location

Everything that happens here

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