As you wait, he pulls out a pouch and stuffs the bowl with an odd-smelling herb. It is but a moment's work to refill his pipe and relight it, but he keeps talking the entire time. <So the elves have a navy. And they do not get along with certain other races. Humans were, a hundred and fifty odd years ago, neutral in matters of interstellar politics. But the elves were on one side, and as they hated the humanoids, the orcs and goblins were firmly on the other side. I do not know who started the conflict, elf or orc, but it became known as the First Unhuman War.> His tentacles twitched in amusement. <Humans named it that, mind you. The Elves call it the War of Goblinoid Aggression, and the Orcs call it the Elvish Purges. Things were in balance for a long time, with the tide flowing back and forth in dozens of spheres. Each side recruited allies from various ground-pounder groups, but neither could gain the upper hand.> Shaking his head, he begins to puff on the pipe as he holds the flame to the bowl. Slowly, it lights. <Then someone messed up. I never found out the details, but apparently a goblinoid ship from one sphere or another attacked a dwarven settlement, and the dwarves reluctantly joined in on the side of the elves.>
Blowing out another cloud of smoke, he shrugged as only an illithid can. <After that point, the war quickly went bad for the orcs. They found themselves being driven back on several fronts, and eventually the war was lost. Several groups were banished by the elves to less than desirable planets. One of those groups was the scro. They were red-skinned orcs, and were not happy with how the war went. The biggest issue the goblins, orcs, and hobgoblins had was communication and organization. There wasn't a clear leader most of the time, and co-ordination between ships was never good. Four goblinoid ships were usually lost to every one the elves lost, but the elves had a harder time filling their ranks after each loss. Goblinoids don't care what hulls they use. Elves are far pickier and won't take non-elves onto their ships as crew. The scro resolved to get their revenge, and set about training in secret. They created their own hull types, and formed a
very militaristic society. Most helmsmen among the scro are
not scro themselves, but orcs, goblins, or hobgoblin priests or mages hired for the job.> Another image resolves itself in the smoke cloud.

<Mantis ship,> Eugene says, gesturing to the red ship in the image. <While several races use the scorpion-ships, only the scro use the mantis-ships. They were designed and built
specifically to tear the wings off of an elvish man-o-war. Over the centuries, the scro have grown bigger, stronger, more organized, and more militaristic. But the scro are few, so they must rely on other humanoids to join their cause. They recruit goblinoids from any planet that has them, and focus on one thing: removing any presence of the Elvish Imperial Navy from whatever sphere they happen to be working in.> Shaking his head, he takes another drag on his pipe, blows out a cloud of smoke, then uses his powers to disperse the clouds. <And if you will not join them, then you are against them.>