Founder of Shared Foundations

Uncle

Not everything should change.

Grounded SNES-style comic panels of the Battletaire family world with shared foundations and reshuffle technology.

Unlike the rest of the family, Uncle feared excessive reshuffling.

He watched homes drift, relationships reorganize, memories lose stability, and people become emotionally disconnected from their past lives. He did not reject reshuffle technology. He built anchors strong enough to survive it.

The family machine

  1. He saw the cost of too much changeGrandma made reshuffling flexible, but Uncle understood that flexibility still needed a place to stop.
  2. He locked shared foundationsHis records gave reality stable anchors: canonical states that could be returned to after drift.
  3. His idea became the center of the matchBattletaire's shared foundations are not decoration. They are the stable piles everyone fights over because the table needs truth.

What shared foundations are

Shared Foundation records are stable probability anchors. They preserve canonical reality states so people can return to something true after a reshuffle.

In Battletaire gameplay, shared foundations represent stable truth, recoverable structure, and synchronized reality states.

Why he left

Uncle eventually isolated himself inside a highly stabilized personal foundation environment. Objects rarely moved, drift stayed minimal, and systems remained emotionally consistent.

Many family members see him as cold or distant. But without Shared Foundations, modern reshuffle civilization may have collapsed into uncontrollable drift.

What came from this

Foundation records

Canonical anchors that hold reality steady after reshuffle events.

Stable rooms

Low-drift environments where objects and memories resist unwanted reorganization.

Shared foundations

The gameplay version: the center piles everyone fights over and returns to.