Scene One (First Impression): When Trailblazers first meet the Interastral Peace Corporation (IPC), they see a group of sharp-suited, profit-obsessed businesspeople. They chase down debts, monopolize space lanes, and even try to turn the planet Jarilo-VI into a corporate asset. It’s easy to write them off as a cold, greedy cosmic monopoly.
Scene Two (Hidden Truth): As you get to know top IPC employees like Topaz and Aventurine, you’ll make a shocking discovery: beneath the surface of this commercial empire lies a fanatical, unshakable faith. They constantly reference the “Amber Lord,” “building walls,” and being the “foundation of cosmic preservation.” It turns out every business decision, every cosmic expansion from the IPC is a grand pilgrimage to their god, Qlipoth the Preservation.
This massive contrast between the two impressions reveals one of the most clever and profound pieces of worldbuilding in Honkai: Star Rail. This isn’t a simple “god and followers” dynamic—it’s a social experiment that turns divine faith into a cosmic-scale business model. This article will focus on the origin of it all: Qlipoth, the Aeon of the Preservation. We’ll break down the incredibly subtle, unexpected symbiotic relationship between this silent Aeon and its largest “church,” the Interastral Peace Corporation.
If you try to understand Qlipoth and the IPC through the traditional myth framework of “god delivers prophecies, followers obey,” you’ll never figure out this odd pair. This rigid thinking leaves three huge fundamental blind spots when faced with the new world of “corporate faith.”
Qlipoth is the most silent and single-minded of all Aeons. It never delivers prophecies, never answers prayers, never reveals its will. Its only action is silently building massive eutectic walls across the cosmos to hold back the threat of Nanook, the Aeon of Destruction. How can a god that never communicates with its followers inspire a tightly organized, highly effective group of fanatical believers like the IPC?
The IPC’s pursuit of wealth is almost obsessive, and their universal currency “Credit Points” are nicknamed “amber.” This makes it easy to assume they’re just pure gold-worshippers. But this is a huge misunderstanding. Their accumulation of wealth is a secular imitation of Qlipoth’s wall-building mission. Qlipoth builds walls out of crystal; the IPC builds cosmic order, acquires planets, and lays out space lanes using credit points—all of this is building an invisible wall against chaos and destruction through commercial means.
Case Study: Aventurine’s mission on Penacony wasn’t just about commercial profit. His ultimate goal was to bring this “lost asset” that slipped out of the IPC’s control back under the order of Preservation. For him, this was a sacred mission.
Traditional religion is often otherworldly and separate from secular life. But the IPC does the exact opposite: they fully integrate their faith in Preservation into the most mundane commercial activities. They don’t pray in churches—they sign contracts at negotiation tables. They don’t preach doctrine—they promote their financial products and services. This full merging of the divine and the secular can’t be explained by old theological frameworks.
The IPC succeeded because they successfully translated Qlipoth’s abstract, hard-to-understand mission of wall-building into a secular corporate manifesto that ordinary people can understand and follow.
Louis Fleming, the founder of the IPC, interpreted Qlipoth’s silence as supreme wisdom: language is chaotic, will is fickle, and only “action” and “contracts” are eternal and unchanging. Because of this, the IPC made “establishing order” and “upholding contracts” its supreme doctrine.
The core tenets of this doctrine include:
If the IPC is the church of Preservation, then its top decision-making body, the Ten Stonehearts, are the archbishops of this church. They aren’t just the company’s top executives—they’re also Qlipoth’s most fanatical followers. Each Stoneheart is named after a mineral, symbolizing their rock-solid faith and will. Topaz, Aventurine, and Diamond (the chair of the group) all live out the doctrine of Preservation in their own ways.
The IPC’s conflict with other Aeon factions perfectly shows how “holy wars” have become commercialized. They fight the Destruction not through prayer, but by funding civilizations on the front lines against the Antimatter Legion. They push back against the Aeon of Joy not over doctrinal conflict—they do it because Joy’s recklessness disrupts the commercial order they built. In the IPC’s eyes, a successful corporate acquisition is an offering to the Aeon of Preservation.
The relationship between Qlipoth and the IPC gives us a new, non-traditional analytical framework to understand other Aeons and their followers in Honkai Star Rail.
This is the most interesting question about this dynamic. Based on current lore, Qlipoth seems completely indifferent to the IPC’s actions. But the power of Preservation has expanded dramatically across the universe because of the IPC’s work. You can think of the IPC as an accidental seed Qlipoth unknowingly dropped, that took root in an unexpected way, and eventually grew into a massive tree that can shelter (or control) the entire cosmos. The IPC’s actions objectively carry out and expand the ideals of Preservation.
This perfectly shows how the same Aeon’s faith can be translated differently by different civilizations. The Preservation on Jarilo-VI is an original, inward-focused protection born out of desperate times, symbolized by “walls” and the Underworld resistance. The IPC’s Preservation is an institutional, outward-focused order born out of cosmic expansion, symbolized by “contracts” and “credit points.” Both are authentic Preservation, but they represent completely different forms of civilization.
One of Honkai Star Rail’s greatest strengths is that it doesn’t give you a simple black-and-white answer. The IPC is both the builder of cosmic order and a ruthless monopolist. They brought prosperity and protection to many planets, but stripped away freedom and culture from others. They are a necessary evil, a controversial but incredibly important piece on the cosmic chessboard. As Trailblazers, our relationship with them will always dynamically shift between cooperation and conflict.
The story of Qlipoth and the IPC gives us an entirely new freedom to understand what faith can be:
Freedom of form: It teaches us that faith doesn’t have to be limited to temples and prayer—it can also be found in business contracts and financial reports.
Freedom of interpretation: It shows us that even a god’s silence can be interpreted by ordinary people into a grand plan powerful enough to rewrite the entire cosmos.
The real question is:
When a faith gains unmatched power, where will it go?
Will it become the foundation that protects the cosmos from chaos and destruction? Or will its own rigidity and endless expansion turn it into a new tyranny built in the name of order?
This faith revolution, which is already rewriting the rules of cosmic commerce, has no end. And the Astral Express continues to travel along the tracks sheltered—and constrained—by the walls of Preservation.
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