FTL requires numerous things to be true about our universe, that all signs say are not.
If we're in a physics simulation, we don't experience at the rate that the simulation is processed. One "tick" of the simulation could be processed in one second of the host universe, or one hour: and we wouldn't feel the difference. We are processed at the same tickrate as the rest of the universe, so we experience the passage of time at the same rate that the simulation flows.
The speed of light isn't just the speed of light, it's the speed of causality. It just so happens that light moves pretty well at that "speed limit" (in a vacuum). We could ask our computational hosts to increase or decrease c, and we still wouldn't be able to travel any faster than it.
Would probably be a heck of a refactor to get it working without bugs though.
> What does speed of causality mean? And how is light so close to that?
Take a look at this video by PBS Space Time on the topic:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=msVuCEs8Ydo
You may need to go down the rabbit hole and watch the earlier videos on relativity and related topics.
Here, I found a copy: https://emperybooks.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/Greg-Egan...
Leaving SciFi aside, our communication technology will be up to the task of relaying information comparatively quickly (light speed or faster), and parallel societies could be built in neighboring solar systems.
What we know of this reality is so limiting compared to what we can imagine.
Good dreams. Many of us have them.
I also like to dream the knowable remains much larger than the currently understood too.