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{{#seo:
|description=Basilisk is a defense industry manufacturer famous for their ship-plating. They also manufacture body armor and shield generator. While it would seem that most of their massive yearly profits come from military contracts, but the armor they provide to the military is cheap and weak because of the budget cut from UEE. They break out the good stuff for high-end private sector sales.
}}

{{Infobox Company
|Name = Basilisk
|Image = Basilisk logo.jpg
|Headquarters =
|Type = Ship Plating, Personal Armor, Shield Manufacturing
|Manufacturer Code = BASL
|Founded = {{Start date and age|2530|sctime=yes}}
||Founder = [[Simone Visconti]], [[Bernard Pak]]
|CEO =
|Demographic = Military, Industrial, Civilian
}}

'''Basilisk''' is a defense industry manufacturer famous for their [[ship plating]]. They also manufacture [[personal armor]] and [[shield|shield generator]]. While it would seem that most of their massive yearly profits come from military contracts, but the armor they provide to the military is cheap and weak because of the budget cut from [[UEE]]. They break out the good stuff for high-end private sector sales.

Often joked among Naval rank-and-file that if you’re going to strap Basilisk armor to your ship, make sure you order it from their public site.<ref>{{Cite RSI|url=comm-link/transmission/12972-t|text=Writer's Guide: Part Four}}</ref>

== History ==

In [[2535]], [[High-General Volder]] toured the facilities of an upstart hull plating manufacturer that, to the shock of many industry insiders, had recently landed a major [[UPE]] military contract. [[Simone Visconti]], the company’s chief engineer and CEO, nervously followed along, carrying her research data. She was ready and willing to answer any questions about how her revolutionary techniques had created some of the most damage-resistant hull plating in the Empire. Yet according to legend, High-General Volder had only one question for her. “Why the hell did you name it Basilisk?” “Because they’re extremely hard to kill,” responded Visconti. Before she could elaborate on the few ways this mythological creature could reputedly be killed, High-General Volder strode off, indifferent to the details. Historians agree that Volder was focused on the big picture. Simone Visconti, on the other hand, obsessed over every last little factor. This unwavering dedication to detail birthed Basilisk’s reputation as the producer of high quality armor, a distinction that still sticks, even though some claim the company’s product quality has eroded over the years.<ref name="jumppoint">[[Adam Wieser]], [[David Ladyman]] and [[Ben Lesnick]], [https://robertsspaceindustries.com/comm-link/transmission/15866-Jump-Point-Now-Available ''Portfolio: Basilisk''], [[Jump Point (magazine)|Jump Point]], vol. 5, no. 4, pp. 50-53, 2017-04-22.</ref>

=== Birth of Basilisk ===

[[Simone Visconti]] was born on [[Asura]] in 2509. Her parents worked for one of the major mining conglomerates that fueled the planet’s economic boom. A constant curiosity and intellectual aptitude were apparent in Visconti from a young age, and they eventually earned her a full scholarship to the [[University of Persei Analytical Research and Quantification]] (UPARQ). Visconti spent a little over a year studying physics at the prestigious school before abruptly leaving to finish her education at the considerably less-esteemed [[University of Tram]].

Whenever asked about it, Visconti simply said that “it wasn’t for me” — a phrase friends and colleagues grew accustomed to hearing when something didn’t interest her. However, biographers later learned from Visconti’s UPARQ classmates that by mid-semester of her second year she had become bored with studying physics and wished to switch disciplines to engineering. UPARQ officials denied her request and told her to wait until the following semester to make the adjustment. Instead, Visconti stopped attending classes and spent her time in the library devouring engineering texts. Suddenly, her scholarship was in jeopardy, as the prospect of her failing all her classes became a reality. But rather than return to classes she had no interest in, Visconti simply walked away.

After completing her engineering studies at the University of Tram, Visconti borrowed money from her parents and rented a small research lab where she could lose herself in her work, trying to create photovoltaic hull plating that would simultaneously protect and power ships. Most believed it to be an impossible task, but some who saw her early work were encouraged. [[Bernard Pak]] was one of those people. A longtime friend of Visconti’s parents who had made a fortune in local real estate, Pak offered to fund Visconti’s vision — upgrading facilities and hiring a small staff — for a significant stake in the company.

Return to Basilisk.