With Global warming out of the way, overpopulation is taking hold of the planet. After the nuclear war of 2094, the moon is gone, and Mars seems to be the only option. Mercury is to far away, and Venus is way to hot. And since the others are gas giants, there isn't anywhere else. Right? Not exactly. Jupiter has 69 known moons, some perfect for human habitation. But when the first team loses radio contact, NASA realized it's not safe. That day was called the Collision of 2123, when 362,980 of the biggest recorded asteroids collided with six of Jupiter's moons, including the one that was being colonized at the time. The collisions continued to happen around Jupiter, summoning more and more drifting matter. This pileup got to a point around a hundred and fifty years after the first Collision, when NASA started to notice a decline in the detected ruble. Roughly fifty years later, the debris had largely settled, making it clear to NASA scientists that the matter had collapsed into the planet, giving Jupiter a surface. Jupiter's new surface was, and is now, 198230000000000000000000 kg. This is enormous. So people started to think, If it's moons aren't safe, why not move to Jupiter itself? And that's where I come in.