Talk:Subjective precognition/@comment-25621058-20141104060359/@comment-7600752-20141107064532

True. I kinda get where you’re coming from. Still, vampires need air to communicate orally. I don’t know that it would have to be oxygenated air… but air nevertheless. Also, their food might be more easily stored. Humans need liquids and solids in order to exist properly. Vampires would only need liquid… it could probably be something synthesized and easily produced (TrueBlood?). Of course it would probably taste horrid to a vampire… but it would be enough to sustain them. I’m sure they’d miss pursuing and hunting humans. I think the thrill of the kill is almost enjoyable as the blood is to them. Also, for humans to travel to vast distances in outer space, they’d have to be put into some type of suspended animation or hibernation because humans would use up way too much air, food, water, warmth, and other resources. Humans also need a certain amount of sunlight. In places in the arctic, they have to use artificial sunlamps in order to keep their health. There are places where school children all go into a room and are exposed to artificial sunlight. They do this to prevent rickets and other types of diseases one develops from too little sunlight. Vampires on the other hand would need none of these. However, vampires would be totally relying on their immortality to survive. Accidents still happen… and if a number of vampires were killed, there’d be no way of replacing them since vampires can’t reproduce. Unless they brought a certain number of humans with them… put them in cold storage… then thawed them out and changed them when needed. But I would imagine that any human onboard a ship full of vampires wouldn’t exactly be too safe.