A broadcast is a transmission that travels from one point into all directions at once, reaching every listener, watcher, or witness without requiring them to seek it out. Its defining trait is that the origin is dispersed, deliberately nebulous—sometimes by design, sometimes by the nature of the medium itself. The message appears everywhere at the same time, but the hand that sent it is hidden behind the veil of ubiquity.
In true broadcast, the receiver knows only this:
- something is speaking.
- Not who.
- Not from where.
Only that the signal is meant for everyone.
Because the source dissolves into the field, broadcast becomes the perfect tool for myth-making, cultural calibration, and intelligence disclosure—a voice without a visible speaker. It creates a shared truth across an entire realm, even when the broadcaster remains unnamed, unseen, or unacknowledged.
This is why broadcast is powerful: It lets a single mind—or a small unseen group—shape the consciousness of millions without ever stepping into the light.