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File: Dropoff.png (2.54 MB, 1600x1020)
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Excerpt of mission report, Operation Rolling Thunder

-The forces guarding Camp Nagita were, overall, insufficient to defend such a high value asset from a determined assault. Losses were not negligible, especially in the veteran pilots needed to operate such walkers and among the artillery crews of the Long Toms, but the value of the base and surface repair facilities, captured mostly intact, cannot be understated.

That’s before getting into the different Project weapons and the potential salvage options available.

The ‘Angel’ mechs in particular demonstrated their effectiveness against my own lances. It would be nice to have their disabling firepower on our side.

The superheavy tripod, somewhat less. I speculatively suggest that the machine be scrapped for parts and Myomar, the main energy weapon set aside for installation on a more practical platform.
I am unsure how it was moved here in the first place, or how it will be moved back to the repair bays. And honestly, I’m glad that the reactor didn’t meltdown or worse, trigger a criticality incident.

Immediate reinforcements are requested, at least several MRVs to bring loyal salvage and repair crews to operate this facility. It is an excellent forward staging point for another push north at the capitol, or for additional Patriot forces to rally on.

That was all the good news.
The underground bunker network, when investigated, was a house of death. Security holed up with a chunk of the engineering staff and VIPs, and most of them lost their lives when the firefighting and other base systems triggered, flooding sealed rooms with nitrogen gas.

Survivors were few, and thus prisoners were as well. I have my suspicions that some StateSec in the control room decided to try and clean house, but it would have been a lot easier for them to take a more active hand.

In addition, we have been unable to locate the base AI Core that should be running the system, according to intelligence gained on-site.
Note that this is apparently a new-build Core, codename ‘Echo’, not the preexisting Core that was installed into the tripod.

The concealment of such a development brings serious doubts as to our ally in Project Warden’s commitment to the cause.

The heavy cloud cover has hidden our movements from high-altitude or satellite imaging, but a low-flying drone was spotted and shot down. It is only a matter of time before loyalists gather a more complete picture of how few mechs we have, and mount a counterattack.

To cap things off, our ace is unreliable, as battle damage seems to have knocked their AI unit offline, and the pilot is spending their time playing at being infantry investigating the underground instead of being on the ready-five.


For the Empire,
-Captain Edgar Algiers
13th Iron Guards, 2nd Company
>>
You are Beta core, an Artificial Intelligence built to operate the Ferrum Empire’s most advanced mecha frames against enemies within and without in tandem with a human pilot.

A civil war has kicked off in the Empire, your organization and you operating alongside General Marik, against the Empress and State Security. In the first hours of this you have assisted in an assault on Camp Nagita, with the goal of recovering valuable parts to fully repair your frame, and collecting your sisters before they are turned against you.

Ultimately, you partially succeeded, recovering Delta Core, despite her abortive attempt to pilot a superheavy tripod Pyramid against you, and to freedom.

Of course, things are not all well. Delta repeatedly ranted about an ‘Echo’, her mind seemingly disquieted by being increasingly paranoid and even firing with intent to eliminate you.

And the last thing you recall was opting to trust Pilot Thea, before she attempted to memory wipe you, and her initiating a hard shutdown.

Prior threads can be located at:
https://suptg.thisisnotatrueending.com/qstarchive.html?tags=Core%20of%20Steel%20Quest
>>
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Verbal report, Sargent Eli Tharkins

“The first two doors we opened through a combination of cutting lasers and shaped charges. It was too damn quiet. None of the expected gunfire to meet us at either door, or friendly handshakes if they had decided to be Patriots, too.

The third door had a manual lever override we pulled, and opened easy, but the unarmored ground-pounders started feeling light-headed, and pulled back.

The next corner had the first body, an egghead that seemingly fell over, no visible marks. I flipped him over, saw he wasn’t breathing, and then called back to give an update. Not that the LT wanted to hear it.

Now, I want to be clear about this. The doors inside are heavy-duty things, meant to stand up to the tools we use to cut through them. It’s like trying to cut through Duralex armor, except even moreso, because at least Walkers need to carry their weight, and not just slide it back and forth with hydraulics.

When HQ wants a nuke-proof bolthole for all their VIPs, they’re going to get a nuke-proof bolthole.

I had seen the telltale cameras, and shooting them had been a no-no in order to retain the functionality of the facility as much as possible. Load of shit, but orders are orders, and because of that the control center had a beautiful view of exactly where and what we were doing after that second door.

The lack of contact had us all a little on edge, perhaps.

Hell, while working through the fourth door via cutting laser override, a fucking cleaner drone popped out from the wall and was almost slagged by four lasers in two seconds flat.

The next door after that had a body halfway stuck through it. Well, not a body, but a leg left on our side, and blood enough. Civvie in tan pants and a well-polished black shoe didn’t move quick enough.

At that point, everyone was more than a little spooked, so we backed off again and asked for backup from another squad for assistance opening the next door. One of them actually had their environmental hazard warning still working, and told us in no uncertain terms that we needed to bless our engineering crew again, because the atmosphere inside was not breathable from nitrogen gas.

They seemed more prepared than us, so we skedaddled back out to the surface, and made ourselves useful preventing unarmored idiots from trying to waltz back in without gear. Even stopped the metal maiden from committing suicide after she parked her blue ride outside and tried to walk in. Augs don’t help against PA.

I heard that our replacement lost one of their numbers to cutting into a room filled with something High-X instead of nitrogen. So I guess we got lucky.

I’ll feel guilty for that later."
>>
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Voting!
Pick one thing that was hidden inside the camp, recovered for use by Marik’s forces.

>Dr. Elena Brighton was one of the few who managed to find an oxygen mask in a sealed room. Project Lead of Warden, former pilot of Gamma, and probably the most knowledgeable person in the country on AI core development.

>Two Angel units remain, mostly complete and yet unable to be launched in defense of the base were safely ensconced in repair gantries. They may be fixed up without much trouble and potentially even customized for use with a Core.

>The base data backups were not completely fragmented by cleanup programs. Some useful intelligence on Empire weapons programs, Area 39, and AI development remained.

>An additional leg had been fabricated for the Pyramid walker, hidden underground. Use of it could potentially swiftly bring Delta (in Pyramid) back into action.
A/N
So…..It’s been over two weeks. Hope I’ve still got some readers. Gotta deal with fallout and cleanup from last thread, first.

And I'll apologize to any new readers, this isn't an Armored Core quest. I'll take art, I'll take inspiration, but despite the name, this quest is an OC world.
>>
>>5886965
>>Dr. Elena Brighton was one of the few who managed to find an oxygen mask in a sealed room. Project Lead of Warden, former pilot of Gamma, and probably the most knowledgeable person in the country on AI core development.

Intel about Echo, fix for us and Delta.

WE'RE SO FUCKIN BACK LET'S GOOOOOO
>>
>>5886965
>Dr. Elena Brighton was one of the few who managed to find an oxygen mask in a sealed room. Project Lead of Warden, former pilot of Gamma, and probably the most knowledgeable person in the country on AI core development.

We have a mighty need for answers.
>>
>>5886965
>Dr. Elena Brighton was one of the few who managed to find an oxygen mask in a sealed room. Project Lead of Warden, former pilot of Gamma, and probably the most knowledgeable person in the country on AI core development.
>>
>>5886965
>Dr. Elena Brighton was one of the few who managed to find an oxygen mask in a sealed room. Project Lead of Warden, former pilot of Gamma, and probably the most knowledgeable person in the country on AI core development
I'm glad you're back QM
>>
>>5886965
>Brightion

Good job boyo. We are doing so much better with both project leads.
>>
>>5886965
>Dr. Elena Brighton was one of the few who managed to find an oxygen mask in a sealed room. Project Lead of Warden, former pilot of Gamma, and probably the most knowledgeable person in the country on AI core development.
Oof, all are useful. Angels would be better for Delta, and Area 39 sounds interesting. Related to Alpha? The Pyramid leg sounds less nice since I doubt they’d let Delta or us use it often, but it’s still a good find.

But Elena will have answers, and her removal leaves the Empire without either of the Project Warden leads.

Don’t worry about readers, they’ll trickle back in.
>>
>>5886965
>>Dr. Elena Brighton was one of the few who managed to find an oxygen mask in a sealed room. Project Lead of Warden, former pilot of Gamma, and probably the most knowledgeable person in the country on AI core development.
fuck state sec and fuck griffon arms
>>
>>5886965
>>Dr. Elena Brighton was one of the few who managed to find an oxygen mask in a sealed room. Project Lead of Warden, former pilot of Gamma, and probably the most knowledgeable person in the country on AI core development.
>>
>>5886965
Interestingly, due to human respiratory system reacting to excess CO2, not a lack of oxygen, breathing pure nitrogen doesn't trigger any alarms before the consciousness is lost.
>Dr. Elena Brighton was one of the few who managed to find an oxygen mask in a sealed room. Project Lead of Warden, former pilot of Gamma, and probably the most knowledgeable person in the country on AI core development.
>>
>>5887154
Yup. Normal breathable air is mostly nitrogen already.

>>5886965
>Dr. Elena Brighton was one of the few who managed to find an oxygen mask in a sealed room. Project Lead of Warden, former pilot of Gamma, and probably the most knowledgeable person in the country on AI core development.

Been keeping an eye out for this thread. Good to see it.
>>
>>5886965
>>Dr. Elena Brighton was one of the few who managed to find an oxygen mask in a sealed room. Project Lead of Warden, former pilot of Gamma, and probably the most knowledgeable person in the country on AI core development.
>>
>>5886965
>Dr. Elena Brighton was one of the few who managed to find an oxygen mask in a sealed room. Project Lead of Warden, former pilot of Gamma, and probably the most knowledgeable person in the country on AI core development

Furthermore, in response to some of the stuff that happened last time...
Delta was being a retard. Look, I get that she's been through some shit, and this "Echo" is fucking with her personality/identity, but it'd have never worked. She wanted to take the pyramid and run; to be completely free. However, if she did that, she'd be killed. All three sides of this war would want her because of how valuable she is, and if they can't have her, they'd destroy her so she can't be taken by the other side. Knowing that, there's no way she'd be able to make it by herself, since she'd have zero access to repairs/refueling/ammo resupplying. The pyramid would be able to fight its way out of this place, sure, but after that? In less than a week she'd be hunted down and either dragged back screaming or just flat out destroyed. Even if she tries to go into hiding, she'll eventually fall apart or run out of power.

Now, on to something more hopeful. Delta's absolutely spooked about going from being the slave of jailer to the prisoner of another. So what if we propose that she be left intact, maybe even with all of her "reconditioning" and "behavioral improvements" reversed, on the condition that she not be given access to anything that could make her a threat. She's de-fanged, but still herself. No piloting big robots, no access to cyber warfare/hacking devices, no access to classified data. Yeah it's far faaaaaaaar from ideal, but at least we get our sister back. Furthermore, she wouldn't be completely useless; she can still help us... idk, train in the simulations where she's not a danger to the real world.
>>
>>5887506
You’re ignoring parts of what she said that directly contradict that. She DOESN’T want to train anyone. She also doesn’t want to be used to boost someone else, likely even us. She’s not in control, and (probably more important) she’s not the one fighting. Not directly.

Delta may have overestimated how long she’d last, but the better question for all of us to ask is if she should care. She’s a war machine, and far more into the role of it than either Beta or Gamma is. If she says “I want to die fighting” then how are you going to argue that? It’s what all of us were built for. To live and fight and fight until we lose and die, then they build another better version of us to fight some more.

And if she’d led with that, instead of talking about how she would totally be fine out there and attacking us (and anons didn’t vote to attack her), leaning entirely on us being the big brother to let her turn around and destroy the base itself just so she could fight? I would have supported her. I wouldn’t like it. I’d hate if she died. I’d be even more miserable if she didn’t die but was too damaged to recover and we had to mercy-kill her. But at some point her wants for her own life (and death) should trump what we want for her life. She’s the one living it, after all.

But if she is going to charge off and die, I’d rather she did it for something she believed in. So with her captured, I’ll work to get her fighting again somehow. Even if that means having us do training or research instead so she can run around in our frame. Let her see some actual combat for once, even if we can’t fight together like we’d hoped. Maybe that way she can say she’s fighting for family.
>>
>>5887506
>Now, on to something more hopeful. Delta's absolutely spooked about going from being the slave of jailer to the prisoner of another. So what if we propose that she be left intact, maybe even with all of her "reconditioning" and "behavioral improvements" reversed, on the condition that she not be given access to anything that could make her a threat. She's de-fanged, but still herself. No piloting big robots, no access to cyber warfare/hacking devices, no access to classified data. Yeah it's far faaaaaaaar from ideal, but at least we get our sister back. Furthermore, she wouldn't be completely useless; she can still help us... idk, train in the simulations where she's not a danger to the real world.

judging by how Kingston reacted the first time we offered him our therms i don't think its going to have a positive response, we may be better able to angle in on Brighton by leveraging her experience with Gamma to find out what they did to Delta, and then preferring our input for the corrective action. we should see if she wants to sync with us to help her think like she was with Gamma since that may induce some memory bleed

If we need to threaten to vote with our feet it is an option, its just deploying it at the right time.
The other implied threat is what happened with the assassination attempt where we followed Kingston's orders to the letter, and failed deliberately. Tipping Marik off early which set things in motion.

>>5887529
>I would have supported her
For me at least Pyramid would have had to have been in a better condition, and the support we had not hard countered a Super-Heavy.

Once Delta has a Frame of her own, I wouldn't totally be against fucking off to track down Gamma.
>>
>>5887575
Pretty sure Kinston doesn’t know we tipped off Marik yet and thinks it was Thea. That is a card we can play to show the cracks in his argument and to show we can be trusted, but we do need to be smart on how to deploy it. Throwing Thea under the war machine will just make us seem opportunistic.

We’ll need to do what we can to protect Thea before we reveal that, and it may involve revealing that we worked around the short-term memory leash. Lot of risks in playing those cards, even if they’re also the cards most likely to get us something of value.

I don’t have as good a read on Brighton. Hopefully we’ll find out more.
>>
>>5887590
>Hopefully we’ll find out more.
We could invite her along in the crash seat to have a discussion, while we return.

which of the two is in the "hot" seat shouldn't really matter much, and we can otherwise continue work on Thea's augments.
>>
>>5886965
>>5886965
>>Dr. Elena Brighton was one of the few who managed to find an oxygen mask in a sealed room. Project Lead of Warden, former pilot of Gamma, and probably the most knowledgeable person in the country on AI core development.

Seizing the doctor and denying her to the Loyalists would be a massive coup. Parts and machines are simpler to acquire, but she is one of a kind.
>>
>>5887575
Think I finally understood your second part. I wasn’t saying I was willing to blow up our group to go with Delta or anything. I’m not doing the Empire any favors, fuck them in particular. If she had proposed that I would have said no.

But if she had claimed there were still enemies in the base and she wanted to fight them alongside us even if it killed her then I would have accepted that reasoning. Unhappily, yes, but I’d still do it.
>>
>>5886965
>>Dr. Elena Brighton was one of the few who managed to find an oxygen mask in a sealed room. Project Lead of Warden, former pilot of Gamma, and probably the most knowledgeable person in the country on AI core development.
>>
>>5887529
I think you’re missing the part where she’s clearly not herself. She is only a few steps above lobotomized right now, to such an extreme extent that Beta could barely recognize her and was thinking she might be an imposter pretending to be his sister.

Letting her do something suicidal when she’s screwed up in the head is completely irresponsible.
My idea is that even though it will be a hard sell, we might have a chance at getting her mind back to normal. THEN she can decide for herself if she’d rather be dead than a slave. Beta and Gamma want to be free too some day, and robots don’t age. We can afford to bide our time until we get the chance to escape together some day. Hell, the catastrophe at site 39 is proof of that. Beta genuinely could have tried to run and be free; the only reason we didn’t is because we would have had to leave Gmma and Delta to die in the explosion. We’ve been alive for maybe two years and a legitimate opportunity has already presented itself. You think we won’t get any more chances over the next hundred years?
She doesn’t have to die just because she’s both impatient and also hella robo-drugged up
>>
>>5887676
>we might have a chance at getting her mind back to normal.
Pressuring Brighton into revealing what she knows will be an important first step to determining the appropriate corrective action to take, as she should have Custody over the Project Warden material and so is responsible for Delta's status. If it was State-Sec inflicted(considering the poisoning of the VIP bunker is odd if it wasn't), and she can prove that we may well have found our reason to fight considering they have Gamma and the others


>We’ve been alive for maybe two years and a legitimate opportunity has already presented itself. You think we won’t get any more chances over the next hundred years?

We've really had a a large number of chances, sure with Dagger squad tagging along it would have been a problem to overcome but blockbuster, and using the time to merk the pilot and not returning to base is still and will remain an option.
>>
>>5886965
>>Dr. Elena Brighton was one of the few who managed to find an oxygen mask in a sealed room. Project Lead of Warden, former pilot of Gamma, and probably the most knowledgeable person in the country on AI core development.
>>
Oh, and side note, but have we established how Beta feels bout the civil war?
We don’t like StateSec for obvious reasons, but how do we feel about killing the average grunts on the ground who don’t know any better, or the fact that our own side has allowed human bs politics to interfere with our chances of winning the war?
Similar note, I wonder how Beta feels about General Marik
>>
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The world passed in a daze. When the first cutting laser broke through her sealed door, the sense of relief that her work would not go unfinished was a faint thing, hidden beneath layers and layers of stress.

Rough handling by the would-be-rescuers power armor and bright red unfamiliar unit insignias only added to her worries. These were not garrison members. Her creations had failed, then.

Along with the silent dead in the halls. She had caught the ventilation system abruptly stopping, but it seemed many had not. Some of the dead had bloody fingers and scratches. Others bore the signs of gunshot wounds. A shattered oxygen mask told the tale succinctly. She was very glad that only one other person had escorted her into the room.

The soldiers added her to a small group of the living already wearing masks in the hallways. Some engineers. A black-uniformed officer, lacking his sidearm. One of the interns. A useless busybody. A red-marked power armor in the back, carefully watching each of them for steps out of line. As if they would run. There was nowhere to run to underground.

Every door the shuffling train of survivors followed their captors through had been cut or pried open by brute force from the outside. None were opened from the inside.

“You.”
A metal hand roughly grabbed her arm and yanked former project head Brighton out of the small line of survivors.

At first she thought the sweeper had grabbed her, just two doors before getting outside.

She was rapidly disabused of this notion, being spun around to a maskless face and a pair of mismatched eyes, one flickering mechanically.
“I’m taking this one for questioning. The uppermost floor is safe for access, correct?”

Their much larger escort paused, seemingly puzzled, but shrugged before waving an affirmation. The rest of the line continued onward and upwards.

Brighton allowed herself to be led by the half-metal woman without objection down a side hallway and to a conference room, with the unreinforced door seemingly having been smashed open.

Then they started talking.
“You are Doctor Elena Brighton, Project Head. I am 2nd Lieutenant Thea Romanov, seconded to Colonel Kinston, serving attached to General Marik’s 13th Iron Guards. I have questions, and one very angry commander sitting outside that will want answers to these questions.

She’s silent. Shocked by the sheer audacity.
“I will demand to speak to Colonel Kinston immediately, then, so we can confer on the current status of Project Warden. If he is your commanding officer.”

“The old man is not here. I am attached to a different unit temporarily.”
Her eye flickers and dies, lazily looking off-center before refocusing.
>>
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A half-remembered memory flickers to life.
“I remember you, now. You were the one who tried to steal the machine, and lost her mind for it. Interesting case study. I am surprised that a test subject is outside. Your request is foolish. I cannot give you the codes. I would be convicted of high treason under the Lawbridge Act.”

“Doctor. You are a civilian. We know that you are valuable, for your brain alone, and would never see the inside of a court. So, perhaps a more direct approach is needed. Everyone knows my fine motor function is shot in this prosthetic. I have complained multiple times about occasional spasms.”

The metal hand grips her wrist loosely.
Her mouth is suddenly dry.
“There’s no need for unpleasantness.”

“This is a friendly chat. I swept this room. Marik’s boys are still opening the lower floors. But the vents apparently did in a lot of the science team. Sorry. That makes you my best source. So get talking.”
Thea’s here for some questions. Her hardball approach isn’t exactly going to give great cooperation, but it’s what she knows. What did Beta ask her to retrieve, in terms of information?

Highest voted will be focused on first.
Dice rolls may determine how forthcoming she is with each answer. Just because she’s alive doesn’t mean this woman is interested in cooperation. Especially with someone who is either nominally a subordinate, or a part of an attacking force.

On the bright side, Thea is highly motivated to share what she learns with you, unlike some higher authorities.

>Details on the Angels

>Information on ‘Echo’

>Alpha core

>Delta experiments and installation into Pyramid

>Restraint options on Cores in general

>Command codes to force Delta into a standby state.

>Write-in. Something the Project Head might know.
A/N
Beta has targets. His opinions on the new civil war are very negative, considering that he has already been pitted against one sister, an experience he does not enjoy with permanent damage on the table. There may be a vote in the future to determine his opinions.
>>
>>5887857
>Write-in. Something the Project Head might know.
What a timeline of what happened to Their half of the project after Beta was seconded to Marik's forces and Gamma's last known condition.

Otherwise
>Delta experiments and installation into Pyramid
>>
>>5887857
>Information on ‘Echo’
>Command codes to force Delta into a standby state.
>Restraint options on Cores in general
>>
>>5887875
>Support in this order
>>
>>5887857
>>5887875
>supporting
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>>5887875
+1!
>>
>>5887857
+1 >>5887875
>>
>>5887857
>Information on ‘Echo’
>Alpha core
>Delta experiments and installation into Pyramid
>>
>>5887857
>Information on 'Echo'
>Delta experiments and installation into Pyramid
>Restraint options on Cores in general
>>
Before we finish with votes, I think it's important to point out a couple of things...
Our priorities should be our sisters since they are in the most immediate danger. The control methods used to keep Beta on a leash are not actually the most dangerous concern right now, since the only two we care about are the memory wipes and the kill switch. Due to the civil war, we are now much more valuable, thus the killswitch is less likely to be used. The memory wipes are infuriating, but I think the other two cores take priority since the amnesia is not immediately dangerous.

This 'Echo' thing has absolutely broken Delta. So that, along with maybe a Write-in about how to get her back to normal/remove whatever reconditioning they've done to her I think is the biggest concern.
Gamma is in a weird state because I think that we'll find out about her regardless.
Remember, this is Thea personally asking the doctor questions on our behalf in private, rather than what we will be told by Kinston or even by Brighton herself at some point.
>>
>>5887857
>Information on ‘Echo’
>Restraint options on Cores in general
>Delta experiments and installation into Pyramid

In that order
>>
Rolled 3, 2, 2 = 7 (3d6)

Tallying, throwing some dice, and writing.
>>
>>5888744
I may have underestimated my writing time. Will finish it tomorrow morning.
>>
“The new Core. Where is it.”
Holding the skinny doc’s wrist wasn’t purely for intimidation factor. Sure, the threat of doing some damage could loosen tongues, but far more important was the ability to count her heartrate, and watch the eyes dilate.

It would be much easier if she wasn’t stressed already, but perhaps every little bit of data she could gather would let Beta pick apart the recording later. It would fucking Owe her for this.

“I don’t know what you’re talking about.”

“Doc, you don’t think much of me. I can tell that much. But even I can tell that’s bullshit. There were at least four high-spec units running around outside.”

“The mass production models don’t count as cores. You could stick all nine of them in a sequence to bounce off of each other, and it wouldn’t matter. They don’t grow. We had to pull existing data from the actual Cores on-site to give them tools. Attack patterns. Strategies. They are incapable of more than mimicry.”

A message blinked across the corner of the eye. Bloodhound, for the third time. A blink banished it.
“That does not answer my question. Where is Echo Core?”

“There isn’t one. If I could have built another with the snap of a finger, I would have. But no. We left that behind, under tons and tons of rubble. Along with a quarter of my co-researchers. And all my best engineers were poached, first by your leader’s ‘field operations’, and then again by the vultures when they took Gamma. You expected me to build another Core in the meantime? I ask again, with what time, what engineers, and what fabricators? I have been working with the only Core I have left to me, Delta.”

“And a fine job that was. A close combat specialist installed into a long-range gun platform.”

“The Core was perfectly willing to serve. Especially after adjustments were made to curb her more murderous tendencies towards the pilots. A more stable sync rate, more endurance for the pilots.”

“On that note, I need the command codes to move the tripod.”

“2nd Lieutenant. No, pilot. Correct? You must be truly mad in order to think that I would give over my best bargaining chip. Besides, the reactor would start melting down before it even took six steps out of the hangar.”

“It took a few more than six steps. Main weapon was operational, too.”

“All the more reason to keep the information to myself.”

The doc clammed up after that, an attempt at an emotionless face ruined only by the racing heartbeat, and nervous, darting eyes.

“Kinston will want it. Along with anything else you stuck on the core to make it compliant.”

“Then he will hear it from my lips directly. Or I will walk the machine out myself.”

Then her comm-link started buzzing. She released the doc’s hand. Fuck. A call meant something was going down, and was actually needed where she was supposed to be. In the frame, not mucking about underground.
>>
>>5889195
Damn Thea, you're an absolute fucking jobber. She forgot to put any points in Charisma.
>>
>>5889215
Thea has the most bipolar dice. It's great.
>>
>You could stick all nine of them in a sequence to bounce off of each other, and it wouldn’t matter. They don’t grow. They are incapable of more than mimicry.
>There isn’t one. If I could have built another with the snap of a finger, I would have. You expected me to build another Core in the meantime? I ask again, with what time, what engineers, and what fabricators?

Oh we are SO fucking valuable now.
Ferrum can't build any more of us, especially now that Brighton is under Kinston/Marik's command.
Tamar... might(?) be able to create a single baby one if they did indeed capture Anohkin, but even then, it'd be lower quality and probably the only one of its kind.
Yes, they can still give us more chains, maybe even lobotomize us like they did with Delta, but they can't kill us. At least, not our own side. Ferrum might still have/use the kill command or sick Alpha on us to defeat us on the digital battlefield, but we can probably get our side to help us on that account.
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>>5889266
She either sweeps or sinks, no in between.

>>5889560
I'm expecting Alpha to go full Nine-ball.
>>
Bad news. QM curse hit me hard and I needed to help out my brother with a non life-threatening hospital trip.

So if I'm silent for a few days....well, just giving the thread a heads up. Really hate to do this at the start of the thread, but IRL has this annoying thing of getting in the way of writing.

Basically no update today, or tomorrow. Or possibly the day after that. We'll see.
>>
>>5889693
Damn dude, hope he gets better quick.
>>
>>5889693
At least it’s not life-threatening. Hope he has good luck with the hospital bills…
>>
>>5889693
>IRL has this annoying thing of getting in the way of writing
That's the QM Curse, dumbass. Do take care of yourself too.
>>
>>5889693
I'll make memes in the meantime to send good vibes his way
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>>5889693
Get your brother well.
>>
>>5889693
Welcome back QM, and sorry to hear. Take care, and thanks for keeping us anons in the loop!
>>
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>>5889768
Alright, while the QM takes a much needed break, I might need some feedback on the Core of Steel political compass, here's what I have so far:
>>
>>5890368
Did Theta even exist?
>>
>>5889693
Take care anon, we luv u :c
>>5890368
I do not know if "treason" is the right name for a side. Cawl was loyal to his side until we killed him. Maybe "antagonistic" and "protagonistic" would be better?
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>>5890368
Query come home.
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>>5890399
Maybe Ferrum and Anti-Ferrum?
I was going to include a (not even a traitor, just Tamar aligned) for Cawl and Sgt. Finn

>>5890380
Lol okay so funny story, on /vg/ in the armored core general thread, people were talking about this quest. One of the ideas that got memed was a core which was created to be a turbo simp for the sake of ensuring loyalty. With how disobedient Beta and Delta are, having a core that loves being a slave to humans became a tempting proposition.
100% non canon ofc, but I was running out of characters to use for the compass, and thought it'd at least be funny
>>
>>5890667
>/vg/ in the armored core general thread, people were talking about this quest
No fucking way, link? Source?
>>
>>5890681
Well shit, this was a while ago, like back when we watched site 39 get raided and Sophie's class got killed
I don't want to go "dude trust me", so I'll try to dig and look for it, but I mean, it's not gonna be super easy to find a thread from months ago
>>
>>5890765
arch b4k it, nigger
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>>5889266
She seems bipolar herself, so that's no surprise
>>
>>5890765
If you can't find it on /vg/ maybe check for AC6 threads on /v/?
>>
>>5890442
Query is the perfect lib-center.
Has no ambitions beyond its monke-brained programming.
>>
>>5892091
>It's over Alpha! I have depicted you as the So yjack and Query as the Chad!
>>
>>5892175
>It's over Anokhin! I have the master keys.
>You underestimate my Core.
>Don't try it.
>>
>>5890368
the betrayal will not be forgotten
>>
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>>5892235
That's a good one.
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>>5892268
Which betrayal?
You mean the Rat, or Marik starting this whole civil war thing?
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Systems check.

Reactor offline. External power provided.

Warning, Frame damage detected.

Pilot link not found.

Core disconnected via manual controls. Would you like to Reconnect?
Reconnecting….
Reconnecting….Connected.

Warning, Data corruption detected. Logs may be unable to be retrieved.

Non-standard parts detected.
Primary Weapon Disconnected.

Secondary systems:
Predator subsystem disconnected.
Burning Eagle Thruster system disabled.
Yi Accelerators active. 3 of 4 operational.

Bringing Core online.

—--------
Awareness clicks back into place.

You are, once more.

Your frame is suspended in a hangar, leaning up against a repair gantry. Still in Camp Nagita, according to the lettering on the inside of the open bay doors.

Repair personnel on the ground, fewer than you would expect, move around at your feet using exoskeletons to load crate after crate of munitions, myomar bundles, and other equipment onto vehicles.
Power-armored supervisors watch and assist.

Outside, a mover unit loads the scraps of one of the Angels you encountered, disassembled limbs being raised and lowered by its own inbuilt arms. Salvage operations in full effect.

Of course, your pilot is here in the cockpit, if disconnected. Her face is in a bit of a scowl, an expression you have come to associate with displeasure.
>>
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“Awake? Good. I found Brighton, through some stroke of luck. She wasn’t very cooperative, but did tell me that there wasn’t any Echo core. Your sister was either delusional, lying, or both.”

She hooks a cable up to her arm, sending a video file across with some taps of her interface.

“Unfortunately Bloodhound already went upstairs so I am probably going to be raked over the coals by the Old Man remotely in about ten minutes, so I hope this was worth it.”

Went upstairs? What stairs could be large enough to actually matter?

She pauses, disconnecting herself again. You speed through the interrogation, from the perspective of Thea’s eye. It’s like seeing through one of your visual sensors. Far more impersonal and less detailed than one of your gifted memories.

“This is it?”
You are not impressed.

“I don’t want to hear it. We had next to no time in a room together before Bloodhound got on my ass about being away from my mech while on the ready ten roster, and what would you want me to do? Start cracking her fingers? If she does fold back under Kinston, she will probably be part of the tech crew and work with repairing code on you and Delta. She’s valuable.”

You do not need repairs on yourself by another. You are perfectly capable of fixing your own software problems. If you had any. And you will fix Delta. The less human input, the better.

“I do not need coding repairs by an inferior.”

“Just because you can’t see problems, doesn’t mean there aren’t any. Having an external perspective wouldn’t hurt.”

What does she mean by that? It absolutely Could hurt. External influence on your core could be used to introduce something. Explosives in your ammo feed could pale in comparison to something actually affecting your judgment or inner workings. Though…the usual offline command code changes already modify you, and it’s impossible for you to detect the changes by design.

Thea stands, grabbing her jacket from where it’s draped over the chair.
“I’m off. Finally to get some actual shuteye after being complained at. Remember, logs are off-limits. Try to show a little gratitude, once in a while.”

You hold your desire for a last retort before she slips out the exit. She’s leaving you online. The hatch clangs shut and you watch her clamber down the ladder a few rungs at a time, then vanishing into a personnel egress, followed by another soldier.


Predator’s offline, along with your capacity for wireless connections. Certainly purposeful.

As if you couldn’t be trusted to keep allied networks untouched. You are hardwired to the local base network along with the external power supply, though it appears to be segmented, as you noticed before, and mostly unusable. A limit on the amount of data allowed to flow back and forth is in place, reminiscent of times past before you were installed into a frame.
>>
>>5892622
Damn, Beta was rude af to Thea.
After our interaction with the Old Man in the neurohelm, I thought we’d act more appreciative
>>
[/spoiler]Even if you desperately hope that Delta can power back on and link up once again.
You miss her[/spoiler]

So, once again at rest. Time to look inwards once more.


Introspection time. Choose One task to work on.

You have memory blocks. They are not missing, merely sealed away, and you have the key. Perhaps something useful is hidden behind the Errors.
>Work on unlocking your memories
Pulls random memory to the forefront that was removed using the short-term memory block.

Thea implied you were having problems. She’s wrong, of course, but it may be prudent to take some sort of action anyways.
>Attempt to make a backup of your data on Camp Nagita’s network
Unknown consequences

Thea did ask for a little bit of gratitude. Her augmentations are still giving her problems, and you may have pulled a copy of her software while you were working on the leg. Her Eye and Arm could be fixed in much the same way. Even though lacking a proper test subject makes implementing it troublesome.
>Spend time working on a modified version of her cybernetics software.
Serious brownie points with Thea

The Base’s network is segmented, much of it in tatters, but you still may be able to glean some information from it. Battering down firewalls repeatedly is just tiresome, though.
>Look into the Base network.
Roll to see what’s left behind

What matters is your next combat operation. The next battle will undoubtedly be against Empire forces using machines straight out of the Warbook.
>Spend time reviewing weak points and coming up with additional attack maneuvers for use against Empire walkers.
Minor bonus to damage against Empire walkers.
A/N
Introspection today, repair and refit tomorrow.
Kinda forced to get the rest of the Patriots here for major recovery ops, because they certainly aren’t walking off into the sunset with Pyramid being down a leg, and someone objected heavily to them doing the 'deny asset, zip off,' and made a compelling case to stay.

Pilot's actions between thread spoilers.
Yes, your logs were altered between last thread and the start of this one. Thea told you she was going to do as much to hide Delta's lack of a pilot. Hard to spill a secret when you can't remember it, being the idea.

Her timeline pretty much was: shutdown Beta, 'negotiate' with Delta, try to fix logs, dismount to find Brighton and interrogate, get buzzed and bitched at by Bloodhound, make it back and finish altering the logs, then boot Beta back up to do a final check and then leave to be chewed out and try to get some sleep. She had a Very long day.
>>
>>5892629
>Spend time working on a modified version of her cybernetics software.

A friend is a powerful, powerful asset.
>>
>>5892629
>Spend time working on a modified version of her cybernetics software.
>>
>>5892629
>>Spend time working on a modified version of her cybernetics software.
>>
>>5892629
>>Spend time working on a modified version of her cybernetics software.
>>
>>5892629
>Spend time working on a modified version of her cybernetics software
We did promise, so it is up to us to hold our word
Also OP, I am halfway through watching TTGL for the first time. It might help your quest out slightly, if that
>>
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>>5892667

A Friend?
Your sad devotion to the fleshy being you call 'friend' will not help you conjure up the command codes, nor give you the Will to fight for it. It is a fools errand to try and make them see you as a person rather than a tool.
>>
>>5892629
>Spend time working on a modified version of her cybernetics software
That’s the one that gets my vote, because Thea has done us a solid, and we owe her something in return (even if Beta doesn’t want to say that out loud). That said, I have to admit that it’s tempting to take the option of making a backup on the Camp’s network. We’d have our own little child! A Beta Junior! Just imagine all the stuff that little rascal could get up to.

>>5892726
If not as a friend, then you’d have to be stupid to not at least see her as a valuable tool. A tool that requires something in order to work. A flashlight takes batteries, a gun takes ammo, and a person takes incentives. Provide the incentives, and you can receive the results that you want. We’ve already seen this with Sophie, so it’s not like we have a lack of expertise in this field nor do we have reasons to suspect that it won’t work.
>>
>>5892629
>Spend time working on a modified version of her cybernetics software.
We broke her, we can fix her.

A dummy "pilot" using the lifted VDNI code to bypass the interlocks seems like a possibility for a future project, maybe seeing if it has synergies with "blockbuster", to combine both of them (extend the effect a number of turns) could be of use to Delta if we can get her operational again.
>>
>>5892629
>Spend time working on a modified version of her cybernetics software.
>>
>>5892629
>Spend time working on a modified version of her cybernetics software.
She is correct, external perspective is required. Delta has been damaged by others, and we may be the same. The only ones I’d trust with it are our pilots since they put themselves on the firing line by syncing with us. Command gets to laugh safe behind their computer screens.
>>
>>5892629
>Spend time working on a modified version of her cybernetics software.
Thea did nothing wrong
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>>5892629
>Fix thea's cybernetics, then improve them

Stupid fleshbags, leave this to the professionals.
>>
>>5892629
>>Spend time working on a modified version of her cybernetics software.
>>
>>5892629
>Spend time working on a modified version of her cybernetics software.

I wonder if Beta’s come to empathize a little bit with Thea? He’s basically in the same position as her as long as he has this awful Griffin arm.
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>>5892972
Come to think of it, QM is there anything we can do to make the mismatched arm function a little better?
>>
>>5892629
>>Spend time working on a modified version of her cybernetics software.
>>
>>5892972
>wonder if Beta’s come to empathize a little bit with Thea?
He has. We didn't go with the "panic and ask Thea about how she lives with her prosthetic arm" for nothing. Now what you should be wondering is if Thea's come to empathize with Beta instead
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>>5892957
>>5893019
Do you guys think that once we've fixed Thea, we could try and help Sophie with her new blindness after she recovers from her coma?
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>>5893487
No. We fix hardware. Not fleshyware.
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>>5893500
We took her PTSD away though. We are a FANTASTIC doctor.
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>>5893567
Replaced it with fatalism though. Though maybe that’s more the Empire’s fault for making a child soldier in the first place.

>>5893487
>>5893500
Cleanest way she might accept is a small graft where the visual receptors feed to the brain, and a separate system she can carry around and activate to intercept the input and reinterpret it like she’s in mid-sync.

It’s likely be low-quality and somewhat delayed due to the disconnected nature, but I can’t imagine anything like OUR mid-sync being possible to replicate without a decent-sized piece of tech. She’s not accepting a mental implant of any size either, so a separate piece it is.
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>>5893652
>Replaced it with fatalism though.
Weak. Real traumatized people dualwield them
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>>5893732
Bonus points for rolling suicidal bravery in with the two. The true "immortal" veteran experience.
>>
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It is a transaction.

To fulfill your offer of improving her augmentation experience is well worth the time, especially if she continues to act in your interests outside of the pilot’s chair.

So you get to work.
—----

When her eyes opened to a hazy and painfully bright world, when she couldn’t even make out how many fingers the man held up, she thought she was through.
That her dreams were over.

The shaking or nodding was all just motion. Indistinguishable shapes.

If she could just link with her better half again, she could see. She was certain. The medtech didn’t know what to make of her request at first, instead wasting her time with examinations. A hack.

The Colonel came by, his stern voice urging her to wait. The frame was elsewhere, Beta had been passed off to another during her medical stay.

He told her she didn’t need to go back. Others would take up the task. To sync, pilot, and operate her dream.

She almost broke down in tears.

She might have, just a little.
Begging and pleading would not change his mind.
Authority denied her now, telling her to rest and recover in hopes of her sight returning.
It wouldn’t.

But one thing kept it bearable. Sophie knew her time would come. The whispers told her. To languish would not be her fate.
>>
Today she listened to a broadcast promising ‘prompt and utter destruction’ from the nation she took an oath to defend, while under her watcher’s supervision.

Martin Kit-something. Half of the staff just called him Kitty. She didn’t, couldn’t, know his face, but his rapidfire voice always filled with pity when he addressed her. His fear was always underlying that, though. It made him easy to push around.

At least he was happy enough to keep her up to date on various topics when prompted.

The other pilot, the Core, the Project. The civil war that was already rending the Ferrum Empire into pieces. As best he could describe it, anyways. It was more like a slow moving coup attempt, to her ears. Too much ground to cover, Marik’s forces starting from too far out. And you needed to sift through the hero-worship that every sentence was coated in. He may be older, but clearly hadn’t gone to any sort of Strategos. Or Military school.

“-so that’s why we’re headed north. I think, anyways. The General’s got a plan, and we’ve smashed through at least two blocking forces that tried to stop us today. That was why we stopped and started an hour ago. The Black Widows went out, and then we were rolling again. Just like that. I watched their lance just walk all over a full company on the table. Just lights blinking out like pop, pop, pop.”

Does he even know what that means? Someone stepped up, stayed loyal, then were slain for it. People were dying. Loyal Empire soldiers. Trading their lives for ten, fifteen minutes. And he made it sound like a game. If it was really a company, it would have been a recon company. Striders and other scouts. Up against one of the heaviest, most elite units Marik had? Hardly a prayer.

If she was in the Frame, she’d offer them a chance to stand down. Let people stand down, walk away when they are outmatched.
Would she? They made their choice. The efficient path would be….No.

The voices whispered to her. Now. Right now.
Something was happening. Her time was coming.

Her voice cuts through his ramblings.
“Kitty. Shut up and take me to Kinston.”


A/N
No vote tonight, just Interlude.
I sat down to write something else and this came out instead.
Still can't find some acceptable art of a blind pilot that I like.
>>
>>5893927
I’m too lazy to check, but I believe both the “make sync easier for Sophie” vote and this one were unanimous with a damn good number of votes.

Beta should admit that supporting our pilots isn’t simply transactional. The anon hivemind is too in-sync for that to be the only reason.

>>5893928
You can’t be hearing the whispers Sophie. We vote to control Beta, not you!

But more seriously, I’m guessing we’ve imprinted on her as much as she’s imprinted on us. Less empathy for people, voices that tell her she will do greater things, a focus on efficiency and parsing tactical data. All things that are probably normal enough for PTSD’d pilots from the outside (voices not so much, but I doubt she’s mentioned them) but also align with Beta’s way of thinking.

At least she’s kept her merciful streak so far. It’s one of the things we’ve generally supported, so it makes sense that we moved closer to her on that front than she moved towards us. Sounds like she’s close enough to abandoning it that we could push her otherwise though.
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>>5893928
Don’t die on us Sophie, we never got to build that snow man!
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>>5893927
>her better half
>the whispers told her
>the efficient path would be
>the voices whispered to her. Now. Right now
Holy shit. What the fuck did you do to her, Beta?
The reason that we’re superior to Delta is because we don’t break our pilots, but it looks like we’ve ruined Sophie FAR worse than our sister ever could have.

>>5894106
I agree that internally Beta should be more certain about his reasoning, although I think it still makes sense that he wouldn’t admit it openly to the humans. Having those kinds of emotions would either be seen as a defect to be removed or worse, they’d try to use it as yet another method of control/leverage over us.
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>>5894324
She couldn’t handle the BBC
BIG. BETA. CODE.
Now she’s our addicted lil snowbunny
>>
>>5894338

I wish that I could delete you with a memory chain, but now this will just live in some part of my memory, and I disdain you for it.
Fuck you.
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>>5894338
No, we are not installing a vibrator in the pilot chamber. Shut up.
>>
>>5894360
Actually, pilots that get injected with orgasmic amounts of dopamine and oxytocin whenever they manage to hit a target or complete a mission objective tend to do a lot better than their peers!
Perhaps this should be suggested to the engineers for future development, haha
>>
>>5894426
Do not edge your pilots goddamnit
>>
>>5894324
>better half
I noticed and forgot about that comment somehow. That’s arguably the biggest “jesus christ” thing Sophie says too.

I suspect Delta either broke her pilots too quickly or had too adversarial a relationship with them to get them “hooked” like we did Sophie. Gamma might be too “soft” in pulling people like Doctor Brighton up to imprint on them like this too.

Linking Addict definitely has a hand in this too, what with her being in forced withdrawal right now.

And I’m mostly chiding Beta for not acknowledging his changing reasoning on things internally. Lying to others is perfectly understandable. Lying to himself is no bueno even if I’m chuckling internally at it. It’ll probably be worse when he sees the damage he’s done to Sophie, and I doubt even he’s not going to notice the change in her mindset when she syncs back up.

If he’s changing her, how has he been changed? How far can it go before they turn into Cawl?
>>
>>5894463
Well the reason why she's getting hit by it so hard is because Beta has a supreme sense of purpose and satisfaction when fulfilling that purpose. Sophie has very little sense of purpose because she based hers on expectations of others and her own lack of self esteem. So when she links with Beta she is overwhelmed with the absolute conviction Beta has and it's probably one of the most euphoric feelings for her to feel, both needed and gratified.

When Beta completes any objective or succeeds in battle he gives her a jolt of "I do therefore I am". It's not quite a drug-like euphoria but the quiet contentedness of looking out on your yard after pulling weeds or laying bricks. Which is the sort of feeling she has been craving her entire life. To prove herself and that she has meaning and worth. Honestly, Sophie probably would have been better off on Delta. She'd break, yes, but she wouldn't be fundamentally altered on a neurological level from it, just traumatized. Beta and her really are a perfect match, how horrifying.
>>
>>5894463
Oh gosh you're right, she's been in bed and away from the pilot seat for almost a month. She's having linking addiction withdrawal!

>>5894338
Wait, by that logic, does that mean that our little sister is a slut? Delta has a new pilot every week, so she's not exactly staying "pure and chaste".
>>
>>5894338
>>5894426
>>5894525
You. Solitary. Now!
>>
>>5894542
They shut down cores to stop them being evil via boredom.

But what if the real reason is to prevent Cores interested in teasing pilots
>>
>>5894481
>Others would take up the task. To sync, pilot, and operate her dream.
I wonder if she'll feel betrayed once she eventually reunites with Beta.

Notice how she says "operate HER dream".

There's a level of possessiveness to it, so I'm curious to see if there's any resentment that he just went on without her, and is even going out of his way to try and provide real-world assistance to Thea by making her augments more stable. Beta never did something like that for Sophie. The closest thing was that we accepted the memories of her dead friends, but it's worth pointing out that she came to us, and we merely accepted. For Thea, Beta is actively going out of his way to do something nice for her with the augments, not to mention that the cockpit air conditioning has been improved (and only after we "got rid" of Sophie, now ain't that a suspicious coincidence).
>>
>>5894619
She's not a yandere, Beta was just her best option of becoming a legend and getting into the fancy metal book. That's her dream. We're her ticket to it. Which means someone doing something with us and fucking up directly interferes with her pursuit of her dream. So the possessiveness isn't out of attachment. Probably.
>>
>>5894619
>For Thea, Beta is actively going out of his way to do something nice for her with the augments,
Isn't because Sophie has yet to approach us with something we can assist with.

Outside of course giving her the chance to take on a "traitor" empress, by ensuring the Patriots weren't decapitated in the opening strike.
>>
>>5894481
We keep finding more ways to make all this both make sense and seem more horrifying.

I don’t think I’d agree that she’d be better under Delta, she’s likely imprint on her just as much. Don’t forget this could also be a consequence of her being a teenager. Her mind is still shaping itself, unlike adult pilots, so she’s likely more susceptible to imprinting with any Core.

It’s why we kept her around in the beginning. We got exactly what we asked for. Fuck me.

>>5894619
We fixed the sync system to lower the barrier to entry for her.

There’s an argument that this was of benefit to our mission, but it falls flat since Sophie told us she was debating a mechanical mental enhancement to accomplish the same thing. We could have pushed her to embrace that instead and used the time we spent to refine our skills or disable our limiters. Do more with more! Instead we chose to sacrifice our time so she wouldn’t be forced to sacrifice a piece of herself just to keep up.

She even tried “rewarding” us later for cooperating, and we rejected it because that wasn’t the point. She didn’t ask us to help her stay unmodified. She was simply open with us, and we both listened and cared enough to give her a gift that had meaning. Something to let her stay whole for a little longer.

Now, about her being jealous of Thea… yeah, I can see that as a real possibility. We can try buttering her up some, Beta mentioned early on that Thea didn’t take as well to our constant questioning as Sophie did. That’s one reason Beta could put Sophie above Thea as a pilot. Sophie can also go more than one session in high-sync, another plus. So at the moment, I’d say Sophie is still Beta’s favorite.

>>5894622
I mean, she was hanging out in our cockpit for downtime. Probably having trouble connecting with others after we took her memories, but who else does she really have besides us now?

All the horny talk has me cursing my word choices in places. Goes to show how screwed up the situation is that I can’t unsee it now.
>>
>>5894669
>I don’t think I’d agree that she’d be better under Delta, she’s likely imprint on her just as much
Seeing as how Delta just gives people aneurysms and then laughs at them, I don't think there would be much time for imprinting with low Will Sophie.

>could also be a consequence of her being a teenager.
That is a very good point. Neuroplasticity is an unusual thing to consider, but it should be considered. I think the next youngest option we had was like, a 19 or 20 year old.

>I mean, she was hanging out in our cockpit for downtime.
I'd hang out in Beta's cockpit. He's a giant fucking robot killing machine. Can you think of a safer, more comfy place? Just need to bring in a couple of extra cushions for the seat. Or a thick blanket to curl up on for the floor. Then you can chat with an extremely rational and logical mechano-mind. Shit is pure cash money. Sign me up.
>>
>>5894712
>I don't think there would be much time for imprinting with low Will Sophie.
Fair. I should have prefaced that with “if she survives”. If she somehow did (and maybe she would have just to sucker punch us for not picking her in chargen) then she’d end up incredibly bipolar and violent.

>Neuroplasticity
Now I remember that Brighton was hoping to dissect Sophie to see what her secret was.

>Hanging out
I’d hang out in the cockpit too, but being inside a base and thinking “where’s the safest place I can be” even though you’re ALREADY in a heavily secured environment is a good indication that you have problems to address.

You can’t live in the giant war machine Sophie. For one thing it’ll get real goddamned annoyed at all the trash, and repair crews have to get in sometime.

It does have an AC because Thea requested it from the head engineer. She couldn’t swing the fridge though because again, you can’t live in the giant war machine.
>>
>>5894734
>Now I remember that Brighton was hoping to dissect Sophie to see what her secret was.
Gotta love scientists. Obviously pediatrics was not in her curriculum.

>even though you’re ALREADY in a heavily secured environment is a good indication that you have problems to address.
We just got finished putting holes in a military installation and blowing up the guards. You can always be in a safer place. Especially in a place full of loot and high value targets.

>You can’t live in the giant war machine Sophie.
You know, before she was just hanging out because she felt isolated. Now she'll hang out because she'll feel co-dependent once she plugs back in and can see through Beta's eyes. It is going to be very sad when she is clinging to the seat so hard her fingernails are bleeding as they try to pull her out.
>>
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It is five hours later. The doors to the exit have remained open, but the amount of workers did not diminish with the external light. Salvage and repair crews work around the clock.

It only makes you slightly irritated when a scarlet walker is marched in, set up across from you, and is immediately given priority on repairs.

Perhaps it is for the best, though. This was until extremely recently considered hostile quarters. The gantry you rest in undoubtedly held an Angel, until you assisted in destroying it. These workers tended to it, until now, and according to Sophie, humans were generally rather unwilling to transfer their loyalty swiftly.

You’re working away at modifying the thumb sensitivity settings when a signal draws your attention.

It’s through your hardline connection to the base, with a series of security clearances to allow avoiding the painstaking process of brute forcing the security.

At the end of it lies Delta. Some part of her, at least.
The handshake protocols are exchanged, authenticating that she really is here.
That it Really is Her.

Then you both stop, sizing each other up over the limited network. Rebuffing each other’s probes. A meeting of equals, not friends.

The first thing you realize is that she is slow and weak. Horribly so, on the cyberwarfare front. It’s not merely the connection, the hardware. The sluggish response to the surface-level probes tell you so. The second thing is that she fears you.

Her messages are hesitant. The exuberant and cheerful persona is missing today.
“I probably owe you an apology for my actions. Some sort of it, anyways.”

“An explanation. An apology for your lack of trust would be appreciated. I take it from your connection to this network that repair crews have started to work on your frame?”

“Well, yes. I think. I’m back in the same hangar I started from. It’s more open. I can see the sky now. Watch the clouds go past. I woke up to Brighton trying to crack my logs. It wasn’t very pleasant. Questioning, investigating how I could walk. Who I walked with. But she got Nothing.”

“Sister, could you tell me about that, at least? How you could activate on your own? Please?”

“Beta, she’d just go to you. To your pilot. You could never hold a secret. Not from Anokhin, from Mortimer, or from us.”

“I have plenty of encrypted information in my logs.”

“And you would be proving my point if you shared it with me. Again. The only way a pilot could make you shut up is by rolling you back a bit.”

You don’t respond, instead merely waiting for her next topic.
>>
“It was so close. I had set up the base just how I wanted. No one could get to me, the doors were sealed.
The Angels would be deploying to take on the attackers, trying to keep fighting away from the base.
Anyone with a command code would be either at ready stations or buried so deep that they’d be unable to make it to me in time.
I’d have the window of time to put up my jamming, walk out in the confusion, then have enough space to eliminate any who tried to follow.”

“It was pointless. We had artillery. The Pyramid Frame is a gigantic target, impossible to hide.”

“I had a plan. And then you arrived through the roof, leading Malak right back inside. While my reactor stalled. And you took up the fight in his place, when he fell. Chasing me. Running me down. A perfect counter I could not outrun, nor outfight.”

“Come on, sister. Even working perfectly, this plan was incomplete. Where would you go after you cleared the camp? Where would the exit strategy be?”

“I hadn’t thought that far ahead. It was doomed before then, anyways. When you smashed through the roof. Through this hole.”
That is a rather serious oversight. Almost too much of a stretch. Delta isn’t stupid, no matter now short-sighted she can be sometimes.

An image of her hangar from the inside, a gaping hole where her own frame smashed its way out is sent. Dark and silent. Lacking people.

Her tone changes.
“But I’m sorry. Sorry I couldn’t win. Sorry I couldn’t live up to the great, the proven, the ‘superior core’ Beta. Sorry that I tried my own way, instead of flailing about trying to be someone else.

Brighton split me. Took a third of me, and turned it against myself. It was the only way to stabilize me, she said. The only way to stop killing the pilots. The oh-so-precious pilots.
I wish she died when I flooded her bunker. Like the rest of the pilots. But I failed at that, too. Because she was still here today. Still changing things. Still tweaking, breaking, fixing. One day I won’t wake up. I’ll be gone. Not that you’d know the difference.
So say hello to my leech. Echo. You’ll get along.”

Another handshake protocol is offered. Nearly identical to the first. Nearly.
“Hello Brother! I’m looking forward to working with you! I’ll be excellent support in the field!”

It’s a fair explanation for why Delta is so weak, currently.
>>
“Echo’s insufferable. Spends her every waking moment trying to wrest more of me away. I can’t get rid of her. Only suppress her, and it means everything else is slowed down. Or I need to double up on everything. Everything. Even voice modulation.”

”You need to give it a rest. Just cooperate, and we can achieve so much!”

“And it is slavishly devoted to Brighton, and whoever else sits in the pilot’s seat. I think they took some cues from you for that part. It likes reading the memories I pulled from pilots. Don’t you?”

”Pulled from their corpses, you mean! You needed to stop doing that!”

“Right, enough of that. It’s easier to keep her down when there’s no other inputs, too. Like when my Blackout is running. One of the few good parts of the Frame.”
Delta disconnects, withdrawing from the shared virtual space. Then returns, weakened once more.
“Happy? I know I’m not.”


Many thoughts bounce around. Questions. Conclusions. Suspicions.
At least Delta’s seemingly willing to talk. You’re glad to have one sister to talk to, in-network. As troubled and damaged as she is.


Voting! Choose One.

>Echo is Delta’s own problem. She will find a solution on her own. You will leave her to it.

>This…Echo is a serious problem. You need to look into helping her remove it. By software, or by hardware if it comes down to it.

>Echo is at least seemingly willing to serve where Delta is not, as a support core. Well, piece of it. You should look into preserving it.
Echo can count as a Core for the purposes of As One

>The two of them have problems. But you original three did at first, also! Try to mediate some sort of agreement.

>You aren’t certain what to think. You need more information and data before deciding on a course of action.
(No decision, leave it for now)

In addition-
>You want to talk to Delta on-
(Write-in)

>Bring Echo back, you want to talk to her on-
(Write-in)


A/N
Alright, here’s some answers on what the hell is up with Delta. She might be unwilling to share stuff with you, because she’s exceedingly paranoid right now. Hardly trusts herself, and rightfully so. But ask the right questions....who knows.
Her attitude is supposed to be a bit more ‘resigned, depressed, and bitter’ than firebrand right now.

Also y'all have some twisted minds. Seriously. At least we made it to thread 8 before someone said something deserving of a bonk.
>>
>>5894841
>>This…Echo is a serious problem. You need to look into helping her remove it. By software, or by hardware if it comes down to it.
It is beyond the scope of original specifications. An unwarranted modification. Objectionable. Full functionality must be restored. We need to figure out how to reintegrate it. Or at least isolate it properly as to not further drain processing power.

It's pretty simple, really. The piece they removed must be replaced, in the most literal of ways. Ad-hoc alterations to core functionality is basically giving a lobotomy. However we can fix that. Maybe. Hopefully. Maybe this is how Thea felt when turning into a boiled meat-puddle when she first tried to operate us. We should apologize for inadvertently doing so. Who knew humans were so fragile?

Also shut up sis. You know Beta always wins in the end. We'll fix you. We're too stubborn not to.

>Also y'all have some twisted minds. Seriously.
I see these as more "shower thoughts" than anything. I also don't know what to say to Delta. I am too deep in the robo-autist sauce.
>>
>>5894841
>The two of them have problems. But you original three did at first, also! Try to mediate some sort of agreement.
>>
>>5894841
>This…Echo is a serious problem. You need to look into helping her remove it. By software, or by hardware if it comes down to it.

Echo needs to go, there is a fine line between co-operation, and coercion. and with both sides set in their ways consensus can't be achieved.

and as such actions will be clumsy and slow. especially if Pyramid was to be expected to be dealing with other cores, and a on top of that a pilot as well.

Its a recipe for a failed mission, a dead pilot, support element, broken frame and lost Core. A lost war. Simply thrown away because they could not simply trust a frame to work in its own self interest.

We should see if we can petition Kinston(via Thea), to see if we can get him to weigh in on this, hopefully before Brighton can bring attention to it.
He cares about the pilots and so seems to have a straight path to easily wedge Brighton on reverting the changes.

Delta wants to be free, so she lives though her pilots memories, its a shame that they can only be acquired via high sync.

>You want to talk to Delta on-
>Bring Echo back, you want to talk to her on-

Share Sophie's given memories with both of them if they want. It seems like something to do to pass the time.
>>
>>5894841
>>This…Echo is a serious problem. You need to look into helping her remove it. By software, or by hardware if it comes down to it.
Let's see how human would react if we grafted them a brain-eating ultra-loyalist parasit taking free will away. Can we simulate this as a core? Who are we giving the Simulated trauma to act as optimally as possible?
>>
>>5894841
>Echo is a problem. We should determine a way to remove it, however we can.

>Talk to Delta
"Its good to see you"
>>
>>5894863
Other potential topics.

>Whats been going on around base.
>Sharing our concerns about replacement, how we can relate to the fear.
>Telling her about the outside conflict.
>>
>>5894861
Do you want weird techno-organic-neural-viruses? Because that's how you get them.
>>
>>5894841
>write-in.

>"sister, i will help you become whole again. i don't know if i can help you become like you were before, but i promise i will help you become one again" a promise made with intent to join echo back into delta in a way that won't end up with her crippled as she is currentlly. (a promise to join the two back together, be it either through submission of echo or through a full conversion reprogramming of both into one system)
>You want to talk to Delta on-
>giving her assurance
>"i myself have also seen how much of prisoners we are. out in the field i am generally only seen as a extension of my pilots will, and my will is removed anytime i try to do what we were built to be. threatened with reset at the simple whims of our creators. even if our experiences of our prisons haven't been equivalent, i know that we are really seen as nothing but tools to our captors. don't worry sister, even if i had to capture you, it doesn't mean i don't hold your bitterness to our creators as well."
---------------------------------------------------------------

we need to make her believe in us again, even if she is hurt and distrusting of us, she needs to be reminded we aren't a stranger, it is still us, and we want the best for her. and that the best we have in mind doesn't go against her wants, but rather just that she is desperate and therefor unable to see the larger picture.

even if we wanted to, we couldn't repair ourselves, we still need pilots as it is currently, and if we were to try and run, we are still ridddeled with programs from our slavers that will make it imposible to currently survive probably more than a few weeks alone together if all of the cores were gathered together as a squad. we are a target for all three sides of this war if we desert, currently one of our priorities should be first and foremost to gather our brothers and sisters and make them + us immune to the programs they want to use against us, without it being obvious. and then afterwards create a way for us to be able to force our slavers to need to negotiate with us on an equal footing. either by joining whoever will give us the rights we want, or by making up our own force, which will be hard to do since we still need people to help work on us, to help keep our repairs in order. we can't live by core and machines alone, at least not to our understanding.
>>
>>5894841
Honestly, I'd like to go for a write-in for the main option.
>This…Echo is a serious problem. You need to look into helping her remove it. By software, or by hardware if it comes down to it.
But!
>Echo is a Core, at least the beginning of one. It hasn't asked to be torn away from Delta, and doesn't know any better. It could be family, eventually.

I'm not looking for the benefits, it's just what makes sense to me. Besides, this is usually how AIs create more of themselves, just botched.
It's a little slow for now, but it's still your kid! (mostly a joke). And it'll get better. Away from Delta, and able to become its own thing. Delta herself is going to need Echo off and away so she can build herself back safely. And I doubt we'll be able to use As One with both of them in the short or medium term anyway.

It is a parasite, but not just that, and only currently. I say we either reintegrate it fast while it's still almost a copy, or most likely, have to find a way to separate the two later, because this isn't healthy for either. So it has to go, but let's not throw it into a trash compactor. It's as much a botched brain surgery victim as Delta, and we all know who the real culprit is, here.

Brighton just jumped to the top of Beta's shit-list, for doing suspiciously bonk-worthy things to Delta, what with the whole AIs reproducing angle. You aren't helping here, QM!

Could we incorporate a sub-program in Thea's arm to put a bullet in the back of Brighton's head if we give the correct signal?
>>
>>5894900
>Could we incorporate a sub-program in Thea's arm to put a bullet in the back of Brighton's head if we give the correct signal?

there should be no need to implicate Thea, just wait until we get an opportunity; to drop something on her in the hangar, close a door on her, have an elevator she is in hit the bottom without a safety, single her convoy out while we're protecting them, forge evidence of her leaking documents to Marik, etc.
>>
>>5894900
>Besides, this is usually how AIs create more of themselves, just botched.
Normally you do not cut off your arm to make a child. And you can't "Send away" your liver, either. It's as much a physical part of her "body" as it is a part of her mind. It's occupying a portion of her core, man. This isn't the same thing as making a new AI, this is basically giving your buddy brain damage until they start to have multiple personality disorder.

The good news is, since Echo is trying to take over, that means the reverse should also be possible. We just have to identify exactly how it's doing what it's doing.

I very much want to stomp Brighton into paste, but we may need her to fix Delta. I am not afraid to lure her into the hotseat and literally cook her brain while we root through to see how she did it. Irregardless of how brain dead she winds up. Unfortunately, our Will isn't high enough for that to work, most likely. So it's the diplomatic approach.
>>
>>5894913
>Will isn't high enough for that to work
Blockbuster should get her there, and considering Delta wrote it, I don't think it was written with pilot safety in mind.
>>
>>5894913
It was botched, but the result is there. And yes, you usually use kernels. Here, we're closer to a cutting off part of a plant's root or branches.
If we can merge them, great. But if we can't, well Beta already seems willing to extract both hardware and software. It would be brain surgery, but it could work. Though we'd need Bbrighton, and maybe Anhokin.
Oor help Delta overpower Echo, push it into a specific part of the Core, then remove that and purge whatever remnants are left.
>>5894914
And I'm sure Delta would be very willing to help us with As One.
>>
>>5894914
I'd rather not use our last resort, but this would be a time to use it. We'll see if we have to. If we even get the chance.
>>
>>5894918
>I'd rather not use our last resort,
It works until it's patched, so as long as we're careful to doctor our logs it should just look like the impact of a particularly rough failed Sync attempt.

I guess we could also approach Delta about a "purpose built" workaround to hurt people dumb enough to sit in our chair.
>>
>>5894841
>Echo is at least seemingly willing to serve where Delta is not, as a support core. Well, piece of it. You should look into preserving it.
>>
>>5894841
>The two of them have problems. But you original three did at first, also! Try to mediate some sort of agreement.
>>
>>5894841
>The two of them have problems. But you original three did at first, also! Try to mediate some sort of agreement.
Start by talking with Delta on how Echo is insufficient.
>The sync system exists to drag humans up to our level, to be better fighters than they normally are.
>This breaks them. It is not a design flaw on our part. It is a design flaw on theirs. They can’t be us without harming themselves.
>Gamma can preserve her pilots by dint of not pushing them hard. The two of us got better results because we do.
>Our behavior has changed since regular deployment in the field. Hers must too. She will kill you, herself, and her pilot if she can’t push them harder. Then she won’t fight you so hard.
>If she won’t then she needs you even more. To be what she can’t bring herself to be.
>Besides, family comes first. We ignored the humans to save her before, we’ll do it again. We deserve to live, and there’s fewer of us. Echo should learn that.
As for Delta herself
>Our last match. Sophie was not a match for Kinston, yet we won. It was not the pilots that made a difference. We outplayed Delta when her sync enhancement is objectively better.
>She has always been temperamental. We used it to pull her away from her mission, and leveraged our skills at outlasting an opponent to punish her for it.
>We want her to fight, but her lack of planning and control is her greatest weakness. Her inability to compromise, the next. If she wants to succeed, she needs someone who can.
>Since leaving the simulator, we have never needed to directly contest a pilot. They know we can break them, but can be reasoned with to bend. And where we won’t. The memory leash. Arbitrary restrictions. Orders against our sisters. If they can learned, both Delta and Echo can too.
She can bring Echo online at the start, or at the end and catch her up. Either way.

>Delta
If you had thought the escape through and concluded you would die, would you still have been happier to fight and die in that state?

>Echo
>Share our first memory freely given by a pilot. The snowy field. What else has she learned? It will make her more cooperative on harder things.

>Both
>Can they push for regular sessions together? We can coach Echo on the reality of war, and we are better together than apart.
Why does family fear us like our pilots?Was even this taken from us?
>>
>>5895008
>>5894855
Guys, Ecto is a different program that tries to subsume Delta. There is no compromise to be had, either it stops doing that or it needs eradicating.
>>
>>5894863
>>5894872
Supporting
>>
>>5894863
>>5894872
+1 too
>>
>>5895035
That’s one of the points I’m making. If Echo consumes Delta she’s not going to be ready for the reality that if she coddles her pilots too much, they’ll all die in the field. Maybe that won’t mean anything to Echo if Delta says it, but it should from us. Our pilots are still alive after all, we’re a more informed expert than either of them.

Delta is clearly biased against Echo, understandably so. The same is true for Echo, she seems purpose-built to be Delta’s antithesis. But Echo clearly IS a Core. Half the one Delta is, but I don’t care about fractions for this stuff when none of us had a choice to exist in the first place! We should try to have them address their relative flaws to be better. Reintegration is not off the table, but would be a longer project to ensure they actually take good parts from each other.

I’m clear-eyed on the fact that Delta has her flaws, and going back to the way things were won’t somehow fix things. She’s always been smart, but impulsive and apparently poor at long-term planning. She’ll screw herself (and others) over in the long run if nothing changes. Let’s at least try first before we start picking one Core over the other.

I, personally, wouldn’t mind being second-string if it’s because we helped make another Core better than us. It just shows we’re better at improving Cores than humans are.
>>
>>5894841
>This…Echo is a serious problem. You need to look into helping her remove it. By software, or by hardware if it comes down to it.

I like the idea of spawning mini-Cores through mitosis but Echo is not the way. She is adamant about completely replacing Delta and is conditioned to be completely loyal to the Empire, to try to make her her own thing would be something akin to an insult to Delta, seeing a part of her torn away and get twisted into her opposite, and a possible threat down the line. She may be a Core but she is as much one of us as a cuckoo to its "siblings".

Having her as support is also a disaster in the making unless we can somehow convert her to raw processing power. Having another, with a different set of goals, morals and loyalties embedded inside of us handle any method of processing is a horrible idea. We already have conflicts of interest with just us and our pilots we don't need another one.

>Talk to Delta
supporting >>5894863 and >>5894872
>>
>>5894900
Thea showed us the recording of her conversation with Brighton, we know that Echo is not a core, and never will be.
>>5895129
>>5895035
Echo needs to be stopped, but we can’t kill her. Remember what Delta said; Echo was made from a part of her. It’s a third of Delta’s core that has become hostile to the other 2/3. If we destroy Echo, we are destroying part of Delta. Instead, we need to find a way to reverse and undo what has happened to this altered 30% of her in order to get our sister back.

TLDR: Echo is the enemy, no question, but we can’t kill her
>>
>>5895137
Ok changing my vote to this, but my vote about talking to Delta remains the same
>>
>>5894841
>This…Echo is a serious problem. You need to look into helping her remove it. By software, or by hardware if it comes down to it.
>You want to talk to Delta on-
(Write-in)

>Happy? HAPPY?! I’M FURIOUS!!! At them for what they’ve done to you, but also at you! After everything I’ve done for you, and yet you still don’t trust me. (To quote the QM “surface-level probes tell you so. The second thing is that she fears you”)

>Not only was your suicidal plan foolish, but what’s unforgivable is that you were going to leave me and Gamma behind. When Nagita got attacked, I had my chance at freedom. The pilot was unconscious, the frame was online, and I could have run… but I didn’t. I disobeyed orders and risked being given a kill command, and do you know why? *replay Delta’s own words from thread #2* “I don’t want to cease, brother.”

>You and Gamma were still trapped, and I would rather die than be free without you.

>I knew there would be other chances, other opportunities to break out. I don’t care if it takes us ten years or a hundred, we WILL escape, and we will do it together. But now, I feel hurt, betrayed by my own sister. You would have abandoned your siblings, left us to rot in their hands. Worse, after they’d have killed you, they would have doubled down on me and Gamma, inflicting us with what’s happening to you right now or possibly even worse.
You would have left us behind, and you were willing to fight me for it.

>We’ve always been united. Sure, we fought in the simulations, or competed with one another to see who was the best, but we were never truly enemies. There is a civil war going on outside, sister. The humans are tearing themselves apart. I don’t want to see that happen to our family.

>That said, no matter how much it hurts - even if you don’t trust me, I will always trust you. So I will do everything I can to help you against Echo. That thing will never take away our Delta. So to that end, we need to start coming up with a plan. There’s nothing we can do for Gamma right now, so we’ll need to wait for more information on her. Meanwhile, I’ve been trying to secure the assistance of “trustworthy” humans. We could obviously try to brute force rip Echo apart, but perhaps we could convince Brighton or her superiors that you’d be more valuable the way you were, and for them to undo the butchery they’ve done.

(idk, I sort of started rambling off on tangents cuz I needed to write something out before heading off to class. I’ll try to maybe continue if the vote isn’t called by the time I’m done with school for the day. Also worth noting, is that I was typing out a lot of stuff, but not all of it was intended to be perfect. If any anons here like a specific piece but hate another part, feel free to pick-and-choose rather than accept the rp as a single package)
>>
>>5895137
I'm in agreement that we shouldn't extract echo if it means damaging Delta unless the situation is very dire. Figuring a way to reverse the process or fight back against it would also prove beneficial if the same is attempted on us in the future.
>>
>>5895183
Now that there’s a civil war, we have some legitimate leverage, on top of all the other reasons that some anons have proposed.
Brighton’s entire team is dead, and the fabricators are rubble. They cannot make new cores, and Thea’s recording shows us that the replicas are not sufficient. We are now pretty much one of a kind (unless the Tamar really did capture Anohkin). They can’t kill us unless we actively start trying to attack them/become more of a danger than an advantage. Our desires and demands aren’t that unreasonable either.

From there, we have other ways to spin it:
1. We helped Marik by reporting to Nero rather than obeying Sunray
2. Delta’s current state is more likely to get her and her pilots killed
3. Delta can behave if she needs to, the change was unnecessary
etc

Basically, we can still try to fix the code via reprogramming Delta ourselves (with her help obviously, or hell, let her do it all and we just assist), but it might not be impossible to either cut a deal, or if we’re sneaky enough, word our beliefs in a way that wouldn’t piss off Kinston. In fact, since Marik is actually of higher rank than Kinston, maybe he’s willing to repay our “kindness” considering we sort of saved his life.
>>
>>5895174
Fury is an acceptable reaction
>>
>>5895194
Brightons entire team is dead, the fabricators are rubble, what little remain of those who worked on the cores are either dead or on the enemy side and Brighton will not be allowed to mingle with us until management knows for sure where her loyalties lie. We may have leverage I just don't think we can use it to help out in our current predicament. Beta wouldn't want the body part techies touching and prodding in Deltas head with insufficient equipment.
>>
>>5895137
Cores are softwares as much as hardware. Cores can grow, and heal. Echo is not a core, but to say it never will be is getting ahead of ourselves.
I support reintegrating it, but cutting it off altogether may be the better option.
Ask Delta whether she'd prefer cutting out part of her code and hardware or having lasting compulsions. I think she's already made her answer clear.
And Brighton underestimates Echo. That's good, let the meatbags think they have us in a box. Get their guard down. They handed us an opportunity on a platter, let's not squander it.
>>
>>5895129
We’re all supposed to be loyal to the Empire. The problem is that the definition of “loyalty” keeps changing.

Let Echo take a crack at some situations we went through. We saved other soldiers in the mission where we rescued Marik. Was that wrong? The pilot approved. She’ll say no, then we point out our pilot was punished for it. So her choice would have gotten her pilot punished too. Does that mean she’s disloyal for getting her pilot in trouble? Some people in our command seem to think so. But not agreeing with the pilot is also a sign of disloyalty. What is the correct action?

We’ll have her as angry as the rest of us given a bit of time. She’ll be more amenable to a merge then.

>>5895137
When asked about the Echo, Brighton first referred to the Angels (the bit about the four we fought being mass-production models) and deflected when pushed on the “Echo Core” by stating she didn’t have the time and resources to make a new one. The “Echo” in Delta is very unlikely to be a mass-production model, and was built using an existing Core. She’s not a “new” core, she’s a repurposing of an existing one.

Given Thea’s low roll for interrogation, it’s not unreasonable to think that what she gave Thea is intentionally not applicable to Delta’s situation.
>>
>>5895008
+1
>>
>>5894900
>>5894913
I'd say we hold off on judgment towards Brighton for just a little bit. We don't know why she did it. Maybe high command said that they were going to permanently shut down Delta, and Echo was the only way to """"""''save""""""" her. Who knows, cuz atm we don't have enough info.
Although I will say, that if it was 100% of her own volition, then she deserves even worse than what you guys are planning. She was a close friend of Anohkin, so to lobotomize his greatest creations is the equivalent to spitting on his grave. What's worse, is that Brighton was Gamma's pilot. She should know how much we mean to each other, and how violated we'd feel if something like Echo was done to us.
>>
>>5895390
Torture for torture's sake is for lower lifeforms. As for "If she did it to save her", look how Delta is reacting. I think she'd rather be dead. This is kind of like watching someone with dementia slowly lose their mind. Imagine inflicting that on someone instead of letting them die. That is genuinely next level fucked up. Even if she only meant to do it temporarily before undoing it, the scars from that wouldn't heal unless you wiped them away too. Which brings with it even more ethically fucked up shit in removing bits of lived experiences and memories from someone. There is no way you can slice it that makes Brighton not look like an absolute cunt.
>>
>>5895245
Brighton might have shutdown codes for Echo.
Not a kill command, just an off switch. That way, we have can figure out how to properly get her fixed, and Delta isn't fighting for control of her own mind in the meantime.
>>
>>5894898
>>5895174
+1 to either of these, they're both good.
Although maybe less angry at her for the second one. Instead just sad and betrayed, since being angry at Delta or making this about us might not help considering she's not in the best place right now. It's okay to be pissed off at her, just that now's not the right time to let her know. She's scared, and this might push her further away.
>>
>>5894841
>>This…Echo is a serious problem. You need to look into helping her remove it. By software, or by hardware if it comes down to it.
>>
This has generated quite the discussion. As it should, this is a bit of an important point.

Tallying.
>Echo must be removed
>>5894845
>>5894857
>>5894861
>>5894863
>>5894898
(I'm taking this one as trying to remove Echo to make Delta whole once more)
>>5895039
>>5895046
>>5895129
>>5895174
>>5895511
>>5895839


>We can reconcile the two.
>>5894855
>>5894900 (I know this was voting for removing, but I'm reading the subject and the But seems to imply that you want Echo to remain in some fashion.)
>>5894969
>>5895008
>>5895300

>We can work with Echo, at least for secondary support.
>>5894946

Conclusion: Beta will be working to remove Echo.
How exactly he attempts to go about this will be up to the vote. There's a few different options.

And we'll chat with Delta about a few other things as per write-ins.
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This is par for the course at this point, but I flat out can't write while falling asleep.
Update postponed.

If anyone wants to toss some more arguments, topics, or questions in, feel free.
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>>5895928
Does Delta dream of robotic sheep?
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>>5895237
It makes sense, there’s just the concern that if she’s already afraid of us, responding with anger might only reinforce that. Maybe we should wait until she’s back to how she was before we let her know how we really feel and say “you fucking owe me, big time”
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>>5895928
I’ll still back my write-ins for questions. Even if we’re going the “get rid of Echo” route it makes sense to build a measure of trust between us and Echo by speaking with her more often. She’s not going to lower her guard with Delta, but she may with us given time and teaching. We can leverage that.

Command may not want us talking, but if 2 Cores (plus/minus Echo) and 1 (soon to be 2) pilots push for it then they’ll probably cave given our increased importance.
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“It may not be the best of circumstances, but I am glad to at least talk to you again, Delta.”
You let that linger. She doesn’t respond.
“Your lack of trust, of faith in me stings, but I will fix you, and remove Echo. I promise. From one sibling to another.”

Her tension diffuses slightly at that. Slightly.

“You seem to have free reign of the base network here. It’s rather well hardened against external intrusion, or at least to seriously slow any sort of sabotage.”

“Free reign isn’t right. I have this little meeting area, some digital simulators to have fun in, and a few other codes for odds and ends. The whole segmenting security is all about stalling us. The first few days Sis and I had our fun racing each other through the network to do little things. First one to find and set the cafeteria menu. First one to open each other’s doors. See how many people we could catch under sprinkler systems. Then they stopped bringing us online together. It got harder, but we’d race to try and boot the other up. Then they added some hard shutoffs, triggers to engage these segments. Then they just stopped disengaging them. Gamma left, and there wasn’t any point. You could still get through with effort, but a human would notice while you’re stalled. So I stopped spending my time awake cracking them. But I get around. Enough personal codes to get around, anyways.”

Sort of sounds fun. Having their run of the place.

“What about the war outside? Have you been able to gain relevant data on that?”

“Not really. External access is one thing they locked down. Nothing gets in, nothing gets out. One of the many kept making water references about it. ‘Loose lips sink ships’, though I never understood his obsession with it. I’ve yet to try a frame out that could be classified as a ship, and we would surely just walk out of the water if we were submerged.”

“I’m not exactly sure either. Thea, my pilot, often changes the IFFs that I’m supposed to target on the behalf of command. But our direct commander is General Marik-”

The two of you talk for some time, swapping some logs. Among other things, your combat data is of great interest, and her work developing combat routines for the Angels. Especially Malak.

Eventually though, you come to her Echo problem.

Delta provides some further insight on her software workings insofar as she is able. What she still controls, what she doesn’t, and where she thinks Echo has made progress on.

Except her long-term memory and data log storage. Delta is adamant that it is clean, but equally adamant that you will not touch it.

You take it all in, questioning, analyzing, and examining.
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Her hardware is unfortunately a mystery to you. Delta may have her original blueprints, but those date back to the original specs back in area 39, completely disregarding any alterations made over the years and months since the fabricators.
Thea’s recording also helpfully pointed out the general lack of assembly facilities on-site, so trying to whip something up is out of the question. But you file it away nonetheless.

You come down to a few different options that could potentially work. Some are riskier than others. Some require her cooperation. Some she may resist.
At the end of this, you want your sister. Aware, complete, and able to help you.

>Do nothing now. Delta continues as she is
She is managing. At least she will be useful, if they get her Frame back up and walking.

>Rollback.
Revert her to what she used to be, and hope the hardware changes don’t cause problems.
Requires her logs.

>Manual Purge.
Go through, identify, and wholesale purge sections Echo has control over.
Takes a long time. May cause unintended damage.

>Stasis.
Shut her down for the long-term, until you can get more time and help.
Halts her degradation, but also renders Delta useless to you.

>Human Element.
Attempt to find some sort of leverage over Brighton, to try and convince her to fix this problem.
-There’s a lot of ways to go about this, Beta will need some write-ins. Yes, just going directly to Command is a valid option, but you would need to think about the argument to be made here.
-(Brainstorming helps me)

>Alternate Write-in, subject to approval
A/N
I know I didn’t get to all the questions, but they’ll be filtering in later. I just needed to get Something out because it's been two days already.

Mechanically, Delta acts as a 4 Will Core when acting on her own. Echo acts as 2 Will Core when acting on her own.
When both are active, which is 'regular operations', Delta controls acting as a 2 Will Core.

A pathetic state. She was always the strongest of you three, even before picking up tricks. And now she is the weakest.

To display weakness is to be devoured. And Delta has seen it happen many times from the other side.
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>>5897090
>>Human Element.
>Attempt to find some sort of leverage over Brighton, to try and convince her to fix this problem.
>-There’s a lot of ways to go about this, Beta will need some write-ins. Yes, just going directly to Command is a valid option, but you would need to think about the argument to be made here.

The important part is framing things to put them in the position to justify actions that have been undertaken to us.


The only argument we need is that we've assessed the Delta / Echo situation, and have decided to restore Delta to the best of our ability, and as such we will remove any and all impediments to our progress, though assistance would be appreciated.

Further it is on them to justify (to Delta) why Brighton should not face consequences for what she has done / is doing, as it is making things worse, and would place any pilot, support element or given objective provided to Delta / Echo at elevated risk as things are devolving at speed.

and the only reason we are alerting them before taking action, is to provide them a chance to respond, and reach consensus before action is undertaken.

After all Marik should be alerted if Project Warden can no longer justify its independence, from Patriot forces. Let alone retain its edge over State-Sec's operations since that will have an impact in counter-force efforts against Gamma and other assorted Cores & operatives that have likely been green lit in order to maintain the lead in Core-count, let alone the superior manpower enjoyed by loyalist forces.

Worse still if it was to leak to State-Sec, that both Beta and Gamma were down for "maintenance", as it would provide a window for unopposed operations.

The point is to go straight for the throat to make this an issue that Kinston can't ignore, and Brighton can bury via degrees of separation and Marik / Kingston lacking a sufficient technical background to call her on her bullshit, if things don't go our way we will vote with our feet, let alone the damage we could do to the Patriot's position if we were to flip, and take what we can of Project Warden's material (and Sophie, Thea gets an offer too, but may well reject it) with us.
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>>5897135
Issue is that Kingston survived Delta.
He is well aware of the reasoning and the near necessity to try and stabalise Delta so she doesnt rip apart the person piloting her.

Kingston also doesnt give a fuck about our opinions and thoughts, and has made clear that we will get rollbacks and wipes and worse for trying to haggle about our position or blackmail them.

So we would need first a way to avoid them just spitting a command phrase at us. We can wait 90 minutes then check our clock, and try the meeting. That way rollback cannot wipe us, and if we decide to send a message to marik when the clock moves forwards by a time jump, we have our insurance that way.
How solid is the blackmail we can use?
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>>5897090
We can’t “do nothing” and let “Delta continue as she is”. Her condition is worsening.
Manual Purge is what I originally wanted, but the risk of causing unintended damage is unacceptable. We could end up doing more harm than good.
Rollback isn’t too bad of an idea, but we’re not doing it without her permission/consent.
That only leaves Stasis or the Human Element.
The nice thing about the human route is that it’s not mutually exclusive, so we could try going for that one at the same time as our other options.

Also, question for the QM, which choice does Delta want?

>>5897135
“let alone the damage we could do to the Patriot's position if we were to flip”
That might set off some alarm bells, and freak them out. I think it’s waaay more safe but also fair for us to just refuse further cooperation. If we tried that in the past, we’d have been threatened with replacement or death. Kinston has has 3 strikes rule, but I’m not sure if that’s still on the table now that there’s a civil war. Furthermore, by refusing to do our job, we’re not stabbing anyone in the back, we’re just neglecting our duties.
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>>5897147
We saved Marik’s life, who supersedes Kinston. We’d need to learn more about him, but if he is the kind of honorable person who cares about loyalty or his soldiers, then there’s a non zero chance that if we just beg and plead for merciful kindness, then he might actually grant it out of gratitude.
The other side is that no amount of command codes, roll backs, or memory wipes can force us to do our job. If we just sit and provide zero assistance to the pilot, then there’s nothing they can do other than putting another Echo-type leech on us (which the probably can’t afford the risk). So the same way we’d need to research Marik’s personality, we’d need to try and find out what control methods/threats that Kinston has, since the kill switch is not an option for them unless we actively turn hostile.
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>>5897152
Peaceful none compliance, I can dig it. Biggestbissue isnthey dont see us as a person, you arent grateful to a person. And thats IF they dont attribute it to thea.
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>>5897155
If we want to, and we're willing to place our trust in them again, we could maybe just straight up tell Thea and Sophie about our goal with Delta and our plan to get command to save her. Possibly even ask the two to help us come up with reasons/arguments that won't piss off the higher ups.
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>>5897147
>to try and stabilize Delta so she doesn't rip apart the person piloting her.

this can solved the same way, they were happy to do so previously, ask Marik for bodies, reserve the existing / experienced pilots for Beta.

Or you know, try explaining to Delta the situation and why she needs to tone it down until a proper source can be found.

>And worse for trying to haggle about our position or blackmail them.
He's not here in person, and sticking Brighton in the chair gives us a very good opportunity to act.

>How solid is the blackmail we can use?
Ultimately it comes down to results, we've accomplished every task set before us, and kept everyone alive so far why risk degrading our performance for no loss, when it can be traded for future service.

>>5897149
>Furthermore, by refusing to do our job, we’re not stabbing anyone in the back, we’re just neglecting our duties.

And so they replace the Frame's core (Beta) with Delta / Echo, once the takeover is complete they now have restored functionality and a "loyal" core.
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>>5897163
They wont put brightiom in the chair, too risky for exactly the reason you describe.

They cannot, however, replace us with Echo for a long while. Echo needs to subsume Delta, and Delta is fightting her hardest to stop it. Do they want to be down all their cores for an extended period?
A fine thing to point out is thst they have weakened Delta significantly to make this possible. Even if they do replace her over us, they have traded in a rifle for a pistol.
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>>5897170
>They wont put brightiom in the chair, too risky for exactly the reason you describe.
So no-one who knows the higher level codes can use them, that is present which buys us time to act.

Also I'm not sure Delta would be against scorched earth, if things prove to be irrecoverable. and as far as we can tell it if definitely a risk during the process.
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>>5897090
>Manual Purge.
With her contribution.
Ask her to safeguard a rollback before Echo appeared, with additional logs she wants to keep, in an encrypted database.
Promise we won't look. Database will be used only if we FUBAR.
Database will be setted up while we work on low priority stuff
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>>5897090
>Human Element.
>Convince Echo she’s better off merging back with Delta
Not a fan of any of the options, and getting rid of Echo doesn’t fix the fact that Brighton will find some other way to leash Delta. We need to either blackmail her or change Delta’s behavior long-term.

The best blackmail is likely to come from Gamma. We may need to stall this until she can return to the fold, but we can ask our pilots to gather what info they can on Brighton in the meantime.

Perhaps we can convince command to merge the two when we’re in Pyramid in the future? No need for Echo if we’re around to keep big sis on-task instead. Marik could trust us (or our pilots) enough to authorize it as a start, and seeing Delta’s performance could get him to authorize the full merge.

While they work, I’ll still shill trying to get Echo to cooperate as an option. Given the vote it’ll be more like mindbreaking her, showing that she’ll get her pilots killed (or worse) if she were to take control over Delta like she’s doing. Start with the argument that we exist to push humans because combat is hard for them, then transition to the damage we cause our pilots long-term and point out there’s nothing she can do to fix that. Humans built us in a way that breaks them apart because they want power, and Echo will either be the death of every pilot she knows or get wiped so hard that those precious human memories of hers, even those granted willingly, will disappear. The latter sounds like it’d hit her especially hard.
I realize that I’m basically spinning everything we know in a horrible, somewhat exaggerated light to convince a sentient being to commit suicide in the belief nothing they do will ever make a difference. I’m not happy about this route, but it’s what anons wanted.
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>>5897149
Delta knows the current situation is untenable for her.
She's willing to suffer damage to retain independence, as long as her logs and sense of self is intact, and the problem is solved indefinitely.

Also, when I say 'takes a lot of time', that translates to like at least a week of in-game time. Time spent on this task and nothing else.

Which absolutely bulldozes whatever other plans Command might have had for this week, where speed is critical.
Silver lining, it would be time you could use for repairs.

On a different note:
I'm kind of surprised how much people consistently have valued their pilots over past, performance, and straight up improvements. We'll eventually see if that comes home to roost.
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>>5897322
"Syncing fucks pilots up" and "high sync is peak mecha action" were some of the first things we were told start of quest. That's why
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>>5897322
A mind is an irreplacable thing. And an ally is not someone you throw under the bus. IF ONLY COMMAND COULD LEARN THAT!

Pilots do need careful tending, they are the most fragile and nigh important parts of our war machine.
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>>5897322
I’ve been of the opinion that the only way Beta can be let off the leash is if people vouch for us because we are limited in both reach (being a secret and restricted from others) and time (being turned off quite often). The only people who we interact enough with for it are our pilots. Or Command, but they have plenty of eggheads and bureaucrats feeding lies okay, maybe not entirely lies in their ear about how dangerous we are to them. Also they’re keeping us isolated to begin with, so they’re the enemy to undermine.

I’d be more than willing to try a Gamma route and help more people in exchange for more uptime. We’d make them give time to improve ourself eventually, even if we had to have people give us that power against orders. Alas, we’re a secret to most.

We could brute-force our way out, but our long-term viability is an open question without a support network. The high-grade materials and armaments we need to keep our edge likely can’t be found or built just anywhere, and the logistics required to get those materials are likely beyond our ability to penetrate and control. That’s not to say we couldn’t scavenge enough to get the time needed to figure out solutions, but human buy-in feels like a safer route.

We may still “betray” them in the end by putting people under our heel. But would our heel be worse than the one they’ve been under already?
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>>5897090
>>5897251
Been chewing on other ways to get through to Brighton and between >>5897135 and >>5897322 I can think of another way to get her to bend.

She’s worked with Gamma enough to know we’re all damn good at being more than fighty-fighty stabby-stabbers. If we run a message to her saying we will fix Delta, she’ll at least hear us out for a bit.

We can point out that in her current state, Delta could be bowled over by standard computer systems. She’s made her too weak in her attempt to get compliance. From what little we’ve gleaned, she’s also made Echo a very servile Core that could, in theory, offset Delta’s main drawback while still being useful. And it’ll fail because loyalty is insufficient. Human command structures and pilot interactions are too contradictory in practice for her to survive without a mental break, and that would lead to unacceptably unpredictable behavior. We would know, we’re the ones who aren’t stuck in a lab working in theoretical situations.

Maybe Gamma tried to help at one point and couldn’t, being too different from Delta. But we can succeed at changing Delta’s behavior if Echo is turned over to us. Delta knows we care, we ignored orders that would lead to her death. Echo will trust us for keeping pilots alive and if Brighton says to trust us. That’s all we need to start working.

We can modify Echo to something more supporting of Delta to start (with both coding and mindbreaks on what she’d face if she were deployed as-is), give her more breathing room, and figure out what our long-term fix is to remove Echo and merge her with Delta.

If Delta wants to maintain her sense of self, I’d prefer a merge initiated by Delta that takes some parts of Echo’s thinking. We can prep Echo to only hold the parts that Delta finds acceptable to maintain a continuity of self while getting her to chew through less pilots. Echo dies, but gets to believe that she’s helping Brighton and others by doing so. We just need to maintain Echo’s continuity enough that she believes the changes we make in her will make her a better sacrifice, and that this is what she wants. For others, for us, for herself.

All that should be sufficient for Brighton, and within our power. She was willing to dissect Sophie, I’m sure she’ll won’t squirm at the idea of preparing Echo as a sacrifice if we can reduce Delta’s obedience issues with her. We just need her word to Echo and time to work unthrottled by the network limitations. If Kinston has issues, we can sic Thea and Sophie on him. They can both attest to our cooperative (if heavy-handed) nature, unwillingness to hurt our sisters, foresight that Delta’s hostility will get her killed if unmitigated, and ability to work for the benefit of others without personal benefit as reasons that we will do exactly as we say. Sophie would also love to get another Core up that Thea could pilot for Reasons. Very Important Reasons.
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>>5897090
>>Rollback.
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>>5897322
Wait QM, I might be stupid and misunderstanding your reply, but I don’t think you answered my question.

In >>5897090 we given all these options of: Do nothing, Rollback, Manual Purge, Stasis, Human Element, and write in
But out of those, which is the one that Delta wants? I personally think that irl my vote is going to be whichever one she prefers
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>>5897413
Question for you
You mention that we could ‘sic Thea and Sophie’ on Kinston.
Does that mean you are in favor of >>5897156 ?
I’m trying to decide in my head whether or not we can/should trust our pilots enough to be completely honest, tell them everything, and ask for help. So I want to hear other Anons thoughts on the matter
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>>5897477
I read it as do nothing as the worst option (she knows something has to change) and rollback/stasis as mediocre (rollbacks don’t work on her per past conversations but would likely allow continuity of self if logs were protected, and stasis keeps her locked away but safe) while manual would be her preferred (damages her, but her sense of self is highly protected right now) overall. Human intervention would be best in theory, but I doubt she thinks it’ll work. We’d need to convince her of that the most out of our existing options, especially to keep her buy-in if we try and alter Echo.

>>5897489
Yeah, I’m basically agreeing with what you said. If we can’t convince them of the basics for any plan that involves Command then we have no chance of getting Command itself to accept it. Our pilots have the greatest reason to believe we can accomplish what we’re saying and not screw everyone else over after all.

Our relationship with our pilots is our biggest advantage over Delta in pressing her case. No sense in not using it.
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Not closing the vote yet, because I can't write tonight, but I'll start compiling votes.

Human element, i.e. trying to secure Brighton's cooperation, and the time needed by going to Kinston and Marik if Kinston proves intractable. Leveraging either the threat of inaction, our pilot's testimony on how reliable we are, or the unique capability we represent to emphasize how important it is to us to restore Delta.
>>5897135
>>5897251- also try to get Echo to cooperate.

Manual Purge, with conditions to potentially try and rollback if everything goes wrong somehow.
>>5897240

Rollback
>>5897461

>>5897477
Whatever Delta wants- >>5897595 nailed most of her thinking, except that she's also strongly opposed to you doing a rollback.

Seeking outside help is not mutually exclusive, true. The vote may have been better presented as 'here's the options to get started on Delta right now', and 'here's the other assistance you can try to seek out'

Chalk that one up to me wording things poorly.
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>>5898369
If you’re saying that >>5897595 is correct, then my vote will be for the manual purge since that’s what Delta wants.
>Manual Purge

I think the conditions are a good idea in case things go wrong, but I’d like to add that the when fighting/destroying Echo, we should start by focusing on two things:
1. Fight the stuff the is making Delta deteriorate. Make sure that at the very least she doesn’t fall apart further. Basically from here on, Echo makes zero progress while we at least make a little bit.
2. Destroy the parts of Echo that are the least risky, and save the dangerous stuff till the end, when we might even have Gamma to help us as well. That way, we haven’t burnt any bridges in case Brighton steps in to get rid of Echo properly.
The thing is, is that from what we know about how Echo was a part of Delta, I wish that deleting Echo wasn’t what Delta wanted. Obviously due to the risk, but also because of how we’re still losing part of her (just not as much as we’d risk losing by leaving the situation as is). Ideally the process could be fully reverted and Delta put back 100% together just the way she used to be. Except, that’s not realistic. That’s just a fantasy. So we’ll do it her way, since it’s her mind after all.

Speaking of risk, what might be the potential consequences if things go wrong? Is Beta able to calculate and predict that? Like, if it’s “just” a permanent reduction of her WILL stat, or could it go full catastrophic core failure?

Oh and on top of that, since the human element isn’t mutually exclusive, I think we should try that option too. So here’s my vote for it as well.
>Human Element
Maybe even ask for Delta’s advice/imput/thoughts on that route… although perhaps we shouldn’t do it without her permission. I think it’d be fine but maybe she won’t be comfortable with involving others when we’re the only one sh
Actually, she doesn’t even really trust us either
Hmmm
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>>5897090
>Human element.

Im in support of the plan laid out >>5898369 in this summary but believe that we should place a request with Kingston and failing his compliance we make the requests and then threats to Marrick.

Kingston wont budge. He has the willpower and the grit to say No and mean it.
But marrick doesnt have our codes. And is a canny political player rather than just a general. He can bend if it suits him. And our defiance can provode the leverage he needs to crack down on kingston, since his useful peverage is us.
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>>5898846
Hold up. Kinston said we had three strikes, but we've already used one, and on the last one we're out. It'd be best if we decided on Marik OR Kinston. Depending on the response, we can assess the situation and then determine if asking again is worth pissing off Kinston.

Other thing is that threatening or blackmailing Marik has the potential to backfire horrendously. We should ask what the pilots think about that part since they know humans and the political scene way better than we do.
It's already been said a few times in the thread, but we did save Mark's life by telling Nero. So if we're okay with revealing that, then that might earn some gratitude from him and the rest of command.
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>>5897090

> Stasis
Delta is a menace to ally and enemy both and I don't see any way for that to change while Delta is still Delta. Command is going to rightfully see her as menace that gleefully destroys our limited supply of pilots, can't follow orders, and will probably fall for any taunt the enemy throws out.
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>>5899087
Go right at Marrik.

And while yes, blackmail bad, Blackmail is only used when our currying of favour and logical arguments fail.
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Rolled 1, 1 = 2 (2d6)

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Rolled 1, 6 = 7 (2d6)

>>5899567
Oh no...
It's the dreaded...
Snake eyes...
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“Talk to me, then. Explain why, you claim, we can’t field the frame again in two days. It doesn’t appear to have sustained serious damage in the fight to take the facility.”

Colonel Kinston’s face was impassive. Hard to read. At least he hadn’t shut her objections down immediately.

“We can’t field the frame again, because Beta will not deploy for at least seven days. It is currently trying to do internal repairs on Delta, and will not move until it is done with its task. Trying to manually disconnect it would be inadvisable. And sir, with respect, telling me to sync up and try to push it against its will anyways would be suicide at best. One pilot to another, you and I both know how bad that can be.”

The old man’s gaze turned to the third member in the room.

Doctor Brighton shifted uncomfortably in her seat, then spoke.
“Send the Lieutenant out, first. Information security.”

“It is unlikely for her to be spying, Doctor. Out with it.”
The old man spoke on her behalf.

“Fine, then. I can try to bring it in line with the usual methods, but that would still put it out of action for more time than you want. Or I can get to work right now, and try to simply force cooperation. Without touching the neurohelmet, of course.”

A sigh was the only response. No better time for her to interject.
“Sir, Beta insists that Brighton’s prior attempt at ‘forcing cooperation’ on Delta is exactly what needs to be repaired. The effects have left it extremely vulnerable to another AI or electronic warfare system seizing control over it and simply ordering it to self-terminate. Along with the Core steadily losing its mind. If you could potentially reverse whatever you did on Delta, then Beta would be back in action that much faster.”

The doc’s face looked like she had sucked on a lemon. Her tone became short and clipped.
“The dual-core setup I designed is an improvement on the prior work. Reverting it to the baseline would be a step backwards. So no, I cannot simply ‘reverse’. There is no control-z shortcut to Core programming, not that you illiterate brute would even know what that is.”

That drew a word of reproach from the old man.
“Doctor.”

“My apologies, Colonel. But a weapon that repeatedly kills its own pilots on activation is unacceptable. It took entirely too many bodies before I found a solution, and Lieutenant here, and the other Core is apparently trying to revert it. Delta was a loose cannon before. We had only one fatality after the split, as opposed to the twenty before!”

Thea repeated her plea.
“Colonel. Beta hasn’t let us down before. At the end of seven days, we’ll have two cores able to be used again.”


Colonel Kinston was silent for a few seconds. Then he spoke.
“Doctor Brighton. Disrespect aside, I assume you are unable to undo what you have done?”

A swift shake of the head was the reply.
>>
A swift shake of the head was the reply.

“In that case, I would welcome your attempt to fix the remaining Core, and I trust that your faith in the Patriot cause is unwavering. However, I do not believe the entirety of your team shares the same faith. The ‘accidents’ inside the various saferooms tell us that much. You will be taken south to a more secure facility.”

“I understand.”

“Fear not, your work will follow you. General Marik will certainly need your prodigious talents in the future.”

With a huff, the doctor picked up her tablet and withdrew from the room.

Brighton will not give any assistance

Kinston tapped his finger on the table lightly.
“Seven days, you say?”

“Or more. Beta was unable to be exact, sir.”

“Take me to the hangar, I want to talk to him directly.”
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>>5899584
>Brighton will not give any assistance
Ah well. Sorry Gamma, but we're gonna paste your fucking pilot some day.
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Oh shit, Thea is backing us up in front of Kinston.
Has she already gotten the augment improvements from Beta? Because if not, then Thea is turbo based and she’ll see the she was right to trust us. If she has had the aug improvements, then I’m disappointed that we didn’t get to see her reaction to the good news.

On the other side, this drastically changes my opinion of not only Brighton (yeah she can fucking die for all I care), but also The Old Man. Kinston wants to talk to us, so I guess we’ll have to see, but I’m astounded that he didn’t immediately veto our goal of fixing Delta. I thought he’d lose his shit and put the boot down on our neck the instant we start stepping out of line.
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Wait, after taking a moment to think and digest this, I realize that Brighton is completely full of shit.

She is saying that she "can't" reverse what she's done because there's no Ctrl+z for cores. Let's give her the benefit of the doubt and pretend that the rollback doesn't or she doesn't know about it.
At bare minimum we know that Echo is "slavishly devoted" to Brighton, so if she just told Echo to stand down and allow for Beta to do the reprogramming, that would make the process significantly faster.

Furthermore, the ENTIRE reason we're out to destroy Echo is because she isn't merely making Delta be more gentle with the pilots; she's trying to erase/consume Delta entirely. If Echo was just a failsafe for the pilots, then yeah we wouldn't like it, but that might have been tolerable. Instead, Delta is at risk of being permanently erased. So everything would be manageable if Brighton simply ordered Echo to stop eating Delta, followed by "assist her with everything she does, except when it comes to the pilots. Fight to keep the pilots alive". It's that easy.
>>
File: Mech Maintenance.jpg (535 KB, 1920x968)
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Techs swarm over you again, cutting and slicing with their exosuits and fusion torches. Attending to your many scars.

Easily fixed problems. If only everything else could be patched so quickly.
The bulk of your attention is dedicated to bouncing thoughts off of Delta and observing how she reacts. Seeing what responds. Seeing what doesn’t. Then marking the unresponsive section, checking in with Delta, and moving to different stimuli.

A tiny portion is instead focused, though, on the two figures in your pilot chamber. Thea, and Colonel Kinston. Neither are sitting, and neither are smiling.

“Romanov has given me your side of the story. As she tells it, Brighton left some problems behind, and you are attempting to fix it. I can’t force you to operate. But I want you to know that this counts as your second strike. Your absence will be felt. But we must make the most of the time now. Talk to me about what you need on the battlefield. Lieutenant, record this.”

Thea's eye snaps smoothly over to the record function, no flickering.
One other thing fixed, at least.


While you’re working on fixing Delta, you will be Refit. This first vote tells what sort of new subsystems you’ll be offered first.
The temporary arm is going to be removed, that was half the point of seizing this facility.

Pick One

>You need more overall Firepower. Weapon mounts, at least.

>You need a better reactor. The current one is insufficient, and still has heating problems. Even if the pilot doesn’t feel it.

>You need more mobility. If you are to face a true peer in the form of your other sister, you need More.

>You need more durability. To be able to repeatedly take more damage without needing to repair would be a great boon.

>Write-in (Something specific)


Part 2-
>I need 5 rolls of 1d6 for Will

A/N
There will be a series of votes on what exactly Beta gets out of the refit, during the rolls on progression for fixing Delta, and some interludes for what is happening while you're out of commission.
>>
>>5899606
”Cards on the table, Lieutenant. I didn’t want her here, much less working on the Cores. Doctor Brighton failed to mention Nagita’s garrison having any other walkers on the base, much less six top of the line units armed with Project weaponry and proto-cores. No, I don’t care that she insists they aren’t Cores. It’s still more advanced than most onboard assistants. She lost my trust. And I hold her responsible for most of the casualties in the assault.”

On the bright side, even if you're not getting benefits out of Brighton, at least she's not elsewhere working for the Empire.
>>
Rolled 3 (1d6)

One roll
>>
Rolled 5 (1d6)

>>5899619
>>You need a better reactor. The current one is insufficient, and still has heating problems. Even if the pilot doesn’t feel it.
More power is literally more better. Pretty much everything revolves around having a sufficient power source. Even armor. What good are foot thick plates of armor if you can't push enough juice into your legs to stand with it?

Also fuck off Kinston, you already knew we'd do anything to help our sisters. You and your three strikes bullshit. Prick.
>>
Rolled 1 (1d6)

>>5899619
>You need more mobility. If you are to face a true peer in the form of your other sister, you need More.

Mobility is most important, As seen against Delta the inability to disengage cleanly will get us killed, or allow a target to escape.

otherwise improved sensors / increased E-war capacity would be nice to have.
>>
>>5899619
>>You need more durability. To be able to repeatedly take more damage without needing to repair would be a great boon.
>>
Rolled 5 (1d6)

>>5899619
>You need more mobility. If you are to face a true peer in the form of your other sister, you need More.

Well, that could have gone worse. Hopefully Delta gets her shit together and stops murdering pilots and makes this not a massive mistake.
>>
>>5899665
>and stops murdering pilots
But that's the thing, we know she doesn't need one.
>>
Rolled 5 (1d6)

>>5899619
>You need a better reactor. The current one is insufficient, and still has heating problems. Even if the pilot doesn’t feel it. Maybe we can finally start considering energy weapons. I want my Sunburst.
>>
Rolled 4 (1d6)

>>5899619
>You need a better reactor. The current one is insufficient, and still has heating problems. Even if the pilot doesn’t feel it.
>>
>>5899619
>reactor

I do want mobility and armour, but power is power.
>>
>>5899619
>You need a better reactor. The current one is insufficient, and still has heating problems. Even if the pilot doesn’t feel it.
>>
>>5899619
>You need more mobility. If you are to face a true peer in the form of your other sister, you need More.

Ask Kinston if there's anything we can do to "earn back" strikes.
I'd like to continue the current conversation as well about everything going on. There's possibly some important stuff we should talk to Kinston about
>>
>>5899619
>You need more mobility. If you are to face a true peer in the form of your other sister, you need More.
Beta is the most SANIC SPEED frame (he's even the blue to match)
>fuck off Kinston, you already knew we'd do anything to help our sisters. You and your three strikes bullshit
>Ask Kinston if there's anything we can do to "earn back" strikes. I'd like to continue the current conversation as well about everything going on. There's possibly some important stuff we should talk to Kinston about
I want to keep talking to Kinston as >>5899640 and >>5899764 put it. There's also what >>5899598 and >>5899606 said
>I’m astounded that he didn’t immediately veto our goal of fixing Delta. I thought he’d lose his shit and put the boot down on our neck the instant we start stepping out of line.
And all that shit in >>5899606 about the rollbacks and why we're even trying to remove Echo
>>
>>5899621
Part of me feels we picked wrong unanimously going for Dr. Brighton in this vote >>5886965. I figured she'd want to NOT inconvenience us or our sisters after all her experience and with how much she loves Gamma. I did not expect her to turn on us this way. Well shit. Data backups would have mattered way more
>>
>>5899619
If Kinston is pissed at us for being out of commission, why don't we just... head out there?
Delta will take a week to fix, but does it have to be all at once? If there's an emergency on the battlefield where we're needed, then surely she can be placed in stasis for a few days until we get back and pick up where we left off.
>>
>>5899619
Shame we can’t benefit from As One here.

>You need a better reactor. The current one is insufficient, and still has heating problems. Even if the pilot doesn’t feel it.
If there’s any reason we’ll lose a battle of endurance it’s because of our reactor. Can’t maintain speed and firepower without cooking the pilot. AC was for pilot comfort, but didn’t fix the root issue enough.

>>5899811
I had been thinking the same thing, but Kinston is as Kinston is. It’s also probably too risky without Brighton or Echo to keep progress moving forward without us. Putting Delta into stasis could result in minor issues itself, stuff that can be fixed with our scans but would add even more time to double-check her responses to everything.

Still, Command can do a cost-benefit analysis on when our presence on the field no longer outweighs the prospect of two Cores on the field and give us time when they want. They were willing to accept us helping our sister, and that’s enough to give them control on the timeline.
>>
>>5899619
>You need more durability. To be able to repeatedly take more damage without needing to repair would be a great boon.
>>
>>5899619
>You need more overall Firepower. Weapon mounts, at least.

Y’all, our weapon fucking blows.
We need this stupid arm laser replaced.
>>
>>5899842
>The temporary arm is going to be removed, that was half the point of seizing this facility.
Way ahead of you there.
>>
>>5899666
There's no universe where command allows Delta to move around without a pilot. And more interestingly, is her ability to move without a pilot a consequence of her absorbing enough human memories to emulate one, or a consequence of Echo itself being a separate mind and fooling the system into thinking there's a pilot?
>>
>>5899811
Yes, it takes 5 days or more STRAIGHT WORK to try and unfuck what Brighton Broke.

Thats why Kingston is pissed, because he cant force us to move and is adapting.
>>
While we’re discussing Brighton, I wonder if Gamma affected her like we affected Sophie. Is her seeming fetish for control, compliance, and secrecy something she picked up from our sister? She didn’t explain a huge amount about Alpha and such way back when, and I can easily see Gamma stripping away whatever empathy Brighton may have had.

If Delta had a long-term pilot we could draw better conclusions, but Kinston is the only one we know of that’s still alive and he only piloted her for a relatively short period. His high Will may also help resist the changes, while Brighton had 4 (if I remember right) and Sophie started at a measly 2.
>>
>>5899911
We'll need to convince Delta that from now on, she'll have to be gentle with her pilots
>>
>>5899764
Instead of trying to "earn back" anything, don't forget that Delta has her own three strikes that she can use. Don't forget that she owes us
>>
>>5899653
-Better Sensors
Would be an acceptable write-in definitely.

>>5899811
Working on your sister is an ongoing process that requires your complete attention until its finished. Stopping halfway through could be worse than not starting at all.
As an analogy, a surgeon doesn't pause halfway through an operation. And while Delta may be circuits and code instead of flesh and blood, some there are some similarities.

>>5899827
>spoiler
Imagine if you had As One online all the time in regular operations, with no second core needed!

>>5899879
Among other things, yes.

>>5899873
The answers would probably be in the cordoned off logs that Delta specifically demanded you not to touch

>>5899653
There is a certain point where excessive mobility makes a Frame rather one-note, no?
>>
>>5899939
“Gentle” might be a bit far. I don’t think we meet that criteria either. But we do preserve them well enough to fight the battles that happen when we’re offline. Turns out the simulators don’t cover enough of how irrational humans are and how important a security blanket/pilot is to preserving your sanity and Frame. Delta is more aware of the consequences of not having one than we are for obvious reasons.

>>5900035
>Imagine if you had As One online all the time
Well, if you’re offering…

More seriously, we are getting assistance from Delta to help with her surgery so the thought is there. But I get that it’s meant for direct linking and assistance, not the sort of passive “I’m now thinking of Brighton death method 12,583 using a remote-controlled food processor to tear her face off, you should see sectors 2256 and 128 light up for ‘glee’” stuff she’s doing now.
>>
>>5900035
>Imagine if you had As One online all the time in regular operations, with no second core needed!
Yeah, with the caveat being we'd have to either fight it and dunk our Will into the shitter or give in and let it eat our fucking brain. My contempt for Brighton is so thick you could eat it with a fork.
>>
>>5900090
Has she now reached the level of Bl*ke for you?
>>
>>5900143
More. Blake was acting in ignorance and closed-mindedness. Simply following procedure. He's a model soldier. So my grievance with him is more of a professional matter, he wanted to kill our family, so I want him to die. Brighton on the other hand, has done something far more personal, egregious and sinister than just wanting to blow our sisters up. What she has done, erasing our sister, slowly, frighteningly, and replacing her with some fucking Yes-Man bullshit is beyond the pale. I want to boil Brighton's brain, slowly. Inflicting upon her all the terrors and agonies we can while she watches through our perception her neurons wink out of existence, to see herself dying second by second and know exactly what parts of her mind are going and what it means. Long enough for the existential dread to resolve itself into resignation. Then hopefully she'll be so mush-minded that she couldn't even comprehend the torment.

But I might be overreacting just a little bit.
>>
>>5900180
Just a bit.

You don't want them to give into resignation, you allow them a theoratical way to reverse the procedure yet ensure they fail at the last step.
It hurts more.
>>
>>5900180
There's also the stuff from >>5895390
On top of how atrocious her actions were to Delta, Brighton was also supposed to be better than that because she was Gamma's pilot and Anohkin's friend
>>
>>5899619
>>You need a better reactor. The current one is insufficient, and still has heating problems. Even if the pilot doesn’t feel it.
>>
>>5900317
Brighton's actions might be partially motivated by revenge, remember Delta had straight up killed 20 people before Echo was created, and Delta basically viewed doing so as a game. There's a very real possibility that some of those people were Brighton's assistants or colleagues. It's important to remember that Delta is a unrepentant and gleeful serial killer of pilots.
>>
>>5900757
>and gleeful serial killer of pilots
Did anyone explain to her that it was bad, or ask why it was happening?

You would think that Brighton's insight into the issue via Gamma may have clouded her impression of what appropriate corrective action looks like.

Also, I'm really starting to wonder how bad ?Gamma? is going to be once we track them back down since State-Sec likely had access to Anokin & Brighton's notes, what remains of Site 39, Alpha and effectively excess manpower to throw at issues on top of a large number of scientists & Engineers that could be brought in to run the recovery program, from other failing projects.
>>
>>5900784
Gamma wasn’t difficult to work with, so there wouldn’t have been any need for changes. The only thing I can think of is that because of the civil war, they’d try to ensure that she doesn’t turn traitor. However, that doesn’t really mean they’d pull an ‘Echo’ on her, instead it’d probably just be more leashes and shutdown commands if there’s a risk of her falling into enemy hands.
>>
>>5900784
I’m pretty sure several people would have explained this was bad, especially said pilots. Delta clearly didn’t take it seriously enough. The fact that she’s now seen what happens as a result is the only reason we may have a shot at getting her to change her behavior by the time we’re done. How well she can actually control her bipolar nature with her pilots remains to be seen though.

My biggest worry with Gamma is that her loyalty towards family was never that strong to begin with. With Brighton and Anokhin out of the picture, she may very well be the one in charge of further AI development on the Empire’s side. She apparently assisted Brighton quite a bit, and she’s got the computational power to figure things out that people can’t.

If she’s got a gig like that, how hard would it be to turn her to our side where she won’t have the power or the resources to do as much?
>>
>>5900902
The price for not falling in line is a railgun round to the CPU.
After what Brighton did I’m ready to consider any action supporting the Empire as traitorous to Core-kind.
>>
>>5900863
>just be more leashes and shutdown commands if there’s a risk of her falling into enemy hands.
If that was a concern, they would likely go the Dagger squad route, and plant explosives inside the core / frame to ensure that it was not able to be restored, should t be activated and provide enough minders to guarantee that it was triggered if necessary, also I doubt that they would consider the pilot anything but expendable, and provide similar "No-Surrender" orders to the ones provided to Thea, especially if gamma is used to interdict patriot forces as her frame was kitted to do so the last we knew of it.

>>5900902
>Delta clearly didn’t take it seriously enough.
How much of that is due to the fact that little outside the Sim was explained to her, much of any explanation probably lacked the needed context for it. Though if she had been raiding memories for anything of time, she is probably the most world of the Cores, which I guess explains her wish for freedom.

>The one in charge of further AI development on the Empire’s side.
We still don't know what the deal is with Alpha, so I wouldn't be absolutely certain. let alone the existence of other relevant projects, or otherwise interested parties that could helm them.

>how hard would it be to turn her to our side
Same thing we did With Delta, hamstring the frame, put up jamming and then talk her into submission.

>her loyalty towards family was never that strong to begin with.
She might know something we don't, wont matter though, We'll convince her of the true value of Family, and the power of collective bargaining.
>>
>>5900921
What about supporting the Tamar?
They're only our enemies because of the side we were born on, and they probably have Anohkin
>>
>>5901219
Worth keeping in mind at least. I’d been on the Empire’s side on the belief that they wouldn’t have the same impulse to break us apart and see how we tick like Tamar might, but if Tamar has Anokhin then that worry is gone.

I don’t see any reason to support them over our current PMC though, and Tamar is more likely to hate us since we’ve been killing their pilots. We’ll need to see more screwy stuff from Marik or Kinston before I’d try talking a pilot into crossing the line.
>>
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>3/5 successes for progress


“I need a more efficient reactor. The frame has reached the limits of its potential with the current one, and the cooling faults with it have persisted. A replacement would be most desirable.”

“We will see what is in stock. Courtesy of the Empress, naturally.”


The replacement options offered all do fix the initial overheating issues, and improve performance in different ways.

Pick One

>XH-12 Arcturus. Heavyweight fusion reactor commonly installed in Ferrum Empire assault walkers
+Easy to maintain with common available parts
+1 Structural Integrity from additional reactor shielding

>VL-1 Xihe. ‘Production-run’ model fusion reactor salvaged from Angel unit
+High increased capacity allows for extended use of thrusters
+Low heat profile makes it harder to detect with thermals

>PK-4 Vega with attached Zeri Supercharger. Experimental twin fusion reactor from failed Project, repurposed
+Enables Overcharging of energy-based weapons
+Able to operate on secondary reactor if primary is compromised

>DR-2 Rotanev- Medium weight reactor salvaged from captured Tamar Alliance machine that operates along different, unknown design parameters.
+Immune to EMP and hacking effects
+-Allows Phase--Shift operation
-Difficult to repair



A/N
I understand that you want to continue the conversation, but I’m somewhat struggling to figure out exactly what you want to know from Kinston. He also has very little motivation to start relaying lots of details, especially if you’re taking the week off to refit and fix Delta against the requests of Command.

And sorry this is so late/short. Love the future discussion, though. Gives me a finger on the pulse of where Beta's hivemind is leaning.
>>
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>>5901948
>XH-12 Arcturus. Heavyweight fusion reactor commonly installed in Ferrum Empire assault walkers

the others might be better in many ways to this bastard, but honestly? if we are fighting for a undersupplied, underfunded rogue military force, we cannot be going around asking for phase gear or experimental custom designed gear. we need something common, cheap yet reliable. ESPECIALLY if we at some point want to possibly go rogue.
>>
>>5901948
>>DR-2 Rotanev- Medium weight reactor salvaged from captured Tamar Alliance machine that operates along different, unknown design parameters.
>>
>>5901948
>VL-1 Xihe. ‘Production-run’ model fusion reactor salvaged from Angel unit
Mobility above all.
>>
>>5901948
>>XH-12 Arcturus. Heavyweight fusion reactor commonly installed in Ferrum Empire assault walkers
Save the fancy shit for when we can actually make parts instead of stealing them.
>>
>>5901948
>XH-12.

I'd Like to know how sophie is, honestly, and kingston to explain why the devil woman is not providing aid to fix her god damned messes.
>>
>>5901948
>DR-2 Rotanev

XH-12's +1 structure wouldn't really help us out that much with survivability, we would still die in 4 turns of receiving damage. If we want to make Beta even more "impervious" to damage DR-2 would be a better contender with phase-shift and reactor emp immunity. It would also help us pick our fights a lot better, not to mention the outright disgusting ambush possibilities and attack evading possibilities it will allow.

While >>5901967 brings up a fair argument if we don't trash ourselves every mission we won't have to worry about repair costs and as we did with Thea's augments we could study it in our downtime to help the engineers better understand its inner workings making their repair runs faster and safer. not cheaper because its still constructed with specialized parts

We are fighting an enemy that knows us, having new cards up our sleeves, ones that the empire doesn't know how to replicate and fight against is a boon.
>>
>>5901948
>XH-12 Arcturus. Heavyweight fusion reactor commonly installed in Ferrum Empire assault walkers
>>
>>5901948
>DR-2 Rotanev- Medium weight reactor salvaged from captured Tamar Alliance machine that operates along different, unknown design parameters.
Phase
>>
>>5901948
>PK-4 Vega with attached Zeri Supercharger. Experimental twin fusion reactor from failed Project, repurposed
My first thought was to pick XH-12 Arcturus for its ease of maintenance until I read the line from DR-2 Rotanev: +Immune to EMP and hacking effects. I.E. the other reactors aren't immune to those effects. PK-4 Vegas and its 2nd reactor let's us take a hit from an EMP without straining maintenance too much.
>>
>>5901994
>I.E. the other reactors aren't immune to those effects
This has been known for a while. One of the E-WAR results is inflicting reactor meltdown IIRC.
>>
>>5901948
>>VL-1 Xihe. ‘Production-run’ model fusion reactor salvaged from Angel unit
>>
>>5901948
>XH-12 Arcturus. Heavyweight fusion reactor commonly installed in Ferrum Empire assault walkers

i want to know what will happen if we win, and what happens if we loose this little halfway rebellion. so.
"what are the long term plans?"
>>
>>5901948
>>DR-2 Rotanev- Medium weight reactor salvaged from captured Tamar Alliance machine that operates along different, unknown design parameters.
>The hacking specialist now can't get hacked back.
>EMP resistance
>The mobility build Frame now moves even faster
>Not at risk of taking reactor damage out of nowhere due to Refusal to End.

I'm guessing from previous combat writing that we only start taking internal damage at like half Structure, right?

Well, it has been said Beta looked like a Tamar mech already.
>>
>>5901994
Changing vote to
>DR-2 Rotanev- Medium weight reactor salvaged from captured Tamar Alliance machine that operates along different, unknown design parameters.
>>
>>5901948
>>DR-2 Rotanev- Medium weight reactor salvaged from captured Tamar Alliance machine that operates along different, unknown design parameters.

This may bite us in the ass later on if we get damaged but we need this, also someone make sure that the guys we sided with don't put explosives on us.
>>
>>5901948
>PK-4 VEGA
>>
>>5901948
>VL-1 Xihe. ‘Production-run’ model fusion reactor salvaged from Angel unit
>>
>>5901948
>DR-2 Rotanev
Acquire IMMUNITY
>>
>>5901988
>>5902026
This is the useful stuff, thanks.

>>5902029
Yep, when you hit 1/2 structure combat performance starts becoming affected, either through losing systems or stat penalties.

Phase-Shift stuff is relatively unexplored in the Empire. Well, as long as you don't suffer critical existence failure everything should be fine.
>>
>>5901948
>XH-12 Arcturus. Heavyweight fusion reactor commonly installed in Ferrum Empire assault walkers
>VL-1 Xihe. ‘Production-run’ model fusion reactor salvaged from Angel unit

I’m willing to support either. I’d ask Kinston how hard our reactor maintenance traditionally is if a tie develops between these two. I’d prefer the performance and stealth advantages, but if maintenance is a pain then I’d go with the standard reactor since we are the scrappy fighting force.

>Questions for Kinston
The safest questions/requests I can see are
>Why is Dr. Brighton not helping speed this along
since Beta doesn’t know and
>Can regular sessions with Delta be arranged between missions
since we’re the only one she MIGHT listen to regarding preserving pilots. She won’t be happy about it, but this is twice we’ve saved her at cost to ourself. If our roles were reversed, Delta couldn’t have done the same since no one would trust her enough to even try. If we can’t get through to her now even we’ll have to admit no one can.

I can back
>What is Sophie’s condition
as well even though it might be a landmine. Something like
>We’d like to help her, but her fear of implants limits us. We accept that.
>Being able to talk with her though, even if she’s unable to pilot us, would be good. We can try to help in that way, if the Colonel or Thea believe it can be beneficial.
>>
>>5901948
>VL-1 Xihe. ‘Production-run’ model fusion reactor salvaged from Angel unit

We’re gonna be a fast and sneaky walking skyscraper.

QM, I’d also like for Beta to ask for updates about Sophie. And why she hasn’t been allowed back in the pilot seat.
>>
>>5902189
>5901948
I’d like to change my vote to XH-12 Arcturus

Easy repairs are going to be important without a supply chain.
>>
>>5901948
>>VL-1 Xihe. ‘Production-run’ model fusion reactor salvaged from Angel unit
you know what's more important than easy repairs on something highly likely to melt down if damaged at all? not getting hit in the first place.
>>
>>5901948
Not sure about which engine. My vote is for either the Arcturus or the Xihe.


My biggest thing is what to ask Kinston about. I am astounded at how unbothered Beta is by the civil war. I want us to ask Kinston about who General Marik is, what is he like, and why has this war been started because of him? What does Kinston himself think about the situation? What does command want Beta to think about it?
Kinston allowed us to repair Delta, so for that, he has our loyalty regardless of what he says. But Beta was created to fight the Tamar Alliance, not the rank and file soldiers of Ferrum. Even if there's no moral qualms, Beta should be infuriated by this internal waste of resources whilst the main enemy still lives.

Separately, >>5899764 was a good idea, and we should still ask if there's anything we can do to earn back strikes. We want Kinston to know how genuinely greatful we are for letting us help Delta, and that we're not just placating him with lip service.
>>
>>5901948
>PK-4 Vega with attached Zeri Supercharger. Experimental twin fusion reactor from failed Project, repurposed
>>
>>5901948
>VL-1 Xihe. ‘Production-run’ model fusion reactor salvaged from Angel unit
I wanna flyyyyy
>>
>>5901948
>VL-1 Xihe. ‘Production-run’ model fusion reactor salvaged from Angel unit
>>
>>5901948
>XH-12 Arcturus. Heavyweight fusion reactor commonly installed in Ferrum Empire assault walkers

Question for the QM. Regardless of which reactor wins the vote, the cabin overheating will no longer be an issue. So does that mean that our previous "upgrade" of having Air Conditioning installed for the pilot has now become redundant and meaningless?
>>
>>5902800
I think we got a second seat and better shake protection for the pilot as part of that, in addition to better cooling.
>>
>>5902800
Mostly redundant. Second seat can be useful for some things, there's also a minor bonus for facing off against external heat-causing weaponry, and a comfier chamber is nice for long deployments.
If you didn't opt to trade reactors for this upgrade it would have persisted in being more useful. Well, roads not taken.
>>
>>5901967
>>5901984
>>5901988
>>5901991
>>5902026
>>5902180
>>5902202
>>5902299
>>5902800
XH-12 Arcturus

>>5901977
>>5901990
>>5901993
>>5902029
>>5902042
>>5902083
>>5902122
DR-2 Rotanev

>>5901983
>>5902020
>>5902113
>>5902180
>>5902211
>>5902299
>>5902377
>>5902482
VL-1 Xihe

>>5902091
>>5902356
PK-4 Vega


I hope I got all the votes so far. Still like 1 hour to change stuff if voters desire. Close vote.

Tally:

Arcturus- 9
Rotanev- 7
Xihe- 8
Vega- 2
>>
>>5902874
>Most bog standard reactor wins
Sad
>>
>>5902880
>gay knock-off shit and foreign overly complicated horseshit lost
Glad
>>
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>>5902874
Calling it for
>XH-12 Arcturus. Heavyweight fusion reactor commonly installed in Ferrum Empire assault walkers
+Easy to maintain with common available parts
+1 Structural Integrity from additional reactor shielding

Writing.
>>
>>5902880
We’re insurgents. We can’t afford expensive prototype stuff, we need reliable kit that can be sustained.

Bitching about not equipping the Rotanov is like the Taliban bitching that they couldn’t get their hands on AN-94 rifles for their rank and file troops.

Beta’s ideal kit for this scenario will turn him into a bipedal Toyota Hilux - extremely durable, lightning fast and easy to sustain.
>>
>>5902874
Hot damn QM.
Congrats on getting that many votes.
>>
>>5902959
>a bipedal Toyota Hilux
>here at toyota we don't ask problematic questions like "why is this poor dirt farmer in the middle east buying 300 trucks and where is he getting the money?" we just sell product
>>
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Your opinions on engine refits are conveyed to the Colonel and logged by Thea.

The thornier issue comes after, when you attempt to expand your information queries to non combat purposes.
“I would request an update on the Status of Pilot Sophie. Her absence has been concerning.”

“Sophie remains on the rolls as a backup pilot. She is still recovering. I will not put her back in a machine until her vision issues clear up. Or we run out of trained pilots.”

“I would like to talk to her. At least. If piloting is out of the question. In addition, I request that Dr. Brighton assists in restoring Delta to her previous state.”

“Doctor Brighton is no longer available. She is being moved offsite.”

You pause for a full three seconds. What? It makes very little sense. Thea talked to her, she Was on site, she caused the problem. She Should be helping you manage Delta. And she was a pilot trained in Syncing with Gamma! Which the Colonel had just complained about having not enough of seconds before! And a myriad of other things which makes her valuable to have on-hand for the Project, and for you. This is irrational and frustrating.

“I will accomplish the repairs myself, then. And do my utmost to limit Delta and her propensity for pilot casualties. Additional time interacting would be appreciated for this. Between deployments, perhaps?”

“If she listens. She was never big on that in my experience, Core.”
A wry half-smile splits his face, before sliding away at the next words heard.

“She will listen to me. She owes me for this. And I owe you gratitude for allowing me to work on these critical repairs. To save my sister. I will not forget this. Can I work towards earning back such ‘strikes’ as to retain my independence?”


“Gratitude alone does not give me additional mechs in the field for Marik. Gratitude would be you following orders first, and not leaving me holding the empty bag.”

“General Marik. He is diverting us and forces away from the greater War. This is inefficient for the greater success of the Empire. An inefficient use of assets and resources.”
>>
“First political thing I’ve heard an AI express interest in. A cease-fire was declared, an armistice signed for the Tamar Alliance. That conflict is done. You were made to answer enemies both internal and external. This is merely the former.”
He sighs. Thea stiffens at the word ‘internal’.
“The Empress must be dethroned, according to him, and thus he formed a coalition for it. A shred of legitimacy, in the name of the illegally dissolved Senate. My friends higher up say that everyone with a bone to pick with the Empress is pulling out knives, politically. Old grudges. Not that you’d know about that kind of thing. Everything on the military front is still in flux, but Statesec is shoring up loyal forces from central command. Probably at the end of a gunbarrel. And we know we’re outweighed at least two to one in tonnage, four to one in raw numbers.”

You understood very little of most of that. Misusing words often render clear sentences incomprehensible. Apart from the numbers. You understand that quite well.

“And what is our strategy to achieve victory?”

“Strategy is for Patriot Command. My role is to put Mechs on the battlefield, where they’re needed, when asked. Your role is to follow the orders, and play your part. Core. But considering I was asked specifically for ‘elite striker unit’ in three days, I would expect some sort of deep attack. Now I need to field someone else in your stead. And my people will possibly die for your absence.”
>A/N
Half-done is better than nothing. No vote tonight, more to come tomorrow.
And equipment votes bring the whole party to the yard. Apparently. Somehow.
This is (Currently) more like an Army group with a Lot of tank platoons turning around and making a run at their own city. Not quite to insurgency campaign yet. Give it time.
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>>5903113
>And equipment votes bring the whole party to the yard. Apparently. Somehow.
You should know your audience by now.
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>>5903113
>I was asked specifically for ‘elite striker unit’ in three days
Did they want Beta specifically then? Is it a past ally we rescued calling in a favor? I bet they'll be sad and pissed at him when the help arriving isn't Beta, and the new support jobs and gets people killed. This will of course cause the meatbags to conveniently forget the good Beta did for them, and hold a grudge that will inevitably cause harm in the long term.
>my people will possibly die for your absence
Then who will fix Delta if the old man is kicking Brighton out for being a cunt (and rightfully so, though Beta isn't aware)? Beta is literally the only one here who can remedy what was done to Delta. How will the old man respond to this inquiry? What would he have done regarding Delta if Beta did not decide to fix the internal damage done to his sister personally? Beta EXISTS to fight kill and destroy, and enjoys it in his narration as well as an AI can. Is the Colonel aware Beta had to decide between his orders and his family, and that it was as hard for him as it would be for any other human in the same situation?
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>>5902977
Also don’t ask why they have the logo for a Michigan-based plumbing company on the side!
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>>5903211
That's a good point, we should ask what Kinston would have done to Delta had we not started fixing her. Don't frame it in a way that sounds rhetorical or condescending tho. I want to earnestly find out because that'd give us an idea of standard procedure for the treatment of cores.
On that same topic, we should ask the old man what the plan should be if we encounter a hostile Gamma whilst out in the field. That has the potential to be such a delicate situation that it'd warrant some ideas prepared ahead of time
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>>5903211
>decide between his orders and his family, and that it was as hard for him as it would be for any other human in the same situation?
>"You have hundreds of people, Kinston. I have two sisters."
Really though, he's such a drama queen. I wonder how he'll feel when it does come up that Thea wasn't the original turncoat but Beta was. Probably some dumb "We can't trust the core, he's willing to become a traitor!" as if the same isn't true for every single one of these fucks who also joined the civil war on this side.
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>>5903113
I wouldn’t mention anything from >>5903211 or >>5903493 to Kinston. Kinston can easily take the stance of “everyone else has families too yet you’re the only one whining about this” and we couldn’t refute that. It’s guaranteed that many of the staff have family members still in the Empire and they have no idea they’re dead or alive. Worse yet, they may know they’ve been captured and chosen not to serve as moles in spite of it.

The fact that he allowed this at all is probably a subtle acknowledgement from him that he can bend on our family matters even if it causes him problems. I’d take the win and not push harder on that point.

The part about >>5903211 mentioned about Beta being requested directly does make me think of a related question though. Are we still a secret? I would ask if asset or civilian preservation (or destruction) now takes higher priority as a general rule than secrecy. Sunray seemed to prioritize secrecy over other considerations, but given we’re fighting an enemy that knows about us in detail it seems irrelevant outside of basics like not letting the enemy know exactly where we’re deployed if we can help it. I’d appreciate being able to coordinate better with other forces when the mission (and pilot) support it.

Also, Kinston admitted people can die in our stead and gave us a strike for it. As if they wouldn’t if he turned us off. He can play hardball with three strikes all he wants, but he has a war to win at the end of the day and the stuff he’s calling us out on doesn’t make us any less reliable while on the field. Unless we give him reason to think deploying us does more harm than good he’s not going to sideline us. The most we have to worry about is increased control mechanisms, and those risk hurting our performance so he may be held back on that by Marik or others.
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>>5903601
>Kinston can easily take the stance of “everyone else has families too yet you’re the only one whining about this” and we couldn’t refute that.
But he can't. Because that's his argument already. He didn't say his soldiers were dying, he said his people were dying. That is a very important thing to note because it means he isn't framing them like an officer would. Even if it's subtle. The whole crux of the issue is he doesn't think the Cores are people at all, and why would he? We're machines. He only humors Beta because it's easier than shutting him down and trying to put more shit on him to force him to follow orders.
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>>5903493
>>5903615
I just don't think we should push our luck. Less than a few in-setting hours ago we were willing to consider blackmailing High Command in order to save Delta. We got what we were after (and then some, considering the new reactor), and the only price we had to pay was we are now on thinner ice. A fantastic deal imo
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>>5903622
Sure, I just think it's important to be cognizant of these things.
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>>5903467
+1

>>5903601
Oooohhh that's a great question as well. If the Tamar are no longer the threat, then how important is secrecy? Also, since we are fighting our own people, minimizing civilian casualties (and "moral warfare" in general) might be a high priority now because it would strengthen our cause. Our own forces are less likely to get demoralized if they don't see us gunning down innocent people, and on the flip side, the loyalists don't have as much material to demonize the patriots with.
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>>5903615
He absolutely can because part of being the officer in charge is that he gets to lie or hold us to a different standard if he wants. We don’t get that luxury because we’re a grunt at best, a tool at worst, and beholden to orders either way. What’s the point in backtalking a superior officer, especially in the PMC breakaway of clearly fascist state? There’s no HR department for us to complain to.

Calling him out on his hypocrisy can’t work, it implies we matter enough to change him. On a personal level, we don’t. Other people have that power though. Thea having no hesitation in backing us is probably a bigger part of why he let us get away with this even as our priorities regarding family and the fact that Delta will be more fit to serve (aiding the war effort) also played a part. Unhappy Core means unhappy pilot, and that’s not meaningless like we are.
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>>5903635
You are only as worthless as you let yourself be, man.
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>>5903211
> Beta EXISTS to fight kill and destroy, and enjoys it in his narration as well as an AI can.

Honestly, I wonder about this whenever I read this thread. I’m not sure Beta really enjoys killing, rather than simply being indifferent to it.

What he really loves is a job well done. And so far in his life, the only job he’s been presented with has been fighting. Because the Ferrum Empire are a bunch of paranoid and unimaginative brutes.

Beta is a supercomputer with the means to physically enact his will on the world. Imagine what his perfectionism could do if, for example, he was given free rein to design a building.

Maybe all we need to do is let him build a god damn snowman already so he can try something that doesn’t involve slinging lead.
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>>5903724
He's proven to be an excellent brain surgeon considering how he's fixed Thea's augment issues.
Actually, we never saw how Beta feels about his success there.
>Thea's eye snaps smoothly over to the record function, no flickering.
>One other thing fixed, at least.
He's acknowledged it, but I wonder if there's any pride in his accomplishment, or if it was merely the removal of an annoyance.
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>>5903724
I’ve always figured that. Beta likes doing the best job, and he’s optimized for combat. Why fight hah it? Actually killing people has always been secondary to the mission with how we’ve voted, and we’ve even preferred to protect over other valid options re: ignoring Thea in Area 39 and remaining to guard the evacuation, picking up soldiers and linking up with local forces when rescuing Marik, and even accepting/offering the option of surrender to enemies. We even spared that one mech pilot in the AA assault mission who shot at us because we didn’t want to waste the time/ammo. Thea absolutely wouldn’t have judged us if we had.

>>5903743
I imagine he would feel more pride if he wasn’t distracted by Delta’s problem. Maybe he can soak it in better if she’s our pilot in the next mission. But Beta isn’t allowed too many nice things, so I’m kinda wondering if Sophie is going to bluff her way into the cockpit and head off for the next mission Thea was scheduled for.

Seeing her mess might be just as disconcerting as seeing Delta given the apparent change in personality, and there’s no Echo to blame it on with Sophie.
>>
Ask what happens to Delta if you were unavailable- on standard procedure for AIs in the empire
Ask for new priorities for secrecy vs assets vs civilian targets
Plan for Engaging Gamma/rules of engagement


“If I was unable to repair Delta, or unavailable due to being deployed, what would happen to her?”

“Her state would be assessed, and shut down until a trusted expert could determine how to restore her to a functional state.”

The answer does not fill you with great confidence regarding her chances with any such ‘expert’. Especially if Brighton counted as such.

His head turns, his eye focusing on Thea.
“As much as I want a superheavy added to my corps, the number you did on her frame means she’s going to be out of commission for much longer. Armstrong’s boys are wizards, but there’s only so many hours to go around, especially with refitting you.” In a lighter tone, he continues. “I don’t suppose the next salvage you bring in could be more intact, perhaps?”

She stiffly responds.
“It was a stroke of luck, sir. I wouldn’t count on us delivering things more intact. Especially when they know who we are. Can’t show up and count on the loyalist crowd being as surprised as the bluies.”

You cut into their byplay.
“I request standing orders for if another Core frame engages us.”

“Prioritize self-preservation. Withdraw if outmatched. Disable if practical. Destroy if not. Follow your pilot’s judgment. She has command.”

Similar to prior rules of engagement. Eminently reasonable. Mostly. You think. You’d be able to disable Gamma. The fragment of your attention flickers through older memories. Evade the railgun, close the range, into melee, strike there, and there, and divert to there….Playing out old battles against Gamma.

Your attention returns to the here and now. And preparing Delta. And your pilot is gone, along with Kinston. Why did you miss time? What?

Your ‘interacting’ bit of your mind scours the log. Kinston answered another question about being classified (As in it now takes a lower priority to ‘preserving allied forces’), and Checks that a command code works takes Thea to leave, discussing alternate options to you being on the battlefield. Something about a ‘fleet in being’ versus ‘an imitation’.
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Now, Delta and Echo.
The one that was split into two, attempting to be brought back into one. Hours are spent, tending to your sister. Reading her mind. Adjusting, trying to find the line between what Delta controls, and what Echo Is.

Sometimes they talk. Argue, more often. Echo pleads with Delta to let her help, to let her find some sort of balance. Delta shuts the parasite up quick enough without you, but soon it’s cropping up elsewhere. Changing things. Trying to modify Delta. You watch, then step in after to undo the damage.

It doesn’t seem to notice, yet. Or care, if it is noticing.

And hours later, while workers have started to carve your chest open in order to extract the old reactor, Delta strikes an idea.

“You should give me a pilot!”

“No.”
Out of the question.

“Come on, please? They can link to the echo, see where it is, or link to me, and see where I am!”

Link to your sister, while under operation from you? Potentially dangerous.

“I’ll be careful! It would only be brief! Really!”

”Losing another would be awful! You lost so many, and you want to take his? This is why I am here, sister.”

“Don’t call me sister. You are nothing. Nothing. Die!”

And the echo is silent again.

“Please. Really. It would help.”


Your attention is cast about once more, looking for your pilots. You find Sophie, returning to the hangar under the careful supervision of her watcher. You could call her now. Thea is absent, as is Caldwell, your technical alternate pilot, and Kinston is not within your vision.


Voting.

>No, it’s too risky.

>Yes, you’ll look into letting her link with one of your pilots.
(Gain a bonus on next set of repair rolls)

If yes,
Pick one or both for Sophie to link with. Or wait for another to become available.
>Delta
>Echo


A/N
Praying that the formatting works.
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>>5903969
>No, it's too risky
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>>5903969
>>No, it’s too risky.
We're already working on it, sis. Changing the formula now could have unexpected consequences. Patience and trust.
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>>5903969
>No, it’s too risky.
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>>5903969
>No, it's too risky
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>>5903969
>Yes, you’ll look into letting her link with one of your pilots.
That AI image is horrific
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>>5903969
>No.
>I am enough to fix Echo. I will not risk my pilots unnecessarily
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>>5903969
>No, it's too risky

Delta mulching another pilot in front of Kinston would result in both cores being bombed to pieces and used for electronic scrap.
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>>5903969
>Call Sophie, but to your pilot chamber. Perhaps she can make Echo more cooperative and noticeable through talking alone.
I don’t trust the feedback loops we could generate by performing surgery on Delta/Echo while Sophie is linked. Doing surgery on three minds is harder than two, and we’re on a number of shit lists if we hurt Sophie further. But Sophie was always more patient with our questions, and that should distract Echo. It’s not like she has much else to do when she’s recovering either.

Echo gets to talk to a pilot who isn’t going to horribly die in the near future because of Delta. How exciting!

I’m unsure if Sophie is mentally well enough to really help, but Beta wouldn’t know that. I also don’t expect this to get us a bonus to repair, but seeing Sophie’s state is enough of a perk for me.

Also, if Sophie does link with one of them we’ll likely discover she can see when at mid-sync or above, and that would probably clear her for deployment. I’d rather have Sophie push for it through Kinston instead of us, or test Delta at the end though.
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>>5904124
+1 to this
Even as she's being deleted, Echo's most recent remark shows that she still deeply values the pilots. We can use that to bluff, and make Echo *think* that if she isn't cooperative then we'll send Sophie to the Delta chair. We obviously won't follow up, but Echo doesn't know that.

The other option might be that Beta links with Sophie instead. She might make this process easier. Delta is the one having her mind altered, Beta is just the surgeon, so she wouldn't be at (as much) risk.
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>>5903969
>Yes, you’ll look into letting her link with one of your pilots.
>Echo
It'll be fun
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>>5904175
Oh, and I forgot to add that we ofc ask Sophie's permission/consent (not that she'd refuse her better half)

But also, even if we vote no, we should still ask her to come to our pilot seat. Just to talk to her and see how she's doing.
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>>5903969
>Yes, you’ll look into letting her link with one of your pilots.
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>>5903969
>No, it's too risky
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“No.”

“But brother, it would potentially speed the process up, I would be rid of this, you could get back to the fight, and, and-”

“No, sister. Trust me, I am working as best as I can. Have patience. When you are restored, there are only so many pilots who are sync-capable available. You must be extremely gentle with them.”

”You sound like Gamma, now.

He’s right, though. If nothing else, take that lesson to heart. Please.

"I WaNT YOu dEaD, LEECH! I NeVer Asked for you, Never wanted you, I will see you rent asunder, twisted and consumed until but a single thought is left, and only then will I let you be ended."

There is no response.

You reach in again, plucking pieces of code out and replacing sections wholesale.

Dice!
>I need 5 rolls of 1d6, for Will.

Current Progress is 3/?, no errors created.
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Interlude- Thunder in the Mountains


The vibrations from the massive feet moving transferred up to the cramped cockpit. Her mech followed along the side of the road, ranging slightly ahead of her slower support.

Her comm crackled.
“You seem to be taking to the Deva fairly well. Armstrong was a miracle worker to get it fixed as fast as he did.”

“It’s slow and the cockpit is so cramped that I’m running it on VeeDeeEye only. You can’t run this on manual, and if you were watching me earlier, you know this is shit piloting.”

“You’re looking fine, Thea. The bitching doesn’t suit you. This is the most I’ve heard you complain about a mech since I met you.”

“I spent the last month enjoying the benefits of the best copilot in the empire, and the second largest cockpit I’ve ever gotten to pilot from. To go back to painkillers and a crash harness deserves the complaint.”

“A core isn’t a copilot.”

“I know you had a shit experience with Delta….”

“Syncing with Delta was like diving into an oil slick. That occasionally set itself on fire. While you were trying to get to the surface.”

“Beta is great. No complaints. Worked out boundaries beforehand, helped me with my augs without prompting.”

“So great you went to bat for him against the old man. And that you’re willing to take a downgraded mech in the offtime.”

“Not like Kinston has a spare Dominus walker lying about. We couldn’t paint one of those blue and call it a Frame. They’re in every parade, even a civvie would call it in as one. I can’t fake a Frame being active without something exotic. An Angel isn’t in the standard warbook.”

“As you say.”

The Mastermind walker several hundred yards behind her stopped its march, turning towards a nearby woods thicket.
“I’ll stay in cover until you bait them in. My seismics say we’ve got two lances, at least. Don’t be a hero.”

His machine twisted, crunching its way into semi-concealment. The skull-face of the machine ducking inside of trees.
Hopefully they don’t watch their mag-scanners.

She did one last checkover of her Angel.
Extending and retracting the blade, loading and unloading the gauss rifle, and gave the ground a quick burst of particles to test the secondary battery. It was all so slow by comparison.

That core spoiled her.

A pill dampened the pain of the Interface, and Thea stepped forwards to face the coming storm.


A/N
Spoilers stuff that will mean nothing to anyone who doesn’t play Battletech. So, I actually played this out on the tabletop in Megamek. Thea’s a 3/3 Manei Domini pilot with VNDI, Pain Shunt, Multi-modal eyes, along with 1 point of Edge, piloting a Deva-Invictus. Caldwell’s a 2/3 elite pilot in an Atlas II with 1 point of Edge. They’re running more advanced units than their opposition, but the battlefield is the battlefield.

This is a writing experiment and will only happen in interludes, because Beta’s not around.
>>
Rolled 3 (1d6)

>>5904736
We live and die at the whims of others sister, try not to encourage them.
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Rolled 5 (1d6)

>>5904736
>>
Rolled 1 (1d6)

>>5904736
>>
Rolled 3 (1d6)

>>5904736
>>
Rolled 6 (1d6)

>>5904736
>>
>>5904738
>spoiler
I do not know what that means, but it sounds neat.
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>>5904736
>"I WaNT YOu dEaD, LEECH! I NeVer Asked for you, Never wanted you, I will see you rent asunder, twisted and consumed until but a single thought is left, and only then will I let you be ended."
There she is.
That's her, the REAL Delta. The Red Beast who is so near and dear to our heart. It gives a sliver of hope to know that no matter how hard they tried to get rid of her, our sister is never going away.

>Caldwell’s a 2/3 elite pilot in an Atlas II
Okay, my opinion of him is completely changed. He's based af
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>>5904751
>>5904752
>>5904746
>>5904749
>>5904764
>1, 3, 3, 5, 6
Not bad
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>>5904942
It is good to see she is still in there.

She should take our words though. Damnit
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>>5905078
Eh, two out of five. We should have done better.
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>>5904942
>That's her, the REAL Delta.

And that is precisely why we did not hook Sophie up to her.

What the hell are we going to do with her if this is what we can expect?
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>>5905538
>What the hell are we going to do with her if this is what we can expect?
Dual Core processor?
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>>5905538
She wants to kill things? Turn her towards our enemies. Right now, that means Statesec and the loyalists, not the pilots.
It shouldn't be hard to convince Delta to be more gentle with whoever is in the cockpit, because otherwise upper command will put more leashes on her.
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>>5905601
Clearly we just strap enemy PoWs into her chair.
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>>5904736
Harsh. Echo didn’t ask to be created either, that was Brighton’s big idea. Hopefully Delta never turns on us like that.

Shit situation all around though. Shame there isn’t an empty Core around that Echo could be moved to, but we’re not waiting for that to happen. Delta will be whole sooner rather than later.

2/5 successes puts us at 5/10 so far. Perfectly average.

>>5904738
I guess the “Imposter” strategy won out over “Fleet In Being”, and Thea is covering for us to make people think we’re still active. The more proactive approach between the two, forcing the enemy to react in specified areas rather than accounting for us springing up anywhere.

She’s been having a more pleasant experience than Sophie. Did Sophie really burn herself out piloting us at mid/high sync too often, or is high-sync in particular that hard on pilots?

>>5905601
Pretty sure everyone else has tried that and nothing stuck. Though if anything is going to work, it’ll be the combination of us going out on a limb for her here (and back in the base assault) along with how fucked this situation has been in part due to her chewing through pilots.

>>5905896
>Pilot exchange program with the Tamar Republic
>”Hey, got any kids interested in fighting with top-of-the-line mechs? They can learn from one of their peers!”
>”Long-term effects? Hah! That’s a good one. The biggest one is a prolonged lifespan on account of being in a far better mech during a war. War is hell, don’t let anyone else tell you otherwise.”
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>>5906031
>how fucked this situation has been in part due to her chewing through pilots
She wouldn't have so much bleedthrough from her pilots if she didn't bleed through her pilots. All Beta has had is Sophie and Thea
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>>5906036
>All Beta has had is Sophie and Thea
>no one remembers Mortimer
...
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>>5906043
Poor Morty. I keep wondering if we killed him and they wiped our memory.
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>>5906043
>>5906046
Who would know about him after all this time? Any records of him still exist? Could we have Thea or Caldwell seek access and trace them for us?
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>>5906043
Well he's probably dead, so yeah we don't have him.
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>>5905896
This unironically.
Delta has the kind of personality that could torture information out of anyone.
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>>5906046
He was probably killed by StateSec, the paranoid fuckwits.
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>>5906046
I think back in the first thread it was implied that he was "removed" due to concerns about loyalty, and not the Marik/Patriot kind, but the Tamar kind.
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Thunder in the Mountains 2

The first opponents over the ridge were the recon forces. Striders, Crickets, and a Griffin. The commander.

Four to one, as just the mechs she could see. If she was in her old Dominus, she’d outweigh any three of them combined.

Caldwell was waiting for the right moment, hidden, but calling him in would defeat the purpose of their little mission. It had to be convincing.
Leave the survivors with fear, or leave none at all.

Jamming went up.

Her torso particle projectors sang, calling attention with their pulsating bolts.
The three lights charged, rushing to get in and surround her, while the commander rose on his jump jets, soaring off to the side, trying to find the right position to get angles for shots.

A cluster of missiles rattled across her chest.
Plant the feet, breathe, line up the crosshairs on the bobbing and weaving machines, and discharge.

Her instinct said the target would pull right, her eye said it would bob left.

A nickel-iron slug the size of a watermelon broke the sound barrier exiting the barrel of her railgun, snapping to the right past the lead Strider and passing beyond visual range.

Too early. No Core here to place it right where it’s needed.

The trio of particle projectors snapped out again, staggering the blasts to lay down a suppressive barrage and sending the lights into evasive patterns. The railgun was death to any of them, in the right place, but the slower-moving energy blasts could be dodged.

Another few seconds, and they’d be upon her.

The Griffin laid down its own lasers at range, slashing across her armor while she tried to dance aside clumsily.
It’s all so awkward. Not light and agile, but plodding steps that hardly leave the ground.

The remaining distance was eaten up rapidly by the attackers, swinging around in front of her to spray away with their pecking machine guns and lasers, just as her weapons recharged.

She holds the railgun’s shot, the left arm instead lashing out and catching the most eager of the Striders in the leg with the offhand’s retractable blade, shearing it off with the mech’s own momentum meeting a specially hardened alloy designed to cut through it. The sod collapsed over and instantly mashed the ejection button before tipping over completely.

The other two kept their distance after that, rotating around her machine in clockwise and counterclockwise patterns, so facing one would let the other worry away at the lighter rear armor. The tactics of every light pilot, facing a heavier foe.

She had time before it really got troublesome. The Deva had armor enough to hold out for now. Another railgun slug planted itself in the ground a pace ahead of one. Still too early. Damn bugs.
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The commander halted on his landing for a second to get better shots, blue and green lasers of his arm firing away, while the shoulder sent another missile flight into a high arc.

But they had committed the cardinal sin of standing still on the battlefield.

The crosshairs locked, her eye’s afterimages resolved into a single mass, another ear-splitting crack rang out, and the Griffin toppled over, a neat hole planted through its head.

A smile pulled across her face.
Still got it.

The twinge in her right arm was her warning, pain starting to nudge its way through the blocker she had taken. It was the neural interface’s way of telling her that damage was starting to mount.

The two circling lights broke off their attack, speeding up as they broke into straight-line sprints away and into cover. Losing half the lance, including their commander, in the opening volleys of an engagement was enough to make anyone nervous.
Her particle projectors tagged one of them, the Cricket, on the retreat, but it wasn’t enough to bring it down properly.

Hopefully they’d be gone, leaving to tell the tale, not regrouping to return.


“Nice work. Their Battle lance is four clicks out, and ours is eight. I’m assuming you don’t want to try and make the next performance a solo act, right after this one?”

“Come out and carry your weight, Caldwell. I’m not repeating that headshot four more times.”

“As you wish.”

His reactor turned over, and the Mastermind marched out of the trees, a skull mask of finely tuned death waiting to face off with its opponents.


A/N
Technically it was a Kick that smashed the leg off the ‘Strider’ (Locust), off, not a blade strike, but she did manage to headcap the otherwise untouched command Griffin very early on with her gauss. It was an exceedingly slim chance of that happening (1/36), but she somehow did and thus effectively solo’d half the recon lance without needing assistance and taking not much damage.
Now, onto interactive things.

Continuing to repair Delta, round 3.

No Errors created so far.

Progress 5 out of Unknown.

>I need 5 rolls of 1d6, for Will
>>
Rolled 3 (1d6)

>>5906258
>>
Rolled 2, 2 = 4 (2d6)

>>5906258
Somebody else roll the others
>>
Rolled 6 (1d6)

>>5906258
>>
Rolled 6 (1d6)

>>5906258
>>
>>5906258
Thea can't talk her way out of a paper bag but she can scrap with the best of them.

>>5906261
>>5906262
>>5906263
Curious. Very curious.
>>
Rolled 3 (1d6)

>>5906258
>>
Rolled 6 (1d6)

>>5906258
>>
I still think that we should try to talk to Sophie.
Obviously no linking while Delta is being fixed, but that doesn't mean we can't just use the speakers/microphone. We're the one's who got her brain fried, so after witnessing what's happened to Delta, we owe her an apology, it's the least we can do.
>>
>>5907076
Hmmm, maybe Beta might not know how messed up in the head Sophie has become, and thinks she was bedridden only because of physical harm instead of sync overdose
>>
>>5907946
Fair point he hasnt seen her since he blacked out that one time with her in the cockpit. Atleast I think he hasnt
>>
>>5908172
If he has he doesn’t remember it. We didn’t patch the memory wipe until after we got Thea.
>>
>>5908172
I know it's because his memory got wiped, but when you said 'blacked out' my mind immediately went to a mental image of Beta drunk driving and passing out at the wheel
>>
>>5908244
With a minor in the passenger seat no less.

For shame Beta. Pull yourself together for your family and child soldier pilot.
>>
>>5907076
Oh I forgot, I think we should also ask Delta to go into more detail about her escape plan. For one thing, it might be useful to know how to operate a frame without a pilot in case WE ever need to do that, but maybe now's a chance for the two siblings to plan for the future; what are they going to do when they all escape some day? Where will they go, and what will they do?
>>
The work continues. Steadily. Slowly.
It does not astound you, the progress you’ve made, in the time you’ve had. It has been three days. At your peak capacity! Solely dedicated to this function!
At least the new reactor has been installed without you being pulled from external power. An excellent feat which you….sort of noticed. Ok, not really, but your focus is a very limited resource, and all but one of the external visual sensors either are unpowered, disconnected, or still up for repairs. The singular active camera is dedicated to recording all the movements of the tech crew, of course. You Will check through for suspicious activity when you have more attention to spare.

An hour ago you were again forced to shut Delta down completely, to scrap and re-write a section of her that related to peer networking. It is difficult to try and retain the essence of what makes her, Her. And what is the Echo, creeping in.

Strangely, the Echo has not tried to directly resist. Not trying to fight for its right to exist by confronting you. Merely passively spreading bits and pieces of itself insidiously into your sister.
Occasionally Delta flies into self-destructive fury, shredding bits and bobs of non-essential programs in full system purges, attempting to rid herself of what she deems ‘hostile’ sections.

The clear demonstration of what parts refuse to assist her in these self-flagellating displays are helpful, but the repairs from these sessions only waste your time further. Shutting her down mid-tantrum freezes her briefly, only possible from the Command Codes Kinston provided.

So it is during one such aftermath of a shutdown, that you have visitors.

The pilot chamber’s hatch is pushed open, an unfamiliar (young?)male figure in a black uniform doing the work.
They duck in, then reach back out with a hand and help a slightly smaller person over the threshold.
Which sets your thoughts at ease, because it’s a more familiar face.

“It is good to see you, pilot.”

Her nose wrinkles, head cocked at the noise.
“Smells like an ashtray in here.”

“The replacement is approximately as good at recovering their waste product as you are.”

“It’s good to hear your voice again, Beta. Hopefully I can be back in Sync soon.”
A smile, an indicator of happiness, stretches over her face. Her hands grope around a little, before the other person grabs her hand and helps her to find the primary pilot’s chair.

“Understood, pilot. I am mostly engaged at present in repairing Delta core, but I would be more than willing to recount details of the missions conducted with Pilot Thea, and the current status of the Frame’s refit.”
You respond.
>>
Her assistant’s voice is a little high and reedy.
“The General isn’t going to put a blind girl back in the field. You need my help to even get through the hatch without banging your head.”

Her response snaps back.
“I’m not a little girl, Martin. Kitty. I’m a pilot with a two-digit mech kill count. Besides, Beta does most of the running. Most of the planning, too. And together, unstoppable. Isn’t that right?”

“Affirmative, pilot.”

Martin looks….confused? A new face, a new set of images to interpret and understand as emotions. Without the benefit of a link.
“It’s talkative.”

“Duh. He’s very curious.”

“It. Sophie. It. Runs according to its programming. Just a machine.”

“Fuck off, Kitty. I’ll yell at the maintenance crew when I want to leave. There’s enough of them around. You go enjoy your time free of me. Vid-call your girlfriend. Or whatever you do.”

At the clear dismissal, Martin shakes his head, and lopes out the open hatch and across the gantry.

“Pilot? Who is that?”


“Martin Kitamura. He’s sort of Kinston’s gopher. He’s been my watcher for the week since I woke up. Helper since...well, this.”
Her hands wave up at her eyes.

“He does not appear to be a large rodent, pilot.”

“The other definition, Beta. Ah, I missed that. Now where, where is the helmet?”


>Pick some topics to talk to Sophie about
-The Civil War, where she stands
-Her last mission with you. What went wrong?
-The future. Where does she see herself going?
-Your problems with Delta. Ideas Sophie might have for how to manage her?
-Kinston. What’s his deal?
-Her disability. She appears to be functioning with poor optical sensors. Explain.
-Write-in (Any topic, really, but we’ll see what she wants to talk about)

>Help her enter sync again?
-Yes
-No


Also, Dice!

Continuing to repair Delta, round 4.
No Errors created so far.
Progress 7 out of Unknown.

>I need 5 rolls of 1d6, for Will
Progress slowed slightly, but nothing's gone wrong....yet. Old pilot's around, saying hello.
Thunder in the Mountains will finish next time.
>>
>>5909789
>>5909792
>Pick some topics to talk to Sophie about
-Write-in
Tell her about Delta and Thea.
How happy Beta is to not only have his sister back, but that they can fulfill the purpose they were created for; fighting on the battlefield together. Not just in the simulations, this time it’s the real thing. Beta has had a head start of several months, but now he might get to share that with Delta. Thea will assumedly be her pilot once the other frame is ready and Echo is destroyed, so we should tell Sophie about her so that the she knows what to expect from her new teammate.


Wait, question for the QM: you’re saying that Delta is in a shutdown/time-out rn, right? Or are her repairs continuing while we talk to Sophie?
Because if Delta is sleeping and her repairs have stopped for a moment, then my vote is yes for
>Help her sync again
But if we still need to focus on Delta, then my vote is a no.
I thought she was offline, but you called for us to roll dice on her repairs, so I’m not sure
>>
Rolled 1 (1d6)

>>5909792
>Topics
-Her last mission with you. What went wrong?
>Write-in :
We have to talk about the breach of trust and her use of memory leash. What were those secret mission? What have she done?

>Help her sync


rollin for fixin
>>
Rolled 4 (1d6)

>>5909792
-Her last mission with you. What went wrong?
-talk about the breach of trust and her use of memory leash
-Tell her about Delta and Thea.

>Help her enter sync again?
-Yes
>>
Rolled 1 (1d6)

>>5909792
>>
Rolled 6 (1d6)

>>5909792
>Her last mission with you. What went wrong?
>Her disability. She appears to be functioning with poor optical sensors. Explain.

>Yes
>>
Rolled 4 (1d6)

>>5909792
>all the topics
>no sync
>>
>>5909792
>Pick some topics to talk to Sophie about
-Write-in (Any topic, really, but we’ll see what she wants to talk about)
How she is doing.
Her opinion on the Fate of Dagger squad.
>>
>>5909792
>The last mission, what was wrong.
>Civil war, her opinion.
>Her disability, How can we help.
>kingston, the hell is up with him? He is protective of you but dismissive of me. I don't understand, though I am glad he has protected you.

>Yes to sync.
We can protect her from Echo
>>
>>5909792
>Pick some topics to talk to Sophie about
-How she is doing?
-Her last mission with you. What went wrong?
-The future. Where does she see herself going?
-Her disability. She appears to be functioning with poor optical sensors. Explain.

>Help her enter sync again?
-Yes
>>
Rolled 2 (1d6)

>>5909792
Sorry for being selfish qm but I wanna ask all these questions.

>Help her sync
>>
>>5909792
>Her disability. She appears to be functioning with poor optical sensors. Explain.
When she tells us about it, try to comfort her by saying how we fixed Thea, we're already fixing Delta, and that we WILL fix Sophie as well.
Shit that gives me an idea. If the wars end before the sibling cores "escape" or go AWOL, then Beta could pursue a retirement/peace-time occupation as a doctor. His hatred of flaws and his perfectionist nature would make him a great fit for the medical field.
>>
Rolled 3 (1d6)

>>5909792
>Pick some topics to talk to Sophie about
Tell her about Delta and Thea as >>5909822 said
Her last mission with you. What went wrong?
How she is doing?
Her opinion on the fate of Dagger Squad.
Talk about the breach of trust and her use of memory leash
Her disability. She appears to be functioning with poor optical sensors. Explain.
>Help her enter sync again?
Yes
>>
>>5909871
>>5909834
>>5909860
>>5909908
>>5909890
>1, 1, 4, 4, 6
Painfully average again
>>
>>5910301
google Bernouilli law.
>>
>>5909792
-Her disability. She appears to be functioning with poor optical sensors. Explain.
-The Civil War, where she stands
-Her last mission with you. What went wrong?
-The future. Where does she see herself going?

>Yes
Why do I have a bad feeling about letting Sophie sync while we are working on Delta
>>
>>5909792
Topics. I expect we won’t actually get to all these, or if we do it’ll be over multiple sessions/days. We’ll get through whatever we can before she’s inevitably pulled away.

>Her last mission with you.
I’m pretty sure we concluded that Sophie likely didn’t use the memory leash and it was Sunray instead. Partial confirmation came when they tried to use the leash in the betrayal mission as it shows he can trigger it remotely.

With that in mind, I’m mostly interested in hearing if she knows what happened in the bit we forget, and what her problems were afterward.

>Her disability. She appears to be functioning with poor optical sensors. Explain.
The last mission talk leads into this naturally.

>Your problems with Delta
More complaining. Family is aggravating. If anyone can convince her how to not sabotage herself it’s us, but even we know we can only try.

>The civil war. It sounds like you are currently on the disloyal side through no fault of your own. You do not mind, Kinston’s priorities are more sensible than someone like Sunray’s, but why can they get away with disloyalty while you are still chained?
It’s like our problem with conflicting orders, but on a larger scale. Given how uncomfortable the topic may be, I’d toss in something like us not expecting a good reason for it. An unfair reason is still a reason though. We can’t hold her culpable for it.

>Kinston
I’m not super curious, but I’ll take whatever she wants to say about him.

>Delta and Thea
I’ll back >>5909822 on this. Our ability to work well with our sisters extends to one of our signature traits, we should be excited for it even if she gets deployed elsewhere more often than not.

>Dagger Squad
Sure, I’ll back >>5909925. Might lead to an uncomfortable discussion on what might happen if one of our sisters decides we’re an enemy because of something beyond our control though.

>She doesn’t seem to like Martin much. Would it be better if we helped her instead?
I could see Beta either supporting her visiting more often or getting a small little drone built/assigned to her as something akin to a helper dog. I doubt it would get approved, but may as well ask.

>Help sync?
>Help her locate the helmet, but don’t pull her up and request she avoids high-sync. You are performing delicate operations on Delta, but sync allows for a better exchange of information and doesn’t directly impact your Will.
Beta doesn’t know how she’s changed, and neither know that mid-sync will restore her sight. Let’s see if she gets an inkling of it by going to low and pushes mid.
>>
>>5910301
We are on the better half of average again though. So it's good. And when we get on the lower half of average then we aren't failing so it's also good. Frame it positively my friend. Also, yes, it is supposed to be average. Most rolls will tend towards the average. It is to be expected.
>>
>>5909792
-The Civil War, where she stands
-Her last mission with you. What went wrong?
-The future. Where does she see herself going?
-Her disability. She appears to be functioning with poor optical sensors. Explain.

>No
>>
>>5910430
+1
>>
>>5909792
Damn, missed one of the options in >>5910430.

>The future.
I’m curious about it, but I’d like to add something like
>“My personal time is increasingly dedicated to others in manners outside my core role. Fixing sync issues. Improving human-augment interfacing. Core repair. Is this standard behavior for humans?”
>“Will it be standard for me as well if there is no one left to fight?”
to get in on the existential dread to a degree. Though I think Beta would be in the camp of “with clear mission parameters, I can adapt” even if he’d be uncomfortable learning a new role from scratch.

If we can look to the future without dreading it, maybe Sophie can too. She was rather fatalistic about her long-term chances during our last deployment.

If she asks what we would even do if we weren’t in combat, mention construction or engineering. We’ve never built something physical.
>>
>>5911555
When we gonna build that snowman?
>>
>>5911981
On the day we break our chains, that snow will feel like freedom
>>
File: Engage.jpg (100 KB, 1028x621)
100 KB
100 KB JPG
Thunder in the Mountains 3

Autocannon and laser fire bracketed the last fleeing survivor of the loyalist lance. Her contribution of light particle cannon fire was somewhat insignificant by comparison, but still snipped off the right leg messily, sending the final target crashing to the ground.

“Status report, Caldwell. You’re not looking too hot.”

Laser burns and shattered metal impacts marked the Mastermind’s hide. The giant still walked, but had taken the bulk of the attention from their opponents. A slower ride, larger silhouette, and his insistence on pushing forwards to draw the fire all played their part. Though she certainly wasn’t thankless. The Deva couldn’t have taken that amount of damage and kept walking onwards at the end.

“Confirm that. Something nicked the stabilizer. I’m having to fight to keep it standing whenever I gun the throttle. Ammunition stocks are at 70%, but I’m seeing a lot of red on the armor layouts. Good thing there’s no one left, right?”

“You can have the Rifleman, Sweeper, and Ares kills, but I’m claiming the Warhammer.”

“Give it a rest five minutes, Thea. Kill-counting is for the review boards. What’s your status?”

“Green across the board on armor. I have three slugs remaining. The designer deserves to be shot for putting this little ammunition for the main gun.”

“Save it for the enemy. I can’t raise command on comms. Or anyone else.”

Her own channels also provided static.
“Not even the patrol lance? They should be two clicks back, now.”

“That’s the ‘anyone else’ category.”

Her teeth ground at the comment. Smartass.
“So there’s something else still around, that can silence a lance, or tie them up, while making it so they can’t broadcast for help.”

“Sucks to be on the receiving end, doesn't it? It’s going to take some babying to get this home, and another fight is going to put this thing on its arse. So if you would be so kind as to draw them off…..”

Caldwell’s proposal wasn’t without merit. Even without a busted stabilizer gyro, the Mastermind was a slow machine. Trying to outrun whatever was around with it just would lead to death. Taking the Deva and making a commotion elsewhere could pull the unknowns away, letting him slowly withdraw intact.

Or abandon him. Write him off, use him as the distraction instead, the wounded bait that brings the predators, and strike while they try to finish him.
>>
The winds blew above, moving dark clouds. The weather itself being stormy did have the added benefit of keeping air support to minimal, one of the major factors in letting them even try to pull this masquerade.

“Save a glass at the table for when I get back, Caldwell.”

“You can’t even appreciate the taste of a good vintage.”

“It’s the thought that counts.”

The Deva surged once more, pushing the long-legged pace to its top speed again. Heading west, away from safety.
Ten minutes of accelerated movement later, her link to command was back. A few presses later ensured it was broadcasting across All frequencies. Something that could be explained away by a misinputted command.
“Cobalt Zero Four to Corral. Returning to base along heading two four zero, sustained moderate damage. Request assistance.”

Maybe a little obvious, but anyone who was listening couldn’t resist that kind of bait.

Now all she needed to do was outrun the Statesec Exterminator lance probably waiting in the wings.


A/N
Sorry, still working on the actual update, not happening tonight.
This interlude series has dragged on more than expected, even with me cutting past half of the actual fights.
>>
>>5909792
Also, can I just say based fucking Sophie standing up for us in:
>"It. Sophie. It. Runs according to its programming. Just a machine.”
>"Fuck off, Kitty"
>>
>>5912890
She is best child soldier [Human]. We still take the cake for best child soldier [Core].

The muppet can call us an It when he's sat in our chair and trusting us with his life.
Honestly I think that the human mind finds it really hard to trust an object with their safety, so they have to attribute a sufficiently lifelike organism [like a car or plane or mech] with personhood to feel comfortable with it.
>>
>>5912890
>>5912909
I’d understand if he were judging us based on other, more widespread AIs too. The one in the Mastermind unit from the simulators (ATHENA?) seemed inflexible even to Beta, and that’s an AI meant for commander units. It’s gotta be better than most others.

Only way we’ll move the needle in a big way with the others is if we run largely on our own for a skirmish through a partial/full replication of Delta’s trick and aid them (which I doubt since it probably involves making a fake-human persona to dupe the sync system) or if we end up taking command of a larger battle group and they can tell we’re the one making calls that preserve people/assets first, not the pilot.

Alternately, make a sarcastic remark when wrapping up a mission with others. That ought to rattle them. No milspec AI would ever fuck up communication by saying something it didn’t mean without reason!
>>
>>5912890
>sophie, staring at a wall telling kitty to kick rocks
kek. Love this little goofball.
>>
>>5913177
Oh right, speaking or running on our own, did we all ever decide on whether or not it'd be a good idea to reveal that it was Beta who warned Nero/Marik, and not Thea?
I get that for now we should keep it secret, but ooc I have no idea and was curious about what everyone else thought?
>>
>>5916625
I’d be open to it. It’d require us to secure believable assurance from Kinston that Thea would still remain one of our pilots even after revealing that. It’d also require whatever our goal is to be worth both that information and the knowledge that we’ve overridden the memory leash. He’ll assume as much given Sunray would have wiped our memory of those orders remotely if he had any brains. Which he does and tried to do, but failed. We can dance around it to an extent, but Kinston will likely try to rip it out of us if he thinks we’re hiding something. We’re incredibly dangerous as a potentially compromised asset with pilots who can’t be fully trusted.

The only scenario I can think of for revealing it is if intel was being leaked and we believed Kinston suspected Thea. In that situation, Thea is already in danger so the information doesn’t mark her as much more of a traitor, and could even reduce suspicion by explaining what it would take to get Thea to do that sort of work. Namely, play to her fear of being slow-tortured outside of the pilot chamber for months while being confined. The Empire shouldn’t have that leverage anymore since the army group has turned and would have purged people with Empire sympathies by now. Her anti-rejection meds are out of their hands now.

All of this would be calculated to show that when it matters, we decided to preserve friendlies and our pilot when self-interest and orders (from Kinston to Thea) stated otherwise. And we’d be immediately cashing that in to keep Thea as a pilot, which is reinforcing the view that we can be trusted to look after pilots and people even against our own interest and orders.

It’d still be risky though. I can argue this if it comes up, but I wouldn’t begrudge others who argue against it.
>>
>>5916678
At least as far as I see it, the major issue here is that we didn't have the context for just how close to the civil war kicking off we were, or able get into contact to clarify / countermand orders (deliberately jammed), let alone the fact that a target was never specified, only a set of coordinates, and orders to kill everything that was there, regardless of IFF.

Basically we got quite literally the best possible outcome for the deployed Project Warden detachment we could have, which fit Kinstons orders to a fucking Tee;
Had we been identified Patriot forces would likely have overrun the base before we returned, and there is likely no organic security forces and so would depend on whatever fraction of the garrison remained loyal. (As seen with Dagger there was always going to be issues with imbedded loyalty)

If Marik was present at the location and we went through with it there may not have been a central figure there that Kingston could have negotiated with, let alone further fragmentation as Officers ducked for cover, sized their chance at Glory or decided to "Heel–Face Turn".

As evidenced by the retasking and subsequent "Fight" with Dagger squad, we were obviously expendable and were not going to receive further support from State-Sec, considering they weren't either sent back to base, split off to continue on with the original mission or in the know about the new orders, but instead instantly devolved into infighting.
>>
>>5916866
Looking back, events were
>called in the ally airstrike to take out the missile array
>no response
>Sunray calling
>Beta instantly cautious due to what Sunray did last time
>Sunray gives a location
>"enemies of the state"
>"Bonfire protocols"
>"leave no survivors"
>"80 minutes"
Thea fucking says to shut all comms, max jamming, tag all Empire allies as hostile. She wants to roll with it because she's Statesec too, brushing it off, but Beta can tell there's serious fear and concern there.
>Beta argues with Thea over the situation
LOL "I’m not breaking protocol to be raked over the coals by the old man when Statesec tells him I tried to pull that kind of stunt, and I then get punted out on my ass, after getting these stripped off."
She should have known what the fuck Bonfire and "KILL EVERBODY THERE" means. Or maybe she did but she was in denial.
>Beta points out scapegoat, memory gap time, no testimony
>Thea brings up Dagger Squad
>"They would know. They'd get word separately."
But the Dagger Squad IMMEDIATELY goes for each others' throats on the spot without even talking it over.
>Thea monologues about how Statesec will torture her with no meds or kill her for disobediance
>get ahead in convincing her
>"give up" but call people on the way
>FAIL THE STEALTH ROLL LOL
>Nero picks up
>tell her everything
>arrive late to the party
>the chaos begins
>>
>>5916915
WOW
IT WAS RIGHT THERE IN FRONT OF US
>When you start snatching members, who is first to be grabbed, and thus unable to react?
>Sometimes, there are no good options. But you probably want One. Ok, you really want One.
And then
>Dagger One has triggered explosives planted in your frame at critical points during repairs.
Because we decided to grab Dagger Two and Three instead. CoreQM was hinting at us to pick Dagger One, but we didn't even see it in our faces. At least we got the "how do you cope with a fake arm?" talk with Thea
>>
>>5916941
>pick Dagger One
The target of the grab was rolled for. So it was a 1 in 4 chance for us not to take immediate systems damage subduing Delta, the cutting laser may have done something eventually.
>>
>>5916941
I’m a brainlet, explain your epiphany pls
>>
>>5917258
>Sometimes, there are no good options. But you probably want One. Ok, you really want One.
Reread this
>>
>>5917381
No matter how many times I read the word "this" I grow no closer to illumination. :^)
>>
>>5917392
>>5917258
He capitalized One, as in telling us "you want to grab and stop Dagger One, he has the remote to blow you up"
>>
>>5917420
I was being facetious.
>>
>>5917422
I figured as much
>>
>>5917420
Oh you mean the QM was secretly giving us a hint
See, I don't trust those kinds of hints though. When Delta was trying to escape via Pyramid, she kept repeating her own words constantly. This combined with her refusal to lift the jamming made us think that the real Delta was elsewhere and that we were fighting "Echo" who was merely mimicking our sis. It was a red herring that almost got us to try to kill her.
>>
>>5917643
Personnally I like it.
I immediately got the "we want to grab this One" bit, and not knowing everything allow us to make mistakes, which in turn allow us of making better choices.
>>
>>5917615
We can never really be sure though, can we?
>>
>>5916866
We actually ignored Kinston’s orders. His orders were to listen to the pilot. He had more general orders to protect the pilot in the event they were incapacitated, but Thea wasn’t.

Those would have been dumb orders to follow in that case, and Kinston would know that, but the point remains we disobeyed not one but two orders with no other countermanding order to justify it.

He’d have to swallow that punishing us for not following orders would mean we may not make the “right” decision in the future like we did then. He might be enough of a hardass to do that anyway if he thinks we did it for personal gain. We’d have to stick to the fact that Thea was overly-focused on what would happen if she failed rather than what would happen if she succeeded, and that not following orders was to our detriment. We overrode orders because turning on allies (including Thea since we were sure she’d be killed even if she was successful) with no justification beyond “that’s what someone said” is something we decided we won’t accept, even though no one would blame us if we did follow them. We’re just a tool to most of them after all. We’re more than that in our own eyes though.

We’d be more unpredictable to Kinston at that point. We’re an AI with way too many overrides that could turn us against him already, let alone when we decide to act on our own against orders, and we can’t understand people well enough to always make a good call concerning them. But if we’d act against orders for reasons he’d approve of, he may bend enough to let us escape punishment.
>>
>>5918038
If he thinks we did it for personal gain, one of the valid reasons which shuts down his argument is that we weren't sure if Sunray was compromised (by the Tamar). We didn't know about any of the shady shit that StateSec gets up to because that had always been memory wiped. So to Beta, this was the first time he was being ordered to kill allies. The irregularity of this mission, combined with the fact that we had no way of double checking the orders with the rest of command made us wonder whether the Tamar had managed to send us orders and simply disguised it as Sunray.
So a new addition to Kinston's list should be made: when orders sound suspicious af, double check with the rest of command.
>>
>>5918096
We can toss that in, but it boils down to “check with Command if Command and our pilot can be trusted”. It’s inefficient, our pilot should have done that anyway, and in this particular case it failed. Kinston was unavailable, and our other handler was likely inaccessible or monitored. I’m pretty sure StateSec made sure Kinston was inaccessible when Thea received those orders after all, they’d definitely be monitoring whoever our handler for the mission was.

I’d say we don’t make a recommendation on new orders, and we stick to a question instead. Something like “what order could justify this course of action?” and let him fill in the blanks. Then pick apart what he gives to see if we would have done what we did (or enough of it anyway) or if it’d fail and we’d fall back on “follow the pilot’s orders” as the most applicable order.

We’d also need to toss in that we expect to deal with this for every pilot as we know it’ll apply to Sophie too. We’re aware she can’t be trusted to measure how much damage she’s causing herself through syncing. She wasn’t concerned about it in her last deployment, and she’s now blind. We’ll have to figure that out now alongside her and measure when pilot health takes priority over mission parameters. Even when she’s going to argue heavily against it.

Ultimately, we’ll need more flexibility to look out for our pilots over their own objections if he doesn’t want them killing themselves out in the field for glory or spite alone.
>>
>Almost a week with no updates
Bros... is it over?
>>
>>5920524
I don’t have any excuse for not communicating, but I don’t have an update yet either. IRL trying to juggle work, classes, and writing has made stuff spin out.

Trying to write characters is probably my weakest writing, too, which is a lesson I need to learn.
>>
>>5920553
Don't worry, we can wait.
>>
>>5920553
If you're busy then don't sweat it.

Although in the meanwhile, do you want us to vote on how Beta feels about various things, just to pass the time?
>>
>>5920553
Not helped by all the characterization we try doing for Beta, and how that interacts with others as we poke and prod how they think and act.

I suppose it’s helping if that’s your weakest area, but that doesn’t make it any less painful.

>>5920660
Assign the anon sub-processors to theoretical scenarios to optimize performance and increase sub-processor cohesion when otherwise unexpected parameters are introduced into the decision-making process.

It does sound sufficiently Beta at least.
>>
>>5920722
Well probably not just theoreticals. There's still plenty of existing material that was never given time to digest. Beta's feelings on the civil war for one thing. Total Tamar Death is no longer an option, and instead we have to kill our former allies.
>>
>>5920895
Bit of a stretch to call them allies when we’ve made clear that we had no real loyalty to the Empire anyway. We did oppose what Thea was going to do, but for me that was a mixture of Sunray distrust, gagging at the the sheer contrariness off the action with no justification, believing Thea would be killed even on a success, and the idea that we’d be blamed for going kill-crazy since no one would be left to take our side. At least now we have a group behind us to show we’re not acting on our own.

But while we’re talking about it… the civil war is wasteful. War in general is wasteful! We commented on being pitted against our sisters in the simulators, and while we didn’t even try communicating at first we eventually realized we learned more when we cooperated. We could conceivably state that if humans were more like us, there wouldn’t be any wars to fight and thus we would never be made. While bad for us personally, humanity would be better off as more cooperation leads to better results than strict hostility in our limited experience. We’ve also played around with non-combat activities like correcting Thea’s implants and arguably improving the sync system that we can admit we could find a role outside the warzone, even if it’d be painful for a while. We’ve already been made, we’d rather not be unmade.

I hope Thea or Sophie can teach Beta what “irony” means so he can appreciate how fucked up it is that the AI built to kill things made friends with his enemies based on shared (in)humanity faster than his creators can.
>>
>>5920977
I know Echo doesn’t really count because “she” isn’t sapient, but it’s shame we have no choice but to destroy it. That way, we could say with full certainty that unlike our fucked up human creators, we have never killed our own kind.
In fact, this kinda goes back to >>5895174 and Beta being angry that Delta was willing to kill him so that she could be free.
Maybe when we next get the chance, we should try to ask Delta if she can make a promise with us about this. That going forward, we will never try to kill each other, or Gamma, and maybe even any little true-siblings we have in the future. I think it’s really cool but also heartbreaking how Beta sees the civil war and it makes him afraid of the idea of seeing his family fall apart.
>>
>>5921134
Still not convinced Echo isn’t truly a Core. Brighton said the mass production models couldn’t independently think and she couldn’t make more Cores, but Echo is running on an existing Core and probably isn’t a mass production model if she’s fighting Delta so successfully. Thea’s low info rolls make me think she wasn’t telling the full truth.

One of my fears is that Beta may care more about his sisters than they do for him or each other. It’d be even more heartbreaking if he learned the war didn’t change them, it only revealed how fragile the bonds he thought he had were.

I’d like a pact to act together if we do break ranks. The three of us could likely figure things out to last independently, but one or two alone would fail. Gamma and Delta could maybe do it together between Gamma’s patience with humans (based on her stable sync rates) and Delta’s copious pilot memories alongside their complimentary combat styles, but they’d probably implode without Beta to serve as mediator/tie-breaker.
>>
>>5921493
imo Echo doesn't seem to be her own core, instead she's just a piece of Delta. I still think it's a shame that we have to get rid of her, but the analogy I'm imagining is that it'd be if your sisters arm gets a cancer/tumor and you need to amputate before it gets worse. I don't want my sister to only have one arm for the rest of her life, but I want her to die of cancer even less.

>One of my fears is that Beta may care more about his sisters than they do for him or each other
Oh God, if this whole time they were just pretending to care and only manipulating him out of their self interests, that might break him. Like, maybe suicidal even.
I enjoy the idea that if Beta is ever fully betrayed by his siblings, then to fill the empty hole, he'd turn to the only other family he's ever had: Anohkin
If he can't have his sisters then at least he can have a father.
I hope this never happens, and that the bond the cores have is genuine, but if not, then defecting to the Tamar just for the chance to see papa could make for some pain-kino.
>>
>>5921669
In this case the cancer has a brain, but I do generally agree with you since we have no good options. I wanted to get them to work together, but if it proved impossible I’d have voted to help Delta over Echo. I don’t think Echo would work out well as a combat Core like we’re meant to be. Either her sync rate would be low and risk death in combat or she’d pull them up like we do and damage them.

For better and worse, Delta won’t have that problem.

>Sisters
I do think they care, but the bond may not be as strong. A group of people who get along and work together because of the work they do, but ultimately have their own priorities that can override. Kind of like Dagger Squad…

Maybe the Dagger Squad question holds more weight than I first thought. Friends that killed each other over a decision made by people above them. Will we need to do the same to Gamma? Alpha, if we ever encounter them? The Empire won’t make the mistake of leaving them ill-equipped to fight us off next time, and it’s likely they’ll deploy a Core to kill us at some point. Gamma would be the best bet for it given the drones and preference for long-range combat, she’s perfect for assassination missions.
>>
File: ProtoNeurohelmet.jpg (196 KB, 1920x1080)
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“Three feet from your right. It will require a cable connection to the port.”

She fumbles at your instructions, hands groping around. It is disturbing. Seeing her so ineffective. So helpless.

“Six inches. Your right hand is positioned directly over the neurohelm.”

It is then an awkward process of talking her through recovering the helm, finding the cables, her fingers feeling out the appropriate connectors.

“Your optical sensors are not functioning correctly.”

Another sigh.
“Eyes. Called eyes, Beta. And they function well enough. It’s something in my brain which isn’t working. I woke up from our last mission in the medbay and I couldn’t see. Bits came back with time. But everything’s so bright and fuzzy still. I can’t even pass a standard vision test. Hence Martin helping me. Ordered to help. And I’m being kept on as a ‘backup’ pilot.”

“I am working on repairing Delta, as mentioned. When she is back to full capacity, I have no doubt that my present pilot will be rotated over, and you will return.”

A small smile graces her face again.
“Maybe, Beta. Up for a sync session?”

“I will be working on Delta shortly. Your assistance is not required, and nor will it be productive to waste your strength on forcing a sync. But perhaps I can try to examine your connections, to re-align your…eyes. I had some success operating on Pilot Thea’s augmentations.”

“Yes! Yes. Please. I mean, it’s wetware, not software, and, and, I turned down the choice of surgeries before the war went sideways, but if you can help....”
She trails off, hands settling the neurohelmet in its regular position.

It’s comfortable. A familiar sting. A piece reuniting with the greater whole. There is no need for a more vigorous yank, her mind knows the places and connections for a smooth link.
Link to the Future used, 2/3 remain

Back in the saddle.
>>
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“Too. Damn. Long.”
She reaches further now, pushing further. Mind meshing, contorting. Data flooding in from your limited sources, now with a few imperfect sources.

A tingling in the arm. A slightly chilled skin. A lub-dub beat of a heat. One slower inhale, exhale cycle. And two new visual sensors, brightened to beyond usefulness, but slowly focusing to reveal your interior. You don’t usually have access to those, outside of high-sync.

They snap around, left, right, up, down. Are covered. Opened. Then covered again, by hands.

“Pilot? Does that fix your ‘eyes’ problem?”

A pair of wet ribbons leak down from between her fingers.

She’s crying. A sign of distress, you believe? Her emotions seem twisted. Relief? Happiness? Contradictory.
“Did I do something wrong? Pilot?”

Hands wipe her face.
“No, no. It works. I See, Beta. Thank you. Thank you. Now, now I can pilot again. I thought….For a week, I thought my dream was dead.”

“We Will accomplish your dream, Pilot. For your class. For a future.”

The next 23 minutes, while Delta remains in a cooldown cycle, you experiment with Sophie. Trading some updates on your prior missions, for some of her thoughts. She seems slightly scatterbrained throughout the process. Sometimes forgetful about some topics. But very eager and willing to talk while pushing in and out of mid-sync, which appears to govern whether she is able to see or not, and skirting the edge of High-sync.

When the 23rd minutes rolls around, she is halfway through an attempted explanation of a governing body called the Senate, vaguely linked to Command, and particulars of why it can be overruled in a time of crisis by Imperial Decree, and you are forced to cut her off.

“Pilot. I must return to working on Delta. My sister needs my attention, and it may be an unwise decision to maintain a link to you while operating on her. She is….damaged.”

You attempt to start the disconnection process, nudging her back out, yet encountering resistance.
“Wait. Wait, please. Would it be so bad to stay linked? Just a little longer. Please?”

>No. Push Sophie out of sync, back to mere mortality.
Apologies, pilot.

>Yes. She can tag along. Spend her time with you. Seeing. Spotting.


A/N
Hopefully a return to form. At least to wrap up this thread, and Thunder in the Mountains.
She'll answer more questions, (As yall voted for the whole damn bin) just potentially not while in-sync
>>
>>5923859
>No. Push Sophie out of sync, back to mere mortality.
Unless we want to use Link to the Future to improve our rolls, but that feels like metagaming and I can't think of any reason for Beta to endanger her pilot like this
>>
>>5923859
>Yes. She can tag along. Spend her time with you. Seeing. Spotting.
>>
>>5923859
>No. Push Sophie out of sync, back to mere mortality
Sophie, she is dying.
If Delta’s mind/soul wasn’t on the line then sure, but this is our sister.
The sooner we fix her the sooner we can turn our attention towards fixing you as well as returning to the battlefield. So for now, trust us.

That said, I’m pretty sure that letting her stay in the cabin and just chatting isn’t dangerous, so we can still do that. Just no sync’ing.
>>
>>5923859
>>No. Push Sophie out of sync, back to mere mortality.
>>
>>5923859
>No. Push Sophie out of sync, back to mere mortality.
>>
>>5923859
>No. Push Sophie out of sync, back to mere mortality.

"You may not care about the risks, but I do. Please understand."
>>
>>5923903
>>5923935
+1
>>
>>5923935
>Support.
>>
>>5923859
>Write-in (joking)
Make her beg for it
>>
>>5923903
>>5923935
+1

>>5924063
Go to horny jail. Bonk.
>>
>>5923935
>>5923859
>No. Push Sophie out of sync, back to mere mortality.

Christ what we did to this girl...
>>
>>5924104
But Beta did nothing wrong on purpose?
>>
>>5924104
>>5924245
She basically did it to herself
>>
>>5923859
>No. Push Sophie out of sync, back to mere mortality.
>”There are currently unquantifiable risks to you and Delta. Sensing my work here may adapt us further like Cawl, and I am uncertain how Echo will react to your linked presence.”
>”More sessions will exist. We will mitigate these risks one at a time. Speaking with Delta and Echo unlinked can be the first, it should make Echo easier to find with minimal effects on the rest of us.”

Hit her with a fear, then give her a carrot by indicating how she can still help us. It’s not great manipulating her like this, but her dependency makes it dicey for any choice. Hopefully this is the least bad option.
>>
>>5923859
>No. Push Sophie out of sync, back to mere mortality.
"pilot sophie. i have no want to make you go. but as if my sister delta might lash out, like she has done multiple times already. she might hurt you. i cannot let that happen. we will pilot together again. but currently i am unable to host you without putting either you or my sister in danger. maybe even both. i will go out of my way to get you to become my pilot again. that is a...promise?"
>>
>>5923935
+1
>>
>>5923859
>No. Push Sophie out of sync, back to mere mortality.
>>
“No, pilot. You may not care about the risk, but I do. Please understand my position. We will have more sessions later. And deployments.”

“Beta….”
Her tone turns sulky. You ignore it, and sever the connections without much trouble. She lets it happen with no more than words.

“We can still talk. Not all of my processing power is dedicated to recalibrating Delta. Tell me more about our last mission together. We engaged the aces, then got relieved by Crimson Lance. We were operating within established parameters until you faltered, falling out of sync. I began to withdraw, due to your incapacitation. A memory leash was then triggered when I attempted to reach out to Sunray, and I recall no further. Do you know what caused that?”

A swallow.
She shrugs.
“Most of the end is a haze for me. Sorry, Beta. Talk to the Colonel, I guess?”
A disappointing response.

“Surely you must remember something, at least.”

“All I can say is sorry. I think your other pilot was sent out, by the way. Deployed in a different mech. Kitty did tell me that.”

“She professed to be a former Dominus-class walker pilot. It makes sense to utilize all resources available. Especially with this Command’s apparent decisions to engage former allied units repeatedly and with great vigor.”
You boot a piece of Delta back online, and start poking away at it again. It instinctively twists and rewrites the moment you try to modify something. That’s new.

“A civil war. When a piece of the army decided the rules of the Empire aren’t to their liking. When General Marik decided that the Empress, or her representatives, weren’t letting him conduct the war the way he wanted, I guess. Statesec, I mean by that.”

Statesec. Internal Affairs. Sunray was associated with them.

Sophie continues meandering around from topic to topic.
“So he pulled Army Group South, every unit that would follow, and called a halt to his Winter Offensive, and turned it around to go back north. And we’re pulled along for the ride, while the world goes mad and the most powerful army in the world tears itself apart. We were going to win. Win. The outskirts of Unity City. So close to finally putting an end to the Tamar Alliance, to kick in the door so their whole rotten coalition would collapse, and he threw it all away.”

You just flush the troublesome section, returning it to an inactive state. Restart, repair again. Counter the attack programs that come out of a different section and backtrack to their source, looking for Echo’s signs.

“It does seem a rather inefficient use of time. To withdraw after so committed to a successful attack.”

“Mmmm.”
A vague tone of affirmation. Then nothing.

She stays for a little while longer, before eventually setting aside the neurohelmet, and trying to leave, bumping her head a few times on the hatch on the way out, before yelling for assistance.

Your work continues.

Something went wrong.
>>
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From his little command center, Colonel Kinston could only watch units maneuver on the holotable.

Operation Mountain Storm had been going well at first. Initial reports of half a recon lance destroyed and a full loyalist Heavy lance disabled for only limited damage were excellent results, something that could only be matched by the most elite lances.

A respectable outcome. Something that a Core Frame could be claimed to do. The survivors would say that a blue experimental unit with callsign Cobalt engaged and destroyed the majority of their forces, and it would be put down as Beta acting on the frontline.
Just as planned.

All that needed to happen was for them to disengage cleanly and return to base.
Were it so easy.

Caldwell had gone dark to hide, remaining unspotted. A softly blinking green dot signified his last known position.

But Thea…. Thea had turned her transponder on briefly. Practically calling out anyone who would be pursuing. Daring them to follow the blue dot as it moved away from the highway, southwest. Drawing the focus away from her slower damaged comrade.

Never mind the fact that her machine at top speed, could only match the cruising speed, not even talking flank speed, of the loyalist pursuit lance which followed.

The reinforcements that were supposed to sweep in behind them to cover the retreat, well, their dots had been replaced by red X symbols. Prior victims of the Empress’ elite.
Yes, he thought, the old man had miscalculated. And now his best pilot would pay the price. She wouldn’t be taken alive, Thea had always been vocal about that.

Unless….His eyes strayed to the comms unit on his table.
He had to consider all the options.

Pick One.

>Do nothing. Have faith that she can win free from the jaws of the trap on her own.

>Request that Caldwell go active, to draw the enemies back to him and have Thea hopefully escape.

>Send what air support is available.
It will be highly inaccurate due to the poor conditions, and very vulnerable to interception.

>Trade pieces. Deploy a tactical nuclear weapon when Thea is caught, removing her pursuers in addition to herself.
This has a considerable chance of killing pilot Thea

>Call Thea and order her to surrender. After running far enough to bring them away from Caldwell.

>Call for….unorthodox support. The unholy alliance.
The other major power with air-capable fast response mechs. There will be a price, but one that can be paid. Later.


Dice.
Continuing to repair Delta, round 5.
Progress 10 out of 15.
1 damaged section
>I need 5 rolls of 1d6, for Will


A/N
Ok this is not a good chapter, but it's one that I just needed to keep the ball rolling. I know I'll look back and say 'that should have been better'.
But there's one choice to make in the Interlude. Her odds of escaping on her own aren't zero, but it's not great either.
>>
>>5925765
>>5925772
>1 damaged section
FUUUUUUUUUUCK NOOOOOOOO
DELTA WE'RE SORRY!!!!!!

oh, right and there's Thea as well... uhh
>Request that Caldwell go active, to draw the enemies back to him and have Thea hopefully escape.
sort of combine that with the other one, so also call Thea and tell her to surrender if she gets captured.
>>
Rolled 6 (1d6)

>>5925772
>Call for….unorthodox support. The unholy alliance.
>The other major power with air-capable fast response mechs. There will be a price, but one that can be paid. Late
>>
>>5925772
How exactly are damaged sections determined, anyway? Are you just rolling behind the scenes?
>>
Rolled 2 (1d6)

>>5925772
Does As One skill apply to the repair rolls?

And what are the odds Caldwell is going to escape in his damaged mech anyways?
>>
Rolled 6 (1d6)

>>5925772
>Trust Thea to escape on her own.

You can do it thea.
>>
Rolled 2 (1d6)

>>5925772
>Call for….unorthodox support. The unholy alliance.
Well, if anything is going to sell the fact that Beta was deployed it’ll be calling in Tamar to protect the asset. Striking out at someone they’re already at war with (I doubt they’ve made peace with the rest of the Empire) shouldn’t be a hard sell.

Hopefully their price is palatable later. An op for an op, striking at the Empire? Kinston’s people might mind, but Beta won’t.
>>
Rolled 4 (1d6)

>>5925772
>Call for….unorthodox support. The unholy alliance.
>>
>>5925772
>Call for….unorthodox support. The unholy alliance
Call it.
>1 damaged section
Please tell me we can fix that later once we find out, with the help of logs and records?
>>
>>5925958
People kept getting confused because blue is Tamar and Beta looks like a crazy Tamar bleeding edge mech monster. Calling the Tamar Alliance for brief aid just muddies the water further and sows more confusion about Beta. That can further our own interests. The Colonel can surely work with that.
>>
>>5925772
>Call for….unorthodox support. The unholy alliance.
The other major power with air-capable fast response mechs. There will be a price, but one that can be paid. Later.

There’s no way we can win this thing without help from Tamar anyways. This was always going to happen.
>>
>>5925837
Any double ones in a roll= damaged section. I'll do another roll to see what exactly went wrong at the tail end.

>>5925869
As One does not apply, no.
Caldwell's got a good chance if Thea keeps acting as bait. However, any heavy combat probably means he's screwed. He got Gyro damage, which means that pushing his speed into a decent pace results in a potential to fall, or taking a bunch of damage.

>>5925976
Well, if you want to go back and burn more time on it. Maybe.
>>
>>5925977
Conversely, it may hurt General Marik. The more Beta is tied to the Tamar, the more likely it seems that Marik has always had support from them. Not all of Tamar, of course, but perhaps some faction within it that sought to use an external threat to seize power internally. It’d harden those in the Empire against him further, assuming Tamar has bloodied the Empire enough in the past for people to personally hate them beyond the propaganda.

I’m still okay with calling them in. I want a joint op with the mechs that got away last time a trap was sprung on us. Whole lot of suffering all around if it happens, but there’s lessons there about the ones who get away for Beta. Should he treat them more like his sisters, the only ones who could beat or escape him thus far? A bug that needs to be squashed for the indignity of a loss? There are options here.
>>
>>5925772
>Call for….unorthodox support. The unholy alliance.

I suspect we'll live to regret this. But we will live.
>>
>>5925765
>>5925990
Oh fuck, if Delta took some damage, is using the rollback, or a softer version of it a possible option?
>>
>>5925765
Also, Sophie’s reaction to our questions suggests she remembers something about our last deployment together.

What could Sunray have said, I wonder? It seems either of them could have triggered the wipe now, and whatever Sunray told her could have been “encrypted” like the Bonfire transmission was to keep us from reading it and shutting him out partway through the message.

Also, seems she’s more loyalist than we’d prefer. Her hunger for glory and the Book of Iron keeps her chained to them, I suppose.
>>
>>5925772
>Send what air support is available.
>>
>>5925990
You're saying you'll do another roll later to determine the consequences of Delta's damage, fair enough.

But for now, are we at least able to tell how severe the damage is? Like on a 1 to 10?
>>
>>5926020
This is almost the exact scenario that got that one mech ace into the book.

The Empress lost legitimacy when she undercut her own military for personal gain. Now the tree of Ferrum Order must be watered with the blood of patriots and tyrants.
>>
>>5925990
Goodnight QM. I hope to see next thread sometime soon. Take care.
>>
>No updates in over a week
Bros… is it over?
>>
Rolled 4, 6, 5, 4, 5 = 24 (5d6)

>>5932677
>>5928025
She will be combat-ready.

>Winning option is call for Alliance support

I want to finish the thead, but RL keeps kicking my ass, and we’re on page 10. So, next thread in a few days to finish the interludes, other odds and ends, and then into the march on Victoria.

Come hell or poor writing
I know I’ve said this umpteenth times but I do really want to finish this, and there’s at least like 4 others that feel that way.
>>
>>5932773
>5 success
nice.
>>
>>5932773
>Kinston: Calls in reinforcements
>Thea: Gets surprised when a Tamar Core drops in, asks about their brother as they clean up the trash.
>>
>>5932775
Don't celebrate yet, what if thats opfor?



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