ECHO-031 — Those Who Sleep
Classification
Designation: E.C.H.O. EC: PHN — Phenomenon Echo ESC: S3 — Fractured RCC: RCC-1 — Silent Collapse RTS: T3 — Developed RDS: A–B — Analogous / Variant
Description
ECHO-031 refers to a widespread anomalous phenomenon commonly known as Those Who Sleep.
The phenomenon was first documented during survey operations at post-collapse site R-007, recorded in Year 3, Cycle 4 of ALR Initiative operations. Initial field personnel reported encountering a fully intact urban environment in which the entire observable population had entered an unresponsive sleep state. The investigation at R-007 produced the first formal classification of the phenomenon and remains the primary reference site for ongoing research.
The phenomenon manifests within realities closely resembling baseline human worlds. Affected individuals enter an unusually deep sleep state from which they cannot be awakened through normal means. During this state, the individuals remain physically stable and show no signs of distress. Respiratory function, cardiovascular activity, and neurological output continue within normal parameters. Medical examinations conducted within affected realities have returned no findings capable of explaining the condition.
The phenomenon does not discriminate by age, health status, or location. Affected individuals have been documented in residences, workplaces, transit vehicles, and open public spaces. In every recorded case, the individual appears to have entered the sleep state without warning and without physical struggle.
Whatever takes them does so quietly.
Observed Behavior
The phenomenon spreads gradually through affected populations over the course of several days. Initial reports within a reality typically describe isolated incidents — individuals found unresponsive in otherwise ordinary circumstances. As the phenomenon progresses, the frequency of incidents increases until the majority of the population has been affected.
No vector of transmission has been identified. The phenomenon does not appear to spread through physical contact, environmental exposure, or any identifiable biological mechanism. Individuals who remain conscious during the later stages of an outbreak have reported no symptoms prior to the sleep state taking effect in others around them.
The phenomenon appears to occur exclusively within realities classified as RDS-A or RDS-B. No confirmed outbreak has been documented in a reality classified RDS-C or higher. The significance of this boundary is not currently understood.
Manifestation Pattern
Realities affected by ECHO-031 present conditions consistent with an RCC-1 Silent Collapse. The infrastructure of the affected reality continues to function for a limited period following the onset of the phenomenon. Power systems, water supply, and automated services remain operational without active maintenance until natural degradation causes failure.
Cities and settlements remain structurally intact. Personal effects are found undisturbed. Food left on tables. Vehicles stopped in the middle of roads. Doors left open. The environments give every indication of a population that expected to continue.
Time progresses normally within affected realities. The absence is not of time but of the people who should be moving through it.
Environmental Features
Collapse Indicators
Affected realities are consistently distinguished by the following observable conditions:
- urban and rural environments remaining fully intact with no structural damage
- infrastructure operational but unmaintained, degrading naturally over time
- no observable cause of physical harm among affected individuals
- personal and professional environments preserved in states suggesting interrupted activity
- gradual and complete cessation of all organized civilizational function
These conditions are consistent with the terminal characteristics of an RCC-1 Silent Collapse. The absence of destruction is considered one of the most significant features of ECHO-031 affected environments. Nothing collapsed. Nothing failed. It simply became very quiet.
Psychological Effects
Observational Reports
Personnel assigned to investigate ECHO-031 affected realities are advised to limit continuous exposure to the environment. Extended investigation periods have been associated with a gradual reduction in cognitive urgency among field personnel — a condition described informally as difficulty remembering why continued movement is necessary.
On four recorded occasions, personnel have reported the distinct sensation of being observed from an unidentifiable direction during extended exposure. No entity associated with the phenomenon has been identified. These reports remain unconfirmed but are noted consistently enough across independent accounts to be considered a documented effect of prolonged presence in affected environments.
Personnel are instructed to conduct investigations in rotating shifts where possible.
Notes
Archive Note — Records Management — A. Solen
ECHO-031 was formally classified following the investigation of R-007 in Year 3, Cycle 4. It remains one of the earliest phenomenon-type Echoes documented by the ALR Initiative. Subsequent investigations have confirmed the pattern across multiple realities beyond R-007. Affected individuals recovered during the initial R-007 survey remain in the sleep state. No method of reversal has been identified. They are preserved within The Archive under ongoing observation.
Investigator Note — Lead Investigator M. Voss, Reality Investigation Division
The hardest part is the quiet. The cities are intact. The lights are still on in some places. Whatever happened here did not destroy anything. It simply stopped it. I keep returning to the reception desk we found on the third day at R-007 — a half-finished cup of something, still sitting there. Whoever left it expected to come back. We have been back four times now. The cup is still there. I have stopped trying to explain why no one has moved it.
Reference
Archive Reference
This entry is part of the ECHOES catalog maintained by the ALR Initiative within The Archive.