Auxilium Nexus / AUXNEX

  • Organization
  • Casual
  • Freelancing
    Freelancing
  • Security
    Security

A collective of independent operators who are stronger together. No divisions. No mandatory roles. Post a Call, and someone answers. That’s the whole org. Vocati Adsumus — When called, we are here.



History

As recorded in the Levski Archives, Nyx System…

Before there was a collective, before there was a Call, there was a man named Marcus Andreia.

Andreia was a decorated operative within one of the largest organizations in the settled systems—a sprawling apparatus of divisions, hierarchies, and bureaucratic machinery that promised its members the strength of unity. He had served faithfully for years, rising through ranks that multiplied faster than the people filling them. He commanded no one and answered to everyone. He filed mission requests that disappeared into approval chains. He trained for certifications he never used. He attended briefings for operations that never launched.
And when the day came that he needed them—truly needed them—no one answered.

The details have become legend now, sharpened and softened by retelling. What is known: Andreia found himself outnumbered and outgunned in a dispute over contested mining claims in the outer reaches of Nyx. He had called for support through every channel available to him. His requests were logged, acknowledged, and routed through proper protocol. By the time authorization was granted, the battle was already over.
Andreia won. Alone, outmatched, fighting with the desperate clarity of a man who understands that no one is coming. He held the line. And in the wreckage of the last ship he destroyed, witnesses say he activated a distress beacon that burned an ethereal blue—not a call for rescue, but a signal fire. A marker. I was here. I fought alone. Remember this.

He did not survive his wounds. But the flame persisted in the void long after his ship went dark, burning on nothing, answered by no one, visible for hours to every pilot in the sector.

Marcus Andreia was later confirmed to be a direct descendant of an old lineage tracing back to the Ancient Roman Empire of Earth—a bloodline of senators, soldiers, and sovereigns who believed that the duty of the strong was to answer the weak. That the first obligation of any citizen was not obedience to a structure, but loyalty to a neighbor.

The organization that failed him issued a formal commendation for his valor. They did not change their protocols.

But others remembered differently.

A small group of independent operators—pilots, miners, medics, fighters—who had monitored Andreia’s transmissions that day gathered at Levski. They had heard the Call. They had been too far, too uncoordinated, too scattered to respond in time. They swore it would not happen again.
They called themselves Auxilium—the Latin word for help, aid, relief. Not an organization. A promise. A collective of independents bound by one principle: when called, we are here.

They adopted the blue flame as their standard—the signal that burned when no one answered, so that it would never burn unanswered again. They named their pact the Nexus, the bond that connects without constraining.

Auxilium Nexus was born as a defensive compact. If you flew alone, you were never truly alone—not if a member of the Nexus was within range. Over time, the collective grew beyond its origins. Miners who needed crews posted Calls. Haulers who needed escorts—or even just some extra hands—posted Calls. Medics who wanted to serve posted Calls. The principle remained the same: post the Call, and someone answers.
Levski remained the home—fitting for a collective that valued independence over empire. No UEE flags fly above the Nexus. No corporate charters bind its members. Only the flame, and the promise it represents.

In recent years, whispers have emerged of something else within Auxilium—a smaller circle, hand-selected, operating at a level of precision and discipline that the wider collective does not demand. They are spoken of rarely and seen even less. Those who are brave enough to speak of them describe a deep, violet flash in the darkness, amid coordinated silence, and the feeling that if you could see that flash, it was already too late.
The Princeps neither confirms nor denies their existence. The flame, as always, burns.

Vocati Adsumus. When called, we are here.

Manifesto

The Manifesto of Auxilium Nexus

We are an organization built on a single principle: no one flies alone.

Auxilium Nexus exists because the systems that were supposed to protect the individual failed. Somewhere between the divisions and the protocols and the chains of command, the person was forgotten. We do not forget.

We believe in the power of the individual.
Every member of this collective is a sovereign operator. You fly what you want. You work how you want. You answer to no one’s schedule, no one’s quota, no one’s career ladder. Your time in the verse is yours.

We believe that independence is not isolation.
Flying alone does not mean dying alone. The strongest individuals are the ones who know when to call for help—and the ones who answer when called.

We believe in the Call.
If you need help, you ask. If someone asks, you answer. There is no rank required to post a Call. There is no permission needed to answer one. The only qualification is willingness.

We do not specialize. We adapt.
Want to mine? Mine. Want to haul? Haul. Want to run medical? Run medical. Want to escort a convoy through hostile space? Post a Call and gear up. Want to explore a wreck on the edge of known space and need someone watching your six? Post a Call. Want to do all of that in the same week? That’s the point. Other organizations will tell you to pick a lane. We will tell you to fly the lane you feel like flying today, and a different one tomorrow. You are not your role. You are a pilot who does what needs doing.

We do not chase wars. But we do not run from them.
We hold no grudges against the UEE, and no allegiance to it either. We are independents based out of Levski because Levski is where people go when they want to be left alone but still want neighbors they can count on.

We earn trust by showing up.
There are no ranks to climb. No training pipelines to complete. You matter the moment you answer your first Call. Reputation in Auxilium is built one response at a time—not by title, but by presence.

The flame does not go out.
Marcus Andreia lit a signal that no one answered. We exist so that never happens again. Every Call answered is a promise kept. Every member who shows up is proof that the system works—not because someone ordered them to, but because they chose to.

Vocati Adsumus. When called, we are here.

Charter

The Charter of Auxilium Nexus

Auxilium Nexus operates on trust, not bureaucracy. This charter is intentionally brief. If you need a hundred rules to behave like a decent person, this is not the org for you.

I. Independence Within Unity
You are a sovereign operator. You choose your missions, your ships, your playstyle. No one will assign you tasks, mandate attendance, or require you to specialize. The only expectation is that you treat the collective with the same respect you expect from it.

II. Answer the Call
The Call is voluntary. You are never required to answer one. But if you consistently ignore Calls while benefiting from those who answer yours, the collective will notice. Auxilium works because people show up for each other. That is the deal.

III. Represent Us Well
When you fly under the Auxilium Nexus banner, your actions reflect on every member. Griefing, harassment, toxicity, scamming, or deliberately antagonizing other organizations while representing Auxilium will result in removal. You do not need to be perfect. You need to not be a problem.

IV. Respect the Collective
No internal theft from shared operations. No sabotaging another member’s mission. No importing drama or grudges from other organizations. If you have a conflict with another member, handle it like an adult or bring it to the Princeps.

V. No Rank, No Ego
Auxilium has a flat structure by design. The Princeps holds final authority over org-wide decisions. Specialized roles exist to serve the collective, not to command it. No member outranks another in daily operations. Whoever posts the Call leads the op. That is the chain of command.

VI. Multi-Org Policy
Membership in other organizations is permitted. We do not demand exclusivity. However, if a conflict of interest arises between Auxilium and another org you belong to, you are expected to either resolve it transparently or step back from the situation. Divided loyalty in the middle of an operation puts people at risk.

VII. Conduct During Operations
Follow the op leader’s calls during active missions. If you disagree with a decision mid-op, execute first and debrief after. Friendly fire, loot disputes, and abandoning an active op without communication are all grounds for review.

VIII. Enforcement
There is no strike system. There is no points-based penalty chart. Every situation is different and will be handled at the discretion of the Princeps on a case-by-case basis. Minor issues will be addressed through conversation. Serious or repeated violations will result in removal. If you are removed, you will be told why.

IX. Amendments
This charter may be updated as the collective grows. Members will be notified of changes. If you disagree with a change, you are free to raise it with the Princeps. You are also free to leave. Auxilium is voluntary in every sense.