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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gca_ja_mosaic_cover_5086.jpg]]
2
3->''It is a place where we all meet and challenge, where bargains are made and broken and avenged, where an alliance may be built on blood and fortune. It is a place where faith is lost, and where religions are founded or proven true. It is where you shall confront, and be confronted by, truth and lies, enemies and allies, belief and denial, impossibility and transcendance.''
4
5A GenreThrowback SpaceOpera series by Creator/RykESpoor. Currently consists of four novels:
6* ''Grand Central Arena'' (2010)
7* ''Spheres of Influence'' (2013)
8* ''Challenges of the Deeps'' (2017)
9* ''Shadows of Hyperion'' (2021)
10
11The Sandrisson Drive promises to give humanity FasterThanLightTravel of the distances-are-shorter-in-hyperspace variety. But when the ''Holy Grail'', the first manned FTL ship, transitions into Kanzaki-Locke space, it finds itself not in a featureless void, but contained within an enormous sphere encompassing the volume equivalent to the solar system. Outside the sphere is the Arena, where thousands of alien races interact and compete according to the rules laid down by the {{Precursors}} who built it. And if Captain Ariane Austin and her crew are ever to get the Drive running again and get home, they'll have to face the wonders and dangers of the Arena and stake out a place for humanity in a universe stranger than they ever imagined.
12
13The first volume of the series is available from the Baen Free Library.
14
15----
16!!Tropes in the Grand Central Arena series:
17
18* AbsoluteXenophobe: The Molothos. The Arena system forces them to interact non-destructively with other sentients, and they are ''not'' happy about it.
19* AbsurdlyHighStakesGame: This is the core and essence of life in the Arena; if the name "The Arena" didn't clue you in, the fact that the "Challenges" can cost you entire SOLAR SYSTEMS should.
20* AdaptationalHeroism: [=DuQuesne=] is an example of this both InUniverse and in the traditional sense.
21* AirVentPassageway: Played with in ''Shadows of Hyperion''; when the heroes are preparing to infiltrate the diabolical mastermind's secret lair, [=DuQuesne=] makes a point of mentioning that they can't use the air vents because those are too narrow for anything larger than a rat to get through. [[spoiler:Later, however, when she's in a pinch, Oasis is able to use the Arena's power to invoke tropes and discover/create a passageway just large enough for her to squeeze through.]]
22* AirWhale: The space between the Spheres supports several airborne life-forms ranging from small fast winged predators to enormous creatures capable of doing serious damage to a battleship.
23* AliensNeverInventedTheWheel: ZigZagged in the first book. At one point when outlining the history of the Blessed to Serve (and, by extension, the Liberated), [=DuQuesne=] says that the Minds "went all Literature/{{Frankenstein}}" on them, meaning they TurnedAgainstTheirMasters. Orphan says that "Frankenstein" didn't translate, showing that his people don't have an equivalent to that story nor any that were inspired by it, prompting the humans to give him a synopsis. After a few more minutes, Sandrisson notes that the future Blessed likely did have an equivalent to ''Frankenstein'' at one point in their history, but the Minds purged it after taking over.
24* AllThereInTheManual: Ryk Spoor has extensive notes on the books, including about the characters and their world and the various shout-outs.
25** [[http://grandcentralarena.com/books/grand-central-arena/ Notes for Grand Central Arena]]
26* ArtificialGravity: Check. Double check. Lift off a Sphere and you still haven't escaped it.
27* AsteroidThicket: Justified; they aren't actually asteroids, but it's still a space obstacle course (with some actual asteroids as part of it, or at least Really Big Rocks).
28* BaitAndSwitch: Possibly unintentional. Readers who are unfamiliar with ''Journey to the West'' are likely to think that [=DuQuesne=]'s fellow Hyperion Wu is based on Louis Wu from ''Literature/{{Ringworld}}'' before his introduction in ''Spheres of Influence''.
29* BecomingTheMask: Part of Orphan's backstory. He was sent to infiltrate the Liberated, and not only came to agree with their cause but rose to become their leader and kept the Faction going for centuries after it would otherwise have been wiped out.
30* BewareTheSuperman: {{Lampshaded}} by [=DuQuesne=] at one point, calling himself "...somebody's idea of a superman, which was based on [[{{Creator/EEDocSmith}} somebody else]]'s idea of a supervillain." When the Arena shows a select group of individuals (including Ariane) the true scope of Project Hyperion in ''Challenges of the Deeps'', we see that, if anything, this is in fact a ''massive'' {{understatement}} on his part.
31* BigDumbObject: They don't get much bigger than the Arena. A scale model of the ''entire universe'' is just the start of it, even the smaller components are mind-bogglingly impressive.
32* BioAugmentation: "Biomods", anywhere from cosmetic changes to military enhancements.
33* BizarreGamblingWinnings: The story features an artificial construct where competitions are indeed serious business: a contest between individual contestants can result in entire ''star systems'' changing hands.
34* BloodMagic: An element in the Faith's initiation. [[spoiler:And the Shadeweavers'.]]
35* BrainComputerInterface: Most people on Earth have direct interfaces with their AI-equipped personal organizers/communication devices, to the point where Ariane is considered a bit odd because she doesn't use the direct interface unless she has to. This does mean that she's the least affected of the crew when all their [=AIs=] suddenly stop working.
36* BrainUploading: Backups are mentioned in passing.
37* ByThePowerOfGrayskull: [[spoiler:How The Faith and the Shadeweavers grant their powers.]]
38* CallingYourAttacks: The Shadeweavers. And the Faith, though they tend to be a lot more flowery.
39* CaptainErsatz: One of the Hyperion survivors who appears in ''Challenges of the Deeps'' is a Japanese racing driver whose [[Anime/SpeedRacer name consists of two words denoting "speed"]].
40* TheCavalry:
41** Near the climax of ''Spheres of Influence'', [[spoiler:Sun Wu Kung and his air whale fleet]].
42** In ''Challenges of the Deeps'', [[spoiler:Ariane and the others who went on the expedition to the Deeps return just in time to see off the invading Molothos fleet]].
43* ClarkesThirdLaw: The Faith and the Shadeweavers. The whole Arena is this, too.
44* CompositeCharacter: Most Hyperions qualify for matters of practicality, at least according to [=DuQuesne=]. [=DuQuesne=] himself combines elements of E.E. "Doc" Smith's [[{{Literature/SkylarkSeries}} original version of DuQuesne with Martin Crane]] ([[{{Series/Frasier}} no relation]]) and [[{{Literature/Lensman}} Kimball Kinnison]], and he mentions that [[{{Literature/JourneyToTheWest}} Sun Wu Kung]] is the end result of essentially putting nearly every version of the Monkey King legend in a blender.
45* CoolGate: In person-sized and starship-sized forms.
46* CorralledCosmos: The entire cosmos is enclosed in the Arena, which limits where and how quickly anybody can travel beyond their own solar system.
47* CrazyPrepared: The designers of the Hyperion Project, in drawing inspiration from fictional sources, went so far as to invent solutions for fictional problems that didn't exist in real life. This saves Ariane and her crew when it turns out that one such problem really does exist in the Arena.
48* CurtainsMatchTheWindow: Ariane's hair is noted as being almost the same shade of blue as her eyes.
49* {{Defictionalization}}: The in-universe goal of the Hyperion Project, developing "real" versions of fictional or fictionally-dramatized characters as close to their fictional portrayals as reality permitted. In ''Challenges of the Deeps'', it's revealed that [[spoiler:the Arena itself takes this to even more drastic levels; not only do the Hyperion survivors have the powers that they could be physically granted, they also are granted those powers that would be otherwise physically impossible, such as fictional technology, psychic powers, or the strength to break bonds made of a material as far beyond neutronium as neutronium is beyond mundane matter.]]
50* DividedForPublication: The Japanese edition of ''Grand Central Arena'' is split into two volumes.
51* EnergyBall: Of the [[ShockAndAwe made-of-electricity]] sort. One of the Shadeweavers' attacks. WordOfGod says that any energy type can be used; Amas-Garao just likes the zappy ball.
52* EnforcedTechnologyLevels: Certain technologies just don't work in the Arena -- AI; nuclear reactors; nanotech beyond certain limits. This is assumed to be due to The Arena's deliberate intervention; it doesn't ''want'' you having those things to play with, so you don't.
53* EnlightenmentSuperpowers: The Faith's approach to training.
54* EvilCounterpart: Alexander Fairchild to Marc [=DuQuesne=].
55* FamedInStory: Ariane proves to be this in ''Spheres of Influence'', when she meets her first fan in the Arena, asking for her autograph.
56* FamousFamousFictional:
57** A list of fictional creations that have become bywords for rogue-AI fears: Literature/{{Frankenstein}}, [[{{Franchise/Terminator}} SkyNet]], Monolith.
58** Ariane compares the Faith's ceremonial music to Music/LudwigVanBeethoven's Ninth Symphony and Satterli's "Jovian Themes".
59** The Hyperion Project fell after five of its subjects discovered the artificial nature of the environments they lived in and led a rebellion. The Five, as named in ''Spheres of Influence'', include two from environments based on nineteenth- and twentieth-century fiction respectively and two from video games of subsequent centuries (and one whose origin is not yet clear).
60* TheFettered: [[spoiler:Marc [=DuQuesne=]]], who has kept his emotions, physical and mental abilities under tight rein while interacting with normal people. Against a bunch of xenophobic hostile aliens, however...
61* FloatingWater: The gravity-less spaces between the Spheres include enormous spheroidal floating lakes and oceans.
62* AFormYouAreComfortableWith: In ''Challenges of the Deeps'', Vindatri greets each of his visitors in the form of a mentor figure (Ariane, for instance, sees her grandfather) before adopting an elegant inhuman-but-humanoid form when dealing with them all together. His true form [[spoiler:really is the inhuman-but-humanoid form, which is a major plot twist because he's the first alien they've met who looks anything like a human]].
63* GenreThrowback: To the pulp space opera of Creator/EEDocSmith and his contemporaries.
64%%* GoneHorriblyRight: The Hyperion Project.
65* GoneHorriblyWrong: The way the Hyperion Project came apart was a complete disaster.
66* GoneMadFromTheRevelation: The fate of many of the Hyperion Project subjects, particularly [[MarySue Maria Susanna]].
67* GrandTheftMe: During the downfall of the Hyperion Project, one of the Project's villainous [=AIs=] attempted to evade capture or destruction by downloading himself into one of the soldiers sent to clean up the mess. [[spoiler:''Challenges of the Deeps'' reveals that he did manage to escape somehow; ''Shadows of Hyperion'' reveals that he and at least one other have successfully stolen bodies for themselves, with a third being prevented by the heroes mid-theft.]]
68* TheHeart: Sun Wu Kung is specifically described as such by Mark, in comparison to the rest of The Five who engineered the downfall of the Hyperion Project.
69* HeavyWorlder: Invoked by the designers of the Hyperion Project. [[spoiler:Marc [=DuQuesne=]]] is an example of the results.
70%%* HiveMind: The majority of the Blessed-To-Serve.
71%%* HollowWorld: The Spheres.
72* HumansAreSpecial:
73** Humans are [[spoiler:more willing to take risks]].
74** And on top of that, WordOfGod says that humans have a special ability that they've never noticed because they've only been competing against each other. (It's revealed in ''Challenges of the Deeps'' that Humanity as a whole is [[spoiler:BornLucky compared to other species]].)
75* IKnowMortalKombat: Most of the humans with regard to hand weapons. Of course, in the Solar System of GCA, the "simulators" are just as good as the real world (or can be: some people prefer to play with the realism dialed down).
76* ImADoctorNotAPlaceholder: Dr. Wolfe, the ''Holy Grail''[='s=] Southern-accented medical officer, gets at least one in each book in which she appears.
77* KillAllHumans: After being shown up by [=DuQuesne=] in ''Grand Central Arena'', the [[{{AbsoluteXenophobe}} Molothos]] make this a priority.
78* LabcoatOfScienceAndMedicine: Invoked by Dr. Sandrisson, whose preferred outfit is a white suit of which the coat is tailored to resemble a lab coat.
79* LastOfTheirKind: In ''Challenges of the Deeps'', [[spoiler:Vindatri is the last survivor of a humanoid race that flourished in the Arena millions of years ago]].
80* LawyerFriendlyCameo: When additional details start coming out about the inhabitants of the Hyperion Project in ''Spheres of Influence'', some are identified only by vague descriptions ([[WesternAnimation/KimPossible a green-eyed redhead who's been a superspy since before she was in college]], [[Film/JamesBond a man in evening dress with some unspecified interest in spectres]]) or by things they said ("[[Film/StarTrekIITheWrathOfKhan I don't believe in no-win scenarios]]", "''[[{{Anime/Slayers}} Sore wa himitsu desu]]''"). ''Challenges of the Deeps'' contains more along the same lines.
81* MagicPoweredPseudoscience: In ''Challenges of the Deeps'', the power of the Arena allows [[spoiler:Simon and Marc]] to build impossible gadgets that don't work if anybody tries to copy them, even if they follow the same steps exactly. [[spoiler:Marc's are based on the pseudoscience of his native fiction; the principle behind Simon's remains unclear.]] Since all the magical effects in the Arena are presumed to be actually powered by ancient precursor tech, it's really a case of MagicFromTechnology Powered Pseudoscience.
82* MarySue: In-universe, one of the characters in the Hyperion Project simulations was a woman named Maria-Susanna who was created to be (a) a non-canonical love interest for the main character of the simulation[[note]]implied to be [[{{Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries}} James Kirk]][[/note]] and (b) a stand-in for her creator. [[spoiler:''Spheres of Influence'' reveals that she is one of the surviving Hyperions and that she... [[GoneMadFromTheRevelation didn't take it well]] when she learned the circumstances of her creation.]]
83* MeaningfulRename: The leader -- and only surviving member -- of the Liberated goes by the name "Orphan".
84* MistreatmentInducedBetrayal: In ''Spheres of Influence'', [[spoiler:Sethrik, leader of the Blessed-to-Serve at the Arena, starts out considering Ariane as a WorthyOpponent. His masters back home use their growing respect for each other to set a trap for Ariane -- and for Sethrik himself, whose loyalty they've come to doubt. Sethrik's own thoughts on his loyalty are greatly clarified by the incident, and after he and Ariane have fought their way out of the trap together he resigns from the Faction of the Blessed and joins Orphan's Faction of the Liberated]].
85* MorallySuperiorCopy: Marc C. [=DeQuesne=] was created by the Hyperion project primarily as an incarnation of the villain from ''Literature/SkylarkSeries'' with the same name. They leavened him with personality traits from Martin Crane of the same series and Kimball Kinnison from Literature/{{Lensman}}. Because of the personality shifts and the moral choices he has made over the years, Marc uses his talents for much less selfish goals than his namesake-- though he does retain the original [=DeQuesne's=] capacity for ruthlessness when he deems it necessary.
86* MythologyGag: One of the Hyperion environments described in ''Shadows of Hyperion'', in the same deliberately-vague terms as the others that are still in copyright, appears to be the world of Ryk E. Spoor's own fantasy novels.
87* {{Nanomachines}}: Commonly used, not considered especially scary. Used for in-flight ship repair ("Nanomaintenance"), medical support (medical nanos) and sensors and other purposes.
88* NoMoreHoldingBackSpeech: [[spoiler:Marc [=DuQuesne=]]].
89-->Your mistake, you pea-brained overbearing pompous crayfish, is that you think you have any idea of what you're dealing with. [...] I was raised in gravity more than half again yours. I was built by people so insane they didn't realize what kind of a monster they designed, and spent half a century hiding what I am. [...] You brought it out, you son of a bitch. You made me let it out, and I don't know if I'll ever find myself again.
90* NothingUpMySleeve: Marc has a back-up pistol in sleeve holster.
91* NoTranshumanismAllowed:
92** In Earth's solar system, [=AIs=] are possible but legally restricted, with the same applying to uploaded intellects, due to fears about rogue AI.
93** In the Arena, AIs and uploaded intellects simply don't work, and apparently even body modification past some as-yet-unspecified point will fail. The allowed level of transhumanism (and not just for humans, other species do it as well) is still reasonably high (enhanced reflexes, strength, healing nanites, etc.), and ubiquitous, so it's more 'no transhumans above this height can ride,' and most everyone tries to get their top people as close to their allowed line as possible, which varies a bit from species to species.
94* NoWarpingZone: Sandrisson Drives, even when inactive, interfere with each other, which wouldn't be an example of this trope except that drives jump from the volume of a star system to the artificial "Spheres" which are much smaller. A smallish number of ships occupying a Sphere can entirely prevent jumping from anywhere in the system.
95* OffscreenTeleportation: When [=DuQuesne=] is being pursued through the Shadeweavers' Faction House by Amas-Garao, Amas-Garao does this using actual teleportation.
96* PardonMyKlingon: Simon swears in Japanese. There are also a couple of instances of swearing being described instead of quoted, including that old standby, an invitation to perform an anatomically impossible act (which gets interesting when alien anatomy is involved).
97* PlanetOfHats: Most of the groups that matter to the politics and the plot are those which are organized or naturally inclined to wear one hat. Strictly speaking, though, they're mostly multi-species organisations who share a common outlook because that's the basis of the organisation; only two ''species'' are pretty much uniform -- the Blessed To Serve, who are controlled by super-AI overlords, and the Molothos, who hate everyone uniformly.
98* PlatonicCave:
99** [[spoiler:The Hyperion Project]] took characters from fiction and raised people in simulations to make them into those characters, with excellent results apart from the ethical issues, the [[spoiler:MarySue]], and it all falling apart at the end.
100** Also what one of the characters assumes when they initially discover where they are and the impossibilities (such as artificial gravity) they see. [[spoiler:Marc, having been been raised in such as environment]] responds rather negatively to the idea.
101* PowerIncontinence: [[spoiler:Ariane]], after the climax of ''Grand Central Arena''.
102* {{Precursors}}: The Voidbuilders built the Arena. There is no consensus on their motives, their continued existence, or their divinity. Even the brief glimpses of the closest thing to an inside like we have on them are unclear and contradictory.
103* PrecursorWorship: Some of the factions worship the Voidbuilders as gods.
104* PsychicNosebleed: In ''Shadows of Hyperion'', when Simon overdoes his psychic power, he gets a nosebleed. When he does it again later in the same novel, he bleeds from his nose and one of his ears.
105* RelationshipUpgrade: In ''Challenges of the Deeps'', [[spoiler:Ariane and Marc]] hook up, as do [[spoiler:Simon and Oasis]].
106%%* ScaryDogmaticAliens: The Molothos.
107* ScaryShinyGlasses: Simon Sandrisson's glasses are narrated as doing this from time to time. Sandrisson is one of the good guys, but he's not a person to mess with.
108* ShockAndAwe:
109** The Shadeweaver's EnergyBall attack.
110** [[spoiler:Ariane Austin]] has a contact-weapon biomod derived from electric eel biology.
111* ShoutOut: Lots and lots and lots -- as shown in [[http://grandcentralarena.com/grand-central-arena-spoilers/ Spoor's canonical list]] (contains spoilers, of course). Here are a few of the more blatant ones:
112** Several in-universe shout-outs to Creator/EEDocSmith (both ''Literature/{{Lensman}}'' and ''Literature/SkylarkSeries'') due to Ariane being a fan.
113** The Hyperion Project also provides in-universe shout-outs to the ''Literature/SkylarkSeries'', as well as ''Literature/DocSavage'', ''Literature/SherlockHolmes'', and ''Literature/JourneyToTheWest'' (and that's just the ones mentioned in the first book).
114** The Tayler scale used for rating artificial intelligences is named after the author of ''Webcomic/SchlockMercenary''.
115** In ''Spheres of Influence'', the humans name one of their newly-acquired battleships ''{{Webcomic/Nodwick}}''.
116** In ''Spheres of Influence'', an AI named Isaac quotes from ''{{Franchise/Foundation}}'', implying that he's modelled on Creator/IsaacAsimov.
117** In ''Challenges of the Deeps'', the human warship ''[[Literature/TheDeedOfPaksenarrion Paksenarrion]]'' makes an appearance.
118** Also a lot of other SF and Anime material. If you look closely at Orphan's description, you'll realize he and, by extension, the Blessed to Serve look like [[Anime/DragonBallZ Perfect Cell]].
119** In ''Challenges of the Deeps'', a RelationshipUpgrade is marked by one character saying to another, [[Film/ThePrincessBride "As you wish"]].
120** If you pay attention to her description, you'll notice that the ''Holy Grail'' bears a passing resemblance to a [[{{Franchise/MassEffect}} Reaper Destroyer]].
121** The Molothos bear a striking resemblance to one of [[{{Film/GodzillaVsDestoroyah}} Destoroyah's earlier forms]].
122** The Shadeweavers' robes / cloaks / whatever resemble those favored by the [[{{Franchise/StarWars}} Sith]] and [[{{Franchise/HarryPotter}} Death Eaters]].
123%%* SlidingScaleOfRealisticVersusFantastic: ''Unusual''.
124%%* SpaceElves: [[spoiler:Vindatri]] in ''Challenges of the Deeps''.
125* SpaceOpera: The Arenaverse is a deliberate attempt to bring the high stakes, big ideas concepts of the old pulps into the modern era.
126* SpeaksFluentAnimal: In ''Spheres of Influence'', [[spoiler:Sun Wu Kung]] shows the ability to speak with just about any animal in the Nexus [[spoiler:and environs]].
127* SubspaceOrHyperspace: They thought they'd invented your standard jump-into-hyperspace-to-shorten-distance drive. Then they found someone else got there -- ''an entire universe of "there"'' -- first.
128* SymbioticPossession: In ''Spheres of Influence'', [[spoiler:Oasis Abrams]] is revealed to carry two minds. In her backstory, the body of one of the minds was dying, and the mind of [[spoiler:Oasis Abrams]] was transferred into the brain of [[spoiler:a Hyperion based on WesternAnimation/KimPossible. By the time we meet her/them, their minds have sort of fused, creating a new amalgam personality.]]
129* TelescopingStaff: The Hyperion Project designed one, inspired by Sun Wukong's magic staff, for their recreation of ''Literature/JourneyToTheWest''. Ariane uses a copy of it as a weapon in one of the contests in ''Grand Central Arena''. Wu shows up with the original in the sequel.
130* TimeAbyss: [[spoiler:Vindatri]], introduced in ''Challenges of the Deeps'', is so old that he's witnessed the first arrival of every race that now has a presence in the Arena -- and some of them have been around for millions of years.
131%%* TrainingFromHell: The Hyperion Project, maybe.
132%%* TranslatorMicrobes: The Arena provides.
133* TwoAliasesOneCharacter: In ''Challenges of the Deep'', Marc shows Ariane a picture of [[spoiler:the scientist who created him]] and she recognizes [[spoiler:her paternal grandfather]], revealing that two characters who have been important parts of the backstory since the beginning of the series are actually one and the same.
134* {{Unobtainium}}: Indestructible matter made of quarks, without bothering with atoms or molecules along the way.
135* VillainInAWhiteSuit: The diabolical mastermind Dr Alexander Fairchild has a trademark all-white outfit.
136* WhatTheHellIsThatAccent: In the audiobooks for ''Spheres of Influence'' and ''Challenges of the Deeps'', Dina Pearlman gives Oasis Abrams / [[spoiler:WesternAnimation/KimPossible]] a vaguely British / Aussie / Kiwi-sounding accent for some reason.
137* WhyAmITicking: Room-temperature-superconductor loops built into your armor are [[AchillesHeel no longer energy storage devices]] when they're above room temperature.
138%%* WorldInTheSky: Most of the volume of the Arena.

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