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he Rapture happened in 1996.

Now it is December 1999... and despite all that's happened, you have something to party about.

The world has been rocked by a global earthquake, and supernatural phenomena are starting to manifest.

The end of the world tried to come in the form of a giant asteroid, but you led your people to figuring out 50 years of nuclear physics in less than 2, and deviated it off course, leaving only a few chunks to threaten the planet.

These chunks are matching eerily well with the disasters described in Revelation...

Oh, and you got yourself into a land war in Africa.

You are the man who runs the internet. Your mission: keep the lights blinking, even in the face of Armageddon.

Can you subvert the prophecies, or are you just fulfilling them?

Previous thread: >>3773439


(I gotta do the math for last turn, which will take a while)

Rules: http://emlia.org/pmwiki/pub/web/LeftBeyond.Quest2Rules.html
Datalinks: http://emlia.org/pmwiki/pub/web/LeftBeyond.Quest2Datalinks.html
Timeline: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1BlMOSEOxSihj1gdagq7yxCjONaRBgcdlRxnc68uWf0A
>>
>>3795813
Linking my post from the last thread since I asked a question and shit. >>3795997
>>
>>3796134
You dick, stealing QMs first post from the op!
Frankly I'm just jealous I didn't do it.
>>
>>3796165
Well now we've both done it. So now we're just as bad as each other.
>>
I think we should dick santiago
>>
>>3796179
>Not going for the Aki multi-body hivemind ending
Truly a plebeian taste.
>>
>>3796174
Nu-uhhh!
Second post doesn't count!

>>3796179
We need multiple dicks.

Between the 3 of us, there is only 1 and a half.
>>
>>3796266
Let's put Ryan on it. If anyone we have knows how to be a dick its him.
>>
>>3796283
I'm certain Santiago can hatefuck him.

With a strapon
>>
So where do you think fragments will hit?

I think the one that poisons the freshwater is likely to hit the great lakes or Canada, or Russia like in the Tunguska event.
>>
>>3796307

>>So where do you think fragments will hit?

Hypothesis:
Whole fragment?
West Russia/East Europe.

Targeted plagues favor Mid-East, Atlantic. Narrative looks Bible centric.

Blown into tiny smithereens? Everywhere. Dust from debris spreads worldwide.

Massive headache.

Fragment likely already drawing dust from Akhenaten fracture.

Stopping dust... Improbable.


Proposal I: Knock Fragment 3 so it hits ocean? Pros:
It can't spread poison if people don't drink the water.

Tsion's prophecy busted by technicality.

We keep nuclear rocket for Fragment 4.

Cons:
Still have space dust from fragment.

Tsion stubborn like Harold Camping. Twist results to support theories. Credibility damaged, though.

More Tsunamis.

Proposal II: Blow up Fragment 3

Carla sets up water treatment clinics.

Teams secure fresh water supplies. Great shortage in days ahead. Shoot looters dead.

Research Cyanide bacteria from Thread 10? Maybe correlation. Develop miracle cure for poisoning, reduce damage.

Pros:

Minimize death from poison

Bacteria asset. Fight demon army with biological war, War of Worlds style. Geneva convention got nothing on demons

Cons:
Tsion gets vindicated.
Counter Point-He never shuts up.

---

Focus on payload. Minimize damage.
>>
>>3797390
Yeah pushing it into the ocean does sound best with that. Is it this asteroid thats intended to posion? You may be wholly right that nuking it will just cause the prophesy to go as planned. It will be a lot more then 1/3 or all water but it will be a lot less then 1/3 of all drinking water.
>>
>>3797407

>>Is it this asteroid thats intended to posion?

Extremely probable.

Third Fragment = Third Trumpet AKA Wormwood.
>>
>>3797421
Good point. Lets make that happen and talk to carpatasu and whoever head the agency and make up some.bullshit how we dectected toxic materials in the asteroid that if fallen in water sources.it would poision it. It would be better if we repeated the other asteroid and had it fall into the ocean so most of the chemicals are not released and those that are, are in souce of water we do not drink. Save the rocket for the fourth asteroid.

We can then put up a 4 booster sattalite and just push it.
>>
>> Lets make that happen and talk to carpatasu and whoever head the agency and make up some.bullshit how we dectected toxic materials in the asteroid that if fallen in water sources.it would poision it

We have analysis of Fragment 3, yes? Made of pyrite. Conduct follow up data collection.

Have space agency use assets to scan Fragment 3 for hollow center. Best place for toxic payload.

Get proof. Post it to Space Agency website. High traffic anticipated.

Problem:

Tsion's rants. Increase in Remnant conversions likely.

Proposed solution:

DDoS Tsion's site. Coincide with press release. Fun job for Aki. Catharsis.

Keep people's eyes on us.
>>
>>3797429
We can approach boss, and propose launching several rockets to handle this. Maybe try and intercept the rocks before they get close to earth?
>>
Interception is best option. Why poison ocean if we can deflect?

Avoid explosive ordinance if possible. Fragment 3 fragility ....uncertain?

Hypothesis:

Fragment 3 is divine con game.

God expects explosion from humans.

Play off fear of repeat of second fragment. Humans nuke Wormwood. Nuke unleashes the payload to maximum effect.

Humans just played themselves.

Instead, call bluff.

Predict trajectory. Nudge is needed. Send it to the sun. Enjoy light show. Keep watch for stray dust.


Else, If earthbound, nudge to ocean. Have antidote on standby for missed toxins.

Bonus: Collect samples of toxin. Relation to bacteria? Space grasshoppers?

Do science!
---

Fragment 3 is end of current month, yes?

Options possibly narrow. See what QM offers.
>>
>>3797553
>Fragment 3 is end of current month, yes?
Fragment 3 end of month, any possible intercept negligible on trajectory with current assets, will still land in ocean, poison still spread.

Possibility of creating additional or specialised assets? Possible, current team and factory count could rush a large satellite into orbit to perform a intercept with multiple large fuel tanks and a kinetic head.

Likelihood of success? Low, earthfall still likely if not inevitable. Likelihood of enhanced guidance? High, could potentially send onto land or attempt to force into a slingshot around earth.

Main issue is most of earth populated and landing site still not given (citation needed, can't remember), could attempt to force evacuation and then land-fall it somewhere but getting governmental permission difficult, getting public support impossible without evidence of poison and assets limited.

Preferable landing site is in Russia (Tunguska suitable, low population, isolated, few water-connections to oceans, etc) or similarly isolated areas. Landing in Africa, India or South America risky: high bio-diversity, risk of damage; large water sources spread poison; dense population.
>>
>>3797553
Perhaps launching multiple satellites including a harvester would be beneficial.

Launch 3 satellites, first 2 for guidance from earth to the sun, 3rd one to harvest sample material and bring back to earth in sealed containment black box.

Speak to boss about gather 3 agency heads for this. We provide the R&D, building crews, observation, and math. GCASA provides parts, computing power and deployment. UNDRR gives funding and preparation.

>>3797586
What about the Sahara desert? What if we try and slam it into the moon?
>>
>>3797596
>What about the Sahara desert?
Good point, reconsidering, we could drop it into any major desert from the Sahara to the Gobi assuming proper precautions are made in surrounding regions to deal with falling debris.

>What if we try and slam it into the moon?
Almost certainly too late for that but if we did then it would certainly take care of our issue since any and all forms of contamination would be prevented.
>>
I laser gun that can shoot asteroids would be mighty nice right about now.
>>
>>3797602
Energy research is a higher priority now we have the...fuck we need a name for the anti-supernatural generator. Anyone got a good idea? Best I can think of is "Psi-shield" or something similar.
>>
>>Russia

Pros:

Vast regions sparsely populated. Minimal damage.

Decent relationship with Subpotentate

Cons:
CATS assets based in region at threat
Risk of favor loss with Subpotentate. - Still thrall of Carpatescu

>>Gobi Desert
Pros:
Vast desert landscape, populated by nomads.

Cons:
Chairman Yang's territory.
Mongolia devastated from First Fragment

>>Sahara Desert

Viable.

Pros:

Few water sources to infest.

Rebohoth's territory. He hates us anyways.- Loss of favor negligible.


Cons:

Nomads and wildlife will be affected
Counterpoint: Damage is smaller scale.

>>Moon

Pros:
No humans to poison or waters to poison.

Cons
Risk of considerable harm to the lunar surface. May create chunks to bombard Earth.

Query
Would lunar damage constitute Fourth Trumpet?

Proposal:

Antarctica?

Pros:

Devoid of human habitation aside from researchers
Remote location

Cons:

Extinction of Antarctic species. RIP Penguins
Counterpoint: They're fucked anyways if God has his way.
>>
>>3797612
Spark/Gap Generator works just fine.
>>
>>3797615
Yang would hate us enough to maybe work with Rebohoth.
>>
>>3797620
To be fair Yang actually doesn't dislike us since the worst thing we ever did to him was bypass him to set up a factory. If we can convince him that doing this isn't bad or that we'll compensate him then it shouldn't be too hard to create a new ally.

Plus, we can offer him access to our cybernetics program in return for the assistance of China in future developments. Given he is all about making China stronger and self-improvement (admittedly of the mental kind) he odd to approve. Especially if we can get some more practical / useful cybernetics developed.
>>
>>3797635
Which put us from like 3 points to 2 points. Landing a comet in his territory would probably take anywhere between 1 at the least, to two points, putting us on par with Rebohoth.

>cybernetics
Why do we want or need this? I don't see the benefit.

Also didn't we have a huge argument on putting lasers and steel rods in space?
>>
>>3797643
>Which put us from like 3 points to 2 points. Landing a comet in his territory would probably take anywhere between 1 at the least, to two points, putting us on par with Rebohoth.
Potentially, which is why I'm saying that we would try to compensate him.

>Why do we want or need this? I don't see the benefit.
Fair enough, personally I want to get more or less anyone we think is decent involved in it in the hopes of reducing the cost of cyberfying people and also of the research / get a chance of independent developments.

>Also didn't we have a huge argument on putting lasers and steel rods in space?
Yeah mostly around the fact that we have little need for them but at the same time we really need them.

Fact is true orbital supremacy with advanced enough measures would be insane: I mean, in theory if we made our lasers advanced enough, we might be able to get their targeting down to within a few meters which would make them useful as an anti-infantry / vehicle weapon in close support but the likelihood of that seems low in my admittedly uninformed opinion.

On the other hand, they'd be useful for hitting asteroids which is a major point of contention for us.
>>
>>3797661
We haven't even made things up to him from the factory thing yet.
>>
How big is Fragment 3? Advisable that we consider size before choosing impact sites.

>>3797635
>>
To be fair Yang actually doesn't dislike us since the worst thing we ever did to him was bypass him to set up a factory

True.

>>If we can convince him that doing this isn't bad or that we'll compensate him then it shouldn't be too hard to create a new ally.

Problem: Close proximity to China. High risk. Will require real convincing.

Can we guarantee precision impact?

>>Plus, we can offer him access to our cybernetics program in return for the assistance of China in future developments. Given he is all about making China stronger and self-improvement (admittedly of the mental kind) he odd to approve. Especially if we can get some more practical / useful cybernetics developed.

Viable. Good market for cybernetic industries.

---

Gobi Desert is very high risk compared to other locations.

East Asian cybernetic program viable market.

>>3797643

>>cybernetics

Prosthetic limbs. Good market in Apocalypse.

Built-in nomenclature with Anti-Hypnosis features?

Possibility to co-op Mark of the Beast program? High probability of chip implants involved.
>>
>>3797661
but at this point ,we'd be building weapons needed yesterday for for issues that are in process already. by the time we get the lasers done, it might be for naught since all the orbital threats would have passed by then.

I'd rather we slam the comet into a mountain range or something.
>>
>>3797662
True, we really should arrange a meeting with him to say sorry and maybe give him a gift of some sort. Perhaps see if he wouldn't like something.

>>3797665
>Problem: Close proximity to China. High risk. Will require real convincing.
True but we have an insane amount of computing power, chances are we'll get it's landing on a dime in space terms so it shouldn't be too risky...hopefully.

>Can we guarantee precision impact?
If we forcibly overclock our network and ask users to do the same for a day or two? Certainly seeing as we have most of the world's computation under or at least within our grasp.

>Prosthetic limbs. Good market in Apocalypse.
True but it requires the loss of limbs to be a market.

>Built-in nomenclature with Anti-Hypnosis features?
Was considering we might want to get this installed ourselves but the ears are a delicate thing, best to let the market test it first.

>Possibility to co-op Mark of the Beast program? High probability of chip implants involved.
RFID chips can be implanted under the skin as a method of ID and payment without serious issue. To the point whereby some people do it using DIY kits.

>>3797667
True, these are things we should have done a long time ago but we've been busy with loads of different projects. At least soon we should finish one or two research trees and the mandate, letting us focus on shit like averting the apocalypse.

Especially as the factory count grows, we're nearing my target of 6Bn production per month. As at that point we can quite literally throw money into the wind and shit out network parts (3 per month passively).
>>
>>3797667

>>I'd rather we slam the comet into a mountain range or something.

Flat desert or waste is best bet. Mountains contain headwaters for springs.


>>3797678

>> True but we have an insane amount of computing power, chances are we'll get it's landing on a dime in space terms so it shouldn't be too risky...hopefully.

Decent argument.

Contingencies for supernatural SNAFUs? Satelite hit space bug on Akhenaten.

>>Was considering we might want to get this installed ourselves but the ears are a delicate thing, best to let the market test it first.

We could go ear-buds like Aki?
>>
>>3797390

I read this whole post in Abathur's voice.

(So, one of the Preparedness anti-earthquake things, I just sold the design for it . Doing math for this turn right now, gimme 30 minutes)

>>3797454

Fragment 4 seems to be made of pyrite.

Fragment 3 is aggregate, and could contain pretty much anything, you're correct.

>>3797454

Your options are "Hard DDOS" which makes it unreachable, or "Soft DDOS" which makes it hard to reach and gives the impression of technical glitches. Both these options will massively inflate his view count. (Remember view counters on websites?)

>>3797487

There's currently one big rocket ready to go; NCASA has been instructed to figure out how to make more (since restarting the Energia production line would take years).

>>3797553

Nudging Fragment 3 to the sun will not be possible, however nudging it to an ocean drop is. You'd have to refactor the NCASA Alkali launch, either officially or by overwriting the flight firmware on the impactor.

>>3797586

Fragment 3 is at the end of NEXT month. Unlike with most other prophetic events, you can be sure of that, because orbital mechanics are mostly Newtonian n-body physics, and haven't been affected by any metanatural effects.

>>3797598

Hitting a different celestial body would require more energy than you can impart in one explosion, or even a few weeks of thrusting. You may be able to cause a near miss, though - given the general trajectory of Akhenaten fragments, it would mean that you'd see the object again in 2 years.

>>3797615

Nudging a fragment enough to change its point of impact on Earth is doable, albeit subject to some imprecision.

>>3797665

Fragment 3 is the largest of the four that were going to hit, and the heaviest, although it's less dense than fragments 2 and 4. If it comes down in one solid chunk, you can expect a repeat of the Tunguska event.

>>3797665

Carpatescu has mentioned wanting to use a RFID chip for cashless transactions once everyone is used to the system, but you have not been asked to implement the program, or told who is going to be in charge of it. The technology exists for animals, but is not widespread and is generally reserved for prize bulls or horses, due to the cost.
>>
>>3797703
>Contingencies for supernatural SNAFUs? Satelite hit space bug on Akhenaten.
Could mount a gap generator to minimise godly influence? Likelihood of it working low but better than nothing. Issue would be people questioning what it does and it jamming most methods of communication and thus control. Terminal guidance would need to be automatic or programmed before activation of generator.

>We could go ear-buds like Aki?
True but the point is to be concealed so no one can tell we have them, ear buds are a bit too noticeable.
>>
>>3797707
>There's currently one big rocket ready to go; NCASA has been instructed to figure out how to make more (since restarting the Energia production line would take years).
How many aerospace parts are we talking here per rocket?

>You may be able to cause a near miss, though - given the general trajectory of Akhenaten fragments, it would mean that you'd see the object again in 2 years.
Give me the odds man and more importantly, is that just with the Alkali launch? If so, accounting for our satellites could we nudge it even further if needed to improve the odds?

>Tunguska event.
Bah, a few hundred miles ruined and at the cost of saving humanity.
>>
>>3797707
We may not be able to use the moon as as shield, but what about using its gravitational pull to sling it elsewhere?

I suppose w 'd be doing something similar with pushing one of the fragments so we see it again in two years. Sounds like a fairly optimal decision.
>>
>>3797708

>>Could mount a gap generator to minimize godly influence?

Workable. How far along is our research?

>>3797707
>>I read this whole post in Abathur's voice.

(Space Bug FTW)

>>Fragment 4 seems to be made of pyrite.

(Shit. Got pyrite confused with petrified wood.)

>> Hitting a different celestial body would require more energy than you can impart in one explosion, or even a few weeks of thrusting. You may be able to cause a near miss, though - given the general trajectory of Akhenaten fragments, it would mean that you'd see the object again in 2 years.

This would put it out of chronological order.

---
>>DDoS

Soft DDOS. Subtle.
>>
>>3797714

You do not have the capabilities to build an Energia rocket in two months any more than nine women can have a baby in one month; the production line was shut down in 1989.

You certainly can help NCASA with getting their ducks in a row for 2002, though; they are likely to need it.

However, you can -- if you start this turn -- build a large comms satellite that is in fact mostly propellant, and keep it up there as a plan B of sorts.

>>3797721

That's feasible; your engineers will have to figure out if a direct nudge is less effective than a gravity-assist nudge, and go with whichever works best.

(IRL the fact that the Moon's gravity field is "bumpy" makes it an excellent meteor magnet... and it also makes it a pain in the ass to put a satellite around that'll last for more than a couple of years, since it will have to use a finite reserve of propellant for stationkeeping).
>>
QM, is SETI operational?

Can we direct the satellites towards Fragment 4?
>>
File: SETIDish.jpg (38 KB, 550x413)
38 KB
38 KB JPG
Radar dishes*
>>
>>3797727

The prototype Gap Generator has shown the ability to reduce the tiny measurable outcome of prayer. You'd have to test it near a "known good" supernatural phenomenon, place, or person, and take careful readings. You can use an agent or a survey team to do so. This will not advance the program, by itself, but it will allow it to advance. You can combine some effort by having a science team or teams deployed at the same time as the survey team or agent.

The current setup is about the size of a tabletop pendulum clock, and looks like one. If running on batteries, it'll need a truck battery and an inverter, making it twice the size and about four times as heavy; you could put it in two backpacks, but then the two people carrying the backpacks would need to be tethered together by an electrical cable. Fortunately, 120V is sufficient.

>>3797733
>>3797737

SETI operates primarily off the Arecibo radio observatory in Puerto Rico, which took damage during the global earthquake. Puerto Rico was hit by the Fragment 2 rogue wave, but not in a way that affected the observatory. They are run by NCASA, but more than half the personnel is volunteers; you can definitely ask them to aim their radio telescope somewhere, and given your reputation as Akhenaten's slayer, they will most likely agree. Other dishes, such as the one near Stanford, will follow suit.
>>
>>3797740
So send moira to the whitnesses with a gap generator is what you sre saying.
>>
Proposal:

Request SETI to direct radio telescopes in direction of Fragment 4.

Pros:
Get reading on mysterious life forms.
Confirm correlation to Fifth Trumpet.

In turn, it can offer leverage in deciding NCASA launches. Stop E.T.s from landfall.

Cons:
If leaked, credence given to Remnant.

Solution: DO NOT let it leak.

---

>>3797747

Extreme option.

Propose we choose smaller target. We have that prisoner, yes?

We also have sword, and access to Vatican archives. Possible fragments of First and Second Trumpet.
>>
>>3797747
Or we can let other smucks do that and set a generator up nearby, and observe effects.

Heck We can pay people to do that. 10k mess with them.
>>
>>3797755

Music video crowd? We have audio of Witnesses.
>>
>>3797755
Im not sure who would take 10k to see if they might die. Be better if we have the heart as a backup like with moira.
>>
>>3797760
You'd be surprised. We can up the amount to 50k or even 100k.

Plus there are paramedics by the wall to resuscitate people.
>>
>>3797727
>How far along is our research?
System functional, able to create a reduction to 1/2 of faith field strength. Focusing can reduce to 1/4 but would require target information. May also not work against target, given our testing was regarding the ability for prayer to alter life span and I believe we were targeting the individual not the plant so to speak. We might be able to stop faith generation but unable to stop faith manifestation, although I personally think I am wrong but I feel under the circumstances, I must raise the possibility.

Likelihood of improved odds assuming godly intervention are moderate but it's our only defensive measure besides a BFG so it's the best I can offer.

>This would put it out of chronological order.
Yep and it might even give us a chance to knock it clean out of the park next time round.

>>3797728
>You do not have the capabilities to build an Energia rocket in two months any more than nine women can have a baby in one month; the production line was shut down in 1989.
True, though I'd suppose we could just throw a lot more smaller rockets at it.

>You certainly can help NCASA with getting their ducks in a row for 2002, though; they are likely to need it.
Oh that I have no issue with. Especially given what such rocketry represents: the potential to use one of them to send up a proper large laser array is overwhelming.

>However, you can -- if you start this turn -- build a large comms satellite that is in fact mostly propellant, and keep it up there as a plan B of sorts.
Probably a good plan. Personally I kinda have a goal to get 10 (or more!) factories built so we can do a large sat every month with 5 parts to quickly finish the orbital network and create a massive defence grid. Admittedly the quickest way to that is actually control of Africa or an additional factory in Russia and China so it might be a bumpy ride to that level of power.

>>3797753
>We also have sword
Sword is no-go for faith testing. It is actively anti-faith. Personal theory and supposition: iron is anti-god in some way; issue, most of humanity is surrounded by iron in some form constantly and is still faith-affected; correlation, meteoric iron must be cause of effect; suggestion, we must secure additional meteoric iron.

>>3797760
>>3797765
Personally I'd prefer to have Moira do it again since it'd break the rumour she converted and, when others do it and need to be revived, we can spin any narrative we want.
>>
>>3797767
>Personally I'd prefer to have Moira do it again
Doe she still have the heart?

Also, won't they just burn her this time, since they already did the heart thing.

I say, get a Gap generator ready and have her hope into it as a get away vehicle.

Maybe it can cause it to disperse after some distance like plasma losing containment...
>>
Lets test the Gap G. on the marked witness or whatever we have in our cell to see if it affects anything.
>>
>>3797767

>> Sword is no-go for faith testing. It is actively anti-faith. Personal theory and supposition: iron is anti-god in some way; issue, most of humanity is surrounded by iron in some form constantly and is still faith-affected; correlation, meteoric iron must be cause of effect; suggestion, we must secure additional meteoric iron.

Iron? Like iron chariots, God's kryptonite in OT.

We should have plenty from Fragment 2, yes? Once seas are calm, we could dispatch Garibaldi; configure it for deep sea salvage.
>>
>>3797771

Yes, the heart implant is in place and working well.

She's used it to mess with Klaue a little; the arms dealer has indicated that there are some important customers willing to pay a lot for a copy. He's also indicated that he can start looking for some heavier stuff (guided missiles, artillery) if the deal goes well.

Due to the Fragment 2 impact, the following are the case:

- You have lost 3 fleet assets.
- You have lost 1 satellite over western Africa.
+ You have lost no personnel since none of your people were over there.
- The factory system in South America will be unavailable since they will be busy helping with emergency reconstruction.
- You will not be able to buy power or supplies next month as all stockpiles will go to the affected areas.
+ You will be able to sell power or supplies at twice the price next month.
+ You will have the option to send the Garibaldi in hospital or cargo configuration to Eastern South America or Western Africa to provide humanitarian aid.
>>
Hello, Foreman! You are planning CATS' operations for the month.

Rules: http://emlia.org/pmwiki/pub/web/LeftBeyond.Quest2Rules.html
Datalinks: http://emlia.org/pmwiki/pub/web/LeftBeyond.Quest2Datalinks.html
Timeline: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1BlMOSEOxSihj1gdagq7yxCjONaRBgcdlRxnc68uWf0A

You can deploy yourself on TWO actions for a small bonus to all rolls
Dr Robertson can be deployed on ONE action for a large bonus to R&D rolls or a small bonus to any non-covert rolls
Ryan Andrews is busy with Pontifex Mathews and cannot be deployed. He will be available starting next month.
Moira McSingh can be deployed on ONE action per turn, for a medium bonus to covert rolls or a small bonus to all rolls; She can give basic combat capability to a work crew
Aki Lattinen is available for ONE action this turn since she is in your South American HQ talking to Santiago's programmers.

BOCHICA is 1 fleet asset away from being able to handle logistics for you automatically.

Drones give a stackable small bonus to non-research rolls; they may be lost in combat. You can build as many as you like.

C0 (Free):

Move the Garibaldi (Mediterranean, Arctic, Atlantic, Indian, Pacific)

Buy and sell equipment on the open market:
Power generation 2 | Only sale
Small arms 1
Network equipment 2
Fleet assets 2
Aerospace part 3
Supplies (food, fuel etc) 2 | Only sale

C0 (Agent):

Survey a territory for opportunity using an agent. REMINDER: Jerusalem; Aberdeen Proving Grounds
Construct a CellSol pylon (Needs 1 network part)
Undergo combat training (Max 1 per month)
Tail someone
Meet with someone

Buy equipment on the black market:
Small arms 1
Squad weapons and explosives: 2
Stimulants 1

C1:

Reconfigure the Garibaldi (generic, cargo, hospital, strike, orbital)
Tail someone
Survey a territory for opportunity using a team. REMINDER: Jerusalem; Aberdeen Proving Grounds
Hire out a covert operations team for a situational reward
Construct network equipment
Construct power equipment
Procure network equipment and construct a CellSol pylon
Make and sell consumer-grade Nomenklators (Net gain 1BN)

Buy black market equipment using a security or black ops team

C2:

Do research (1~3)
Construct an aerospace part
Construct a forward logistics hub (small bonus for any action in that territory)
Construct a batch of drones

C3:
Construct a network node (unifies cell and net; costs 1 power, 1 network)
Recruit a work team
Schedule a satellite launch, which will happen at the end of NEXT month. Requires 1 (microsat) or 3~5 (bigsat) aerospace parts.
Do research (4~6)

C4:

Construct a factory
Recruit a covert team
Do research (7~9)

C5:

Rush a satellite launch, which will happen at the end of this month. Microsat only, Requires 1 aerospace part
Construct a hub and a network node at the same time (2 power, 1 network)
Capstone research (10)
Build a Uranium Hydride bomb.

What are your orders?
>>
>>3797792

Your budget is depleted for the trimester.

You are 1 pylon away from completing Carpatescu's mandate.

You are almost ready to initiate a 51% attack on the world's economy IF you build said pylon, and do so at the end of the month when your new budget comes in, or if you dump your supplies and power generation reserves in order to have a 20BN surplus after work orders have been tallied.

This may require initiating the attack while in conference with Carpatescu.

It is now December 1999; due to Y2K worries, it will be possible for you to hire out work crews to private companies to assuage their worries.

(I'd like to do a "state of the world" post every few months if people are interested!)
>>
>>3797795

>>(I'd like to do a "state of the world" post every few months if people are interested!)

Do it!
>>
Alright guys do we want to do this now or after the asteroids?

In thinking we do it after and build a node instead.

>>3797792

How many work teams did we get back after our religous research worked out?
>>
>>3797792
Also did we find any more factory locations? Did santago say yes with aki and did ryan get us anything?
>>
I think we can win this turn. Hear me out.

Find out where Ikko and Tsion are. They're near Chicago.

We sell all the power and supplies we can so that we can pull this off.

We build a bomb.

We do the 51% thing. If Carpatescu tries to fuck with us after that we nuke his ass, we know where he lives.

After that we can deal with the designated winners knowing that we won't be hamstrung by Satan being an idiot and wanting to fight modern wars with horses and swords.

If we still have the nuke after dealing with Carpatescu, evacuate the HQ and nuke Tsion's ass instead.

Go full Ozymandias. Kill millions to save billions.
>>
>>3797771
>Also, won't they just burn her this time, since they already did the heart thing.
Godly powers sealed behind conditional statements, not controlled by them. So long as no actual physical harm is done to them, she can't be hurt.

>>3797778
>Iron? Like iron chariots, God's kryptonite in OT.
Affirmative.

>We should have plenty from Fragment 2, yes? Once seas are calm, we could dispatch Garibaldi; configure it for deep sea salvage.
Suggestion, creation of offshore facility to perform deep sea research, mining and function as a independent basing point for our forces. Code name: Enclave.

>>3797787
>She's used it to mess with Klaue a little; the arms dealer has indicated that there are some important customers willing to pay a lot for a copy. He's also indicated that he can start looking for some heavier stuff (guided missiles, artillery) if the deal goes well.
Priority high, need access to those assets for the Africa situation to supply rebellion.

>- You have lost 3 fleet assets.
>- You have lost 1 satellite over western Africa.
Combined monetary cost of 11, 12 if we buy the aerospace part from the market.

>+ You will be able to sell power or supplies at twice the price next month.
Personal opinion, we should sell as much as we can to generate a giant profit and immediately invest it in a bunch of network parts

>+ You will have the option to send the Garibaldi in hospital or cargo configuration to Eastern South America or Western Africa to provide humanitarian aid.
Should do this and to western Africa: good PR; largest loss of life preventable and it might get Rebohoth to like us a little more, at least long enough for us to plant a knife in his back.

>>3797795
>You are 1 pylon away from completing Carpatescu's mandate.
The dominos are in position, all that is left is to push the first piece.

>This may require initiating the attack while in conference with Carpatescu.
Risky as shit.

>It is now December 1999; due to Y2K worries, it will be possible for you to hire out work crews to private companies to assuage their worries.
Possibly a good idea.

>>3797801
Agreed, screwing with the balance of power at a time like this feels stupid given we've not got time to hide in the blacksite and shit, assuming I'm understanding shit right.
>>
>>3797792
I suggest as the asteroid goes up the month after this that we have our
>4 factories produce 2 aerospace parts
>buy 2 aerospace parts
>3 work teams launch a sattalite

>5 covert teams and moira work. Hopfully making 5bn
>7 work teams working y2k with ryan

>3 work teams and aki work on sats/big sats. To see if anything tech wise and help us with out plan

>us contact nasca and Carpatescu have the telescopes find out whats in there and propse our plan to not fuck our water supply

>aki's second action is to work on having us actially have it miss us.

>Roberson also work on having it miss us.

>>3797814
That won't stop the asteroid from hitting us and probably make us the antichrist.


Also shouodnt that clinic in south america be done?
>>
>>3797824
Why dont we do the economic take over once the year 2000 starts on new years day. Would be fun thematically and tie in with y2k if any problems with infrastructure arises.
>>
>>3797814
>Go full Ozymandias. Kill millions to save billions.
Lad, I feel we could probably get away with a conventional bomb if we're just targeting them. Hellfire we have a black-ops team for a reason, just have them arrange for a rather large delivery of fluoride to come plowing into wherever they are.

>>3797828
I'd rather we sell all of our power and supply reserves to meet monetary demands rather than putting work teams on Y2K, especially given we could use additional teams to construct additional rocket parts and maybe even make a 6 or 7 part satellite somehow to really punt the asteroid off course.

>>3797835
Seems like a good idea, personally I was planning on delaying until the literal deadline to do the domino attack. Give him an excuse about focusing our teams on improving network security rather than putting the last piece in place and give him a spiel about not wanting this to go wrong and get a bunch of people killed / trust in the system lost.
>>
>>3797801

I thought we needed to wait until the right moment. If we spring this too early, the plan will fail.

Mark of the Beast, I.E. Cashless System, hits before second half, after Sixth Trumpet.

Proposal:

Build Pylon - Meet mandate

Build black sites to house Bochica backups.

Hire teams to protect IT infrastructure. One defense. One offense. Base in separate facilities.
>>
>>3797846
>Build black sites to house Bochica backups.
Bochica ain't the target, we would be. Issue isn't the system, it's too distributed to be targeted. We are a figurehead he will eliminate.
>>
>>3797846
We need to do it as we meet this mandate from what i understand so we should hold off untill we are ready.
>>
>>3797803

Aki is in Brazil this month to explain BOCHICA to Santiago's IT workers; she wants to understand the system better before allowing it to take up more of the economy. She may or may not succeed, depending on how they get along. Dr. Diamond is there and will keep an eye on Aki, which should help.

>>3797814

That's definitely audacious. It has a chance of working, but beware the dice.

>>3797828

Yep, there are two things that get done at the end of this turn (end of the year). Dr. Suzanna Diamond's clinic is complete (it has actually already been operating for a bit as a regular neurology clinic, and was useful in the aftermath of Fragment 2, but you are mostly interested in the "special" wing), and Ryan Andrews will have set up the digitization project for Pontifex Mathews.


>>3797835
You'd still have to build the one missing pylon this turn, but yes, you can definitely do that.

>>3797799

Earth at the dawn of the third millennium (Which technically starts at the beginning of 2001, but who cares) has been through a lot of hope and a lot despair. The end of the cold war, which some hailed as "the end of history"; the Event which caused all the world's children to disappear; at long last political unity, more or less, under the Global Community administration; the prophecied disasters. Some at this point are just numb, going to work every day

Global poverty has greatly decreased; the disappearance of a significant part of the world's population has alleviated pollution concerns,

There are now almost 50 million children on Earth again -- the oldest being three months away from his or her fourth birthday -- and each is treasured, loved, and perhaps coddled a little bit too much. Whether it's true or not that it takes a village to raise a child, the global village has decided to take excellent care of the new generation; there are, of course, those who worry about raising a class of little princes and princesses.

In some ways, 25 is the new 18; contrary to those who expected the Rapture gap to effectively wipe out teen culture, pastimes such as videogames, boardgames, RPGs and the like, which market research has always associated with teenage years, have naturally extended their lifespan. With fewer people rushing into the job market because they have kids to feed, getting a degree has become more common, and it's not unusual for the class of people who would have gotten into college in, say, 1980, to stay until they are 26 and sport two degrees.

(cont)
>>
>>3797874

The other common arrangement in some territories has been to extend secondary educations into a 13th to 15th grades, covering the core classes that would be taught in most college curricula and allowing universities to specialize.

Global extreme poverty has been almost eradicated by the Eden fertilizer as well as the simple fact that fewer people mean more resources. Carpatescu's policies on liberalizing access to birth control and pornography have caused the "Rapture bump" in birth rates to not be as large as people hoped; the potentate has expressed happiness at this, stating that humanity can now be in balance with the environment, as all things should be, and "whatever caused the disappearance, cruel as it may have been, has pulled our leg off the Malthusian bear trap, and we should see to it that it stays out".

Africa remains a problem spot for a number of reasons, including factional warfare preventing economic investment, the AIDS epidemic, and systematic corruption. Racial tensions in the south continue.

Russia and China are economically on the rise; Europe and Greater Britain are going through a mild recession, largely brought about by a population that is aging faster than elsewhere, a small refugee crisis that is nevertheless very present in the public eye, and a perceived availability of better opportunities in other territories.

After the consolidation of the Ecumenical Council, syncretistic religions are doing remarkably well. Examples include the followers of Sai Baba (they are generally called Zensunni in the literature, but not by themselves -- they simply insist that it is possible to be Buddhist and Muslim at the same time, and do not want to leave out Shi'ites or Theravada Buddhists), Santeria, vodun, and a surprising resurgence of Asatru and Greco-Roman paganism in Northern and Southern Europe respectively. Interestingly, Scientology has recently renounced its religious status and reverted to offering "self-help spiritual therapy" after Pontifex Mathews obtained a copy of their secret Operating Thetan "tech" (scriptures) and published it in full.

The only major faiths that remain outside the Ecumenical Council are Remnant Christianity and Orthodox Judaism.

It looks like English and Simplified Chinese will be the two global languages, with the former being in the lead simply due to its ease of use on the internet -- most keyboards are ASCII, after all. Dr. Neal Damosa has been pushing the concept of "Globish", a subset of English to be taught in all schools.

At this point, the only people who do not have a cell phone are those who don't want one; new models come out often, and a thriving system of used markets such as eBay ensures that this remains the case. Nearly all phones are programmable with a simplified Linux operating system, and the well-off have recently started having access to phones with color screens that can play full TV resolution video. Portable media tends to exist in minidisc or USB form.
>>
>>3797866
>>3797846
>>3797824
>>3797814
I would say, hold off on this. Too many unknowns, and we still have a mole that can fuck our day up 6 ways to Sunday, then God takes over for a day before it starts again.

We lack any means of survivability short term should our boss cut us off and we lack the inventory for any sustained attrition conflict. Another problem is our staff. Just how loyal are they if their pay is in turmoil, and they themselves face retaliation for just working for us?

We should finish 3 or 4 more tech trees before pushing the button. It will help us win immensely.

We can also attack MCP to set it back. Have all the places we "helped" do Y2K stuff not work or attack MCP.

We do not want to be see as the person to be blamed in a crisis? What if Carpatescu decides its worth screwing up the rocket launch to intercept the fragment killing millions, just so it can all be blamed on us and making a power grab? Does anyone think a global world dictator won't do that to stay in power?

We need at least 1 or 2 fleet assets this turn, and finish the Africa thing so Enoch Litwala won't get steam rolled. Let him bleed a little so he, and his people appreciate us a bit more. Let them stand on their own and understand how much worse off they are without us and our patronage.

Another thing we ought to get done is a network node in South Africa. It will be a a asset in future African issues, and provide help to our "allies/friendlies" in the area

Also guys, we can shore up our manpower by hiring our 3rd parties. We met with the founder of "Darkwater" and he was willing to let us hire out one of his teams for discreetly for "deniable opts".
>>
>>3797874
>>3797908

Carpatescu won't have to push much for his cashless system; the 10-cent flat tax on Internet purchases, which started off as a dampener on the digital economy, has instead turned into a boon. A flat tax means a potentially advantageous exchange rate between Nicks and Linden dollars, or e-gold, or kittycoins, or all manner of competing digital currencies or loyalty points; users simply transact in bulk (this has become known as a "macrotransaction" in gamer circles) to avoid getting dinged, and then spend as if they were using a gift card. Nearly all large companies have a loyalty-point system; it is estimated that 15% of the transactions happening in the former Canadian provinces every day take place in Canadian Tire money.

This has not slowed down the adoption of the Nick in significant degree; if anything, since buying loyalty points can not be done at the bank, the retirement of old-denomination coins and banknotes has proceeded apace.

Low fuel prices due to a drop in demand for plastics (and the legalization of hemp-derived plastics that went with marijuana legalization in territories where it was still illegal) have caused a significant uptick in the sales of recreational vehicles and sport-utility trucks.

In a few regions, notably the former United States, the sudden availability of residential real estate has caused a housing price slump, which in turn has required a few overexposed banks to require a bailout. Mr. Dimmsdale was able to lobby for the bailout to be handled by the central global government, thereby significantly reducing the impact of punitive taxation on North America.

(Done unless people have questions!)
>>
>>3797909

Support.

Attack now? One bad dice roll will send CATS back to the Bronze Age.

Have contingencies in place.

Establish allies with Subpotentes.

Have means to fuck back, when Carpatescu comes for our head.

We have until Midpoint, theoretically, to secure dominance.

---

>>3797908
So Scientology just handed over their scriptures or did Pope Peter have to go through the entire process of paying millions of dollars to learn the truth about Xenu?
>>
>>3797926
> mAcrotransaction
> canadian tire $
> special snowflakes due to rapture gap
> scientology

My sides.
>>
>>3797940

Evacuate? In our moment of triumph?

>>3797846

I guess we can wait until we have a bead on Ben Goldblum. And maybe another nuke? Blow up Discount Jesus and Discount Satan at the same time before Actual Jesus and Actual Satan show up?
>>
>>3797926
>Canadian Tire money
https://www.ctvnews.ca/canada/saskatoon-man-buys-canoe-with-briefcase-full-of-canadian-tire-money-1.4488125

>>3797940
No he is Xenu!
>>
>>3797946
Why not use antimatter bombs?
>>
>>3797959

You don't have any, or any way to make them.

Uranium hydride bombs are not as good as pre-Event nukes, being significantly less efficient, but can level a city block and effectively make the rest of the city uninhabitable. However, if your intention is to vaporize a target, you would have to pretty much land the bomb on top of it.

>>3797953

wow.

>>3797940

Pontifex Mathews did, in fact, offer an undisclosed sum of money to send a Lutheran Bishop through a complete accelerated Scientology courses, to ensure that Scientology was compatible with the Ecumenical Council.

The prelate was clever enough to spend a substantially smaller sum of money on a high-resolution digital camera and hide it in his mitre, then insist that since he was taking the courses on official business, he should show up in full regalia.

Ryan Andrews denied any involvement.
>>
>>3797979
I think someone bought a car in America claiming it was Canadian money a decade and a half ago.
>>
>>3797979
Does the nuke provide a bigger boom than say the T12, or BLU-82 conventional bombs?
>>
>>3797979
Also, whats the deal with Enoch Litwala, he doesn't need us this month correct? We were suppose to brace ourselves, so either noting happened and our guys went home or they are still needed?
>>
>>3798010

That depends entirely on you; he's going to be a source of security team contracts, at a minimum.

If you give him a discount, he will be able to use the money he saves that way to recruit and equip a militia and grease the palms of other tribal leaders into taking his side.

>>3798005

Yes (you can expect 100 to 200 tons of TNT equivalent from a uranium hydride bomb; the Massive Ordnance Air Burst is 11 tons). The issue is that while it's not that bulky, it's heavy; you'd have to put it on a truck bed or a boat to deploy it, or chop up an airliner into a makeshift bomber. It's also a bit of a crap shoot how big of a boom you will get.

For comparison, the Hiroshima bomb was 15 kilotons.
>>
>>3798031
Can factories make power?

New plan after reading all this.
>>3797828
>4 factories produce 2 aerospace parts
>buy 2 aerospace parts
>3 work teams launch a sattalite
>sell 2 power
>sell 6 supplies
>3 work team place node in south america
>4 work team with aki reseaech sat
>5 covert team and moira work offer them to enoch for 3bn total as a discount
>3 team research defense in prep for economic takeover

How does that sound?
>>
You know what Africa has a lot of? Sweet sweet uranium ready to be mined.

Our nukes are a bit shitty but nobody else has them (except some other group is trying to make them, I doubt it's the Christians). So there's no MAD. If we have enough we can just hold the world for ransom.

Mwhahahahaha!

For the good of mankind of course.


>>3798048

I like it but there's already nodes in South America. Is it OK to make the black guard work with the other sec teams?
>>
>>3798048
>3 work team place node in south america
Why?

I'd rather not cut into our supplies, but it can't really be helped, I'd rather not sell more than 4 units.

>>3798053
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EJR1H5tf5wE
For 1 million right?
>>
>>3798048

Factories can make power generating equipment, yes.

Note that this turn the South American factory system is unavailable (it has no surplus capacity that you can allocate) since they are busy with reconstruction, so you have 3 available.

>>3798053
>>3798048

Using the Blackwatch alongside your regular security forces is possible, but they will dislike it.

Moira is pretty morally flexible; she wouldn't blow up a school full of kids, but she would blow up a school full of adults if necessary, and she will gladly blow up a school full of Remnant since they're going to heaven anyway. Either way, she's earned the respect of your security force, and can work with both units without issues.
>>
>>3798084

I like it, but we are NOT building the pylon without sending guards with the workers. We're basically (un)officially at war now.

So 1 covert team to do that.

Also are we doing the 51% attack or not? If we are we should keep 1 covert team and maybe Moira to watch our back. If not no worries.

I think Aberdeen is helicopters as per >>3796792
>>
>>3798092
Made a mistake with aerospace parts, so rectifying it. Aberdeen has Helicopters? I thought it was mostly a tank museum.
>>
>>3798092
Its mostly not our people who set up the Pylons, Its local contracted work crews, and GC security. We send like 1-5 guys to survey the place and tell them where to dig in cannon......
>>
>>3798096

Yes but last time there were problems.

The dice are out to get us so let's not leave stuff to chance if we don't have to.
>>
>>3798104
I feel its worth it, since its only the cost of a network part...... It would look good for the boss if we did it before the end of the trimester.

Otherwise we poach a team from either going with the foreman or from security teams.

Actually hold on. We can send a security team and have the goon squad go with us to Aberdeen.
>>
>>3798104
Robertson should be fine, we just have some of his staff and interns make sure he gets home or sleeps on his couch.
>>
>>3798108

Since we can make it $ wise I'd rather use the security teams for the job that they are actually supposed to do.

Being our bodyguards + the pylons bodyguards during install.

That leaves 2 sec teams doing random jobs for Litwala I hope.
>>
>>3798061
>>3798053


I thought you guys wanted a node so we can help them coordinate there troops there? Also we dont already have a node there. Its here and 2 more spots then global coverage.

>>3798108
We dont want to fufill our mandate until we are ready for the attack. That is the trigger.
>>
>>3798115

Once you fulfill the mandate, you will have 3 to 6 months to subvert the global market.

(OOC: Basically, until the MCP also crosses the "finish line", meaning it's ready to start operating outside New Babylon. It's possible that Ikko gets there before it, but very unlikely).

>>3798112

Entirely your call; the goon squad has been left to operate in Effincold and keep an eye on Robertson. It's easy work, and they get to ride around in nuclear powered snowmobiles and play with the giant excavator, so they haven't begrudged it despite the cold.
>>
>>3798130
What would hapoen if ikko gets there first?
>>
>>3798115
Node in South Africa, I was thinking of doing it next trimester.

>>3798114
So lets say 3 teams assigned to Enoch Litwala + Moira

1 team goes with the Pylon?

That leaves us with the Black Opts team, or we can stack the firepower with Litwala, and have the Black Opts team beef up security at the Pylon, then we take the Goon squad with us.

I think the Danger for Robertson is fairly minimal at this point. They are only needed when he travels. Otherwise hes underground in a deep vault essentially, anyone attacking it can be locked out while we send people to deal with it.
>>
>>3798145

You can find out by executing the attack and then handing her the keys.

(I haven't simulated that, honestly, so I have no idea! Could be interesting since it would make a mess of victory conditions. Then again it could just look like books 10 and 11 where the Antichrist has picked up the Idiot Ball so much that the Remnant basically have to advance the plot for him)

>>3798150

True. The secondary job of the goon squad has been to prevent Tsion Ben-Judah from contacting Dr. Robertson or his staff in person, which they have done.
>>
>>3798150
Im sorry i meant to say south Africa not America im just dumb.

Ok in that case ill change the plan.

>>3798159

>build last network celsol in africa with 1 security team.
>4 factories produce 2 aerospace parts
>buy 2 aerospace parts
>3 work teams launch a sattalite
>sell 2 power
>sell 6 supplies
>4 work team with aki reseaech sat
>3 covert team and moira
>1 black ops team work
>3 team research defense in prep for economic takeover with us
>3 team recruit work team.

We talk to nasca and Carpatescu to convince them of our just push the asteroid away plan.

Hows that. Then next turn we can get our teams back to 15 and keep pumping defense tech for the takeover.
>>
>>3798159
I'm more worried about someone ganking him, or trying to "stop" him from doing nuke related stuff via forceful lead injections at high velocities.

The important question is, are they any good at lifting helicopters.
>>
>>3798181

I'm worried about him getting kidnapped or converted (same thing for our purposes).

how do we feel about giving him an extra heart that has a fuck-you switch

>>3798173

Looks good to me what do you think >>3798181
>>
>>3798194
>>3798173
This is what I'm working on and waiting for consensus on the smaller details.

Buy 2 Fleet assets -2BN

Sell 3 power + 6BN

Survey Aberdeen Proving Grounds (Not sure what they have that we want...)
Foreman+Little Italy's Goon Squad

2 Factories make 1 Aerospace parts
1 Factory makes Go GO POWER RANGER parts

Build a Pylon in the last spot in Africa.
+ 1 Black Opts team + Drones

Do research on Big Sats
3 Work crews + Aki

Build 3 Aerospace parts
2/2/2 Work crews + Robertson

Schedule a Sat launch
4 Work teams + Foreman

Covert teams on the streets looking for work + Moira from the employment office helps them find jobs.
4 Covert teams. + Drones

We should have -11BN after this not counting what we may earn from Covert work.

Any Cost discrepancies from failed jobs or whatever we can sell supplies or network parts to cover the overhead.
>>
>>3798173

wait how the heck are we paying for all this stuff.

also we only have 3 factories this turn

>>3798197

why 4 teams for sat launch?
>>
>>3798173
I had to rejiggle crews since 1 factory is offline in south America, and another person insisted we provide security for a CS pylon installation.

Although frankly we can just ask our boss to send extra GC security for the last part telling him about our nearly finished mandate, I think he would happily send extra men.
>>
>>3797390
>>3797586
>>3797667

just wanted to say that I love this sort of theorycrafting.

>>3798201

You can definitely ask; he's not very irritable at the moment, so the worst you'll get is "no". (The irritability may change later on, of course)
>>
>>3798200
Originally I wanted the foreman to join a work crew doing Y2K security patches and have a fun LAN party, but I didn't want to risk the SAT launch and since having the foreman do that by himself didn't quit work I figure we stack our odds and get alot of extra boons dispute and dice deities saying FUCK YOUR PLANS BITCH.

And I wasn't sure what else to do with the extra crew aside from Jobs, or just stak the odds and make absolutely sure nothing can fuck with something as important as the SAT launch since we are investing 15bn and 6 work crews + 4 more crews and 4 credits on launch to any chances.
>>
>>3798212
>didn't quit work
didn't *quite* work
>>
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If only we did SAT research last month we MIGHT be able to have had finish big SAT tech tree so we could have maybe better guiding for comet catches and have the rock slam into an open air mine.
>>
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>>3798209
>just wanted to say that I love this
Is this you? The green one I mean.
>>
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>>3798209
>geistklempner ID: wORHRR1w
Hmmm maybe your more related to this
>>
>>3798194
I'd rather have a FUCK YOU switch on the gun we use on the kidnappers.
>>
>>3798209
Wait a sec.

Can we have 1 factory make part of an aerospace part and the other half make the other part?

So something like this.
1 Factory makes 1/2 aerospace part
1 Work Crew makes 1/2 aerospace part
--------------------------Total:
1 full aerospace part
>>
>>3798173
Are we not building a 5 part satellite?

Because we need 5 parts for a big one and you only want to build 4 for a smaller one?

Alright I want to confirm a few things, are we :
1 Building and launching a satellite this or next month?
2 Are we doing any research, and if so what kind and how many different projects?
3 Are we Recruiting anyone?
4 Do we build that last pylon, and if so, do we add extra security?
>>
>>3798271
This is a general question I'm asking everyone.

>>3798209
What if we inform Rebohoth that if the pylon fails to be built a second time we aren't going to be building anymore in HIS own stronghold territory?
>>
Forgot about the Carrier, what should we do with its configuration? Keep it at Picket, change to Hospital or Cargo?
>>
>>3798197
Where are we getting the 11bn from. we need to break even this turn. Also we only need 3 launching sat i would move that too research to mske it 4 for 100%

>>3798271
I dont think we would need all 5 but i can adjust its just expensive. Ill change to do that. We are revruiting. We are researching defense and sattalites. We are building that pylon with security and drones.

>build last network celsol in africa with 1 security team with drones. -1bn
>3 factories produce 3 power
>sell 6 power +12bn
>sell 6 supplies +12bn
>buy 5 aerospace parts -15bn
>3 work teams launch a sattalite with drones-3bn
>>4 work team with aki research sat -4bn
>>3 covert team and moira and drones potential +3bn
>>1 black ops team work potential +1bn
>>3 team research defense in prep for economic takeover with us -3bn
>>3 team recruit work team.-3bn
>We talk to nasca and Carpatescu to convince them of our just push the asteroid away plan.

Leaves us with -1 bn hope a covert team will make 2.

Realised we could make and sell power the buy sattalites for more efficiencythen porducing the sattalites ourselves.

>>3798200
We are selling stuff.
>>
>>3798296
Huh sonder how i did that formatting.
>>
>>3798296
Selling network parts, supplies, and doing jobs with the combat teams. I don't know how much they will bring in but it should be between 3 and 6 maybe so the rest will be shored up with selling off our supplies.
>>
>>3798296
Making the Satellite parts is cheaper than buying them. We save 1 BN for every part we make, compared to buying.

Selling power can only net us 2BN, as it is the same for most, and since Y2K is going to be over after this month, I'd like to do that instead for any interesting events the QM might write.

Power parts are likely to remain high for a few more months.

I am hesitant to sell so much of our supplies since, they have only shown to get more expensive.

Maybe if we could buy a farm to produce 1 unit of supplies for us every month.....
>>
>>3798296
We are almost done theology it just needs 1 more turn worth of research. Defence is far away, with Satellites and CS Pylons almost done.
>>
>>3798324
We cant afford loosing another 3 teams right now. Ill support thay once we have 15 teams again.

>>3798319
As far as factory turns power is actually better. Buying a aerospace part is 3bn but takes 2 factories. Selling a power is 2bn but requires 1 factory. Thus 1 factory or aerospace parts is worth 1.5bn and pwoer is 2bn and its better for our work teams to be doing other things that only they can do.

Look i love y2k interesring stuff as well but i dont want to loose efficiency due to it.

>>3798302
Yeah we should be good money wise on thay plan.
>>
>>3798319
Also our factories can produce 1 supplies each so im not super concerned.
>>
>>3798296
>Where are we getting the 11bn from

Buy 2 Fleet assets -2BN

Survey APG
Foreman+Goon Squad -1BN

Build Pylon in Africa. -1BN
+ 1 Black Opts team + Drones

Research on Satelllites -3BN
3 Work crews + Aki

Build 3 Aerospace parts with Robertson
2 Work crews -2BN
2 Work crews -2BN
2 Work crews -2BN

Schedule Satellite Launch with the Foreman
4 Work Crews -4BN

Total: -17 BN

Sell 3 power +6BN
New total for now 17-6=11BN

Assuming 3 teams. Jobs will likely net us between 3-6BN I'm guess around 4-5BN more accurately. 9BN if we are super lucky and do unethical shit just for the money, but theoretically possible.

We can sell network parts which we have 6 of, and each single part is worth 2BN on the market, or sell Supplies for 2BN but will be harder to stockpile with its constant price increases.

So if we liquidate our entire network parts inventory, we can gain 12 BN.
If we sell off 10 units of supplies we can net 20BN
>>
>>3798398
>loosing another 3 teams
Well we ARE sending out one team fairly alone by itself to guard a pylon. Frankly I think we should ask our boss to cover the pylon security. If it fails or he says no, then hes cucking himself out of a early finish in HIS mandate HE gave us. He can only fault himself, and he knows it. Can't really blame us.

>Factory
So you want the factories to make power and the crews to work, so we buy parts instead?

>money
Yeah we can make it work either way, just depends how much stock we are willing to sell and how much research and other things we want, but don't do.
>>
>>3798417
Its a security team its thier job. I dont think they will be sending a whole army after em
Well we can ask carpastsu then i really dont mind.

Yeah we sell the power and buy the parts.
>>
>>3798398
Making power to sell and doing y2k stuff for income nets the same amount of money for the same complexity. I don't see any efficiency loss?

>>3798433
I figure all he'll do is double the amount of security sent to guard the pylon.
The only job where making money is sub-optimal is selling nomenklators.
>>
>>3798433
Our best bet is to give Litwala a discount we can't really afford so he can better finance a militia, that would reduce casualties we would otherwise likely take by doing all the heavy lifting.
>>
>>3798437
Y2k stuff takes teams? Not factories.
>>
>>3798448
What? Are you asking if Factories can do programming?

Having our crew make power units to sell only nets us 1BN because we have to pay for the crews to make them in the first place.
So -1BN to make 1 power supply
Sell 1 power =2BN

We come out with +1 BN
>>
Never mind, I didn't like that plan.
>>
>>3798456
No im just confused on why you are comparing factory effency with y2k stuff when they require 2 independent sources
>>3798479
Im oretty sure y2k only gives 1 bn a team
Yea its coming then
>>3798485
We cannot rush a big sattalite only rhe small ones we need to launch it this turn.
>>
>>3798499
I'm also confused.

># Ryan Andrews will be unavailable until turn 35 to set up this project quickly, using BOCHICA's idle CPU time to assist him.
Ryan should be available this month.....

>>3790951
>SPECIAL RULES FOR NEXT TURN:
>Due to residual Y2K worries, it will be possible to hire out work teams to secure other people's networks. In addition, you will be able to sell power generating equipment at 2BN each.

I took this as meaning both Y2K jobs and selling power equipment nets us 2BN for either jobs.
Re-reading it, I may be wrong in that it only refers to the latter for power equipment.
>>
>>3798499
I think we can hold off on recruitment. We can't really hold off one research anymore.
>>
How does this look.

3 Factories make Power Equipment

Buy 2 Fleet Assets -2BN

Sell 6 Power Supply +12BN

Sell 4 Network Parts +8BN

Sell 4 Supply +8BN

Buy 5 Aerospace Parts -15BN

Build a Pylon in the last spot in Africa.
+ 1 Black Opts team + Drones -1BN

Schedule Satellite Launch
3 Work Crews +Foreman -3BN

Research on Big Sats
3 Work Crews + Aki -3BN

Research Defence
3 Work Crews + Foreman -3BN

Research CS Pylons
4 Work Crews -4BN

4 Covert teams doing jobs + Moira

We should have -3BN after this not counting what we may earn from Covert work.

Any Cost discrepancies from failed jobs or whatever we can sell supplies or network parts to cover the overhead.

I think we should hold off on selling supplies until till the end to see how much money we can make so we don't end up with extra cash, and having needlessly sold more supplies than we needed to.
>>
>>3798532

(My mistake, you can use Ryan next turn, I wanted him to be unavailable untik January)


Also hey guys

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/robert-mugabe-former-zimbabwe-president-dead-95-n1050576
>>
>>3798723
Bastard lived a rather long and full life, unlike most of his victims.

>>3798532
>>3798723
Just to be absolutely clear, Y2K jobs only give 1BN?
>>
>>3798730

Y2K jobs give 1BN net, yes. (You are paying 1BN for a team to go out, and getting 2BN).

Security jobs work the same, which is why some in past turns have been "Break even, but gain favor or reputation".
>>
>>3798732
I thought security jobs already had that amount deducted so when you say 2BN we get that amount total with the cost of deployment already covered.
>>
>>3798737

Then I should have been more consistent. I will give NET gain excluisvely from now on, and my apologies, again.
>>
>>3798738
Not really your fault. I should have read things more carefully, and asked every time something was uncertain.
>>
So, conspiracy hat time!

Is it possible that since David Hassid (how did he get that job and out of house arrest? Why did we send him?) now works under Carpatasu on the MCP, and Ikko is working on some sort of AI, that they are in fact working on the same AI (or plan to combine them somehow) and they are further along than we realize, and that Ikkos AI and MCP are really one and the same so their progress when put together means its nearly complete?!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vpqffgak7To
>>
>>3798499
>>3798532

Sorry for the confusion, I have updated the rules doc.

http://emlia.org/pmwiki/pub/web/LeftBeyond.Quest2Rules.html
>>3798748

David Hassid seems to be pretty good at talking himself out of a jam, doesn't he?

It is entirely possible that Ikko's people have been trying to coopt the MCP themselves, yes. You do know that they have a few decent hackers.

As far as you can tell, however, Ikko does not use an AI for her purchasing and logistics; rather than being consistently good at it with some exceptions, as an AI might be, Ikko's market moves oscillate between brilliant and poor. This hints at the work being done by several human analysts, so either they do not trust AI, or their people make for good intrusion specialists but not good coders.

Ikko's stated goal is to build up a stockpile that Remnant may draw from should the "mark of the beast" nonsense happens, and then live on it (at least partially) until their Savior rescues them.

You are almost certain that Ikko's husband, screen name Buck, is in fact William Cameron, the former Global Community press liaison and editor of the Global Community Weekly. He has recently been fired for absenteeism. The two were married by a Remnant preacher in a private ceremony, so William Cameron is listed as single on public record. Whereabouts are unknown, but you suspect that Ikko's group is operating close to your HQ due to the set of IP addresses they use. They keep mentioning wanting to move to Israel, but have not done so yet.

Your current deal with her is that she provided a few fleet assets in return for Tsion's website not being censored. You can still soft-DDOS it, or even hard-DDOS it for a short time, since that counts as heavy traffic rather than censorship.
>>
>>3798756
>David Hassid seems to be pretty good at talking himself out of a jam, doesn't he?

But we sent him to our boss?

I suppose we can lead a team to scour the Chicago area later on.
>>
>>3798756
Could we talk to Robertson about what he say and experienced when working in New Babylon? Like people being mean, and the perceived conflict between Matthews and Carpatescu?
>>
>>3798748
>>3798758

You sent David Hassid to Carpatescu because he asked for your best programmer to coordinate the Master Control Program initiative, and at least according to your performance reports, he was it.

At the time, you chose to take Carpatescu's request literally, which meant you sent your best male programmer, Aki Lattinen having greater technical skill (and, admittedly, greater flakiness).

It was also a good way to get rid of a suspected Remnant mole and a suspected jobsworth who is good at looking good by the stated metrics but doesn't actually get a whole lot done.

He seems to have done a good job in his current position; while you were busy cornering the production and shipping sectors of the economy, the MCP has been subsuming the financial sector.

(BTW, polite reminder that you now have 3 units of drones. Each can be assigned to one job (not necessarily one team) for a small bonus. If put on a combat job, they will act as ablative armor (in that they will be shot down before the meatbags are).

>>3798763

Yes, that does not take up an action. Robertson felt that New Babylon was needlessly gaudy, but respects the fact that everyone there was genuinely giving their best effort.... sometimes to the point of exhaustion and, in at least two cases, death by it. "Mind you, we were trying to save the world -- that would do it. Carpatescu is a slave driver, plain and simple, but to his credit he works harder than the people he pushes. I think he sleep two to four hours a day.

Mathews is the most European American I've ever met, in sensibilities - loves wine women and song, and clearly has throughout his career, but... not in a malign way.

Carpatescu sees Mathews as a useful idiot; he's mentioned hoping to get rid of religion in its entirety once the Ecumenical Council has watered its theology down enough. I honestly don't even disagree.

Oh, they get along great in public, don't get me wrong! Mathews sees himself as Carpatescu's equal; he isn't. He doesn't have the charisma or the energy. He's a lot more personable one on one, of course, but Carpatescu could probably take his church away from him under his feet with one good Conclave speech. Mathews is a big fan of the Renaissance - how things worked back then.

After the launch, we had one ferocious, nasty argument about Leonardo, Galileo, Darwin and Einstein, and thoroughly enjoyed both the argument and the wine.

My conclusion is that Carpatescu is a well-intentioned sociopath, Mathews is a good old boy with some delusions of grandeur. I do physics, not psychology, but you don't get to be my age without learning some.

Who I really cannot figure out is Fortunato. He's obviously in love with his boss, it would be kind of cute if he wasn't this big swarthy older man. I'm going to agree with my students here -- he should ask him out. It clearly didn't work out with whatever-her-name-was, maybe Carpatescu is into men."
>>
>>3798773
Dr. Robertson I would like two ask a few things, and they're fairly important so take you time to answer, and please answer honestly and to the best of your ability.

Did Carpatescu try to mesmerize you or did you come into contact with Ben Tsion, perhaps through Chaim Rozenweig?

(assuming he answers no to all the above)
Well I'm glad that's settled. Now for the big Q.
Ahem* Clears throat*.

"Dr. Robertson, I greatly appreciate your work and contributions from helping us advance telecommunications by over a decade, re-writing the books on physics, and helping save the world from great catastrophe from space.

I understand you previously expressed them to me, and may still have greater aspirations that I feel that after finishing the current projects, you and I can part amicably if you wish so. While I may already know the answer, I want to be sure I don't cause you to feel as if I am holding you back from anything. I would like to add that I still do wish to continue our current partnership indefinitely or for as long as either of us have the energy or will for it. I simple wish to be certain I am not holding you back from anything, either from lack of freedom from obligation or lack of help".

(OOC:We never got a proper direct "yes or no", although it is implied he doesn't want greater exposure, or to work under Carpatescu, he may have changed his mind after being allowed some rest. Also Character Development and stuff.)
>>
>>3798790

"Ah. Yes, this would have come, wouldn't it."

He thinks for a little bit.

"I cannot be certain whether the Potentate mesmerized me - I made a point of wearing a Nomenklator throughout my stay in New Babylon, happily it is becoming less of a breach of etiquette and being able to look up numeric values and the like without interrupting my flow of thought to get to a computer, has been terrible for my memory but has done wonders for my ability to get things done.... but I digress. I did not always wear the headsets, as their batteries don't last very long. What I can tell you is that if Carpatescu tried to alter my mind, he only had a few moments to do it in. I'd like you to tell me if I am exhibiting any of the side effects. Of course, if I were to have someone ask my students, they'd say that I have always been pompous and hidebound..."

You say that you haven't seen any loss of competence in Robertson's work, and point to the Gap Generator as an example.

"That's what worries me; the Gap Generator is a quintessential example of bad science. It maybe works, dampening an effect that maybe is there.... and yet."

"After seeing you and Mrs. Colombo, I have decided that if Potentate Carpatescu were to offer me a job, I would politely decline. To tell you the truth, I've been considering retiring on a high note, Foreman. The recent tests have shaken me. If the change in physics was simply a matter of what we thought to be constants, instead being variables -- excellent; every theoretical physicist dreams of dethroning Einstein and I may have come closest to that goal than any of my colleagues. The issue is that, well, consider the complexity of processes inherent in plant or animal growth. If those can be altered by, let's call it theologically mediated human intention -- I've caught students use Narrative Causality, after testing with the sword -- it's bigger than that. It means the world is, on a fundamental level, no longer making sense; the scientific method may not even apply any more. I've been meaning to continue my battery of tests, specifically to test this hypothesis. If I cannot falsify it decisively, I think that I will retire. What if we truly can no longer trust our instruments, and have to restart the scientific enterprise from Galileo and Newton, or even from Aristotle?"
>>
>>3798803

(Dr. Robertson has, of course, no way to tell whether it would be traced or not).

* especially since this particular mountain may well reveal itself to be the wall at the end of a flat Earth. A scientist has a right and an obligation to follow the data wherever it leads, but allow an old man to cling to a few certainties. I will finish what I started with you, of course...."
>>
(Let me rewrite the last, I mispasted)

He mentions having spent some time reading Max Planck's philosophical musings, which he used to ignore as the goings-on of an illustrious scientist who had lost his edge. "A new scientific truth does not triumph by convincing its opponents and making them see the light, but rather because its opponents eventually die, and a new generation grows up that is familiar with it." That's a direct quote. "If the world requires a completely new scientific paradigm, I would prefer to step back and let younger minds take the spotlight, rather than burden them with my obsolete understanding of the cosmos. I've spent far too much time in the mires of academic politics for my liking, but my ultimate devotion is to the truth, and if I can serve the truth best by stepping aside, I've earned my rest."

You encourage him to continue.

"In short, Foreman, I am more tired than I thought. I can see a veritable mountain of work ahead, and for the first time in my life, I am unsure about whether I can take on the climb -- especially since this particular mountain may well reveal itself to be the wall at the end of a flat Earth. A scientist has a right and an obligation to follow the data wherever it leads, but allow an old man to cling to a few certainties. I will finish what I started with you, of course, and ensure that the SNO lab can continue and expand its research, but I don't want to work with Carpatescu: it would drive me to an early grave, or rob me of my intellectual integrity. I've got maybe another year or two of productive work left in me and I would prefer to pursue my own goals, and sometimes yours, rather than spend every waking hour building up a new global agency and die of a heart attack at my desk."

You ask about Tsion.

"And yes, Rabbi Ben-Judah has been trying to see me in person for quite a while now. We have conversed via email. His vision of the world is quite reductive -- the man is a young earth creationist, for crying out loud! but has a consistency that mine, alas, no longer can afford. He's a fugitive, so he can't exactly come to my lab, and I have been busy with more important things, so I have been unable to arrange a meeting. I'm of a mind to accept his invitation; I'm also happy to let you listen in, if you guarantee his physical safety in the spirit of academic freedom."

TLDR: Robertson will not take up an agency head job unless given a direct order to by Carpatescu, and in that case he will retire as soon as he can. He estimates that he will be able to work with you for a while longer. Nobel prizes are awarded in December, so he figures that he will remain active at least until next year; he's been nominated.

# Tsion is going to mess with your head, don't forget the brain condom

# Tsion is going to mess with your head, I'd stay away, same as with Carpatescu

# Why not just a Skype call? I can guarantee that it will not be traced.

# Doctor, we've solved heart attacks, in a way, haven't we?
>>
>>3798805
Gonna combine some of them.

That's quite an admirable and noble stance, I hope you have a list of some candidates of keen minds whom you wish to nurture into achieving half as much as you have. Perhaps we can find you tenure at a university, or perhaps start one with you as a founder?

Doctor, we've solved heart attacks, in a way, haven't we?

Tsion might mess with your head, same as with Carpatescu. Why not just a Skype call? I can guarantee that it will not be traced.

(Do this after we find Ikko so there's no cries of foul.)

Also we should have Robertson speak to Dr. Diamond sometime. I really hope we don't have to start managing NPC's mental health.
>>
https://www.cnn.com/2019/09/04/us/man-buys-generators-bahamas-trnd/index.html

>>3798809

"Yes, but working myself to the point where I need a machine to stay alive isn't my idea of a happy ending to my career. I was only a little older than you when Star Wars came out, Foreman, and really don't see myself as Darth Vader."

Dr. Robertson and Dr. Diamond have been in touch; they respect each other professionally, but don't particularly get along. "I admit that her more... holistic approach may be appropriate for some of the work we are doing, as much as I don't want to."

When you mention a list of candidates, he gives you an unexpected belly laugh. "Ah, Foreman! Already looking for my replacement I see! I'm going to keep you in suspense on that particular line item, I think." He doesn't seem upset, so there's that.

As for meeting Tsion, he's both wary and intrigued.

"I would be fine with a video call, sure; I don't know if he would. In addition to exposing his location, he believes that it's a poor substitute for direct human interaction. I don't disagree, but it's fairly transparent that he might want to use mesmerism on me. If that's the case, I count on the earsets you've developed to protect me; it just means that the meeting will have to be brief."

While you know what the trigger phrase for Carpatescu is, and have set up the earsets to trip automatically upon detecting it, you don't know what it is for Tsion; an operator would have to listen in and handle the matter manually.

"I will note that this would also provide a unique opportunity to test the Gap Generator prototype in a situation that carries no risk to life and limb." You hope that this explains why Dr. Robertson is intrigued, more than Tsion's preaching.


# Videoconference only.

# Stick to emails, it's safer.

# Arrange for a meeting and keep a work team around for Gap Generator testing and possible extraction (they'll be better at the first, clearly).

# Arrange for a meeting and keep a covert ops team around for Gap Generator testing and possible extraction (they'll be better at the second, clearly).

# Arrange for a meeting and use the goon squad for possible extraction (they'll set up the Gap Generator, but won't be able to do much more than turn it on and leave the recording instruments running).

# Arrange for a meeting and let Dr. Robertson go alone (but with the earsets in place, obviously).
>>
>>3798809

(You may need to let people rotate out and rest, but that's it. Aki is an exception; she should not go out alone. That said, spending a bit of time with Dr. Diamond has done her some good, to the point that she showers semi-regularly, doesn't spend all her time in the VR rig, and has even started going to the caf to eat rather than sending a drone tank to pick up her food).
>>
>>3798815

(It is understood that when Dr. Robertson does things "alone" he has a couple students from his own staff with him, the same applies to Dr. Diamond and Mr. Andrews, the latter in fact has his own bodyguards by now. Aki has access to your HQ computing resources pretty much all the time, and usually has a drone helicopter buzzing above her head when she does go out. Moira does operate alone, but anyone other than a trained assassin messing with her would probably have to be sent home in several small boxes).
>>
>>3798815
>"Ah, Foreman! Already looking for my replacement I see
Knew he was gonna say that.

Haha, not quit dear Dr. If I had a replacement for you, I'd have hired him (or her) already, and have you both work side by side! I kid, I kid. No, its more that I wish to see what skills, knowledge, and also wisdom be passed onto the younger generations, including things that are not directly related to the hard sciences such as a casual psychology to better understand people, and overcoming common conflict or problems in the lab.

# Arrange for a meeting and keep a work team around for Gap Generator testing and possible extraction (they'll be better at the first, clearly).
This includes the Ear Buddies right?

If Tison messes up Robertson, you can bet your ass he's never gonna go back to Israel.

>>3798817
I'm worried we may lose what makes her special. including her natural resistance to mind control

>>3798820
What about us? The Foreman?
>>
>>3798820
Do satellites need 1 part communications for command and control or can we do something like 5 parts boosters for large satellites? I assume we'd use other satellites or ground based observatory to guide it to target if we don't put a camera in a satellite.
>>
I suppose we can put the last set of drones with the covert teams.
>>
>>3798826

(You'll have a couple of HQ staff with you during official meetings, although it's more for the look of the thing lately, since you can communicate with HQ instantly and anywhere. If you're going somewhere unsafe, you can count on the fact that your driver or pilot will be trained in evasive maneuvers. You have some self defense training, and can hit someone center-of-mass with a pistol at a few meters, and know the basics of how and when to take cover. Of course, if you need muscle, you can simply take a covert team along. Since you are a global agency head, you may carry your handgun in many places where they are forbidden, although not all of them. Carpatescu specifically requests everybody to leave their personal attendants at home when meeting with him unless he says otherwise, and had a row with Mathews about it once. Your handgun is fairly generic, but is given excellent maintenance by your support staff, and will only jam in the event of a miracle. You may, of course, work out how to prevent even that from happening).

>>3798826

(Aki can go completely insane, or can go completely sane, or can keep threading the needle as she is right now. All three have different gameplay consequences. What is best for any of your agents, including yourself, may not be what is best for humanity...).

>>3798826

Yes, Nomenklator earsets with noise cancelling would be deployed in all those cases. Since nobody's particularly impressed at people having perfect recall of things, as the Datalinks are accessible by text-to-speech by anyone who forked over a few dozen Nicks for a headset, their main value now is in their stealth.

>>3798826

"I pride myself in being a good lab manager. In that sense, I like what your friend Santiago had to say about Cpt. Steele; I think that it applies to running a lab, too, since people on the project will see themselves as separate from people off it."

"What'd she say?"

"A ship at sea is its own world. To be the captain of a ship is to be the unquestioned ruler of that world and requires all of the leadership skills of a prince or minister. That's what she said; I believe that it applies to people in my line of work as well -- the reason why scientists are depicted at arrogant, as a stereotype, is that we often do feel isolated from the public. Some do because they see the public as ignorant, and they aren't necessarily wrong, mind you; I do because, I can't ask the public to understand ten percent of what I and my colleagues do. All I ask them is that they understand that our work does trickle down to the engineers, and then to the factory floors and storefronts. Unlike my colleague Dr. Stadler, I think that men are open to truth and reason, and we do not have to deceive them into letting us pursue them. It's just that our time on Earth is limited, and we all have to pick and choose."

The distinguished scientist hasn't lost edge, but he's done a bit of pontificating lately... maybe he does want to impart wisdom.
>>
>>3798829

A low resolution, fixed focus camera such as that found on a cell phone is sufficient for terminal guidance; it weighs a couple of grams and uses negligible power, and can be embedded in the comm array. Long range guidance is accomplished by external measurements, so you're right. Satellites must have at least 1 comm array to receive commands and send video and telemetry back.

With your current tech availability, the best "kill vehicle" you can manage would be 1 comm array, 4 hydrazine tanks.

Researching satellite tech will unlock more components. Some components may require investment in other tech trees. It is theoretically possible to put a uranium hydride bomb in a satellite, for example... you have done the necessary R&D for the warhead itself, but it would have to be made lighter, and you would need some lightweight radiation shielding to protect the electronics. Worse, it has to work both in and out of the nuclear attenuation zone. None of these things are impossible or even require a paradigm shift, but they do require time and effort.

(Researching satellites will unlock new parts; you already completed most of the other tech trees except energy, so you'll unlock more than one part at a time. Some technologies require more than one tech tree to have reached a certain point; for example, the one time bonus in pylon performance required both CellSol and AI research).
>>
>>3797909
>I would say, hold off on this. Too many unknowns, and we still have a mole that can fuck our day up 6 ways to Sunday, then God takes over for a day before it starts again.
True, we'd need to avoid our location spreading to basically anyone in the lower ranks. At best we keep it among the heroes and a single sec team assigned to defend us selected entirely by our head-of-security.

>We lack any means of survivability short term should our boss cut us off and we lack the inventory for any sustained attrition conflict.
Attrition conflict doubtful: boss can hardly be seen to be trying to kill us or CATS; assassination by poison, gunman or bomb is the threat as well as kidnapping.

>Just how loyal are they if their pay is in turmoil, and they themselves face retaliation for just working for us?
Fairly given the serious investment in loyalty, quality-of-life and rewarding good service we've made.

>We should finish 3 or 4 more tech trees before pushing the button. It will help us win immensely.
That will be difficult but hey, it'd certainly be smart since it will provide marked benefits to other tasks and free up teams for us to send elsewhere.

>We need at least 1 or 2 fleet assets this turn, and finish the Africa thing so Enoch Litwala won't get steam rolled. Let him bleed a little so he, and his people appreciate us a bit more. Let them stand on their own and understand how much worse off they are without us and our patronage.
Agreed. We want Africa on our side in our Cyber economy given it's vast natural resources are perfect to act as a non-fiat backer to our currency / market systems that will strengthen our position further while also granting us access to massive manpower and other opportunities to construct factories.

>Also guys, we can shore up our manpower by hiring our 3rd parties. We met with the founder of "Darkwater" and he was willing to let us hire out one of his teams for discreetly for "deniable opts".
True but we will want to leave that until we've got everything else in order or we seriously need the troops on the ground given the costs associated with it.

>>3798031
>That depends entirely on you; he's going to be a source of security team contracts, at a minimum.
Ah, generating conflicts to then profit off of the clean-up, truly we are a government agency aren't we...

>>3798228
The green one is me, we just look very similar.

>>3798286
Changing it to cargo would resolve our current lack of fleet assets I think but I'd rather change it to Hospital for that sweet sweet PR.

>>3798773
>(BTW, polite reminder that you now have 3 units of drones.
Aye we really need to be better about assigning these to actions. They aren't a big help individually but given our rolls they can be the difference between life and death.
>>
>3797792
>build last network celsol in africa with 1 security team with drones. -1bn
>3 factories produce 3 power
>sell 6 power +12bn
>sell 6 supplies +12bn
>Sell 2 network equipment +4bn
> buy 2 fleet assets -4bn
>buy 5 aerospace parts -15bn
>3 work teams launch a sattalite with drones using 5 parts-3bn
>4 work team with aki research sat -4bn
>3 covert teams and drones work potential +3bn
>3 team recruit work team -3bn
>We talk to nasca and Carpatescu to convince them of our just push the asteroid away plan.
>Leaves us with -1 bn hope a covert team will make 2.


Hows that?
Also disagree with not recruiting. Hitting our recruit max is very important to be doing as much as we can with our turns.
>>
>>3798902

Is Dr. Diamond available? Do we have funds for research?

If yes, assign her to the Theology Program. Robertson takes a break.
>>
>>3798888
>>3798830

(Do you have a plan for now? What about Dr. Robertson?)

The map for possible intervention by your covert teams is fairly easy this month. Enoch Litwala is going to want to strengthen his position as soon as possible. You can give him market rate (+1BN) or work at cost (no loss or gain, but he will be able to use his war chest elsewhere). Note that you can, at any time, spend 1BN to quickly bring Neall Ellis to help out.

# Assist in Eastern Africa.

# Assist in Northern Africa.

# Assist in Southern Africa.

The central African territory contains Rebohoth's stronghold, and going there on a war footing might be a bad idea -- it will be hard enough to install C-S pylons.

Elsewhere, things are a little more relaxed, but not by much.

# If the Garibaldi is in hospital or cargo configuration, she can be deployed to either side of the South Atlantic to provide disaster relief. UNDRR will pay 1BN for use of the ship and 2BN for the ship plus a work crew. They will also pay for the refit as long as it's to one of those two configurations (you get to choose).

# The Darkwater CEO proposes a joint operation against a former drug lord who has taken advantage of the chaos in South America to seize a large quantity of cocaine (which is now legal, or at least tolerated, in a number of places; this is largely a matter of turf) and convoy it across Mexico to deliver to the tourist centers on the coasts. (1BN)
>>
>>3798918
I don't want to loose more work teams to that research untill we have 15 work teans again.
>>
>>3798918

Dr. Diamond and Mr. Andrews will be available next month; the former is finishing setting up your augmentation clinic, the latter is digitizing the Vatican Archives and other ancient repositories of sacred knowledge.
>>
>>3798919
>Set garbaldi to hospital and help undrr
>assist in eastern noether and southern. america give them drones.
>have blackops do the drug bust.
>>
>>3798902
>Hows that?
I question selling network equipment compared to selling additional supplies, seeing as we can almost certainly re-buy them later at a better price.

I also question where we are getting that 4th drone from that makes an appearance in your turn plan, seeing as you dedicate 3 to covert teams and 1 to our security in Africa for the celsol pylon.

>>3798919
# Assist in Eastern Africa.
# Assist in Northern Africa.
# Assist in Southern Africa.

Do all 3 in return for 2Bn, it's all the money we need and leaves him with enough cash to spend on some troops of his own to strengthen his position.

# If the Garibaldi is in hospital or cargo configuration, she can be deployed to either side of the South Atlantic to provide disaster relief. UNDRR will pay 1BN for use of the ship and 2BN for the ship plus a work crew. They will also pay for the refit as long as it's to one of those two configurations (you get to choose).

I'd like to refit and deploy it with a work team but I'm unsure if any of the plans anons have suggested have room for that, assuming there's time, I might throw together a plan of my own.

# The Darkwater CEO proposes a joint operation against a former drug lord who has taken advantage of the chaos in South America to seize a large quantity of cocaine (which is now legal, or at least tolerated, in a number of places; this is largely a matter of turf) and convoy it across Mexico to deliver to the tourist centers on the coasts. (1BN)

Can we deploy our black ops team to do this?
>>
>>3798932

Yes, you can use the Blackwatch to do this. They will likely appreciate working with experienced mercenaries with few ethical constraints. You may send drones or not, your call.

Moira is flexible enough to work with either of your combat division, and sure enough of her beliefs that she will not be influenced much by the culture of either.
>>
>>3798920
>>3798925

>>I don't want to loose more work teams to that research until we have 15 work teans again.

Fair point. Current research is HR nightmare. Next month we'll have archive data.


---

#Assist in North Africa
#Assist in South Africa

These areas impacted by wave.

Why no West Africa option?

#Deploy Garibaldi as hospital ship, assign to African coast.

#Assign regular Covert+ Moira.

Save Black OPs for Rebohoth.
>>
>>3798944

It's a bit too early to go into the lion's den. However, you can deploy a security team to escort the CelSol installers there -- they will be working above the table and Rebohoth would have to be very brazen to attack them in that capacity.
>>
>>3798944
>Save Black OPs for Rebohoth.
We ain't making the killing blow yet lad, we're securing the outlying regions so he is isolated from the rest of the world.

Plus, it ain't our troops that should make the final push. Let the Africans eliminate this dictator while we melt back into the shadows. Last thing we need is a person recognising our lads and us getting connected to a rebellion against the World government.
>>
>>3798946

Apologies. I was vague.

Clarification: I meant for Rebohot's soldiers if he sends war bands to attack.

Revise: Send Black OPs to Central America. Bad PR if they're seen with our peace efforts.
>>
>>3798932
I just meant that they will have the support. We can pick which 2 teams have the support.
>>
Rolled 28, 45 = 73 (2d100)

>>3798932

(Which work plan does this covert plan go with?)
>>
>>3798960
One that I'm in the middle of writing, since I've got fairly different opinions from most people on how this should all be done.
>>
>>3798932
You have a fair point with the network. I just didnt want to dininish supplies too much and they are of equal value to make from factorys.
>>
>>3798977
Actually the supplies are something that are usually much cheaper, assuming we survive this event we can almost certainly replace our stockpile of those easier than network parts.
>>
Hey the 3rd fragment lands at the end of this month, right? Or is it the next one?
>>
>>3799005

Next month: >>3797703
>>
>>3799005

Fragment 3 is going to come in at the end of next month, unless the Alkali rocket takes it out as it's hoped that it will. Alkali uses the same booster stack and interception vehicle as Alkahest, but carries a thermobaric warhead and oxidizer instead of a nuclear warhead. Given the close range of interception, this will prevent radioactive fallout. The intent is to disgregate Fragment 3 in much the same way that Akhenaten was separated into parts; Fragment 3's subfragments should be small enough that most of them will burn up in the atmosphere or cause local impacts.

You have to admit that NCASA has done a fair job of assembling a second Energia rocket so quickly.

If you want to have a second interceptor, you would have to prepare it THIS month so that it may be launched roughly concurrently with Alkali

(You can rush a microsatellite launch, but what's a microsatellite going to do against a bolide?)
>>
Query:

Could we arrange Gap Generator testing with Non-Remnant groups, such as the Zensunni who keep getting mentioned?
>>
>>3799023

Yes; it then becomes their call how much they want to publicize the testing.

Note that you have one member of the Remnant in custody.

Your three prisoners were moved to your blacksite, where they were allowed to see the sun, talk to each other, and have a bit more room. Mr. Tully is attempting to be stoic; Mrs. Jospin is beginning to despair about seeing her family again; Mr. Durand is clearly looking for an escape angle.

Your fourth prisoner is in Effincold and seems generally okay with being there, being as he didn't have much left in the way of family and his skills are appreciated there.
>>
1) Assign 3 covert teams to African ops, 2Bn in payment for all 3 ops and deploy all of our drones with them.

2) Assign the black ops team to the operation in south america with Blackwater with Moira.

3) Refit our carrier to it's hospital design and send it to Africa with 1 work team onboard.

4) Assign our 3 factories to create power generators and sell them.

5) Buy a fleet asset to restore automatic logistics management.

6) Assign 6 teams (coverts can be used for this if I remember right?) to recruiting a further 2 work teams.

7) Sell 7 units of supplies

8) Assign 4 teams to construct aerospace parts.

9) Purchase 3 aerospace part for 9 Bn

10) Assign 3 teams to schedule a launch for the end of next month of 5 parts

11) We go to meet with Carpetscu and NCASA to convince them of the slingshot plan and get their support for it.

12) Dr Robertson surveys Western Russia, Aki surveys China, we survey Greenland.

This ends with us 1 Bn in surplus, at our team cap, with a big sat going up and all operations done along with logistics automation restored and the good PR from Africa. Plus we might find some good shit with those 3 survey actions. Anyone have any points they'd like to discuss or contest?
>>
>>3799042

(Aki is in Rio, but she can do a bit of survey work remotely, so this plan is feasible if people want to second it or haggle)
>>
>>3799042

(Note that you have a meeting with Carpatescu at the end of the month regardless; you don't get to set the agenda, but if you want McLachlan in, he is hardly in a position to refuse).

# We're all busy, let's video call.

# Briefly show up in person.
>>
>>3799049
To be fair you had previously described her doing it remotely so I knew it wouldn't be a problem.
>>
>>3799052
Personally I'd prefer to video call but if other anons want to do a meeting, do a meeting. Assuming however they don't, I'd assign our action to an additional survey action, this time of the Uk / Ireland.
>>
>>3799042

Good start.

Why do you propose the areas for survey? Particularly Greenland?

We should provide data on Fragment 3 to back our slingshot plan.

Optional: Get audio on Fragment 4 via SETI to convince Carpatescu to shift to nuclear option. KILL IT WITH FIRE.
>>
>>3799057
>Why do you propose the areas for survey? Particularly Greenland?
They were regions I could name off the top of my head, if you've got a preference for a different region I am entirely willing to hear you out as to why.

>We should provide data on Fragment 3 to back our slingshot plan.
Any data we can provide they probably have given the myriad of professional novice watchers that must be looking at it 24/7.

>Optional: Get audio on Fragment 4 via SETI to convince Carpatescu to shift to nuclear option. KILL IT WITH FIRE.
I doubt they'd agree to that, I mean given the nature of it as a high density metallic asteroid, a nuke will do relatively little to it to my understanding.
>>
I support this >>3799042

instead of this
>>3798296
I like your plan better then mine.
>>
File: suzanna diamond md.png (741 KB, 536x773)
741 KB
741 KB PNG
Rolled 29, 100, 37, 93, 8, 21, 56 = 344 (7d100)

(Suzanna Diamond only gives a small bonus, but she gives it to all actions. She has never been in combat, but is used to harsh environments, having worked in Nepal, Antarctica, the Atacama desert, and the Amazon, and comes from a military family. In addition to the operational bonus, she will significantly decrease the chance of fatalities should anything go south. The augmentation action that will become available next turn requires her to not be otherwise occupied though).

>>3799057

The main issue is that there's only one big rocket available. You would have to provide nuclear fuel and nuclear engineering expertise, abort the launch of Alkali, deal with Fragment 3 using some other method, then refit Alkali to similar specifications as Alkahest.

These things are doable, but it would be a tour de force to accomplish them and convince the Potentate that they can be accomplished.

SETI is tracking Fragment 4 at your request; they indicate that it is mostly made out of very large pyrite crystals, and has its own magnetic field. It's shaped rather like a long, thin bundle of sticks, each stick being a large pyrite formation; while it is the smallest fragment, it is also the second most massive, jut behind Fragment 3.

Due to its shiny surface, it's occasionally visible by naked eye in the night sky as a flickering dot.

They can't get "audio" from it, of course, but they can play back the magnetometer readings (magnetic field fluctuations are extrapolated by interferometry of the solar wind hitting the object). It sounds roughly like https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZAKy_08klrg

>>3799068

The more solid an asteroid is, the more a nuclear weapon will do to it; even a small nuke would cause it to split into two.

You can also propose that your probe be used against Fragment 4, in which case it would attempt to nudge it out of the way; since it is solid, rather than aggregate, docking with the fragments and then using thrusters to push against it would obtain some results.

>>3799071
>>3799042

Any objections or changes?
>>
>>3799077
>The more solid an asteroid is, the more a nuclear weapon will do to it; even a small nuke would cause it to split into two.
I imagine that wouldn't seriously improve our situation however.

>You can also propose that your probe be used against Fragment 4, in which case it would attempt to nudge it out of the way; since it is solid, rather than aggregate, docking with the fragments and then using thrusters to push against it would obtain some results.
How significant of a result are we talking here?
>>
>>3799077
Nope good with the plan
>>
>>3799083

Worst case scenario, a miscalculated redirection sends it on a population center.

Next worst, nothing happens: it is known that Fragment 4 will hit the Earth, but since it is emitting gases, it's not coming down on a ballistic trajectory. This makes the exact point of impact hard to calculate.

A middle of the road result would be for it to skip the atmosphere a few times before being captured, resulting in greatly decreased impact velocity, and the burning-off of at least some of it in the atmosphere.

Ideally, Fragment 4 will miss Earth entirely.
>>
>>3799092
Does fragment 4 fall in the same month as 3 or a month later?
>>
>>3799096

Fragment 4 was "pushed back" a fair amount; it's expected to come down in 3 months or so. Most of the other 26 fragments are going to pass between Earth and the Moon over the next few weeks, with some potentially becoming a danger again in two years. Akhenaten's core, roughly two thirds of the mass of the original body, has sailed past; it's too heavy to be recaptured by the Earth, and is not expected to be a problem again for centuries.

>>3799089

(OK, will write while I watch this datalogger go then)
>>
>>3799106
>Fragment 4 was "pushed back" a fair amount; it's expected to come down in 3 months or so.
Aye that's plenty of time to throw together another 2 or three big sats to try and push it off course. Especially if we can get the NCASA to help too.
>>
>>3799068
Fair points, all.

Survey areas acceptable.

>>3799077

Works for me.

>>3799092
>>Emitting gases

Can we determine what sort of gas?

>>3799106

>>Fragment 4 was "pushed back" a fair amount; it's expected to come down in 3 months or so. Most of the other 26 fragments are going to pass between Earth and the Moon over the next few weeks, with some potentially becoming a danger again in two years. Akhenaten's core, roughly two thirds of the mass of the original body, has sailed past; it's too heavy to be recaptured by the Earth, and is not expected to be a problem again for centuries.

Hypothesis:

Asteroid pass over correlates to 4th Trumpet: Darkening of Sun and Moon.

Chance of impact to lunar surface... Probable.
Query: Will satellite assets be at risk?
>>
>>3799144
>Survey areas acceptable.
Ideally we'll get round to surveying more regions at some point, lord knows I'm pissed we missed our chance to finish surveying the earth before the last opportunity shift.
>>
>>3799157

Agreed.

----

Hypothesis:

Fragment 4 is an artificial construct?

Fifth Trumpet described Key to the Bottomless Pit.

Counter-Argument - Akalli Satellite footage suggests fragment inhabited.

If Fragment 4 is not the Key, is it the 'Abyss?'

The mystery deepens.

We have a heading, yes? Middle East (Cario to Tehran)?

Proposal: Send survey team next month. Scout for anomalies.
>>
Well fuck, 4chan ate my post.
>>
Your security teams coordinate a strategy with Mr. Litwala; while he slowly expands the territory under his direct control, your people and other mercenary outfits will engage in continent-wide harassment of Rebohoth's forces.

The team you send to Algeria has the misfortune of intersecting General Raveshaw's unit directly; at first you suspect a mole, but then come to the realization that he simply followed a burst of network activity not correlated with any significant economic or cultural event. Your planned raid on a supply base turns into a rout. While the small swarm of drones your people brought to provide cover and a minimum of air support was their downfall, it also turns out to be their salvation; the platoon CO has your HQ team order the drones to charge blindly forward while they beat a hasty retreat. Raveshaw's men briefly panic; the dawn light makes distinguishing sizes difficult, so for a precious twenty seconds, it looks like a dozen attack helicopters are coming their way. By the time it becomes obvious that this is not the case, your team has made a hasty getaway, and Raveshaw's forces end up having to spend the entire morning swatting electronic flies armed with small-caliber handguns bolted to the frame. This ruse isn't likely to work again, but the opposite ruse might...

You lost the drones, and did not accomplish much strategically, but you got paid. Your HQ team hopefully learned a lesson about OPSEC; your soldiers learned that their little disposable friends can be used for more than reconnaissance.

In South Africa, things go slightly better; the mission there is to approach the parties of yet another land dispute, and ask them to wait settling it until Litwala is in power. Your men's job is to escort Litwala's representative and arrange for a teleconference with the big man himself; they do their job well, and ensure sufficient bandwidth for their customer to talk to both faction leaders. However, they feel that he is not yet entrenched enough to provide a viable alternative to Rebohoth.
>>
Things go considerably better is near Litwala's base of operation in Malindi. By using SIGINT, cheap drone tanks as mobile IEDs, and good old fashioned ambush tactics, your people manage to block a column of jeeps and five-ton trucks in a small valley, Rebohoth's attempt at securing a forward base where to mass troops at, after which Litwala's militia quickly surrounds and disarms them. Since you were not taking payment for this operation, the militia colonel agrees that you should get half the loot. A few trades later -- you don't particularly have a use for diesel generators or AK47s -- you find that your men have obtained sufficient squad weapons for the remainder of your security force (that they know about).

The prize catch however is a fourth Centauro IFV, apparently sleight-of-handed from the Jordanian army; it's in poor condition, and was likely obtained by Raveshaw as a way to conduct false-flag operations, but once it gets shipped back to you, it can be restored to full function. Litwala's militians happily trade this one vehicle for a bunch of Jeeps.

Aki is informed by the loss of the drone squadron, with some hesitance; rather than being upset, she's genuinely happy that the drones preserved "higher forms of sentience", as she put it.

* One unit of drones lost
* Two units of heavy weapons gained
* All four security squads can use IFVs
* Balance of power moved SLIGHTLY in Litwala's favor
* +2BN received in payment, as promised

>>3799162

Tsion has stopped short of identifying the four fragments of Akhenaten with the first four Trumpet Judgement, but other posters on his website have done it for him.

>>3799144

The large satellites are very unlikely to be at risk due to the Kolniya (modified Molniya) orbit that they are in; you may lose a few microsatellites, though, since they are on very low orbits and so any sort of upper-atmospheric disturbance such as a volcano eruption or an atmospheric tide caused by a foreign object may cause them to lose velocity and re-enter early. This has happened once with Fragment 2 so far.
>>
I'd rather we kept up research, we will have a easier time recruiting than research, an we are rushing against a deadline for research against MCP.

>>3798918
Theology IS the break for Dr. Robertson.

>>3798932
I like this plan. except for the cocaine plan with Darkwater. But I can roll with it.

>>3798988
Network parts are more consistent, supplies have only always gone up and have rarely ever returned to a baseline price like .25 per unit.

So you want to completely abandon any research?

Also Robertson and Aki aren't ideal for survey work and finding opportunities... I really don't think we should send Aki to survey.

Also, no Pylon for our mandate?

# We're all busy, let's video call.
I'd rather we do so with some sensor equipment since he will likely use his powers on us.

>>3799077
Mandate, make Pylon?

>>3799157
We can hire more agents, or send more teams out.
>>
Speaking of Aki, she's done a better job in China, where she isn't, than in Rio, where she is. On the plus side, she spent a little bit of time with Dr. Diamond, who is Chinese-British, and learned the rudiments of Confucian philosophy, then jacked into the Sino-Japanese Synco system, sometimes replacing the BOCHICA chatbot, to discuss them with mildly disgruntled middle managers in Shenzen who feared being replaced by an algorithm; the machine translation is approximate, so it's not obvious that they are talking to a human being. She asks their help in writing a better Chinese-language version of the BOCHICA interface, and finds a few local coders to work with, getting it done from the common API rather than as a patch upon the Japanese version. Slowly, over a couple of weeks, the Sinicized version wins people over, to the point where Chairman Yang is seen making use of it while fact-checking himself before a speech to the People's Congress.

Unfortunately -- and perhaps predictably -- Aki's remote work causes her to neglect seeing what's under her nose; she is extremely happy to explain neural networks and genetic algorithm to Santiago's IT team, but when offered a tour of the Spartan Guard barracks, she refuses -- too many loud people! -- and the offer to go with Santiago via drone annoys the subpotentate, who is adamantly opposed to any surveillance system that her people don't control. Despite her information technology team's approval, and the fact that BOCHICA did a stellar job coordinating work post-tsunami (you cheated a little, in that its few obvious mistakes, unavoidable in an AI, were caught by human operators), she says that turning over too much of the economy to an automated system is too much of a strategic risk. She points out that, while respecting the fact that Aki had work to do, she's not a very good guest, and privately recommends to you to let her whip into mental shape.

* Santiago will not allow expanding the factory system, for now.
* Relations with Yang have normalized.

The Garibaldi, refit as a hospital ship and provided with a work team, does an excellent job mitigating the damage along the coast of Africa; Litwala takes advantage of this by having posters and memes circulated that depict his arrival back to the motherland aboard what is clearly the same ship. Rebohoth does not have a navy, and wouldn't dream of harassing a warship with a bunch of guys with Zodiacs.

>>3799187

(Y'all tell me! I think you were waiting to finish the mandate until the last minute? There's still time to change your mind though)
>>
Moira comes home with a few scars, a big grin on her face, and what you might charitably call a tan (she looks pale, rather than borderline albino -- they must have some good sunscreen in Mexico).

Darkwater agents are treating your black ops team as muscle; they're doing most of the infiltration and detective work to track the cocaine convoy (which turns out to be anything but: there is a decoy convoy while the actual deliveries are being made with what looks like a recrudescence of tourists with suspiciously souped-up VW minivans), while letting your people take the risk of blocking the couriers.

It's not a particularly difficult job, and gets done relatively quickly.

"I'd like to take the next plane back south, Boss. The Darkwater boys want to leave him alone -- let him rebuild his strength and do this again in six months; they call this farmin' - but I think we can bust him for good. I don't give a rat's ass about who's selling coke to who, but this guy has been in business a while, so I bet there's some good stuff in his big fancy house!"

# You got paid, you came home with only a few scratches, let's not take risks.

# Phat loot ahoy!
>>
>>3799187
I would rather wait to complete the node and
We can do.research later when we have the money to do so.

>>3799042
I still prefer this plan.

>>3799212
>phat loot ahoy!
>>
>* One unit of drones lost * Two units of heavy weapons gained * All four security squads can use IFVs * Balance of power moved SLIGHTLY in Litwala's favor * +2BN received in payment, as promised
Honestly this comes out to a decent profit for us. Especially that IFV.

>>3799187
>I'd rather we kept up research, we will have a easier time recruiting than research, an we are rushing against a deadline for research against MCP.
Mate we're basically in position to beat the MCP and after this turn we won't have any more recruiting to do. Assuming everything goes proper.

>Network parts are more consistent, supplies have only always gone up and have rarely ever returned to a baseline price like .25 per unit.
Yes but they are frequently priced at 1 per unit whereas network parts have literally never changed their price.

>So you want to completely abandon any research?
For now at least.

>Also Robertson and Aki aren't ideal for survey work and finding opportunities... I really don't think we should send Aki to survey.
They can both do it however and it's more so about throwing them into these actions since it's free and I had little for them to do this turn.

>Also, no Pylon for our mandate?
It slipped my mind.

>We can hire more agents, or send more teams out.
We need to find agents first but aye we can use our teams, problem is they're a limited supply.

>>3799201
>Aki's remote work causes her to neglect seeing what's under her nose
God dammit Aki. In hindsight I should've seen this coming.

>she says that turning over too much of the economy to an automated system is too much of a strategic risk.
Would she be willing to set a standard for us to reach in terms of security for the system before she'll allow further expansion?

>She points out that, while respecting the fact that Aki had work to do, she's not a very good guest, and privately recommends to you to let her whip into mental shape.
She touches the savant and there shall be no escape from the fury Aki's drone swarms will unleash on south America. It'll be the Terminator films but entirely focused on getting revenge. Is she seriously turning down a major economic benefit to her region because a person, who we outright told her was autistic with a capital A, turned down a tour of her barracks and tried to compromise by using tele-presence?

Christ Santiago worst waifu of 1999.
>>
>>3799212
# You got paid, you came home with only a few scratches, let's not take risks.

I'd rather not seeing as it might piss off Darkwater and we have decent relations with them right now.
>>
>>3799201
I honestly don't know, I tried to make my plans as close to this guys >>3798296
but then he went completely in another direction.

I guess just go with the last minute change.

>>3799219
We're meeting the boss next month and completing the node 1 trimester earlier would likely gain us some relationship increase or some boon with the boss.

Also we are losing out on research time when we have less than 3-6 months to finish before hitting the economy.

The same can be said for the satellite which seems like it won't even be used next month and yet we are juggling everything for it.

>>3799225
Survey actions aren't free? I think team or agent costs 1BN. Where as attaching an agent to a team is free, or vice versa.
>>
>>3799212
# You got paid, you came home with only a few scratches, let's not take risks.

>>3799229
Also we have dirt on us and are now blackmail-able somewhat.
>>
>>3799232
>Survey actions aren't free? I think team or agent costs 1BN. Where as attaching an agent to a team is free, or vice versa.
To my understanding C0 actions are free assuming they aren't shit like buying from the market. A hero survey is a C0 but a team survey is a C1.
>>
>>Aki's remote work causes her to neglect seeing what's under her nose

Inevitable. We sent the Autistic Savant to Fight Club.

#You got paid.... let's not take risks
>>
I love that no one is even commenting that I called Santiago worst waifu.
>>
>>3799232
Survay actions are free if done by a hero.

The onlg research that matters in the take over is defense otherwise i just want to do it before the asteroid blows us to hell.. i mean really attempting to place the node only costs a network part as Carpatescu has his teams installing it so may as well attempt it.
>>
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Rolled 28 (1d100)

You're inspecting the now-shutdown Thule base in Greenland; Dr. Robertson had sent surveyors this way a while ago, and you quickly confirm that the base can be turned into a logistics hub for potential mining operations. There's no significant amouts of nuclear fuel up here, but there are plenty of rare earths, iron, and coal to be dug up.

This facility belongs to the Global Community, and having it reassigned to you wouldn't be much of a hassle.

Talking to the lonely few caretakers there, you learn an interesting thing. On July 15, 1942, six P-38 Lightning fighter aircraft and two B-17 Flying Fortress bombers encountered a blizzard while supporting the Allied war effort in the British Isles. The aircraft were forced to conduct an emergency landing on the glaciers of Greenland, and though all the crew members were rescued nine days later, the aircraft were left behind. One was found in 1992. You're pretty sure that modern imaging technology could help find any of the others; it's unlikely that they can be restored, and it probably would not make much sense to do so, but perhaps you can trade them for a warbird or two that are in actual working order.

Another possible use for Thule, which despite its remote location is relatively easy to get to by cargo planes and can be supplied by sea in the summer, is a town-sized settlement entirely under your control.

* Half price on a logistics base in Greenland; Thule can be further expanded.

All is not well in the north, though; you sent Dr. Robertson to Russia to see if he could find anyone to bolster the science team, and, as you have a right to expect, the Canadian physicist was given the red carpet treatment by Zakharov. Unfortunately, scientists are famous for having a bit of an ego; scientists in a position of power, doubly so. The two, after some official pronouncements and similar diplomatic and academic niceties, ended up bickering over the finer points of electroweak theory for most of the trip, culminating in a public row in which each called the other's methodology "respectable, but flawed on a foundational level", which is university-rector-speak for "you and the horse you rode in on". This doesn't affect you directly, and Zakharov still managed to get a bit of PR out of it, but it does mean that Robertson got essentially nothing done.

Upon his return, Robertson says that given Zakharov's recent boisterous attitude and disregard for rigor, he is afraid of turning into that if he were to work closely with Carpatescu, or accept an official political appointment - so he won't.

(By the way, how about his meeting with Tsion? Your call on whether it happens or not).
>>
>>3799225
>Mate we're basically in position to beat the MCP and after this turn we won't have any more recruiting to do. Assuming everything goes proper.
Its against a clock that is running constantly.
And when have things gone perfectly ever?

>We need to find agents first but aye we can use our teams, problem is they're a limited supply.
What isn't in limited supply?

Also Aki doing survey work without drones to help her...... Probably not a good idea.

I send Aki, since we would get her back and would be harder to threaten.

>>3799242
Well if we have researched BigSates properly we would be able to do more about the fragments!

CS Pylons would likely net something good for our AI and carrying out the takeover.

Defense is always gonna be important WHY NOW?! From all the previous times we could have researched it earlier but we choose now?

>>3799242
Yes but some people are better suited for it than others, and sending Aki without drones for survey is a bit of a waste.

>Haley Kipper
>professional surveyor and woodsman from the area
Find her and have her do survey work.

We have actions as foreman and since IDK what Foreman is doing anymore we can assume hes got the 2 actions again.
>>
>>3799242
Asteroid impact is designed to be survivable.

God has more plagues in store before sending us to Hell.

>> Meeting with Tsion

Negative. Tsion is bad news.

>>Planes

Promising.
>>
>>3799251
I say meet with him after we find Ikko.
>>
>>3799251
Can we get the planes and the Base?
>>
>>3799237

C0 actions are free unless otherwise specified. Of course your agent will be given a first class plane ticket or small charter flight, a good hotel and so on, but that's in the noise for an international agency budget.

>>3799229


>>3799232
(You're meeting Carpatescu at the end of this month for the quarterly review; you mentioned wanting to talk to McLachlan of NCASA at the same time. Since Carpatescu is happy with your work, you can choose teleconference or visit)

>>3799225

Santiago tells you that she understand Aki better than she thinks; in different ways, they both had it rough during childhood. "The difference is that I pushed myself over the wall; she curled up against it. You'll get more out of that girl after she can practice some self-discipline, and she'll live happier, too."

She says that once you are sure that your system is free of moles, she'll consider it again. "Mind you, I've got no complaints with the current system; I just don't see the need for more of it. Why, you might even get to the point where you can subvert my economy, and where would I be then?" She winks, and since you were discussing this via webcam, she had to wink very obviously for the low frame rate to catch it.

>>3799234
>>3799229
>>3799219


Moira doesn't seem particularly happy about not going back for seconds, but after reviewing the close shave in Morocco, doesn't really blame you. "Let's keep that guy's address in mind though, yeah?"

Who seem particularly happy upon their return are the Blackwatch platoon; you're pretty sure that they took a bit of time sampling the merchandise while they were south of the former border.

>>3799260
>>3799263

The options were:

# Videoconference only.

# Stick to emails, it's safer.

# Arrange for a meeting and keep a work team around for Gap Generator testing and possible extraction (they'll be better at the first, clearly).

# Arrange for a meeting and keep a covert ops team around for Gap Generator testing and possible extraction (they'll be better at the second, clearly).

# Arrange for a meeting and use the goon squad for possible extraction (they'll set up the Gap Generator, but won't be able to do much more than turn it on and leave the recording instruments running).

# Arrange for a meeting and let Dr. Robertson go alone (but with the earsets in place, obviously).

At this time I have 1 vote for "arrange for a meeting, with a work team".

Robertson is traveling back West, so you can use that as an excuse for Ikko to arrange for Tsion to come up to a coffee shop or some other neutral place. She may say no, of course.
>>
>>3799251
>* Half price on a logistics base in Greenland;
Potentially useful for some particular things.

>Thule can be further expanded.
Do you mean as a factory opportunity or something?

>(By the way, how about his meeting with Tsion? Your call on whether it happens or not).
I'd prefer not to risk our science expert in meeting a mind-controller given the fact we've not performed in-field testing against passive faith shit, only prayer. I would like to test it against the two witnesses first given their abilities are already countered.
>>
>>3799272

You'd have to at least partially reopen the base in order to look for the planes (satellite imaging will have to be complemented by ground survey), so yes.
>>
>>3799282
Sweet!

>>3799278
I'd go for the meeting since its controlled and we can study any magic effects Tison does to Robertson, plus testing of the gap generator rather than a more direct risk with the witnesses.
>>
>>3799255
We had other things to do then as we do now. If you can go back in tine and research defense rather then somthing else go ahead but hienstly we have been doing our best.

>>3799278
Arrange meeting use goon squad as we dont have any frwe work or covert teams.
>>
# Arrange for a meeting and keep a work team around for Gap Generator testing and possible extraction (they'll be better at the first, clearly).

Risky, but we need the SCIENCE.

>>Thule
Possible safe house. Remote. Inaccessible.

Also, extra factories are nice.

Set up Santa's workshop.
>>
>>3799298
>>3799295
>>3799291

You have a free action (I think?), and the whole thing is happening near your turf anyway.

# Offer to also meet Tsion and maybe Ikko in person. Neutral ground, no electronics (that they can see), yada yada.

# Disguise yourself as one of the goons and operate the Gap Generator yourself.

# Use the time to prepare for the meeting with Carpatescu and McLachlan instead.
>>
>>3799295
Yes but Defense research is so far away from completion compared to the others. It would be better to wrap up some of the tech trees and experience their max boons while still mostly relevant compared to later when they won't be as much.

If it wasn't just defense I would be more okay with it.

>>3799298
New blacksite?
>>
>>3799300
What did we want to speak to Carpatescu and McLachlan about exactly?
>>
>>3799305

Possibly using your impactor against Fragment 3 and the Alkali against Fragment 4, or alternatively, making it official that you intend to land a probe on Fragment 4 and give it a push, so as to get NCASA assistance to do so.
>>
# Use the time to prepare for the meeting with Carpatescu and McLachlan instead.

To deflect Fragment 3 requires convincing the boss to forego nuclear option.

Querry: How many gap generators do we have? Can we bring one to our meeting?

---

>>3799303
Possible!

It's also an Air Force base. There might be assets left behind.
>>
>>3799295
>If you can go back in tine and research defense rather then somthing else go ahead
I did but it didn't work, and I currently am, and its still just not working.

>>3799300
What did we use our first action on? The Foreman I mean.
>>
>>3799311
Better place for both training and keeping prisoners. Its like a Gulag in Siberia but on a big Island, no where to escape to.

Anyone who dies, dies of exposure.
>>
>>3799311

Just the one. It's about the size and shape of a wooden pendulum clock of the variety you put on a coffee table to look fancy, except with more glass and high-voltage corona discharges. Since it already looks pretty steampunk, someone glued some random gears on it. Someone with better taste removed them, fortunately. The frame is made of wood because it turned out to have a good mix of properties for the job, although the real thing will probably be made out of carbon fiber.
>>
>>3799314

You went to Greenland to take a look around. You got a tour of the now-closed Thule airbase, and was told a story about warbirds buried in the ice. You're now considering buying it. Buying the base, that is, not the whole of Greenland; that would be silly.
>>
>>3799320
Use the other to recruit Haley Kipper/Survey Canada.
>>
>>3799318

Pity.

Next time then.

---

>>3799322
Who is Haley Kipper? Apologies, the name is not ringing bells.
>>
>>3799327

You can make more, that's not the issue, the only three pieces of equipment you cannot replace are the Garibaldi, Terry Pratchett's sword, and the Bagger 1457. It's just that right now there's only one prototype.
>>
>>3799300
Use the time to prep for the meeting. More inprotant to avoid the worlds water from being fucked
>>
>>3799327

(I know a Canadian surveyor who has a very similar name and would have been for hire in late 1999. Uh... what's going on?)
>>
>>3799278
>Santiago tells you that she understand Aki better than she thinks; in different ways, they both had it rough during childhood. "The difference is that I pushed myself over the wall; she curled up against it. You'll get more out of that girl after she can practice some self-discipline, and she'll live happier, too."
Fair enough, if she can convince Aki to agree to it then I won't stop her from spending her time being trained but like hell am I going to risk pissing off one of our best researchers.

I mean, I'd point out we are having her see a psychologist and shit, she's gotten a lot better. It's not like she started out like this and we ignored her needs as a human being.

>She says that once you are sure that your system is free of moles, she'll consider it again. "Mind you, I've got no complaints with the current system; I just don't see the need for more of it. Why, you might even get to the point where you can subvert my economy, and where would I be then?" She winks, and since you were discussing this via webcam, she had to wink very obviously for the low frame rate to catch it.
Kek, it's a fair point that our system needs to be a bit more secure. Guess we'll just build our factories in China, Russia and North America for now.
>>
>>3799347
Agreed.

Aki's unique advantage is her eccentric mannerisms.

Better to keep Aki out of territory.
>>
>>3799327
>>3799255
She was an option to recruit, but we went with Andrews instead
>>
>>3799354

Oh, thanks! Sorry, I have different mnemonics for names (and a text file somewhere).

(Y'all tell me if you want to do anything with the gap generator, or move on to the end-of-quarter meeting, I think that's all that needs done!)
>>
>>3799347
>Kek, it's a fair point that our system needs to be a bit more secure.
We talked about this and came up with a bunch of ideas for security that never got implemented or followed through. Like crap, I basically pushed for a guy like Raman for over 4 threads before we got a him.

>>3799360
Name list is still a WIP, its just gotten massively unwieldy right now, since I'm also putting in relevant or somewhat relevant information relating to the character.

Which would have been easier if I could use a certain game engine/program that I had planned for tracking and detailed information, but my previous computer died due to "QM curse".

>>3799360
What plan are we following again?

Did we do the satellite thing?
>>
Query:

Is Niel Gaiman still alive?

He did work with Terry Pratchett.

Perhaps he knows something about the sword?.
>>
>>3799369

Yes, you've built or bought five aerospace components and are preparing a launch to take place at the end of next month (or later, you can always postpone it - what you cannot do, with a big satellite, is speed it up).

You have yet to design the satellite. It must have 1 Communications component, the other two can be Camera Array and Propellant Tank. Research satellite tech to add to your component options.

>>3799372

He is; he's currently writing comics, but does not plan to go back to Sandman for some time, as the Rapture gap would make it "too much of an adult comic". His last film credit is a Babylon 5 episode. He mentions that the sword would be "a thing Pterry might do, yes - but he'd have hidden it, carrying it around would be knife crime, even after getting knighted" and that the Remnant clearly have got Revelation all wrong: it's a warning, not an instruction manual.
>>
>>3799369

(Feel free to just put up a skeleton, I'll add data to their bio once you put it up somewhere!)
>>
>>3799389
I'm thinking pastebin or making a new page on the website.
>>
>>3799388
With research, can satellites have storage capacity for small objects?

Example: Grass seeds?

>>Components
1 Comm
1 Camera Array
1 Propellant Tank

Balanced. Can keep eyes on the ground and dodge when needed.

Thoughts?
>>
>>3799331
>>3799311

You figure that there's no point forcing yourself and Dr. Robertson to meet with a hostile agent -- albeit one that has been polite -- and note that Tsion keeps going back and forth between asking Carpatescu to meet him in Jerusalem in a few weeks, and telling him that he's going to go there anyway, regardless of outstanding warrants.

Letting the not-so-old man yell at clouds, you spend the time getting ready for a brief meeting with Carpatescu, McLachlan, and possibly Carla

# in person

# via webcam

and making sure that you have all options on the table well-described.

The Alkali rocket is going to be ready to go roughly at the same time as your interception vehicle; of course, both of them will do relatively little to affect Fragment 3's trajectory, while Fragment 4 is far out enough to be deviated by a relatively small nudge. Alkali has been fitted with a thermobaric warhead surrounded by oxidizer tanks; it's intended to partially penetrate Fragment 3 and shatter with a powerful pressure wave. The design and the flight envelopes are solid, although you reserve the right to offer engineering assistance to NCASA.

>>3799405
(You went through a lot of trouble to have 5 components available this turn though)

>>3799405

You've already set this up! In fact, you've so far sent up two bags of seeds, each with their own retrieval mechanism; it's become one of those things that schools have contests for. Since there is a gap between 4 and 16 year old children, it's turned into a thing to do for "low performing" high schools to collect viable specimens with as much variety as possible and ship it to CATS' space office. Of course, you've had real botanists go over the samples.

(It's a good idea, I think you mentioned it a couple of threads ago).

Since a seed doesn't breathe much, or take up much space, and the "large" satellites are based upon the Salyut/Almaz mini space station, there's plenty of room for them even if life support features of the spacecraft are kept at their most basic level.

Note that your "large" satellites can host a human being for a few days, or even dock with each other.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salyut_6
>>
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OBQQB7dD-B0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iVed5FHuBTo
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5A8WZK1AJIc

(So.... this exists)
>>
>>3799405

aren't we making an asteroid tow truck? 1 comms 4 tanks
>>
>>3799425
# via webcam

>>3799433
This, the plan is to make a proper mass mover in the hopes of seriously dislodging the fragment we target from it's course. That way we can prevent all of it from making earthfall.
>>
>>3799425

Apologies. Thought it was three. Merits rework.

1 Comms
3 Propulsions
1 Camera

---

>>Life Support

Good. Developing a scheme.

Anon mentioned landing on Fragment 4 to push, yes?

---

#Via Webcam
>>
>>3798838
>With your current tech availability, the best "kill vehicle" you can manage would be 1 comm array, 4 hydrazine tanks.

>>3799433
>>3799438
>>3799443
I highly doubt we would even use it.

Why are we gimping the satellite again? We can put 4 boosters.
>>
>>3799450
>I highly doubt we would even use it.
We kinda have to if we want to prevent frag-3 and frag-4 from landing.

>Why are we gimping the satellite again? We can put 4 boosters.
Hey don't blame me for them mounting a camera on it.
>>
Also, guys, If you can upvote the archived threads that would be great.
>>
>>3799455
Wasn't blaming you, was asking you guys why we might be doing that.
>>
>>3799455
>>3799450

Clarification: Camera is more spying over coordination? Trying to understand options.

If we have Microsats we could have them be eyes in the sky.

Large sat does heavy lifting.

Works for me.
>>
>>3799466
We can shove like a very shitty camera phone or something that goes with the communications aerospace part and have it count as 1 part, then put 4 other parts as boosters.

>>3798838
See here, unless I'm retarded and misread it.
>>
>>3799443
>>3799438

The meeting is short. Carpatescu thanks both you and Carla for your efforts in mitigating the impact of Fragment 3's impact -- he puts it like so verbatim -- and adds that he looks forward to the beginning or the cashless system. "The Master Control Program that will ensure equity and efficiency for all Global Community citizens is nearly complete, and we are going to begin testing soon. I understand that the ground infrastructure is ready, or nearly so?"

You confirm that you only have to do some work in Africa.

"Ah, yes. The damage was most dramatic there. I will have to discuss emergency aid with.... Mr. Rebohoth, yes." Nobody has any doubt that the pause, as if to remember who's in charge in Africa, is deliberate.

The last participant in the teleconference, Dr. Neal Damosa, whines that the satellite coverage in Western Africa has not been completely restored yet, forcing remote curricula to be delivered via DVD. Carpatescu nods towards him and tells him that, considering what just happened there, a delay of a few weeks is understandable (he says the last looking straight at you).

Carla gives her report; Carpatescu praises her efforts in reacting to disasters, and asks if she's attempting to use any methods to be proactive in setting up mitigation systems.

You have a IRC chat open with her; she says a few things by way of introduction, and in the meantime asks if you've got any input.

# We're going to use Tsion's prophecy checklist as a way to generate hypothetical scenarios.

# Not yet, we are waiting for the MCP.

# Yes, we have a logistics AI in place.

# Let her do her thing.

In meantime, you sent the block diagram for your Fragment 4 interceptor to McLachlan. He notes that having a high-resolution camera on it would decrease its effectiveness, but allow for learning more about what it's made of - you won't be able to get realtime video, but you will be able to get high resolution stills or video clips.

>>3799461

UNDRR covered converting the Garibaldi this time, but only to hospital or cargo. You picked hospital.

>>3799466

Your microsats (and your comm arrays on large sats) feature a low resolution, fixed focus camera of the same sort you'd find on a cell phone. This is sufficient for, say, hitting an asteroid.
>>
>>3799471
So....... We didn't send the extra work crew for 2BN?
>>
>>3799476

(I think you did; you used all the work crews you have available)
>>
>>3799471
Right then. Thank you.

Propulsion all in.

----

# Let her do her thing.
>>
>>3799479
Okay.
>>
>>3799471
# Let her do her thing.
>>
>>3799471

Carpatescu asks McLachlan if he requires any assistance with the second Energia rocket; he says that there's a 95% chance of a successful mission.

"That's five percent under par, Chief Designer. Foreman? Director?"

Carla mentions that she has some aerospace engineers to transfer to the project.

For the last minute preparations, you offer to lend

# (1 to 3 work teams to cross T's and dot I's)

# Andrew's competence in getting large projects done at the last minute.

# Aki's talent in writing custom software.

# Dr. Robertson's ability to get people with egos to work together well.

# Dr. Diamond's skill in keeping a team cool and collected under pressure.

# your own experience in coordination and project management.

# your confidence in McLachlan's professionalism - he got this.

Now it's time to make your pitch.

It's good that the Alkali rocket be ready to go, either way; you mention your "pusher" satellite design, noting that at worst it can be used as a regular comm satellite until called upon to do its other job.

Your proposal is to

# use it against Fragment 3, keeping Alkali in reserve for Fragment 4.

# use it against Fragment 3, alongside Alkali.

# use it against Fragment 4.

>>3799498
>>3799490

Carla says that her analysts are creating predictive models as soon as they can, and she is looking forward to being able to use the MCP's spare capacity to help. She also mentions that she would like to use Tsion's checklist as a hypothetical model to test heuristics on. Carpatescu looks irritated. "Director, let us not give power to the baseless assertion of mountebanks. We have already put the lie to their claims: their Third Trumpet was supposed to destroy a third of all shipping in the region, and fell far short. Rabbi Ben-Judah -- I try to be polite here -- has claimed that his predictions, or should I say post-dictions, were correct if one were to count the skeleton army of derelict barges that was deployed as a sea wall by our Peacekeepers." It was actually mostly Carla's idea and Santiago's execution -- you're sure that Andrews got his shipbroker hat out of storage for that one -- but hey, it got done. "You are hereby requested to not use any predictive model that might give credence to such charlatanry in any of your public projections or public service announcements."

"I understand, Potentate."
>>
>>3799519
# your own experience in coordination and project managemen
# (1 to 3 work teams to cross T's and dot I's)
>>
>>3799519

Carpatescu has pragmatic point

Citing Tsion Ben Judah generates Remnant support. Credibility.

Not good for averting the Apocalypse.

(Honestly, I thought she had sense not to bring it up)


#Dr. Robertson's ability to get people with egos to work together well.

---


#Use it against Fragment 3, keeping Alkali in reserve for Fragment 4.
>>
>>3799519
>3 work teams to cross the T's and sot the I's

>your own experiance in coordination and project management

>use it against fragment 3 keeping alkali in reserve.
>>
>>3799554
>>3799547
>>3799533

(To clarify, you can lend 0, 1, 2, or 3 teams, and optionally an agent for one action. Moira isn't in there because she doesn't have applicable skills; she'll RIDE a rocket Doctor Strangelove style if that's what it takes to steer it, and not expect to make it back, but this isn't a Bruce Willis flick)
>>
>>3799519
# (3 work teams to cross T's and dot I's)
# your own experience in coordination and project management.

We can afford these losses, seeing as next turn is probably just going to be a lot of research and maybe setting up a base or something in Greenland. That or sending another satellite up to deal with frag-4.

# use it against Fragment 3, keeping Alkali in reserve for Fragment 4.

This is the option that would be sufficient to most probably get it into a fly-by orbit, yes? Could we get a detailed understanding of what these three options really mean in terms of rough odds and outcomes?
>>
>>3799578

Fragment 3 is solid, but semi-transparent to radar; it's expected to be made out of loosely aggregated rocks, or sandstone. A "pusher" probe may be able to stick its nose in it and then push, or may simply dig through; either way, McLachlan is worried that the bolide is too close for a few meters per second of delta-V to make much of a difference. That is an unknown, however: you don't know what this fragment's mass is, other than it's heavier than all the other three since it was deviated the least.

The idea with Alkali is to burrow in it a few meters, if possible, then activate a thermobaric warhead (fuel-air explosive, in this case of course it's bringing its own oxygen) to either shatter the asteroid into harmless fragments, push enough of it away from the main mass to act as propellant to cause a miss, or both.

Fragment 4 is much smaller, very solid (pyrite, as far as spectrographic analysis shows), and further away; the further away it is, the more likely even a small nudge it is to cause a miss.

If you are confident that the pusher-probe can have a meaningful impact (other than in the literal sense) on Fragment 3, Alkali can be kept in reserve should something show up unexpected and undetected. If.
>>
>>3799589

(I should stick these in Kerbal Space Program and put them up for download, but it can't really model things like porous asteroids very well. OTOH, the software that can, returns very basic graphics)
>>
>>3799589
In that case I'd rather we use the Alkali against Fragment 3 and use our pusher probe against Fragment 4.

Assuming the situation is close enough however, I would also like calculations to be done for having our other large satellite, the one with the single fuel tank, be ready to intercept Fragment 3 and re-direct it away from earthfall.


Who knows, we might actually manage to get through this event without the major disaster of the waters turning bitter, at least if nothing else we might manage to reduce the percentage of waters from a third to a fifth or something.
>>
>>3799578
>>3799554
>>3799533

"Potentate, I have almost completed my assignment, as you can see from the chart. I can afford to lend three engineering team, same as Carla- same as the Director of UNDRR, to the asteroid redirection effort."

"Excellent."

"I would like to coordinate their effort personally."

McLahclan seems to be about to object, but both you and Carla manage to stare him down through a webcam.

Carpatescu raises an eyebrow. "That is excellent news, Foreman! It's about time you got a taste of life in New Babylon. I understand that your tastes run... Spartan, at times, but I insist that you be my guest in one of the Burj Carpathia executive suites."

You can expect to spend about two weeks there, on and off.

>>3799603

Given the relatively small amount of propellant, the size of Fragment 3, and the closeness of it to Earth when it would intersect that satellite's orbit (even at apogee), the consequences of such an intercept would be negligible. You would lose a satellite; if Fragment 3 was due to fall on a coastline, you could nudge it in land or in water; if Fragment 3 was due to fall on a city; you could nudge it to fall next to it instead.
>>
>>3799603
To be fair actually, if Carpetescu was willing to throw another 10Bn or so our way, we could construct a pair pusher satellites this month to go up after the interception of Fragment 3 and use the two of them to force Frag-4 off it's intercept path.

E,g the intercept of Frag-3 is done with the Alkali and our current pusher probe; then Frag-4 gets hit a month later with two satellites built ASAP just to hit it.

To be fair, we wouldn't even need the money if he threw it at NCASA or Carla's teams, we could each chip in 3Bn with a further 6Bn from cent-gov and that would cover all the aerospace parts for one of the two rockets. Add in our construction capacity from the factories of another 2 and that means we'd only need to find another 3 which we could almost certainly achieve.

Admittedly, I imagine there is some limiter I'm not considering or it might be the case I am overbuilding to counter these asteroids but I think it is entirely possible and I feel there is little reason we shouldn't try to avoid this plague as much as possible.
>>
>>3799621

(This is me being a bit anal about orbital mechanics: what you want to do with a killer asteroid is see it coming a year in advance. send a probe, give it a tiny little nudge, and let Isaac Newton do the rest. The closest they are to you, the more energy you need to get the same effect.... and that changes with distance squared. In the original books they weren't even trying to make it look like it made sense: the author spends 3 lines each describing the Second and Third Trumpets, and around 90 describing two of the Trib Force idiots arguing over flowers that ended up in the trash. For something called Trib Force, this book series has not nearly enough lesbians.)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kdt9bgAHymc This is pretty accurate, keeping in mind that KSP only does patched conics.

(Bottom line: If the asteroid is already inside the Moon's orbit, you need to give it a hell of a punch to make it not hit the Earth. You want to poke it as far out as possible... so having months to do it, is good. OTOH, you've only got one "big punch" rocket left, and you cannot make more right now, and you got two asteroid fragments coming down, so....)
>>
>>3799728
which one is more probable to send into a two year round trip around the solar system?
>>
>>3799737

Fragment 4 is more solid, which makes it harder to disgregate, but easier to redirect.

You currently have two designs on the table:

1 comms (necessary)
4 propellant

This is a "pure" redirector/nudger. It carries a low resolution camera that can be used for targeting on terminal approach, but will not allow in-depth study.


1 comms (necessary)
1 camera array
3 propellant

This has a smaller chance of nudging the fragment, but will return crisp images and high resolution video about what Fragment 4 actually is.
>>
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/09/06/science/india-moon-landing-chandrayaan-2.html :(
>>
>>3799747
Can we use two satellites 2 nudge fragment 4?

We already have one up there.
>>
>>3799752

You currently have 2 large satellites in orbit, each with 1 unit of propellant. While they can use it to intercept Fragment 4, they would not be able to give it much of a push. However, they are both carrying camera, so they would be able to at least get some high-resolution stills during a flyby. (IRL, think of how the last Pluto probe worked - same deal, except it takes weeks instead of years to get there)
>>
>>3799728
Oh trust me I've got a decent idea of what you mean since I used to play KSP, I'm just spitballing because at this point money-is-no-object compared to preventing god's plans.

Still, I'd rather use our pusher sat on Frag-4 if it's only really going to be effective there and use the big-fuck-off rocket on Frag-3. Hopefully we'll manage to push these to land on dry land or into slingshot orbits.
>>
>>3799759
I thought we already had one over Europe with 1 comms 1 camera, and 3 boosters?

So the one going up right now would either be the same or more of a comet pusher.
>>
>>3799728

(Funny. You would think people would show up for the death and destruction, yes?)

----

We want visuals on Fragment 4.

Hypothesis:

Fragment 4 is being protected by something.

Evidence:

Alkali I was briefly intercepted by an unknown element.

Footage from Alkali suggests there are lifeforms on Fragment 4.

The Fifth Trumpet describes a star falling to Earth, and being granted the key to the Bottomless Pit.

The judgments, thus far, have a scientific basis. If the entities are not supernatural, we will want to know what we're dealing with.

Conclusion: If we're going to nudge Fragment 4, we'll want visual in case of interference.

---
>>3799767

I support using rocket to push Fragment 3.

Off-Topic Query: Area 51. Is it still in operation as a Peacekeeper installation?

Not anticipating alien bodies, but experimental aircraft? A plus.
>>
>>3799547
>>3799554

>Use it against Fragment 3, keeping Alkali in reserve for Fragment 4.

that's not how any of this works dammit.

>>3799767

this guy gets it, support.

QM said that he is a space nerd, so the space stuff is being simulated semi accurately. small push far away > big push up close.

the Fragment 3 is already up close so we have no choice.

the Fragment 4 is far away so we can shoot 1 or 2 satellites at it.

>>3799772

we saw some supernatural stuff, the two Jerusalem hobos incinerating people.

how about shooting 1 camera sat at it, and separately 1 pusher sat at it? it's expensive but this way everything is specialized for a job and does it well.
>>
I will say, after this I want to get energy research up to at least 4/10 since that odd to give us just enough for a sub-par orbital laser array that won't require about 50 tonnes of coolant or suffer from bleed off of coolant.
>>
(I got two people for

* Propose Using CATS Nudger on Fragment 3, NCASA Boomer on Fragment 4

and two people for

* Propose Using CATS Nudger on Fragment 4, NCASA Boomer on Fragment 3

anyone feel like breaking a tie?)

>>3799790

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asteroid_laser_ablation Yep. A nice thing about laser ablation is that, with sufficient solar panels and heat dissipation systems, it's the gift that keeps on giving. A non-nice thing about is that it would require a lot of launches, meaning NCASA would have time to do little else.
>>
>>3799779
>>that's not how any of this works dammit.

Now that the physics have been explained, I see you are right.
>>how about shooting 1 camera sat at it, and separately 1 pusher sat at it? it's expensive but this way everything is specialized for a job and does it well.

That works.

---

>>3799801
I support: >>3799767
>>
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>>3799801
* Propose Using CATS Nudger on Fragment 4, NCASA Boomer on Fragment 3
>>
Rolled 100 (1d100)

>>3799815
>>3799809

(thank you!)

"...This is a repurposed communication satellite design, with most instrumentation stripped off and replaced with additional propellant. A simple inflatable bumper and some neodymium magnets will ensure a stable lock on the pyrite surface of Fragment 4, and allow for an efficient transfer off momentum."

"I would prefer a more dynamic solution, but we have no more Energia rockets. Can we launch it in time for it to make a difference, Chief Designer?"

"I... Not sure, Potentate. If we were to begin systems integration now, the unit would be ready in-"

You interrupt McLachlan. "We've already completed systems integration; the modified satellite can launch in thirty days."

Carpatescu nods. "Make it so. Chief Designer, focus on getting Alkali ready - we will talk later. Director, Foreman, keep up the good work. Foreman, you are still on track to deliver global connectivity of sufficient quality to enable beginning the transition for the cashless system, correct?"

"Yes, Potentate" you answer. "We need only bring up Subpotentate Rebohoth's home territory to global standards. That will require replacing one of the satellites displaced by Fragment 2."

"Get it done as soon as you can - it is not as important to me as the asteroid crisis, naturally, but we must be proactive, and a properly integrated economy is the key to it."

Carpatescu pushes a button on his fancy desk's touchscreen. "Sandra, inform Subpotentate Rebohoth that he has an appointment with me at 0300. Lady and gentlemen, as always, thank you for your time and do not let me detain you."

Looks like your budget went through on the nod again; the asteroid bombardment probably has something to do with that.

# End month.

# Wait...
>>
>>3799833
OMG!

That's OUR roll right?!
>>
>>3799842

Even RNJesus thinks this was best option. O__O
>>
>>3799833

(Oh my.)

You let Carpatescu hang up on you, out of politeness, then let in whoever has been knocking on the door earlier. It's Vajpayee. He comes in and shows you a map. "We got a solid bead on Ikko. Caught them trying to tap into the video chat. You're not going to believe this, they've been practically in our neighborhood the whole time."

Chicago's damage was repaired quite quickly after the global earthquake and the nationalist attacks; a few destroyed neighborhoods were left fallow, due to a lack of interest by land developers. The neighborhood in which New Hope Village Church used to be is one of them. While by the look of it Pastor Barnes and compatriots never got to use the bunker under it save perhaps for a few weeks -- it was too small, and too obvious -- you are surprised to discovered that they moved only a few houses down, to one of the semi-dilapidated homes in "Apocalypse Row" that still has power.

# They don't know that you know; don't do anything rash and plan things out next month.

# Take the goon squad and go.

# Go by yourself, with just a driver and Vajpayee along.

# This warrants calling the cops.

# Call Ikko and tell her she's busted, but you'll give her and her people a few minutes' head start.

Should you go in person, you will of course be taking along your handgun and flak jacket

# and that's it.

# plus the Gap Generator.

# plus Sir Pterry's sword.

# plus both. (Might want to get someone to help you, there).
>>
#Go by yourself, with just the drive and Vajpayee along.

#Plus both.

Vajpayee operates generator.
>>
>>3799901
I'd like if we could take a few drones and a pair of bodyguards as well, that way we can do this properly. We don't need a whole goon squad, just a few reinforcements to equalise any numbers they might have and to cover other exits.
>>
>>3799905
Sure.

I feel its Overkill, show up with an army, yes?

They're Remnant. Worse to expect is more preaching?

We have Nomenclature, Gap Generator.

Bodyguards would be nice, yes. In case of gunfire.

Perhaps bring Moira if she is about?
>>
>>3799849
Time to convert?
>>
>>3799884

# They don't know that you know.

Okay, NOW we win next turn. Hear me out:

Bust Ikko and company. Have them sent to New Babylon. We can gift wrap them. Carpatescu is going to want to interrogate them.

Build a bomb.

Build the last pylon.

They are now all in the same place (Claw Tower).

Nuke them.

Pull the rug under Carpatescu with a 51% attack so that the world is ours and not the Pope's or whoever.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LjogCytzX0s
>>
>>3799915
>I feel its Overkill, show up with an army, yes?
Yeah but they might be 4-5 people or 9-12 given we only know about their cyber presence. Hell they might even be living in more than one of the houses.

>They're Remnant. Worse to expect is more preaching?
Probably, that or small arms fire if we really piss them off or they think we plan on hurting them.

>Perhaps bring Moira if she is about?
Sure, she'd scare the shit out of them given she's literally withstood their miracles / godpower.
>>
>>3799926

Arm her with the sword of St. Terry. She'll be a demon slaying nightmare.
>>
>>3799884
# Take the goon squad and go.

# plus both. (Might want to get someone to help you, there).

Why don't we put surveillance on them to get a more precise location and how many people we are dealing with, and how many are armed?

Then we make a move. Also no electronics, traditional spycraft only.
>>
>>3799932
NO! Terry gave that to us as his dying wish!
>>
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>>3799915

Moira is in fact about - she didn't get to go blow up a drug lord's house, so she's had some free time recently, like right now. You may have to come up with a good explanation for the explosions later, but so it goes.

>>3799920

That's a conversation you may get to have with Tsion, if you like.

>>3799921

Audacious.

>>3799915

You have yet to see Remnant carry weapons; however, most of them are very keen on the Second Amendment, if Tsion's website is anything to go by. The US constitution has technically lapsed, but the sentiment, understandably, has not -- Dimmsdale has made sure that the ability of North American citizens to buy and carry firearms has remained intact. Ironically, this has caused some perplexity in former Canada and former Mexico.

>>3799932

At least she's not a black Scottish cyclops

>>3799935

You just got an address right now; you can definitely tell the goon squad to go on a stakeout, they aren't bad at it. Whether you also go yourself, is your decision.
>>
>>3799932
>Cybernetics enhanced, red-haired, butch (kinda), sword wielding, irish waifu.
It's certainly good taste but it feels a bit too close to that gender swap of doom guy.
>>
>>3799926
>>3799915
>>3799935

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B1QKkwfikzU

You don't want Peacekeepers or even local law enforcement on this one; they'd mess it up, and besides, you may want to talk.

You pile into a CATS maintenance van with a few Ghilotti goons, Moira, and Raman. During the very brief trip, you rig the Gap Generator to operate off the spare battery by means of an inverter, and strap the whole contraption onto a dolly that you're pretty sure came from a U-Haul truck.

The nearest CellSol utility pole is maybe seventy meters from their safehouse; you've seen lights on in a few other homes in the dilapidated residential neighborhood -- it looks more like Detroit than Chicago, but that's a terror attack and an earthquake for you -- but they aren't relevant to you right now. It's not illegal to belong to a Remnant-affiliated church; you reckon it's crack or meth houses.

Someone got around to making a scabbard and harness for the sword, which is in

# your

# Moira's

hands.

The goons start messing with the C-S pylon as if they were checking on it; some of the light in what you assume is Ikko's safehouse go down.

How best to approach this?

# Call the house's landline number, on the chance that it's still connected.

# politely knock.

# SWAT style!

# Moira brought a grenade launcher to a home invasion.
>>
>>3799982

(Obligatory derpy option)

# You ordered a large pizza on the way, and swung by to pick it up. Attempt to deliver it.
>>
#Moira's

#You ordered a large pizza on the way, and swung by to pick it up. Attempt to deliver it... SWAT style!
>>
>>3800000

nice round number there, but pick one please :P
>>
>>3799982
# your
# politely knock.
>>
#Swat style
>>
>>3799982
# your

# SWAT style!

Knock knock, Free lead on your pizza or your next one is free!
>>
>>3800024
forgot to put
*in 30 seconds*
>>
>>3800024

The Remnant are the sort who probably leave Chick Tracts in lieu of tips.

Jesus doesn't pay the phone bills.
>>
>>3800036
>CD's as gifts
I forgot people did that. I always hated being given CDs, ffs I never had a CD player until less than a decade ago.
>>
Rolled 95, 92, 63 = 250 (3d100)

>>3800024
>>3800013
>>3800012

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CezOHqlXAFY

Moira loads a flashbang. Vajpayee takes the safety off his handgun. The goons surround the house; it's dilapidated, but there's a fairly expensive Cherokee outside.

You're holding a sword and there's a guy with a dolly, a Tesla coil, and one of the van's rear doors strapped to the dolly as a shield.

There's 6 miles to Chicago, you've got a full tank of gas, a Gap Generator, it's dark out, and you're wearing sunglasses.

You break the window with your sword, which beloved British author Sir Terry Pratchett personally smelted out of meteoric iron before he died.

Moira fires the flashbang, followed right after by a flare.

And then there was light. You take the sunglasses off as soon as the flashbang is out., and kick the door open.

"Tsion! Chloe! RUN!"

"Ach! My head!"

There are maybe a dozen people inside, men and women, from their thirties to their seventies; you've interrupted dinner, by the look of it - someone around here had time to make vegetable casserole. The house is big enough for all these people to sleep comfortably in, although you see the lower half of a bunk bed dragged into the living room. There are maps, printouts, a couple of open laptops. Not even that many Bibles, surprisingly.

You hear another window break; someone's making a run for it.

An old man falls on his knees and starts praying loudly; a young man stands up, reaches for something under the table -- could've been a baseball bat or a shotgun -- and is promptly shot in the shoulder by Vajpayee. Moira reloads her grenade launcher. The women try to scatter; you hear a small commotion outside, the people who tried to run bumped into the Ghilotti goons; they aren't trained martial artists but are quite familiar with this sort of scuffle.

# Capture.

# Kill.

# Chase.
>>
>>3800076
Dear fucking Go-of What is going on with the rolls?
>>
>>3800076
# Capture.

Capture all of them.

(What would chasing do that Capturing does n't?)
>>
>>3800076
# Capture.

Non-lethal shots only. No deaths today unless they try to kill us first.

See this is why I wanted to knock on the door.
>>
#Capture.

We want them alive. No disentegrations.
>>
Rolled 66 (1d100)

>>3800086
>>3800087
>>3800089

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=arT48Dft0sg

"Keep them alive" you whisper. Despite the din of overturned furniture, broeken glass, and a smoke alarm going off due to the flashbang, everyone who needs to hear you does.

Outside, you hear the car take off -- you missed a couple, you guess. A few pistol shots are followed by a louder bang, probably a tire. Maybe not going to miss any.

You watch Raman and Moira, who's shouldered the grenade launcher, precisely put a few bullets in feet, ankles, forearms.

You call out

# CATS! Nobody move!

# Police! Nobody move!

# Peacekeepers! Nobody move!

# Morale Monitors! Nobody move!

The goons you left outside come in with zip ties taken from the maintenance van and start cuffing people. A couple of the laptops are smashed on the ground by the Remnant cell; one of your guy accidentally steps on one; you save one or two.

"You have the right to remain silent! Keep screaming and I'll cut your tongue off!"

You aren't sure what the sword did, if anything, but it certainly keep their attention on you when they should've been avoiding the guys with the guns.

There's another scuffle outside; you and your people slice the pie, and just in case, lock the cellar - you'll deal with that later. You get into one of the bedrooms; before you can flick the switch a young man, barely out of his teens, roughly your size was waiting for you with a baseball bat, and tries to come at you with an overhead swing.

# Stab him. Sword beats club.

# Shoot him - it's your off hand, but he doesn't know that.

# Take it on the flak jacket, and retreat, your guys got this.
>>
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>>3800112
># Police! Nobody move!
As much fun as shouting out CATS would be, lets see if we can get them to respect our authoritah!
>>
>>3800112
# Stab him. Sword beats club
Sabby, Stabby says it time to test the testy!
>>
(What's the name of Covert Ops? Can we use that instead?)

#Take it on the flak jacket.
>>
>>3800125

Your covert ops teams have a generally positive reputation as the Tiger Mafia -- despite calling themselves a mafia, they're the guys who rescue trains from bandits and refugees from warlords.. If your intent is to cause cognitive dissonance, this will work well.
>>
>>3800133
Indeed.
>>
>>3800133
What if we shouted out "Gillette Brothers Super clean shaveTM Security Cats! Nobody move!"?
>>
>>3800112
>Police! Nobody move!
>Stab him. Sword beats club.
Let's not stab hard though
>>
>>3800702
>>3800124
>>3800119

"Police! Nobody move! On your knees!"

"We didn't do anything!"

"Don't shoot!"

It disturbs you that some people, fearful for their lives, comply almost instantly. Some who fall on their knees start praying; an elderly black woman begins to enunciate a hymn -- she's too scared to sing -- and others follow. It doesn't seem to affect your men, and if they are praying they aren't resisting, so all the better for you.

You and your people go from room to room; you hear Moira kick someone in the nuts and something, likely a pistol, drop on the floor. "She's pregnant, you bitch!"

"All right. Nobody touch this one! Lie down, stay down, nobody gets hurt. Got it?"

"Yes!"

You enter a bedroom. There's a young man in there, barely out of his teens. He was whispering a prayer for courage, which gave him away; you walk in and he brings a baseball bat down on your head. He misses.

Without thinking too much about it, you thrust the sword forward -- it's not a particularly great sword, per se, and pushes the boy's forearm a little before cutting into it. He drops the bat. "I'm sorry! I'm sorry! Don't kill me!"

You drew blood today, but didn't kill anybody. As the adrenaline rush abates, you realize that you could probably do this again, if you needed -- or even wanted -- to.

There are another couple of pistol shots. The neighborhood is nearly deserted, so it's unlikely that anyone called the real cops; instead, you summon a five-ton truck out of the motor pool, and whoever is in the HQ infirmary at the time.

At the end of the operation you search a closet, and it's full of clothes and shoes. You kick the bundle of clothes on the floor and see a pair a gym shoes under a long dress, which appeared strange, but in your mind it’s a closet. Just as you walk away from the closet to continue searching the home you hear, what sounded like the plastic bag on the dress crinkling. You immediately turned and begin yelling at these gym shoes. Seconds pass, and suddenly the shoes move and a small middle aged man comes out from behind the dress,

You're pretty sure that a couple of people scampered off; a quick check outside shows the Jeep Cherokee blocking the way to this particular cul-de-sac, you don't see any skid marks but it's pretty obvious that it swerved when one of its tires was blown up by a gunshot. You run the license plates with BOCHICA, and confirm that the SUV was bought by William Cameron, on a Global Community Weekly company card no less.

You've got yourself fourteen prisoners, five of which wounded, one seriously enough that instead of leaving her kneeling on the floor in handcuff she's been put on a bunk with her wounded leg held up high by one of the goons, one unhurt but visibly pregnant. The Gap Generator is crackling away in a corner, plugged into a wall. A few of the people who did not get hurt are in clear discomfort.
>>
You don't want your voice to be recognized, and the best you can think of in the heat of the moment is to put on a phony German accent. It's terrible.

"Very vell! Vat do ve haff here..."

One of the goons salutes and says "Sir! House secure, sir!"

"Good vork." You already know that the truck with your HQ nurse is on the way; the only bullet wound that your medical personnel cannot treat on their own is one guy's shoulder, which will require surgery at a proper hospital -- the woman with heavy bleeding will need a blood transfusion and stitches, but saline to keep her blood pressure up will do between here and base.

You ask the wounded for their blood type; two give it, two say they don't know, one man says that he is washed in the blood of Jesus and that's all he needs. Smart aleck.

# "We're not here to kill you, idiot."

# "Have it your way. HQ, we need 3 blood test kits."

Moira comments that if he really wants to go to Heaven, that's going to take about half a second.

# Her call.

# We're not murderers.

Mr. Vajpayee and Moira are familiar with the sort of first aid that is required in this circumstance; he raids the house's bathroom, which the Remnant cell had the good sense to stock well, and starts bandaging up those who can.

# Allow painkillers, people who are sedated aren't trying to run.

# None of this is lethal, let it hurt.

These people are clearly in a vulnerable emotional state; it's not a bad time to get some preliminary intel.

# "Ve are done here. Round them up." You don't think that intel gathered under coercion is worth a wooden mite.

# "Ve are looking for indicted murderer and international fugitive, Rabbit Tsion Ben-Judah."

# "Ve are looking for black market operator, Mrs. Williams, alias Ikko."

# (Write in)

The house's cellar is fairly small; a workstation and a sort of small office was set up there, but it's not particularly fancy. You do, however, find one of the laptops that had disappeared about a year ago; unlike the ones upstairs, this one is intact.

The walls are lined with MREs, water bottles, ammo, standard prepper fare really; by the look of it, this Remnant cell did consider armed resistance, since they had lined up a number of firearms -- you're looking at Uzis, AR15s, even a couple of Tommy guns, albeit they're without the iconic drum magazines. You're pretty sure that at least the Uzis have been made after 1986 and are therefore illegal, which gives you a veneer of plausibility for this raid. Mr. Vajpayee sends one of the goons to photograph everything; the truck from HQ brings two nurses, first aid kits, and a couple rolls of police-line tape which you were recently surprised to learn anyone can buy from surplus stores or online. You may want to invest in some fake uniforms if you intend to do this more often.
>>
>>3799519
>use it against Fragment 4.
>>3800823
>Have it your way. HQ, we need 3 blood test kits
>We're not murderers
>Allow painkillers, people who are sedated aren't trying to run.
>Ve are looking for black market operator, Mrs. Williams, alias Ikko.
>>
>>3800823

The healthy prisoners are being loaded up on the truck after your EMTs climb out and start administering first aid -- none of your people got hurt, save for one dumbass who nicked his ankle on a shard of glass and has to endure the shame of his colleagues as he gets stitched up there and then. The house isn't even in bad shape; a couple of broken windows, some busted furniture, but it'd look like new with half a day of work.... which is in and of itself interesting, since this neighborhood was damaged by the earthquake; other than the garage, whose roof collapsed, this house is almost pristine.

You now have a small population of Remnant prisoners; since you've housed prisoners at your warehouse before, you have somewhere secure and relatively safe to put them. There's the matter of the one guy who needs shoulder surgery, of course; your HQ nurses say that he'll live, and he's stable, but he will need proper medical attention or he'll lose mobility in that arm.

# Sedate him and drop him off at a hospital without explanation.

# Hand him over to the Ghilottis, you're pretty sure that they know how to deal with this sort of thing without generating paperwork.

# Have Suzanna put one of her employees on a plane.

# Just yank out the bullet and patch him up quickly, who cares about his arm, these are criminals.

The prisoners in the truck are praying.

# Let them, as long as don't shout.

# Shut up!

# Let them, but take the Gap Generator back to HQ.

The pregnant woman is scared but unhurt; one of your EMTs suggests strapping her into the front of the van and taking her back to base separately.

# She's fine, she goes with the rest.

# She can get a comfortable ride to HQ, sure.
>>
>>3800788
We need some proper blue-grey uniforms for our public security forces, with CATS badges.
>>
Rolled 61, 14 = 75 (2d100)

>>3800837

One of the nice thing about even the consumer-level Nomenklators is that they're great for this sort of thing. You click your tongue twice to get queued up to an operator's attention, and say so. Two minutes later you get a confirmation that they'll be at the warehouse Monday morning.
>>
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>>3800823
# "Have it your way. HQ, we need 3 blood test kits."
# We're not murderers.
# Allow painkillers, people who are sedated aren't trying to run.

# "Ve are looking for indicted murderer and international fugitive, Rabbit Tsion Ben-Judah." & black market operator, Mrs. Williams, alias Ikko."

Forgot pic.
>>
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>>3800835
# Have Suzanna put one of her employees on a plane.

# Let them, but take the Gap Generator back to HQ.
Keep em together and next to the gap generator, get Robertson to make another one, and have sensor equipment to observe and take readings.

# She's fine, she goes with the rest.
Why are we strapping people to the front of the van? This isn't Mad MAX.

Pic is badge, but with a beige background with 4 stars over a radio tower and a satellite dish, with dark blue boarders. Yellow golden stars.
>>
>>3800847
>>3800832

Ikko has sworn up and down that the charges against Tsion were made up by Carpatescu, but as it is, Israel is the one jurisdiction still completely out of Global Community control (Well, that and Vatican City, technically, but the Vatican is maybe a square kilometer), so there's no real reason why the GC would or could make those charges up; you're sure that Carpatescu would love Tsion's head on a platter, so to speak, but the story does not add up from either side.

Once the prisoners have been lined up in the truck, you tell them who you are looking for.

The goon squad is guarding the truck and the house, which has been handed over to your EMTs. Just to be safe, you've disabled 911 calling in the range of the pylon that covers this house; you suspect that the crackheads who have probably holed up in other dilapidated homes won't mind.

"I demand a lawyer!"

"You haven't read us our rights!"

That's a valid point. You nod towards the biggest guy on the goon squad. "Officer de Bris? Read them their rights."

The big guy rumbles out, "Youse seen Cee Ess Eye? Yeah? How bout you? Yeah? Good, that's them rights."

>>3800852

(I mean putting her in the van's front seat, and strapping her in as in securing her seatbelt, the intention is to give her a safer ride than sitting on a bench in the back of an old army truck. My bad!)

>>3800852

(Let me do a bit of mspaint)

The wounded are properly sedated; they'll go out on the second truck. HQ informs you that there is in fact a bounty on Tsion's return to Israel, alive; if you've caught him or Ikko, they haven't talked yet. Tsion's face is pretty well known; the man was on cable TV a few times, and regularly puts up low resolution but recognizable video snippets on his website. Looks like you didn't get him.

Ikko, on the other hand, could be any of the six women you've captured. You've been corresponding, but neither of you knows the other's face (Your one TV appearance was on a podium on the occasion of Alkahest's launch, but you were in the back with other minor dignitaries).
>>
>>3800852
Radio tower and dish to be dull white, with CATS instead of STARS on top, and Custodial Arrangement of Telecommunication Systems in the circle area instead of Raccoon Police Dep.

Maybe a midnight blue sky as the background color instead?
>>
>>3800861
>(I mean putting her in the van's front seat, and strapping her in as in securing her seatbelt, the intention is to give her a safer ride than sitting on a bench in the back of an old army truck. My bad!)
Ha, would be villainously mean tho, don't want her to miscarry.
>(Let me do a bit of mspaint)
Good luck, I tried for the last 5 minutes, and couldn't even get a decent circle in mspaint.....

Still thinking about the background, perhaps the background should be dark blue like in the badge pic so the white tower and the Yellow-Golden Stars stand out a bit more.

I might ask a friend to do a drawing of it, hes got a tablet. I'm also looking at other badge shapes atm.
>>
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>>3800866

(I am not good at this lol)
>>
Rolled 50 (1d100)

>>3800832

You tell Moira to stop -- you aren't sure she wasn't playacting, either.

Rather than waste time with the "blood of Jesus" guy, you have more blood kits brought in; the test is quick -- it works more or less like litmus strips, for ease of use in the field -- and will have a result by the time you get back to HQ.

Suzanna isn't very happy to get woken up, but when you tell her that there's a wounded man who can't be taken to a hospital, she's smart enough to figure out that something happened. You give details about the injury; she doesn't ask about the patient's identity, likely figuring that it's one of your covert ops personnel.

She says that she has people to take care of in Rio, but she'll get one of her aides on the next flight to Chicago, and gives you a list of medical tools to make available in the HQ infirmary. "Probably not a bad idea to keep that stuff around in general." You're looking at a few thousand Nicks to get the stuff overnighted, but it's still in the noise for your operating budget.

# Have this conversation in the prisoner's hearing range; he'll see you are humane.

# Don't, a cop would just have him taken to city hospital and post a guard.
>>
>>3800835
>Hand him over to the Ghilottis, you're pretty sure that they know how to deal with this sort of thing without generating paperwork.
>Let them, but take the Gap Generator back to HQ.
>She's fine, she goes with the rest.
>Don't, a cop would just have him taken to city hospital and post a guard.
>>
>>3800871
That's 100x better than what I managed, I couldn't even make a proper circle...... Though I tried it from scratch.
>>
>>3800880
# Don't, a cop would just have him taken to city hospital and post a guard.

Time to establish that Greenland base.
>>
>>3800880
Also can we tow the jeep, and put a observation team on the house to see if anyone else shows up?

We got everyone right? best turn the place inside out and get anything and everything of value, including the clothes so the prisoners have something to change into.
>>
>>3800882

>>3800888

The prisoners who were unhurt, including the pregnant woman -- who's given a pillow taken from the house and a blanket -- are taken back to the HQ's warehouse by truck; the hangar-style doors close, and they are herded into your secure area.

In short order, your prisoners are in the containers that you've converted to cells a few months ago; it's cramped, but the quarters are clean and secure.

The woman with the wounded ankle has been given a transfusion and stitches, the pregnant woman has been checked out just to be safe, the man with the wounded shoulder has been patched up and sedated until he can undergo surgery to take the bullet out in a way that won't mess up his shoulder joint -- he's out like a light right now -- and the goon squad have been given pizza, beer, and whatever cash was in the busted safehouse.

You have obtained a few hard drives' worth of data, which don't seem to amount to much -- past snapshots of Tsion's websites, baby pictures, encrypted Excel files which probably contain contact info for other cells which will take a few days to brute-force -- but can be invaluable to a professional data analyst.

* You have obtained Remnant intel.
* You have obtained 1 set of light infantry weapons.

Before being stuffed into the containers, the prisoners get to see other trucks go out empty and come in with some of the house's contents. By now the prisoners have probably understood that this was not an ordinary police raid. A few panic, others admonish them to pray and give out nothing. Some don't understand why one-world-government jackboots are being so, well, nice, and an older man tells them that it's to make you more compliant. Interestingly, the people who sat next to the Gap Generator on the trip back complain of headaches.

# Gut the place while searching it overnight, in case there are secret caches or the like.

# Do a quick search that doesn't damage the walls, install temporary cameras, and leave someone posted nearby to see if anyone comes back to the scene of the crime.

The Jeep Cherokee is registered to William Cameron, and was purchased with a Global Community Weekly company card -- oddly, the date of purchase is that of the nationalist attacks. The car is in good shape, other than the blown tires, and by the look of it Mr. Cameron got the deluxe package at the time; it even has one of those in-dash GPS navigators that have been popular with the rich for a year or so, which you reckon will be effectively obsoleted by smartphones in another two or three.
>>
>>3800898
# Do a quick search that doesn't damage the walls, install temporary cameras, and leave someone posted nearby to see if anyone comes back to the scene of the crime.

fix it up and put it back at the front of the house.
>>
>>3800898
>Do a quick search that doesn't damage the walls, install temporary cameras, and leave someone posted nearby to see if anyone comes back to the scene of the crime
>>
>>3800898
Oh and put a second GPS on the jeep.
>>
Rolled 77, 44 = 121 (2d100)

>>3800898

"Ladies and gentlemen, you are being held in precautionary custody. You may have, without knowing, played host to convicted murderer and international fugitive Rabbi Tsion Ben-Judah, and or suspected black market mastermind, Mrs. Williams."

# Generic male voice.

# Generic female voice.

# Autotuned, creepy synthetic voice that, for some reason, wouldn't sound out of place talking about deadly neurotoxin.

Your HQ is very anonymous; if it was any more anonymous, it'd look like the one from Men in Black. Your main warehouse is one among many nearly identical warehouses in a somewhat run down industrial district -- If you ever decide to drop these people off somewhere, they're unlikely to associate this raid with the cable company. They did see the white van with poorly stenciled CATS markings, but it's a white van, it could've been saying FREE CANDY on the side for all they know.

If Ikko is here, she's not making it obvious. For now, your prisoners will be

# put on prison food and given orange jumpsuits.

# put on the same regimen as the older ones: they can ask for takeaway, may get their clothes back once safety pins and the like have been removed, and can use the TV and unconnected PCs if they like. Since there's 14 in a space intended for 4, they'll have to share, but so it goes.

You aren't sure if the Gap Generator worked or not, but the raid went remarkably well; the sword.... well, it can cut people. You look at the blade, it's still got a bit of blood on it. That you drew. In, arguably, fair melee combat. In the waning days of 1999. That's a little weird, isn't it? Well, now you have a bunch of people who will probably be praying for release, or for the conversion of their captors, or something else predictable -- you can experiment further with the Gap Generator, if you put someone on this next month. Technically it's human experimentation on unwilling subjects, but it's not as if they will be physically harmed.

>>3800912
>>3800908
>>3800914

You get the Jeep's tires replaced and have it parked back exactly where it was, plus a tracker, of course. Two men will camp out in an adjacent abandoned house after putting some disposable cameras in the busted safehouse, to see if anyone who escaped makes it back.

"Were you really going to kill that guy, Moira?"

She's making herself a sandvich. "Sure. They think they go to Heaven, and frankly, so do I. Between that and living through the world going crazy for another four years, I'd be doing them a favor."

"... You believe in all that stuff?"

"Boss, I had some Old Testament scarecrow point at me and stop my heart, just like that, didn't even have to snap his finger. I don't call that scientific proof, but it's good enough for me."

"So why don't you... I don't know, join up with them?"

She takes a big bite of the sandwich, and makes it look feral. "Nah. Heaven is for wimps. If I ever go there -- on my own time, by my own hand, with my own bombs, and let the bells ring."
>>
>>3800938
>Autotuned, creepy synthetic voice that, for some reason, wouldn't sound out of place talking about deadly neurotoxin.
>put on the same regimen as the older ones: they can ask for takeaway, may get their clothes back once safety pins and the like have been removed, and can use the TV and unconnected PCs if they like. Since there's 14 in a space intended for 4, they'll have to share, but so it goes.
>>
>>3800938

> we invent gap generator to break supernatural shit
> it breaks the dice curse

well fuck me.

>>3800898
>Do a quick search that doesn't damage the walls, install temporary cameras, and leave someone posted nearby to see if anyone comes back to the scene of the crime

Tsion Goldblum and Kirk Cameron ran off, but I think we got his wife. Let's interrogate the women.

inb4 Cameron didn't actually get married and was pretending to be a chick on IRC
>>
>>3800938
# Generic female voice.
# put on prison food and given orange jumpsuits.

>>3800946
> we invent gap generator to break supernatural shit
> it breaks the dice curse
Oh Shit Nigga!
Build more! TOP PRIORITY, screw the mandate!
>>
>>3800946
He was a girl.

Guy In Real Life.
>>
Rolled 87 (1d100)

>>3800946

That's a valid point, actually; you have no concrete proof that Ikko is a woman. She's been referred to as Mr. William Cameron's wife in many posts on the site, including by Tsion, but she hasn't ever showed up on video and the few times you hear her on one of Tsion's webcam snippets, well, the voice could be anybody's, really.


While you make sure that the prisoners are locked up, your people go through their personal effects and remove anything that can be turned into a tool from their clothes, which are then piled up; you'll decide what to do with them later.

https://www.hymnal.net/en/hymn/h/582

In the meantime, the prisoners have moved the furniture out of the way, sat in a circle, and started singing a few old Methodist hymns. It's probably loud enough that a submarine could pick it up, but it's not loud enough to get out of the containers and the warehouse.

Mr. Vajpayee, clearly satisfied with his handiwork -- he really should go outside to smoke, but eh, big warehouse, who cares -- reports that there was something good on the unencrypted files on the hard drive: scans of postcards of congratulations from other Tribulation Force members stationed elsewhere on Chloe and William Cameron's marriage, followed a few months later with more of the same, this time in regards to her expecting. Well, you've got one pregnant woman in custody, so, with any luck...

# Interrogate her, standard procedure. She won't know it's you.

# Stick her in an interrogation room that has an old style Minitel terminal that was "accidentally" left connected to the network.

# Put some of your cards on the table; call her in one of the conference rooms, and tell her you got her, and now she's got to give you a reason to let her go.
>>
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>>3800938
Isn't it most likely the pregnant woman?

We need to turn an entire warehouse into a better and proper detainment and interview facility before we decide on sending them to a black site, or handing them over to cops, to possibly releasing them.

We should line them all up and take their pictures with a camera on a tripod with a bright flash, facing a backdrop concrete wall with lines of height measurements.

Small cells individual cells are basically Quadcons. Shortened shipping containers, while larger ones hold more inmates.
>>
>>3800945

seconding this because just because it's what Cave Johnson would have wanted.
>>
>>3800972
>Put some of your cards on the table; call her in one of the conference rooms, and tell her you got her, and now she's got to give you a reason to let her go.
No pictures, not even weeding pictures of Chloe? Can we go through graduation pics of universities for the time frame and major she must have graduated, looking for Chloes and looking if one of them is in our container? We need a pic.
>>
>>3800972
# Stick her in an interrogation room that has an old style Minitel terminal that was "accidentally" left connected to the network.
Didn't Ikko get poisoned and we gave her a bunch of stuff to be treated with?

Check her blood, in fact take everyone's blood sample, and see if any of the trace amounts of poisoning or "cure" is in the blood.

Get to ID'ing everyone and checking if anyones related.
>>
>>3800984
This too
>>
>>3800981
Didn't Aki know Ikko at some point? Or was it only through an online presence?
>>
>>3800986
Knowing Aki I'd assume though
>>
>>3800972
Also I'd like to set up mock secret court tribunals to charge them so they will have reason to think why they are imprisoned.

We're just basically detaining people illegally and telling no one about it.
>>
>>3800972
Do we still have custody of that burglar that broke into our house?
>>
>>3800981
I don't want her to know it's us just yet. I want to keep this charade going on for a bit longer, and I do so enjoy charades.

Also lets get better confirmation of who is who first.

Wait, we can try acquiring Cameron's DNA! See if it matches that of the baby, then we know for sure its Cameron's kid shes carrying.

The Jeep Cherokee should have his DNA in there.
>>
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>>3800979

"Hell, and welcome to the enrichment center. We hope your brief detention in the relaxation vault will be a pleasant one. Your specimens will be processed, and we will then be ready to begin the test proper."

The prisoners do not resist: in fact, they seem to have agreed to go limp as soon as they are touched, as a passive resistance technique. Some do so with remarkable discipline -- you get the idea that one elderly Black gentleman has had to do this during the Civil Rights era. This makes it easy for your nursing staff to take a blood sample, and since they're just flopping on the floor, you mount a camera on the container's ceiling, string measuring tape on the floor, and take pictures that way. All the while, the synthetic voice describes the process and tells your people what to do.

>>3800981

Ikko apparently understands OPSEC; the pictures with actual human faces have either been scribbled over in mspaint, or are in the encrypted partition, which would take centuries to crack on a regular PC. Since you have access to about a quarter billion of them, it'll take a couple of weeks. However, whoever did the preemptive scrubbing, didn't think that some data could be gleaned by more innocuous things, such as scans of Hallmark cards.

>>3800986
>>3800988

They talked on IRC, but it was before everyone had a webcam.

>>3800995

No, she was handed off to Chicago police. At the time, she pretty much begged you to; she wasn't going to go back to Rebohoth after failing her mission. (Technically, she succeeded, in that she hid a hockey puck full of polonium under your bed.... although the stuff would not have killed you, being as it's almost non-radioactive now).

>>3800992

That's the nice thing about having a black site; the prisoner transfer and the necessary setup is going to require the black ops squad to be busy with this next month, though.

>>3800984
>>3800985

The voice begins calling people for interrogation; since nobody gave their names, you have it issue a description. Two of your guys go in, and the woman, rather than letting herself be dragged away, meekly walks between them.

"Due to mandatory scheduled maintenance, the appropriate chamber for this interrogation sequence is currently unavailable The Enrichment Center apologizes for the inconvenience and wishes you the best of luck."

She's taken to another container which has been hastily set up with a table, two chairs, a very bright desk lamp, and an ancient Minitel dumb terminal. The other side of it is connected to a terminal window on a regular PC; it will be possible for an operator to copy and paste command responses so that it looks like it's connected to the internet, and with any luck, any delays that this causes will be blamed on the age of the equipment. Should "Ikko" try to actually communicate her plight, of course, that wouldn't get copy-pasted. It's good to keep a human in the loop sometimes. After a few minutes with nobody coming in, she does.
>>
>>3801012
And probably the house too.

We may be able to do some fun Stanford style experiments on the prisoners. We lock them all into individual cells then have a speaker loudly boom into the rooms, telling a person with a name to please stand up to the door before being let out on their daily exercise or something. Whoever responds to the name and instructions is likely the person who's name we called.
>>
>>3801012

Sending people out to swab for hair and skin flakes will take a fair amount of time, and make the Jeep and the house unavailable for bait purposes.

# Bait. They're likely to come back for something.

# Prepare for DNA scan. They're not likely to come back for anything anyway.


>>3801015

(That's supposed to be Hello, not Hell. Lawls.) The terminal looks like it's got a DOS command prompt.

c>hello
Bad command or file name

c>telnet 64.7.68.102

The operator outside the container telnets to the same host; it takes a few tries for it to connect, indicating that it's probably another PC rather than a dedicated server. "Ikko" simply types the number 1, and hits enter.

# Have the operator input the same thing and paste the result, if any.

# Don't, it might be a remote erase.


>>3801017

A quick blood test gives you these people's blood types and confirms that none of them appear sick, or have significant amounts of medication in their system other than the painkiller you gave some of them. One of them is diabetic, so you make sure insulin is available.

You do find some IDs; by the look of it, a number of them are fake -- well, that's something else to justify their detention, if you care. You run all of them through various databases, and match names to faces for about half your prisoners; none of them have significant criminal records past the occasional speeding ticket and a couple of instances of shoplifiting.
>>
>>3801021
>Bait. They're likely to come back for something.
>Don't, it might be a remote erase.
Just give her a generic erased message back, let's see how she reacts
>>
>>3801015
>passive resistance
We shall have heavy lift quad helicopter drones a carry them around like baggage.

>No, she was handed off to Chicago police
Shoot, I wanted to scare her straight and force her to do schoolwork then get a job and stuff.

>the nice thing about having a black site
Heating, AC, medical wing, interrogation, enhanced interrogation, a recreational space for prisoners and a separate one for guards, and a few modular rooms. Plus a mini-fridge in the staff break room.

>>3801021
# Bait. They're likely to come back for something.
No rush, we have time and all their cash and supplies.
>>
>>3801029
or little robots and trains to cart and putt them around.
>>
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>>3801022

> mfw i actually try to telnet in and punch in numbers

Wonder what the pins and switches are for.
>>
>>3801033
Maybe whenever they are doing something, we have guards walk up to them and poke them to make them go limp. Bet they will get real tired of going limp every time we touch them so they stop, and when they don't go limp we hold onto the until the do. It'll push the boarders of their passive resistance, and get real tiring for them.
>>
>>3801022
If shes smart enough to have a remote delete button, then shes probably smart enough to have a customized response.

>>3801021
Can we track or detect where the connection is going out to?
>>
>>3801021
Also, our staff have face masks on don't they?
>>
>>3801038

The IP address goes to California, but you know it as one within the range that Ikko has used before -- it bounces back to the IP block devoted to Chicago, which is huge (Class A) simply because your HQ is there.

>>3801040

You improvised with dust masks and goggles; this is a large construction warehouse, so that stuff is around for when there's painting to be done.

>>3801036

(You actually tried it? Thanks!)
>>
>>3801044
What does it do?
>>
>>3801046

(IRL? it turns my house lights and sprinklers on and off, it's a thing I built a few years ago before they became commonplace, so it still uses telnet rather than something more modern. In the quest? You'll have to risk finding out, or not.)
>>
>>3801050
>Sprinklers
Like fire suppression sprinklers in your house?

Or like lawn sprinklers?

I don't mind turning on your lights, but I'm not gonna help you take a bath :p
>>
>>3801044
Well, I'm reading up on what A class is, and it seems like shes probably I would guess, trying to communicate with her husband.

So I'm going to risk it and go:
# Have the operator input the same thing and paste the result, if any.

She would put a slightly more complex password than just 1 fora remote erase. Like a bible verse ie Corinthians 3:16 or something.
>>
>>3801053

(Lawn sprinklers.)

>>3801059
>>3801036
>>3801022

(I'm going to go with the stuff that actually showed up on telnet, ok?)

1
Pin 2, Switch 1
2
Pin 3, Switch 2
5
Pin 6, Switch 5


The cameras you left in the busted safehouse show lights turning on and off; you don't know if this is doing anything else, but if it is, you've got their hard drives in your custody anyway.

"Ikko" gets out of that interface; maybe she just wanted to confirm that she had an internet connection.

c>echo "Safehouse compromised by Morale Monitors. Dont come back." > canary.txt

c>ftp

open tsionsinternationalblog.geocities.com
user1
demo
lcd /
put canary.txt
quit

Your operator doesn't actually upload anything, of course, but does log (username user1, password demo? Really? Really?) into the site and mimics the appropriate responses that a FTP server would give.

220---------- Welcome to Pure-FTPd [privsep] [TLS] ----------
220-You are user number 2 of 50 allowed.
220-Local time is now 06:20. Server port: 21.
220-This is a private system - No anonymous login
220 You will be disconnected after 15 minutes of inactivity.
User (tsionsinternationalblog:(none)): user1
331 User user1 OK. Password required
Password:
230 OK. Current restricted directory is /
200 PORT command successful
150 Connecting to port 63721
ftp: 57 bytes sent in 0.02Seconds 29.22Kbytes/sec.
250 OK. Current directory is /public_html
221 Goodbye-Logout.

Done this, "Ikko" clears the screen and sits back.

The previous canary.txt was a text grab of some random headlines from a local paper's web site, presumably as a time stamp; instead of uploading the warning, your operator updates it with today's headlines, making it look like everything's fine.

# Say hello via the terminal. Maybe you can make it look like CATS is going to break them out.
* Assume it's Ikko.
* Don't.

# Standard interrogation, courtesy of Vajpayee or someone else. Let her think she got away with it.

# Let her stew there a while. Let her get worried.

# Send her back to the other prisoners and begin arranging their transfer to the blacksite -- you, yourself, better get some rest. (End month and deal with these people later)

One annoying thing about the Gap Generator is that it's, well, a jammer: in addition to (possibly, maybe) blocking supernatural effect, it certainly does block cell phone signals.
>>
>>3801077
>Let her stew there a while. Let her get worried.
>>
>>3801077
# Let her stew there a while. Let her get worried.
Just a bit.
Then
# Send her back to the other prisoners and begin arranging their transfer to the blacksite -- you, yourself, better get some rest. (End month and deal with these people later)
Buuut we either recuse her or interrogate her.

Popping up and saying hi so soon, is a bit too suspicious.
>>
>>3801077
Do we have the ability to do a fake shootout with fake blood and everything if we stage a fake rescue?

We were wearing masks when we raided them yes?
>>
>>3801092
Before going to the blacksite. Maybe.
>>
Rolled 58 (1d100)

>>3801098

Moira is pretty recognizable, and she wasn't. The Ghilotti goons did as a matter of course; you and Vajpayee did not on breaking in, but it's unlikely that they got a good look at you, on account of the flashbang grenade.

It is possible that the prisoners will remember "that woman who sassed the Two Witnesses".

Foreman, I hate to tell you this, but you look.... kinda generic.

>>3801092
>>3801086

You take care of other matters while you let possibly-Ikko stew in the fake interrogation room. In the meantime, some data starts coming in: you don't know if you have Ikko in custody, but you do confirm that William Cameron is not an internet crossdresser and Ikko is Chloe Steele Cameron, daughter of Cpt. Rayford Steele, one of the personal pilots of Nicolae Carpatescu... whose personal file specifies that he used to be a member of a Remnant-affiliated church until it was destroyed in the earthquake!

That makes little sense; if Steele thinks that Carpatescu is the Antichrist, and has been flying him around for almost three years, why not put the Condor 216 in a suicide dive?

# End month. How you treat the prisoners for a few days isn't a big concern either way.

# Specify how the prisoners are to be treated.

# Something else.

* Now that you have a group of Remnant who have an incentive to pray for their on release, it should be possible to conduct more experiments with the Gap Generator. You may advance Theology further.
>>
>>3801110
>End month. How you treat the prisoners for a few days isn't a big concern either way.
maybe turn the generator of for a second and see if something happens, if so turn it back on ASAP
>>
>>3801110
>Foreman, I hate to tell you this, but you look.... kinda generic.
Its because I like Nickleback isn't it?

# Specify how the prisoners are to be treated.
Take their measurements and pictures, put them through processing, give them a quick intervew and informed they are being detained and possible charged for various crimes, for things like fake ID, hacking, and doing internet stuff that your not allowed to (mostly ikko), harboring and supporting a wanted and known fugitive, and possible espionage relating to the deaths of GC personnel.

Put them into a fake secret court, and press charges with them. They will have no lawyer.

Then lock them all up into individual Quadcon cells, permit them 6 hours out of the cell a day.

Really what we are doing is running experiments on them with the gap generator behind 2 way mirrors and everyone's face and voice disguised.

Also teach Moira a American accent.

# End month. How you treat the prisoners for a few days isn't a big concern either way.
>>
>>3801115

Do you take any precautions before doing this?

The Gap Generator prototype is currently sitting next to the linked containers; it was unplugged momentarily when you came back to the warehouse, but has remained plugged in ever since. It runs on 120V and takes up about as much juice as a microwave oven.

You realize that you're still wearing Terry Pratchett's sword, back in its scabbard after you cleaned it of blood.

# You may or may not have taken a picture of yourself with it, during all this mess.

# OPSEC first, the only pictures in this operation are mugshots and photos of confiscated goods.
>>
>>3801121
# OPSEC first, the only pictures in this operation are mugshots and photos of confiscated goods.

Install fire and sound proofing, get an additional gap generator running just out of range on a 4 wheel push dolly or car that can put all the people back into a "dead zone"
by move it closer to the prisoners. Deadbolts and reinforced doors and windows. Cameras inside and out of the place, with a fence on the property perimeter to keep nosy people out and away.

Have extra batteries and cables. Backup generator, and spare flashlights, fire extinguishers, defibrillators, balaclavas, fire blankets, and non lethal take and restraint equipment, such as zip ties, handcuffs, tasers, lasers, phasers (set to stun), bean bag guns, tranquilizer darts, stun batons, regular batons, buckets of water, and some medical supplies+first ad kit.

Also lockers to store prisoners stuff, and guards stuff safely and securely.

I think that covers it all?
>>
>>3801121
>You may or may not have taken a picture of yourself with it, during all this mess.

Have everyone prepared for ridiculously unlikely luck and chance shenanigans in favor of the remnants, keep all ways out of the building guarded by multiple people. As soon as unlikely shit starts to happen we turn the generator back on and catch anyone that has gotten out. This is pretty much just an experiment to see how and if god will interfere on their behalf.
>>
Rolled 74 (1d100)

>>3801120
>>3801127
>>3801128

To do all the stuff in >>3801127 you might as well have to do all that at the black site; it's not something you can do overnight. Building another Gap Generator would take a few days; the prototype was put together by some of your workers and Robertson's students, and like all high voltage analog circuits, required a fair amount of tuning -- which had to be done by hand since there's no real process to mass produce these yet.

(I'm doing this one in detail because it's refershing to see the Foreman do something actiony in person, and because this IS important, even though it might not look like it -- at the very least it's the first time you capture Remnant intentioanlly and use a GG and the sword "in anger").

>>3801128 can be done immediately, however.
>>
>>3801128
We also need to make sure the place drains properly and there are no pools of standing water, or flooding risks for slipping hazards or electrocution of staff. In fact, lets sandbag the area anyways. On the inside....

Any hanging wires electrical wires inside or out need to be ties up into a bundle and properly secured to building and to the power poles.

forbid all wifi or cellphone usage, and create a dead zone of CS Pylon coverage in the area.

Have safe plugs or outlet covers for electrical outlets, remove all hard and sharp tables or corners that people can hit their heads on.

Oh and get a net launcher gun thing.
>>
>>3801136
Okay, well some tasers and netguns for now should work. can we also get a bunch of iron?

Like iron igots, iron prison bars, iron gate, and iron knuckles?

We should test this with steel and other metals.
>>
>>3801136
Yeah, wish we could do more actions. We need to hire more agents so foreman has more free time to be the awesome main character hes meant to be.
>>
>>3801136
>can be done immediately, however.
Let's do it +>>3801139
mfw "God" just totally trolls us and teleports them.

My take on the world is "god" just being some super incomprehensible alien race, likely not physical, that has visited earth before and is now back to mess with us. Ignoring it was written as serious bible fan fic
>>
>>3801139
>>3801128
>>3801144

# Do this stuff ASAP, right now before supernatural malignity raises its head, with whatever material and personnel is available at the warehouse.

# Do this stuff properly, at the black site, in a few days, and hope that nothing unlikely happens in the meantime.

Either way, you call up the prototyping shop and have them build a small batch of Gap Generators, patterned after the prototype. They'll have to be tuned, of course, which is a trial and error process.

Hmm, maybe you found a long-term use for these prisoners...

>>3801147

(That is possible; quite a few people have been blaming the disappearances and the meteor storms on Sufficiently Advanced Aliens. Carpatescu has not offered an opinion, but is certainly doing nothing to hide the rumors).
>>
>>3801148
>Do this stuff ASAP, right now before supernatural malignity raises its head, with whatever material and personnel is available at the warehouse.
Let's figure out right now, before shenanigans happen.
>>
>>3801147
Aren't we meta-gaming a bit? How does the foreman rationalize all these crazy obsessive and extreme measures? Aside from seeing some supernatural stuff, and the rocket getting smacked a bit when we tried to blow it up with a nuke, we don't really have much of a reason to suspect this level of shenanigans.

# Do this stuff ASAP, right now before supernatural malignity raises its head, with whatever material and personnel is available at the warehouse.

Call up a work crew to do overtime if we have to.
>>
>>3801156
I imagine Foreman has seen enough supernatural shit to expect some bullshit to go done, I mean the witnesses alone would convince me magic is very real. Mostly it's an experiment were maybe nothing or very little will happen but we prepare for the worst
>>
>>3801160
I understand that, but for this level of extreme paranoia

>>3801147
>>3801144
>>3801139
>>3801128
>>3801127
Is over the top and a tad bit much even for what the foreman has been through. I think we need to experience the sheer bs of what can happen before we go this crazy.... Then again, I don't want to waste the good rolls we just for that so *shrugs*.
>>
I wonder what happens if we hook up the gap generators to 240V batteries?
>>
Rolled 101 (1d1000)

>>3801156
>>3801154

You're still running on adrenaline; the day crew are just starting to come in, and they're fairly surprised to find you fully awake after a sleepless night and barking order at a manic yet precise pace like.... Well, like Carpatescu, come to think of it.

BOCHICA makes it easy to summon equipment, you figure damn the expense, and send out people to pick up equipment from nearby warehouses and stores, with orders to get it in ASAP, not haggle, and sign off for immediate delivery. Some things aren't for sale online, so you have operators find them; some things aren't for sale above the table, so you promise a premium to those of the Ghilotti crew who have stuck around if they can procure things like police-issue tasers and riot equipment.

The prisoners must be wondering what's going on around them; the noise is loud and eclectic. People paint off CATS signs, set up netting around the warehouse exits and gates, create a dead connectivity zone by having the warehouse's pylon output white noise on all frequencies, order everyone to put on dust masks, goggles, and painting overalls, get handcuffs ready (it perplexes you that you had handcusffs in inventory, and that only one pair is the pink fuzzy kind). Moira got a bit of shut-eye and has flashbangs ready. A bunch of Ghilotti goons, construction workers, and even some of your security personnel have surrounded the containers, most of them with nonlethal weapons. "What's going on?" "We caught a bunch of Remnant terrorists and the boss doesn't trust the cops with it."

You order that someone get you a coffee.

You unplug the Gap Generator, with a worker ready to plug it right back in.

Nothing happens.

The Remnant members keep singing; you don't hear some of the voice you had before, which tells you that some must have fallen asleep. A construction team is preparing half-size containers to expand the temporary prisoner pen.

The last notification you got from your headset before comms blackout was that Suzanna's employee was en route to Chicago and the surgical kit had arrived.

>>3801160

(That's a fair point. If nothing else, you were around for the Rapture, and saw the Two Witnesses give Moira a heart attack in realtime, with telemetry from her heart even).

>>3801168

Probably a small electrical fire and some wasted engineering effort. If you want to build bigger GG's (or bigger lasers, etc) you'd have to put some R&D into materials and designs that can handle higher energy densities. None of that is breakthrough-level new technology, but you'd still have to get engineers to spec the right parts, find the right materials for conductors and insulators, and so on.
>>
>>3801175

A few minutes later -- it feels more like half an hour, but it's only been a few minutes -- it becomes pretty obvious that if yourr prisoners, or you, were hoping for an Angel to come down and swoop people to freedom, it's not in the cards for today.

You have the Gap Generator be turned on again, just in case, and eventually tell people to stand down. Your crews are loyal, and the Ghilottis basically got a week's pay in a night, so nobody complains much; this little bit of craziness cost you a little bit, but it's more a matter of lost energy than lost money. You're young enough that pulling an all nighter every once in a while is not going to measurably affect your work performance, and so's Moira.

"Don't sweat it, boss. If miracles were reliable they wouldn't be miracles. I'mma get a bit of shut eye."

She's impressed with your decisiveness enough that before leaving, she gives a quick bite to your ear; by the time you realize that's what the brief moment of pain was, she's already walked off.

Before getting some rest yourself, you take a moment to assign some workers who displayed the right amount of ruthlessness to the job of accompanying the Blackwatch team for transporting the prisoners and updating the containment facility. You also download a MUSH server, install it on a PC somewhere, and have a sysadmin set it up so that it can pretend to be a court system that should look like it came out of a Zork game; this, and a bit of TTS and STT, should let you easily and cheaply fake some sort of futuristic automated secret tribunal for the prisoners' benefit.

(I gotta do end of month math which will take a while... good night/morning?)

Once the comms blackout ends, you catch up on notifications, and find that Tsion's site has updated. There is no mention of the raid, but you figure that they would have a few updates in the pipeline, so it doesn't mean much.

You're going to get a bit more intel on whatever command structure theRe

(OOC note: Would you prefer to handle every bit of intel as its own little subplot, or do like in XCOM where "intel" is a currency and can be acquired and spent? In the second case, you will still get the option to roleplay cases that have an impact on the plot)
>>
>>3801179
>little subplot
>>
>>3801179
More on the former, but I would like to try and experiment with the latter a ta bit?
>>
Quick recap! What has happened so far? Where are we now?
>>
>>3801511
We found a cop badge and are in the process of an abortion that will prevent Not!VirginMary to have Not!Jesus.
>>
>>3801199
>>3801486

(Man you guys are making me work hard!)

In the next couple of days, you get some useful information out of the recovered hard drives.

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1BlMOSEOxSihj1gdagq7yxCjONaRBgcdlRxnc68uWf0A/edit#gid=0

Interestingly, Tsion had a few sermons pre-prepared; you note that he has a few versions when referring to the various disasters that have happened. For example, he predicted that a third of the fish in the sea would die; his notes indicate that "this may happen all in one go, or over time, in the latter case extrapolate from fishery production data publically available". A note by Chloe listing a few approximation methods has been crossed out by someone else who apparentl thought "just follow the line on the graph!" was sufficient.

Tsion is sure that Fragment 3 is Wormwood, and Fragment 4 is going to come concurrently with the sun, moon and stars losing a third of their lights. The note says "Atmospheric phenomenon -- not cosmological?"

The notes on the upcoming meeting of the 144000 witnesses indicates that it will take place in Teddy Kollek stadium, Carpatescu is to be "taunted into making an appearance, but not expressly invited", and that if the Two Witnesses were to show up, the program should make room for it. Most of the notes are otherwise mundane (remind attendees to bring water bottles, organize ride sharing, and the like).

You can confirm that "Ikko" is in fact Chloe Steele, and that both Carpatescu's personal pilot -- who is still flying for him -- and his former personal secretary belong to the same Remnant cell, most of which you seem to have captured. They call themselves the Tribulation Force.

>>3801511

(I can write a better recap post later, if you need it)

CATS - the Custodial Arrangement of Telecommunication Systems - has existed for three years; supposedly, it's about two and a half years since the treaty between Carpatescu's Global Community and the nation of Israel has started the Premillennial Dispensationalist seven-year Tribulation. The Event -- the rapture, according to Remnant Christians -- has happened about a year before then.

Despite a statistically significant uptick in natural disasters, the world has recovered; children are once again being born, Carpatescu's administration has generally proven beneficial to a recovering humanity, and Pontifex Peter Mathew's ecumenical council initiative has brought religious strife to a nadir, with only Christian Remnant and Orthodox Jews not joining it.

The Event left the scientific community in disarray, but popular opinion eventually settled on blaming nuclear technology; all the world's nuclear reactors have been decommissioned and most nuclear weapons destroyed. One was recently pulled out of mothballs to break a very large asteroid, Akhenaten, into fragments each of which will simply cause significant ecological damage rather than destroying the earth outright.

>>3801514

(Huh?)
>>
>>3801514
Just summaries everything that has happened up to this point.
>>
>>3801520

You are the Foreman of CATS. Your job, as given to you by Global Potentate Nicolae Carpatescu, head of the effective world government (some old institutions, mostly monarchies, are still in the process of winding down; the US Congress is set to finish lapsing this year), is to unify and streamline phone, satellite and data infrastructure across the globe.

Over the years you have discovered that your boss has an uncanny ability to impose his will on others, which has no doubt aided his political ascent to Earth's highest office. You funded research into active noise canceling in order to make yourself immune to this effect, and shared the technology with the subpotentate of South America, Corazon Santiago, with whom you have formed an alliance of sorts. The world is divided into ten geographical regions, each of which can be divided up into territories (Commissioner Lal and Chairman Yang of the United Indian States and United Asian States respectively, have elected to keep their regions unified, however, for example). Each region has been given to the care of a subpotentate for local affairs. At one point, some were using the latitude they have to pursue their own societal agends, but recently Carpatescu has begun to mandate centralization.

After the Event, many of the world's major faiths have come together to form the Ecumenical Council, a religious version of the UN (now itself superceded by the Global Community, with headquarters in the centrally-planned city of New Babylon) intended to nip religious conflict in the bud.

Your work has ensured that, as of the end of 1999, almost everyone on Earth who wants it has basic internet access; smartphones have replaced Walkmen (there was a brief mp3 player fad), people can access the Datalinks on the fly using a Nomenklator headset, and Carpatescu's vision of a cashless economy centrally mediated by the Master Control Program is about to clash with Ikko's barter-based Community Co-Op and your own decentralized logistics AI, BOCHICA.
>>
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>>3801520
We're a Cat that hunts immigrate mice coming into our home that we named America.

Also my wrist hurts from putting to much pressure on the nerves, so its possessed and typing weird things.
>>
>>3801520
>>3801532

(If you have any questions, please by all means feel free to ask!)

(OOC information: This is a "timed" quest, in that there is a set number of turns, unless things go really topsy turvy. The total is estimated to be between 84 and 90. Turn 36 just ended. Each turn represents one month, at the beginning of which you will be given a global situation report, and have to allocate funds, agents, and manpower to various projects. As the month proceeds and things inevitably go out of whack, you or your agents will have to "zoom in" and roleplay situations to handle problems as they appear.

The goal is to remain alive, fulfill CATS' mandate to keep the Internet on no matter what disasters befall the planet, and maybe, just maybe, cancel the Apocalypse.)
>>
>>3801511

You are currently at the operations plant of your primary HQ in Chicago -- basically a big warehouse holding construction equipment. You have repurposed a portion of it to serve as a temporary jail for the members of the Christian Remnant whose safehouse you have just raided by taking a bunch of construction workers with absolutely no mafia ties whatsoever and having them pretend to be Morale Monitors (quasi-government secret police) to react to a slip on part of their logistics coordinator, a woman who goes by Ikko on IRC.

You may have her in custody, in that you are holding someone that fits her description. The situation has calmed down, and you have people working on a DNA test to check if you got the right person; the results are supposed to come in in 4 to 6 weeks (because it's the end of 1999 and DNA testing isn't as good as it used to be).

Looks like the Remnant group will have to spend New Year's Eve 2000 in custody; you, personally, intend to give most everyone a couple of days off, get volunteers to keep things running overnight (the datacenter folks are planning an enormous overnight LAN party, which lets them be in their preferred environment, close to the servers if any Y2K stupidity should after all occur, and generally happy with life) and get some sleep, it's just a number.

Celebrations all over the world are somewhat muted in light of the tsunami; it happened on the winter solstice, so a number of planned pagan revels across the world took ended up being considerably more solemn than originally intended.
>>
Hello, Foreman! You are planning CATS' operations for the month.

Rules: http://emlia.org/pmwiki/pub/web/LeftBeyond.Quest2Rules.html
Datalinks: http://emlia.org/pmwiki/pub/web/LeftBeyond.Quest2Datalinks.html
Timeline: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1BlMOSEOxSihj1gdagq7yxCjONaRBgcdlRxnc68uWf0A

You can deploy yourself on TWO actions for a small bonus to all rolls
Dr Robertson can be deployed on ONE action for a large bonus to R&D rolls or a small bonus to any non-covert rolls
Ryan Andrews can be deployed on ONE action for a large bonus to construction rolls or a small bonus to any non-covert rolls
Dr Diamond can be deployed on ONE action for a small bonus to all rolls, including covert. She can greatly reduce casualty rates
Moira McSingh can be deployed on ONE action for a medium bonus to covert rolls or a small bonus to all rolls; She can give basic combat capability to a work crew
Aki Lattinen is available for TWO actions for a medium bonus to all non-covert rolls or a small bonus to covert rolls.
Drones give a STACKABLE small bonus to construction and covert rolls; they may be lost in combat

BOCHICA is managing your logistics


C0 (Free):

Move the Garibaldi (Mediterranean, Arctic, Atlantic, Indian, Pacific)

Buy and sell equipment on the open market:
Power generation 1
Small arms 1
Network equipment 2
Fleet assets 2
Aerospace part 3
Supplies (food, fuel etc) 1

C0 (Agent):

Survey a territory for opportunity using an agent.
Construct a CellSol pylon (Needs 1 network part)
Undergo combat training (Max 1 per month)
Tail someone or meet with a dignitary

Buy equipment on the black market:
Small arms 1
Squad weapons and explosives: 2
Stimulants 1

C1:

Reconfigure the Garibaldi (generic, cargo, hospital, strike, orbital)
Survey a territory for opportunity using a team.
Tail someone
Hire out a covert operations team for a situational reward
Construct network equipment
Construct power equipment
Buy network equipment and construct a CellSol pylon
Make and sell consumer-grade Nomenklators (Net gain 1BN)
Buy black market equipment using a security or black ops team

C2:

Do research (1~3)
Construct an aerospace part
Construct a forward logistics hub (small bonus for any action in that territory)
Construct a batch of drones
Augment an Agent (Requires Dr. Diamond)

C3:
Construct a network node (unifies cell and net; costs 1 power, 1 network)
Recruit a work team
Schedule a satellite launch, which will happen at the end of NEXT month. Requires 1 (microsat) or 3~5 (bigsat) aerospace parts.
Do research (4~6)

C4:

Construct a factory (if allowed)
Recruit a covert team
Do research (7~9)
Construct a hub and a network node at the same time (2 power, 1 network)

C5:

Rush a satellite launch at the end of this month. Microsat only, Requires 1 aerospace part
Build a Uranium Hydride bomb
Augment an entire work team (Requires Dr. Diamond)
Capstone research (10)


What are your orders?
>>
Rolled 7 (1d100)

>>3801592

SPECIAL:

You may purchase the Thule Air Base in Greenland. It will count as a logistics hub, but can be further expanded.

SPECIAL: Your HR department reports that you are at capacity, and that there are slight discrepancies in your org chart, suggesting that some people are on your payroll but do not have a position. Due to your excellent record, the chances of an audit are negligible.
>>
>>3801601
Why did we lose favor with Dimmsdale?
>>
>>3801601
Also, part of the reason to get a proper PMC so we can remove these people from payroll, and just put it as 3rd party or contractual expenses.

We can also make up a bunch of roles for them, from janitor to paid intern, and R&D department, or people who handle fleet assets and transporting logistics stuff, truck driver, etc.
>>
Do we have 4/4 factories right now?
>>
>>3801618

Favor reverts towards the mean; you haven't done much for Dimmsdale lately.

On the upside, Aki was able to make Yang's favor revert faster.

There's also the fact that while your men were thorough in cleaning up after the whole "impersonating police officers" thing, a bit of suspicion always lingers.

>>3801621

You do currently have a bunch of roles made up -- that's pretty much standard procedure; however, cooking the books to perfection is very difficult. Since your people are good at it (and by that I mean, BOCHICA would have a slight case of cognitive dissonance about your staff, if it was sentient and could think, which it can't) the chances of an audit are negligible. The fact that Carpatescu is satisfied with your work -- he was hoping you'd deliver ahead of schedule, but he's happy to acknowledge that you have been busy helping him save the Earth from a dinosaur-killer -- undoubtedly helps.


>>3801520
>>3801511

Hey, don't be afraid of posting please, did I scare you off?
>>
>>3801628

Yes (North American Midwest, Chile, Eastern Russia, Japan)

Last month, the Chilean factory system was entirely devoted to urgent reconstruction efforts after the tsunami, and thus unavailable for any other use.
>>
>>3801629
>"impersonating police officers"
With the show of force for the Gilbros, or recently with the house raid?

>>3801633
We never got to build that freaking CS PYLON!
>>
What if we want to make those extra hearts to sell, or research them further to develop better versions.
>>
Aki is no longer with Santiago right? We have two actions with her?
>>
>>3801636

Constructing an additional pylon will let you fulfill Carpatescu's mandate, but also make you decide whether you want to pull the rug under the economy.

Check the Datalinks, as there is more information.

>>3801643

The Augmentation tech tree has been added to your monthly overview.

Mr. Klaue has indicated an interest, but he said he'd have to drum up a few clients crazy or desperate enough to try the technology.
Your little gaggle of prisoners settles into a routine fairly quickly; they sit, pray, read, occasionally play SimCity 2000 on their PCs, got into a monumental fight playing Monopoly, and are discussing their activities as little as possible.

As little as possible doesn't mean zero, though: one of them has recognized Moira as the woman who sassed the Two Witnesses and lived to tell about it. The going theory on Tsion's website was that she had converted right there and then; the going theory among your captives is now that, since she's obviously not Remnant, she must have some other manner of supernatural protection. Could she be the Whore of Babylon? They decide to warn Tsion about it as soon as they are liberated.

# Let Moira hear about it.

# Do not taunt the grenade lady.

>>3801649

Aki came home after watching the end of year fireworks in Rio from a window rather than a screen, and seems no worse for wear.
>>
>>3801654
# Do not taunt the grenade lady.
With a bunch of bombs under her bed for recreational purposes.
>>
>>3801592

We have extra agents, we have Ikko, we have money, we have nuclear material. Let's end this.
>>
>>3801592
Purchase Greenland Base

Foremam
Hire Haley Kipper if possible/Survey Canada for a surveyer?
Survey Germany for a Engineer. Meet Od Gustuve and talk about opening a factory there.

Have 4 Factories make 2 Drones.
+ Ryan

Put a CS Pylon in africa. Maybe. (Are we gonna delay this?)

Do Theology Research
3 work crews + Dr. Roberson

Do CellSol Research
3 work crews + Aki

Do Defence Research
3 work crews + Aki

Construct a hub and a network node at the same time in South Africa (for future war stuff)
3 work crews + 1 Black Opts team + Drones

Covert teams A and B do jobs
Team A = 2 Covert teams + Drones
Team B = 2 Covert teams + Drones

Team A works with Litwala, give him regular discount -1BN

Moira gets sent were she is needed.

3 work crews left over. Perhaps have them make Power or network parts, or Nomeklators?
>>
>>3801678
Forgot to add, buy 3 fleet assets.
>>
>>3801678

if we want better gap generators we need to research energy, QM made it pretty clear. (Is that actually the case or was it just fluff text?)
>>
>>3801680
We have 3 left over crews, we can either beef up the research teams or add another research project to the list, or get %100 research and swap out one of the current research.

I thought Gap Generators was its own research tree?
>>
>>3801680

That's correct. Various things you can build can require a minimum score from two research trees.

ONE thing will require a minimum score from three, but I'm not going to make it any more complicated than that :)

>>3801678

That looks feasible, but leaves the Remnant prisoners in the temporary holding pen for a month. This increases their chances of escape but makes them easier to use as guinea pigs for the Theology research.

>>3801686

No, if it was I'd have added it. (Since I've been a bit derpy on that stuff, good catch, but in this case it's intentional). Gap generators are based on Theology and Directed Energy. Stirling generators were based on Nuclear and CellSol, it jut never came up much because you guys mostly attacked the tech tree one line at a time :)
>>
>>3801686

not for long if we research theology we don't.
>>
>>3801520
>>3801511

did the new guy die?
>>
>>3801691
>guinea pigs
That's the plan.

Does CellSol and BigSats complement each other in research?

I suppose we can divert 1 team from jobs to guarding the prisoners.

Is it possible to transfer our covert and security teams off our direct payroll and into a different company via a PMC, so we can hire more staff? Get around the 20 staff person cap?

>>3801680
So I'm thinking we either beef up the research teams and get that sweet %100 bonus, or we put that last team into Prep R&D or DEW R&D. What do you think?
>>
>>3801703
>>3801629
Hes probably doing a archive dive.

>>3801702
What? So you want to put DEW R&D up there?
>>
>>3801708

Let's start DEW. It's a C2 thing, the dice aren't being assholes, put one team and Dr Diamond on it and it has a chance of happening.

Or actually see above but instead of DEW let's start Augmentation with Dr Diamond since it's her frickin job. Probably better. IDK what 2/5 does for us instead of 1/5 but even if it just makes Moira tougher we're in good shape.

I still think we should go for broke and win before the really bad disasters start
>>
>>3801722
I'd rather Dr. Diamond stick to Augs, I dunno how she would even work with lasers, unless she is like Emma Frost from X-Men.

We can pull foreman off a job, put him on Defence, then put Aki on DEW.
>>
>>3801691
Hey Giest, is Raman automatically on Defense R&D, so putting another "head" on Defense would be counter productive?
>>
>>3801735

Raman Vajpayee is your head of security; his job is to implement what's there, not come up with new stuff procedures. He may or may not interact with anyone "invading his domain", but you've (mostly) got professionals on your payroll, so they are very unlikely to blow up at each other.
>>
>>3801708

Some of your people are looking at the feasibility of orbital Network Nodes; your ground coverage is almost global, though, so it may not be necessary.

That said, since they would sit in a safe orbit, it would prevent war or calamity from touching them.

Speaking of which; the head of NCASA has announced that if the second Energia rocket does its job as intended, the Shuttle-Mir program may be reopened.


(Also, in your planning, remember that you had promised to lend 3 work teams to the Fragment 3 destruction effort)
>>
>>3801779
Well, good thing I coincidentally left 3 work crews unused. LOL. I actually did not plan that.

So I'm not sure how Capstone research works, is it like a final research on something like a finished tech tree like Nuclear but it looks like 11/10 for research and give one final boon?
>>
>>3801802

The final step of a research tree generally gives an extra bonus. For example, wrapping up nuclear research just in time allowed Alkahest to work almost perfectly despite its last-minute troubles.
>>
>>3801812
Oh, so instead of a max team 4 crews, we can go for 5 crews and get a boon on top of that?
>>
I suppose we can scrub the network node and put the teams to something else or add them to current projects.

Anyone else here want to chime in?
>>
>>3801817

No, it just means that that research tree is done (or, as done as it can be without fundamental changes in things).

You can underman ANY project; it just gives them a chance of wasting your time and money, in return for a chance of getting stuff done on the cheap.

What you do not get, is knowing how much "small" or "medium" or "large" bonus means on dice rolls (Although I am pretty sure that a clever anon could do statistics on this quest and figure out by now).
>>
>>3801830
If I were to hazard a guess its 5,10,15,
with 10,20,30 for people who excel in certain projects like construction with Andrews.

Maybe some 7,12,16 or 2,5,7 for foreman doing something not exactly his specialty but still able to add a bonus to the work anyways.
>>
>>3801818

Black anon who wants to go for broke seems a bit shy about actually presenting a plan...

if the plan is good, please second it! I really would prefer to not move on without at least a second.

I don't have anywhere to be this weekend, so pink anon, if you have questions (fluff or crunch) in meantime, please ask away!
>>
What is the status of the Archive Project?

Do we have access to copies?
>>
>>3801845

Mr. Andrews has just finished setting up the whole thing! The initiative was announced by the Vatican at the end of the year, as part of their Jubilee plan for the year 2000. ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Jubilee )

The Ecumenical Council has thrown significant support behind the initiative, to the point that nearly all faiths in the EC have signed onto it. Part of the plan is to produce, by year's end, a synoptic unified religious text that can be used for reference and scholarly purposes, a sort of faith-based parallel to the Datalinks, except that edited entries to it would be vetted by religious scholars.

Ryan Andrews jokingly says that working closely with Pontifex Mathews has "converted" him from agnosticism to the sort of Deism practiced by the North American Founding Fathers, but that if he were to meet God, he'd still try to sell Him consulting services. Andrews is in good humor, has put on a few pounds -- as Americans often do when living in Rome for a while -- and is eager to begin monetizing the consumer end of the archive now that he's gotten a bit (or a lot) out of the producer end.

"Now, granted, this religious Datalinks idea - it amounts to open sourcing most of our work. I'm hoping to see some returns before it's ready to go."

He has little of interest to report to you, "unless you believe the rumors that the Ark of the Covenant is in a small church in Ethiopia - I thought that it was in a government warehouse somewhere?" but that will change as, now that the scanning infrastructure is in place, old artifacts are scanned and made ready for publication.

"I do have a bit of juicy gossip, Foreman, and just to show that working with the pious fathers has made me a changed man" he chuckles "I'll give you it for free: Mathews likely has plans to put Carpatescu in his place. Via agents, completely unlike someone I could mention, he's managed to take control of much Morale Monitor hiring and training, so effectively Carpatescu is paying for his own spy network. And he keeps going on about how during the Renaissance, spiritual power was preeminent over temporal power and both Europe and the Near East were better off for it." That Mathews is a Renaissance fanboy, you already knew.
>>
>>3801863
Guess that pushes up the timeline a bit.
>>
So no interesting treatises on Demonology or works from the Cathars and other Gnostic sects?

I'm not anticipating Iscariot XIII-style shenanigans, (we already have a nigh-immortal Irish operative) but surely there has to be _something_ of value in that library.

---

>>synoptic unified religious text

So the Ecumenical Council is pushing for the One World Religion? It's not a council of people who wear funny hats?
>>
>>3801882

They are attempting to agree on a set of truths that isn't too small, yes.

As far as demonology and angelology and so on, there's a lot of stuff available -- the scanning machines have been designed and built, the necessary feathers unruffled, and you can expect to start getting data now.

"I'm not going to nickel and dime you about it, Foreman -- heh, who am I kidding, of course I am going to -- but... there isn't that much of a market on the output end, you understand. Are you looking for anything specific?"

# Let him know about your theology experiments.

# Share Tsion's notes; he can make up his own theories on how you got them.

# Just keep it in the realm of academic curisoity for now.
>>
>>3801926
# Let him know about your theology experiments.
A sanitized version of course.
One will pique interest and maybe some support from the church, the other gets morale monitors on our ass, the last one is basically nothing, but some people may think we are lying so...
>>
>>3801882
>>3801934

You're not about to tell Andrews that you are currently illegally holding a dozen people a couple miles from where you're speaking, of course, but you do tell him about the Gap Generator experiments. He answers to you that it sounds like the Sourh Korean myth about leaving an electric fan on at night being lethal; it's obviously not true, but it does mean that over there you can buy fans with timers and crepuscular switches built in. Of course, that brings in commercial considerations, because you wouldn't sell a fan without those in that market, while a fan with those in other markets would waste you money on the extra components.

( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fan_death )

You challenge him to look up if any cases of "fan death" have been reported after the Event, which is just a matter of asking BOCHICA and waiting about half a minute for the result. To his surprise, and less so to yours, you find that there is a trickle of confirmed cases -- which wasn't a thing before 1995 -- and that the trend, although difficult to recognize due to the low number of instances, is definitely upwards.

"So you're saying that the Remnant are right, and the Event was the beginning of something, and not a non-repeating phenomenon? I thought that all the disasters were due to Akhenaten."

You point out Moira's escapade a few months ago. That leaves Andrews thinking. "So what do you want to do, Foreman?"

"Unleash the internet on this. We get grimoires, demonology texts, alchemy manuals -- the good stuff, not random things written by aging hippies -- out there. Even encourage people to experiment. Set up forums, create communities, maybe offer prizes. If it turns out that the number of people who die by drowning in their pool correlates with the number of movies Nic Cage is in, and I can prevent some deaths by offering Mr. Cage a theater job, I want to know about it. Wasn't there some foundation offfering a million old dollar prize for these things?"

Mr. Andrews does a bit of math. "You can't afford it."

"Well, no. But a few hundred to a few thousand Nicks, yes. The point is, I need a marketing expert."

Ryan notes that he's spent a few evenings discussing with Mathews and some of his cardinals how religion is the ultimate expression of brand loyalty. "But you need the opposite here, you want people to try to do science to the occult."

"Basically, yes. They'll write about it on the net, BOCHICA will collect the data and weed out the obvious cranks, and we can look for patterns."

"You want me to start peddling fortune-telling and occult books? I've worked hard to build a reputation, Foreman, I don't want to throw it away. It'd have to be worth my while."

# Essentially, yes. Wouldn't you want to be the next Steve Jobs?

# I want you to create the structure; people who are into this stuff will naturally move into it.

# Let's just get some interesting texts and artifacts. I'll pay for early access, of course.
>>
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>>3802033
>Fan death.
This is coming fro ma country that has riots were almost everybody has been conscripted and is a trained soldier and taught martial arts.

# I want you to create the structure; people who are into this stuff will naturally move into it.
One more thing. We have attractive gothy and nerdy girls help us market this stuff.
>>
>>3802033
>no need to harm your name. Create the stucture findsomeone under your employ that can do what you do and the people who are into this stuff with naturally move into it.


>>3801678
Lets delay it till after this asteroid. So next turn.

Ill support this but lets ise the last 3 teams. 1 on celsol making it 4 and 100% guarentee sucess and 2 on directed energy.

That way we use it all. I would write a new one with that.
>>
>>3802097
last 3 work crews have to go help with the rocket and nuke launch.
>>
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0gXXWtYcWPs

>>3802059
>>3802097


Ryan can think of one particular retail chain that would be an excellent vehicle for it; they are struggling with the shrinking of the teen market due to the Rapture gap, and could easily pivot to commoditized occult tchotchkes and services as their customer base ages out of the current product offerings.

"You know that if this does well, your buddy Tsion is going to have a field day with it. We're probably going to see Chick Tracts screaming against Ouija boards and D&D again."

"Buy the copyright and sell them the damn things by the shoebox, then!"

You both have a laugh about it. Hopefully this won't end with you hanging from Foucault's Pendulum in Paris while a bunch of rich idiots who think they're Knight Templars are trying to get you to tell them the secrets of telluric currents.

The near future is going to see a revival of goth occult culture, it looks like, sponsored by the evil one-world government (or a branch of it, anyway) to the tune of

# Ryan being unavailable, but still on retainer, for another 6 months

# 6BN right now

# 1BN a month for 12 months

as a way to prime the pump. The generous investment, of course, includes premium early access to the Ecumenical Council Datalinks, which Andrews assures you will have a less ambiguous and probably more pompous name before long.

You can still back off, of course, or do this later, in which case big tiddy goth GFs will have to wait some time before re-entering the popular unconscious after their early-90s peak.

>>3802097

(Please do if you want to write a new plan!)
>>
>>3802097
If you want, we can instead abandon the network node so all 3 research projects are at %100. I'm fine with that.

As for the CS Pylon did anyone want to stall that for a few more turns?
>>
>>3802097
>>3802106

Purchase Greenland Base

Foremam
Hire Haley Kipper if possible/Survey Canada for a surveyer?
Survey Germany for a Engineer. Meet Od Gustuve and talk about opening a factory there.

Have 4 Factories make 2 Drones.
+ Ryan

Do Theology Research
4 work crews + Dr. Roberson

Do CellSol Research
4 work crews + Aki

Do Defence Research
4 work crews + Aki

Covert teams works with Litwala, give him regular discount -1BN

Moira gets sent were she is needed.

3 work crews go help GC NASA.
>>
>>3802118

You don't need 4 crews for Theology research.
>>
>>3802122
Oh. Well take one off and make EarNommies then? We could use some to store in our investory or sell.
>>
>>3802118
We also only need 3 on defense to 100% it
>>
>>3801592


Purchase Greenland Base

Foreman
Hire Haley Kipper if possible/Survey Canada for a surveyer?
Survey Germany for a Engineer. Meet Od Gustuve and talk about opening a factory there.

Have 4 Factories make 2 Drones.

Do Theology Research
3 work crews + Dr. Roberson

Do CellSol Research
4 work crews + Aki

Do Defence Research
3 work crews + Aki

2 work crews work on augmentation with dr. Diamond

Covert teams works with Litwala, give him regular discount -1BN

Moira gets sent were she is needed with the covert teams..

3 work crews go help GC NASA.

>>3802106
Ryan being unavilable for 6 months and 1 bn to grease the wheels.
>>
>>3802142
Actually isn't one of our actions working on GCNASA

Change to

>>3801592


Purchase Greenland Base

Foreman
Survey Germany for a Engineer. Meet Od Gustuve and talk about opening a factory there.

Have 4 Factories make 2 Drones.

Do Theology Research
3 work crews + Dr. Roberson

Do CellSol Research
4 work crews + Aki

Do Defence Research
3 work crews + Aki

2 work crews work on augmentation with dr. Diamond

Covert teams works with Litwala, give him regular discount -1BN

Moira gets sent were she is needed with the covert teams..

3 work crews go help GC NASA with foreman.

>>3802106
Ryan being unavilable for 6 months and 1 bn to grease the wheels.
>>
>>3802142
Was just about to ask where you wanted to put the last two crews. I guess this works fine. Does Augs R&D only need 3 as well?

>>3802145
Not sure if it takes one of our actions, Sometimes we get some leeway in this.

Otherwise everything seems good.
>>
>>3802155

It does take up an action; you have to stay in New Babylon, probably deal with various grandees while you are there, and attend when Carpatescu or more likely Fortunato decide to hold court; it's a time sink.

However, you can back off, if you trust GCASA to not mess it up or bully your workers or take all the credit.
>>
>>3802155
I dont know about augs but its 1>2 and we have the Specialist on it so im not worried

>>3802161
What is the 1-5 tech complexities?
>>
>>3802161
Also what do we need to do to produce and aell the heart thinga to klaue
>>
>>3802180

After being shown the implant, he said that he's going to see if he can round up some customers. This sort of thing tends to take a while.

>>3802178

C2: Research 1-3 (Advances by 1)
C3: Research 4-6 (Advances by 1)
C4: Research 7-9 (Advances by 1)
C5: Research 10 (Capstone)
>>
>>3802184
So the 1-5 and 1-10 researches have the same complexity at the same numbers? Cool.
>>
>>3802197
>Basically, research trees must be unlocked (0 to 1), then have a basic branch (2 to 5) and two advanced branches, one of which must be chosen (6 to 9) and finally a capstone (9 to 10). Note that the Theology branch only goes up to 5; it's special, as each breakthrough must be unlocked.

Came across this last night.
>>
>>3802201
>>3802197

(I wasn't planning to do much with cybernetics or biotech in this game, since the time frame would not allow it, which is why the augmentation branch only has 5 slots. Part of the problem is that if I do 10, the advantages between tiers just aren't that great)
>>
That's weird. My computer clock was 3 nearly 3 hours behind...
>>
>>3802473
>>3802155

Huh thats strange. So are you confirming your vote for ?
>>3802145

I think that's what geist is waiting for
>>
>>3802533
>>3802473

Yeah, or if anyone has questions!
>>
Can I just say as a fairly drunk man, that I love all of you for providing some of the best entertainment this side of a live rave more or less nightly for weeks at a time? I'll alomst certainly say that I was hacked in a few hours but screw it, I'm currently full of love.

Also on a separate point, thanks OP for deciding to step out of anonymity all that time ago to do some quests. We owe our enjoyment to you and god knows it's been a fun time full of god busting and shit.

>>3802106
>big tiddy goth GFs will have to wait some time before re-entering the popular unconscious after their early-90s peak.
Big tiddy blonde christian GFs superior.
>>
>>3802533
Yes, either one. Just asking QM if we have two actions or one.
>>
>>3802546
Late 20's, early 30's, born again christian "virgins" looking to become a wife do not really count.
>>
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>>3802546
Skol~!

>>3802544
So, thanks to Ryan, we have basically started Myth Busters?

Possibly drowned people to sate the hunger of Nicholas Cage?
>>
>>3802544
Do we have two actions this turn or just one?

Also this is perfectly fine, incase its not clear I support. >>3802145
>>
>>3802554
Nah I'm thinking of a girl I knew in high school I've not seem in a year who fit that description but I entirely agree with what you've said. I would however add that the girl I'm thinking of is about as sexually-cognisant as a lamp post and about as caring of carnal relationships as a rock.
>>
>>3802552
>>3802557

You can make a last-minute excuse and get two actions, or go to New Babylon for a coupe weeks and make sure NCASA doesn't make a mess of things, and get one.

>>3802556

That or the CSICOP foundation, yes. (Or the SCP foundation if you like....)
>>
>>3802556

(I was literally going to use that picture for a scripted event in a couple ingame years, is that OK?)
>>
>>3802544
How do we/or staff handle towerkill?

Are we the Bane of birds and Ornithologist worldwide? Is there any crossovers between Remnants and Ornithology?
>>
>>3802561
>SCP foundation
Truly a shame what happened to that site.

>>3802556
DELETE THIS!!!
(picture)

>>3802559
Better snap her up quickly then. Time is on neither of you two's side.
>>
(Go right ahead, QM.)

Is NCASA based in New Babylon?
>>
>>3802573
Too late. We're already his.
>>
>>3802573
>Truly a shame what happened to that site.
It is the fate of all online communities that aren't 4chan. They inevitably self-police into hell and create a tumblir-esque atmosphere.

>Better snap her up quickly then. Time is on neither of you two's side.
Funny you mention that, I'm questioning sending her a message given my inebriation is granting me the sort of confidence needed to risk a friendship over the potential for a romance. Given I've been burned by this (as in asking a friend out) before and would prefer not to be again. On the other hand, I genuinely think she's one of the best people I've ever met, smarter than me and with a far stronger moral compass.

On the other hand, she's a pro-EU person and I'm about as staunchly pro-Brexit as they come. So our suitability politically is shit but given I'm a believer in 2nd amendment rights in the UK I'm fucking lonely as shit for romantic options.
>>
>>3802575

GCASA is based in New Babylon, in the sense that the offices are there, but they use the launch facilities in Baikonur and Cape Canaveral. Putting the office in the global capital was done as a compromise between the former American and Russian facilities leads.
>>
>>3802584
>>SCP

Complete agreement there. Love the concept. Despise the current culture.

---

I'm for going to New Babylon. It'll let us test Gap Generator on Carpatescu at the very least, yes?
>>
>>3802584

(If I can offer a tiny bit of IRL advice, with the understanding that I don't know your background... Do the thing, but do it tomorrow when you're sober. And get yourself off between now and then. Post-nut clarity is a thing regardless of what's between your legs).
>>
>>3802584
I think it was more of an infection than anything else. Also 4chan isn't immune, not when its public enemy #1 online, and there are efforts to subvert it and its mod staff.

>UK
>inb4 loicense
That's rough
Get a solid job that can support both of you
Maybe get a job in Canada or America
Move to US-Mex boarder
Experience diversity and break ins regularly
Then move to the midwest after
She'll probably be Pro-2nd and anti EU by then

Also don't listen to any of the advice I give in this post.

Perhaps you can get a job near where she is so you can bump into her from time to time.
>>
>>3802598
Agreed, testing the gap generator will let us understand if it's a perfect defence or only a partial mitigation of divine intervention.

I'm hopeful if we complete the energy research tree we can build city / large scale ones and can defend entire continents. That way when various events occur, after serious investment, humanity can just turtle up.
>>
>>3802603
Support.
+ 1
>>
>>3802598

Yes. At worst, he'll think it's a very, very tacky office decoration gift. He's pretty much figured out that he will have to suffer through some nerdery for a while, since they're good at blowing up asteroids.
>>
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>>3802605
Sounds good to me!

Maybe place them in satellites too, yes?

>>3802607

And here I thought Carpatescu was a closet Star Trek nerd.
>>
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>>3802607
I prefer geek.

I suppose we should grab a pack of these to share with our boss.
>>
>>3802603
>Do the thing, but do it tomorrow when you're sober.
Problem is when I'm sober, I'm scared of scaring her off by admitting that I love her sense of humour or the fact she laughs at my jokes or the fact that she is actually confident in a entirely disconnected / different belief system (utilitarian vs baptist-christian). That and the fact that I'm, by my own measure, not worth as much as a person as her.

>And get yourself off between now and then. Post-nut clarity is a thing regardless of what's between your legs).
I rarely feel that sort of need while drunk. If anything I need post-piss clarity.

>>3802604
>That's rough
You're telling me, I've been sweating over Brexit for 3 years.

>Also don't listen to any of the advice I give in this post.
Yeah, I got that the moment you mentioned moving to the US mex border, As a scot, that'd be literal death-by-sunlight for me.

>Perhaps you can get a job near where she is so you can bump into her from time to time.
Fuck knows that'd be hard, she's going to Uni and I'm still bumbling through life with as much of a long-term plan as a bee has a concept of quantum physics. I did a 2 year degree in networking and came away after 1 year. Now I'm doing a single year degree in engineering since I've got as much certainty in the future as a person thinking about the conceptual-theory of Schrodinger's cat.
>>
>>3802607
Comon Carpatescu join the nerds.
>>
>>3802629

(Me too, but it's 1999. Well, 2000 now.)

>>3802621


Considering printing one now...
>>3802557
>>3802145

(Okay, give me a minute!)
>>
>>3802633
Just ask her to hang out with you at a bar. She will get the hint.
>>
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>>3802607
Lets get him one that won't burn down his office as a fire hazard first though okay?

We should make one that looks like a plasma sphere
>>
>>3802636
I still ship carpastu and the forman. They wre perfect for eachother. The couple to defeat god.

I hope he isnt too upset when we pull the rug from under him.
>>
>>3802637
That'd work, except in the entire time I've known her she's turned down every god damn drip of alcohol that has so much as existed near her. It's not even a religious thing, she just doesn't like the experience or taste.

I did invite her round to mine once just to talk and I've regretted it since, as I've thought over every moment and statement with a critical eye looking for a hint or a subtle social nod that I missed to see if she secretly was interested in me but I know that such thoughts are the way of madness and I'll not damn myself to them.

Fuck sake why couldn't she be as easy as some girls. Why oh why must I think like this over her or anyone else. Why is humanity such a dysfunctional mess of emotions and worries when pleasure and satisfaction lie just the other side of a single decision, why do we stand tempted at the fray as it beckons until the opportunity slams shut and we are left to whine and moan about lost chances and missed loves.
>>
>>3802637
I'd go for a bar and grill with a friend so its not just you two, and there is some friends to help avoid awkward silences.

>>3802640
I cannot find my gay stalin and hitler comic strip
>>
Rolled 54, 43, 40, 86, 65, 37, 97 = 422 (7d100)

>>3802145

You're going to have to see if Dr. Robertson is comfortable with working with prisoners. He's a respectable scientist, and wouldn't do anything TO them, of course. As it is, they received good care for their injuries, including the guy who got shot in the shoulder.

Possibly-Ikko still won't say who she is; you ordered a DNA test, which will take a few weeks to happen. The prisoners are being quite docile, passive, even, but have relented from pretending to be sacks of potatoes once they realized that they'd be treated humanely. They seem to believe that they've been captured by Morale Monitors.

# Tell him that they are terrorists, exaggerating a little.

# Tell him that they were making fake IDs and stockpiling weapons, just the facts.

# Offer them freedom if they cooperate and pretend to be volunteers (You don't have to keep your word, but can if you want).

You book your flights, first Germany, then New Babylon -- you'll stay in contact with your aerospace engineers while in Europe, and come in when things are being finalized in case there are any holdups or hierarchy issues to smooth out.

Dr. Diamond is aware of the "mark of God" issue, and has asked Aki for ideas when she was in South America last month; she believes that she can develop something better than the makeup-plus-controlled-environment trick that Moira pulled on Mr. Tully. Essentially, it's a single-pixel LCD tattoo; the technology, called E-Ink, has been around for a couple of years, and is unique in that it needs little external power, and can be charged inductively by a standard Nomenklator headset, or even a pair of headphones. Since the implant is not very invasive, there is very little risk if the operation goes wrong, and it's good practice for heavier work.

# Authorize.

# Suggest more work on the secondary heart and pacemaker instead.

>>3802640

(You can try to give him the "We can rule the galaxy together". It almost worked for Darth Vader and Natalie Portman.)


>>3802657

(Because as much as it is a mess, it got us this far. You are the product of a billion years of evolution. You have a good brain in your skull; use it to your advantage and maximize your chances.)
>>
>>3802657
Alright I guess its something to think over while out on the porch or balcony.

Lets get back to overthrowing the antichrist or something.
>>
>>3802664

(That is good advice. I knew of a Hitler vs Stalin Magic Duel comic, but not a gay comic. Can't say I am surprised though)
>>
>>3802664
>I cannot find my gay stalin and hitler comic strip
You know, there are some phrases that humanity could never have predicted but we just have to enjoy when they come up. Also, releatedly, why do I think I know the comic you are talking about...

>>3802669
If I was about maximising my chances I'd ask my 3rd girlfriend out again and get laid without question seeing as she was possibly more in-need than I am in some ways.

I couldn't give a damn what evolution has prepared me for, I want my weird monkey brain has somehow developed an understanding of as the term love. I want to hold her close at night and do nothing but that yet I know that I'd do that to almost anyone since I'm a complete fuck-wit of a human. I don't know but what I do know as this conversation brings me closer to tears than some deaths so I am certainly fucked up in some capacity.


>>3802670
>Alright I guess its something to think over while out on the porch or balcony.
It's scotland, if I went outside to think it over for any period of time I'd end up with frostbite or a cold.

>Lets get back to overthrowing the antichrist or something.
I think it says something about me, that I have more confidence in military strategy and economic theory than I do in my own emotions or future. That I can more accurately lead an army than my own romance, that I can better guide a nation than my heart.
>>
Also sorry for dragging the (relatively) heavy real world shit into this thread, I would have thrown it into a discord or something but god knows they're all inactive at this time.

>>3802669
# Tell him that they were making fake IDs and stockpiling weapons, just the facts.
# Offer them freedom if they cooperate and pretend to be volunteers (You don't have to keep your word, but can if you want).

No reason we can't do both since their cooperation and his respect of them aren't exclusive.

# Suggest more work on the secondary heart and pacemaker instead.

As much as the E-ink is a interesting development, we have to invest in what we know works and god attack prevention is useful as shit. Especially when it is something we plan on selling to a bunch of rich fucks.
>>
>>3802681
# Tell him that they were making fake IDs and stockpiling weapons, just the facts.

#Authorize.

Thinking further down the line, maybe we can 'fake' the Mark of the Beast if it becomes an issue.

Optimist me says we'll own the economy before that happens.

Paranoid Rogue me says useful contingency.
>>
>>3802669
Fairly decent set of dice.
More Gap Generators.

# Tell him that they were making fake IDs and stockpiling weapons, just the facts.
Accuse them of being terrorists, or planning terrorist plots.

# Suggest more work on the secondary heart and pacemaker instead.
What about those screen films that you can't see from over the shoulder or from the side unless your looking directly at the screen?
>>
>>3802685
>Thinking further down the line, maybe we can 'fake' the Mark of the Beast if it becomes an issue.
Almost certainly, hell we might even avoid that part of the narrative given we could control the economy and not prevent Christians taking part.

>Optimist me says we'll own the economy before that happens.
Christ we better hope so, that or we will have died.

>Paranoid Rogue me says useful contingency.
Agreed. Although if we're thinking of useful contingencies at this point we're probably screwed.
>>
Also mixing Coffee liqueur, vodka and orangeade into a pseduo-cocktail is a shit idea, it tastes like something you might use to clean wounds and actually burns wounds in a very similar feeling to disinfecting alcohol.
>>
>>3802681
I recall see it somewhere years ago.
Basically, it has hilter calling stalin, and blah blah, and stalins all like not interested in you anymore, so hilter says "hes over there with you in bed isn't he?" or something and it shows marx or lenin or someone with stalin. then it has hitler shouting over the phone about we picked thoese sheets out together or something. then in the final comic panel it shows hilter invading russia.
>>
>>3802733
Yeah no I don't know this, that or I'm far more drunk than I thought. Given I literally danced with my cousins and drank about 7 rounds of V&C's that is a possibility. They were however 3.50, quite weak (in my brother's opinion) and mostly consumed after a fine meal of mostly meat and pastry including HAGGIS BONBONS which are the best food in the world.
>>
>>3802669
Don't let me distract you.
Took me forever to find this because I remembered the wrong title. think you may like it. pt1
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=StqZI9pMq0U
brought a tear to my eye.
>>
>>3802743
This tempts me to just send her a link to

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xat1GVnl8-k

Since I have the mental capacity of someone 2/3rds of my age currently and consistently have a pretty childish sense of humour (read: wide sense of humour).
>>
>>3802748
Well you just need to force yourself to interact with more people your age to adopt their mannerism and stuff in a more professional or public setting.

It worked for me until I stopped going outside.
>>
>>3802748
Didn't I post that same video last thread?
>>
>>3802684

It's all good :) Anyway, when I said maximizing your chances, I didn't mean maximizing your chances of getting laid, I meant maximizing your chances of getting where you want to be. That's the difference between you and a non-ape monkey, you can grok delayed gratification and act on it.

>>3802684
>>3802685
>>3802689


Dr. Robertson is Canadian, and takes the "stockpiling weapons" part more seriously than a Midwestern American might. You don't go as far as calling them terrorists, but he agrees that the sort of experiment he has in mind wouldn't be unethical. "After all, I'm going to want them to pray; they're likely to do that with or without my involvement."

You notice that Dr. Robertson has lost a few pounds -- then again, he overindulged both in New Babylon and Russia, so that's probably just him getting back into shape. Given what happened with Santiago at the time, it's a hint that his mind was not messed with to a significant degree.

For this month, most of your warehouse is turned over to the research team; you aren't embarking in any significant construction projects, and the CellSol work is mostly software, so it's not a big issue. A few more Gap Generators are built and tuned, letting you take the prototype with you.

Robertson's status report is encouraging. "It's great, we tried to use the remnant prisoners for menial labor, but they refused. Then we asked them to pray for this or that outcome when it comes to experiments, and they refused as soon as they understood that we were recording the result. Now all they do is pray for our plans to fail... which is nice and consistent, so it worked out pretty well for us. We occasionally beg them to stop if we feel they're slacking off, and send any of ours who wants to cuss up a storm about experimental failures in the covered 'courtyard' next to the cells, so that they can hear it and think they're doing a good job. Like I said: It's great!"
>>
>>3802764
Oh Christ no, I get told I am very mature or intelligent 99% (to a point a fellow student on my college course asked me why I was there recently) of the time because my elocution and conversation is mostly high brow since I only let my guard down around those I know. Then it descends into politics, inappropriate memes and a lot of swearing since I am a firm believer of unfiltered speech and find most people respond to those words most effectively as emphasis of speech. Fact is I can very successfully pretend to be some oxford educated, milquetoast pratt with a sense of humour based around puns, rule-of-3 and word-play because that is how I am when I don't particularly know someone.

>>3802771
...Hell if I know but I only selected that one since the AMV I more closely associate with the song wasn't in the first 20 videos and like hell I was going to search for it.
>>
>>3802776

The next status report is more circumspect. "Got one Remnant to collaborate in return for a chance to preach, we did double-slit experiments, multipled up, to 16 slits. Results vary wildly depending on faith of person performing the experiment, presence and distance of Gap Generator, and when last subject had an argument with a skeptic. We also had them do spectral analysis on some vials of Fragment 1 hematite. The stuff seems to oscillate between hematite-plus-organic-compounds and hemoglobin on spectroscopy analysis, depending on whether Remnant test subject or control subject operates the instrument. Once observed, samples stabilize one way or the other, and stay stable upon centrifugal analysis to confirm spectrography results. Mass remains the same, chemical composition changes. We have observed, in the lab, a popular misconception about Shroedinger's Cat and quantistic observer effects. On the debt side, some of your workers called me a charlatan, and turned in their badges. One has succumbed to the preaching, and is now in Mr. Vajpayee's office. I admit that I am not being as rigorous as I want, but I am being as rigorous as I practically can."

The final status report is somber. "We have managed to widen the band of the Gap Generators, so that they can be pre-tuned to reasonable effectiveness. What worries me is the system may have some side effect; one of my students had to be hospitalized for radiation sickness, except, no radiation. He'll be fine, but I think we've done what we can for now. I have not, for obvious reasons, used the sword in its intended capacity, but I can confirm that it more or less acts as a Gap Generator, only better, and without requiring power. Side effects on Remnant subjects remain circumscribed to the two oldest subject accusing mild headaches near a Gap Generator; I had the device moved to the other side of the container plating, to ensure that the effect was not psychosomatic, and the headaches decreased in intensity but remained. You asked me to check on the effects of iron; I was unable to measure any."

Dr. Robertson notes that whatever is going on here may be bigger than his understanding and, in fact, any single person's. "What will our society turn into if physics becomes merely a suggestion? Decent people shouldn't think too much about that."

>>3802771

Heh, appropriate for this setting....

>>3802748

You know why people advise "be yourself"? It's not because doing so has magical properties, it's because pretending to be someone else is exhausting and quickly saps you of any enjoyment you might have drawn from whatever caused you to start pretending.
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>>3802685
>>3802689
>>3802684

Dr. Diamond figures that the best way for herself to familiarize with the secondary-heart technology is to try and improve on it; while it would have been convenient to use the captive Remnant cell to test a fake sign of God, it's an opportunity that is likely to resurface. She's a classically trained physician, and she's more interested in preventing harm than building a performance enhancer. Medically-induced coma is standard lifesaving procedure for trauma patients, so she decides to add a "reverse gear" of sorts to the existing design. In addition to preventing unconsciosness, the system will be able to cause it, in addition stopping the heart if a loss of blood pressure is detected in order to prevent bleedout. In this mode, the secondary heart will occasionally be run backward, forcing blood through the veins before the arteries, just enough to prevent clotting and allowing residual oxygen in venous blood to be absorbed by the tissues.

It's kind of creepy, really; in this mode, severe wounds seep blood rather than spurting it, and the hypo-oxygenated blood turns a deep blackish red due to some amount of carbon monoxide buildup due to incomplete carbon dioxide catabolysm.

"On the other hand, assuming that you are dragged away from whatever made a hole in you in the first place, it makes the difference between dying of exsanguination or being crippled for life, and having the worst hangover of the rest of your otherwise healthy life."

Effectively, a gravely wounded agent with this augmentation will have about half an hour, rather than a few minutes, in which to be rescued; on the battlefield, it can make a huge difference. In theory, adding a timer to this would allow the agent to convincingly "play dead" in 20 minute intervals for up to 6 hours at a time; Dr. Diamond however recommends against it.

After experimenting on frogs, dogs, and cows, she is now confident that she can perform the procedure on others; Moira's system can be brought up to the new standard as an outpatient procedure, since it only requires a change of firmware and a small modification to the neural pacemaker. "When it comes to the heart pump itself, I would prefer to stick close to the Jarvik design, since it's FDA approved and known to work reliably", Dr. Diamond notes.
>>
>>3802782

Can he determine if it is a result of the sword's meteoric properties?

Could be the force of will behind it too? Kinda sounding a lot like Dragonslayer from Berserk.
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>>3802807

"I'd have to melt it down. The only thing I can tell is that other than the leather for the grip, the sword does not emit radiation - the entire thing seems to be made exclusively of base isotopes. That is, at the very least, exceedingly unlikely."

He does note that you asked about this about a year ago; since then, one of his students has crafted a replica, as precise as could be managed, including using meteoric iron found in Greenland. The replica, however, has no particular properties.

"In fact we've been able to tell them apart by holding a Geiger counter up to them and seeing if the needle drops below background radiation."
>>
>>3802776
I know what you meant OP but I still felt like clarifying. I mean, I've known her for 7 odd years at this point and since the beginning I've been aware that she doesn't particularly have the mind of lewd thoughts that most people her / my age do (she once said to a friend something along the line of lets party like a bunch of either hippies or lesbians, I can barely remember which, before realising what she said and acting embarrassed, to say such incidents were common is inaccurate. To say you could've literally made a pass at here without any recognition is entirely plausible) so I long ago accepted that if I did ever actually get into a relationship with her that traditional concepts, sex and children, were probably out the window or at least something to discuss rather than assume.

I don't know, I've got these sorts of feelings for a fair few people it feels like sometimes but I always come back to a core 3 or 4 people since Scotland's population rarely supports my interests.


>>3802782
I suppose but personally I hate myself. I think I'm a man with relatively little moral fortitude and a high impersonal-ism when it comes to supposedly emotional events. I reacted to my grandmothers death with a moment's anguish and that was it, half-a-decade earlier or so, my grandfather's death saw me literally crying on the floor of a relative's kitchen for minutes and essentially unable to feel happy for a week. It was the breaking point of my faith in god, since I would frequently kneel in my house's hall or by my bed and pray for a sign from god my grandfather was there.
>>
The prisoners aren't allowed to use the internet, obviously, but they did request an offline snapshot of Tsion's website.

# Allow.

# Deny.

The website itself is being updated regularly, although there was only one brief post by Ikko, stating that she is doing well and God has impressed upon her that she will have a healthy baby boy.

The pregnant woman who you have in your custody seems reasonably computer literate, but you still don't know if she is Ikko or not; Dr. Robertson has no real way to find out

# but you ask him to try anyway.

# and he's busy with his battery of tests.
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>>3802819
>"In fact we've been able to tell them apart by holding a Geiger counter up to them and seeing if the needle drops below background radiation."
One of the noteworthy properties from last quest was that godly material wasn't radioactive in the slightest if I'm not mistaken. In theory, could it be Pratchett's sword was made by literal faith or by some scriptural event.

There are songs about swords, is it possible that faith-singing can effect the crafting of metal? Could we forge the Arizona sword of Nature's laws?
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>>3802832
# Allow.
# but you ask him to try anyway.

I mean, we could literally just say we're willing to let them go with 1/2 of a Bn dollars for the location of miss Ikko or actionable data.
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>>3802782
>pretending to be someone else is exhausting and quickly saps you of any enjoyment
This is true. You can only work as Disneyland for so long before it hurts to smile.
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>>3802838
True but when 99% of your friends are probably closer to Tumblr than they are to you, you quickly learn to smile as a default and everything else is a fiction.

I mean shit, the man who was closest to me politically was a jew. If /pol/ read that sentence they'd go insane. The woman I felt closest to emotionally / the greatest kinship wtih? A god damn 5-foot nothing lesbian from Edinburgh that flipped between a adult sense of humour and a childish understanding of the world with the sorts of speed that would make you believe the light barrier was a myth.
>>
#Deny

#He's busy

---

Interesting. Wonder if the principle applies to other swords created with intense focus and dedication i.e. a Katana traditionally forged by a Japanese sword smith.
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>>3802844
>Interesting. Wonder if the principle applies to other swords created with intense focus and dedication i.e. a Katana traditionally forged by a Japanese sword smith.
Easiest method to test this would be to get a bunch of pagan followers together and have them pray as we forge a thing. It could be a hammer of Thor or a spear of Odin. A dagger of Anubis or a bow of that one bitch who's name skips my mind.

Alternatively, we need a bunch of native americans and I can forge you a semi-intelligent native american magic imbued sword that triumphs for freedom and natural order.
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>>3802843
Also I feel I should clarify for this post regarding the first person I mentioned, I have no issue with his religion. It's just that that is a remarkable feature as far as some parts of 4chan would be concerned and that we were a political stand-alone from a fair few of our friends.
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>>3802853

Artemis, Greek Goddess of the Hunt?

I mean, sure, we can get a bunch of Pagan nerds I suppose. I'd rather go for the authentic source, though. None of that hippy stuff.

Then again, probably shouldn't argue. Magic God Slaying Sword forged by Fantasy Author.

I don't think First Nation groups utilized swords, aside from the obsidian studded clubs utilized by Mesoamerican groups?

Definitely wreck a demon horseman's day with one of those.
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>>3802832
# Deny.
Maybe give her a few days old snapshot of it. Or one from the day of her attempting to send the deadswitch file, but before the time she actually sent it.
# and he's busy with his battery of tests.

>>3802843
>True but when 99% of your friends are probably closer to Tumblr
Oh Jebus! Not even a remotely good thing anymore since tumblr banned porn/adult content.

>>3802853
We need to get some Russian orthodox priests to bless our guns and well, everything!
https://imgur.com/gallery/qYMFR6W
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>>3802871
>Artemis
Close enough.

>I mean, sure, we can get a bunch of Pagan nerds I suppose. I'd rather go for the authentic source, though. None of that hippy stuff.
Kek, like hell you will find actual pagans these days, although given drug legalisation, it's entirely possible spirit journeys and shit are back in fashion in certain religions.

>I don't think First Nation groups utilized swords, aside from the obsidian studded clubs utilized by Mesoamerican groups?
Entirely fair (although given there was one or two cultures with copper, they might have had one or two) but I raise you a belter of a song that'd like to disagree:
https://lesliefish.bandcamp.com/track/the-arizona-sword

>Definitely wreck a demon horseman's day with one of those.
I'd damn hope that one of Avalon's miracles would stop them in their tracks.
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>>3802871
Macuahuitl?
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>>3802877
Nah old tumblr I mean: a bisexual chick I'd known since primary school who was a absolute laugh, even if we did fall out for awhile over some dumb political shit she'd misunderstood, who ended up dating my best mate (in highschool); a trans-gender ftm with a body that hurts to imagine being changed and a masochistic streak, somewhat split personality, you get the jist, good guy though, solid lad for a convo about bullshit and lord knows he was a laugh; a wee chick who dated the previous who looked 12 for the entire time I knew her but I swear was basically a 20 year old in that body with 4chan's sense of humour but a childish innocence at the same time (I have tonnes of adorable stories with her); a girl I dated who was a feminist to the 5th degree, did shit like women's self defence courses and such. Christ knows I'm discounting about half a dozen others but they weren't such personalities so I see no reason to count them.

>We need to get some Russian orthodox priests to bless our guns and well, everything!
Christ, we should see about getting them to bless our rockets. I did consider we should get priests to pray over the redirection of the meterors, the few meters per second of delta-v they might generate could save humanity....
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>>3802882
That's the one~!

>>3802880
You still got folk religions practiced in Eastern Europe and Scandinavia. The Sami in Finland for example.

On a somewhat related note, I recently came across this guy called Roman von Ungern-Sternberg. Crazy Russian bastard who waged terror in Mongolia and Siberia around WWI. Had the Mongols convinced he was an avatar of a Tibetan Buddhist war deity or something.
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>>3802907
>Christ, we should see about getting them to bless our rockets.
5th picture from the top buddy.
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>>3802916
>You still got folk religions practiced in Eastern Europe and Scandinavia. The Sami in Finland for example.
True but not in the numbers needed to create a truly powerful magical artefact I imagine. We'd need a few hundred fervent believers before it would realistically make the weapon special. It's a damn shame we don't know how Pratchett made it so powerful as to literally nullify god...unless it's drawing on his fame or something as a basis for it's strength: the materialisation of his words and thus his worlds as a concept imbued into the sword to create a deification to counter anything else.

>Tibetan Buddhist war deity
Which reminds me, in this world where faith actually has a basis, are Buddhist children maturing faster than others or seemingly faster learning? This could indicate that their basis for reincarnation is actually working and rather interestingly would suggest that shit like Chinese ancestor worship or druid nature-worship might have a basis beyond the effects of direct-narrative effect like prayer.
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>>3802927
>5th picture from the top buddy.
That implies I followed your link! Seriously though, I know what you were linking to from my own knowledge of them, the Orthodox are firm believers in the materialisation of faith into the world through blessings which they've applied from everything from AKM (and other more modern models) to rockets. Not to mention the Ukrainian combat priests that they deployed during those protests a couple years back. Fuckers were absolutely mad during their attempt to oust a corrupt government but the world could use more of their like.
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>>3802928
I'm quite curious how Eastern religions such as Buddhism, Taoism, and Hinduism would fare in this type of world.

Since they originate outside the Biblical ranges of the bible and are also fundamentally different from the Abrahamic religions (seeing time as cyclical, Buddhism's irreverence towards deities, etc.)

Hmmmmm.... I wonder what would happen if this event happened after the rise of Islamic fundamentalism from the War on Terror. Would Tsion Ben Judah's prophecies be dueling with those of the Wahabis awaiting the arrival of the Madhi, the Islamic messiah? Would we have to contend with a literal mile long jackass (or something similar - Islamic End Times are weird, even by Biblical Literalist standards .__.)
>>
Also I learned new things about Orthodox Christianity. Awesome~!
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>>3802980
>Islamic End Times are weird, even by Biblical Literalist standards
I'm quite aware. Isn't there a specific passage calling for them having to fight the Roman legions or some such shit? It's the sort of stuff one would compose if you were a literal peasant living in a desert who decided to pretend to be hearing god rather than something a actual all-seeing all-knowing god might grant his followers knowledge of.
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>>3802928
I'm thinking we shave off tiny bits of mental from the sword, either from the handle or from the blade to sharpen it, test the shavings, then melt it into something like a ball bearing (musketball?) then test it again.

>>3802980
>>3788939
>Vajpayee (a devout Hindu who makes a point of performing aarti to Shiva at least once a month) can't make heads or tails of the whole Sign of God thing, and ends up disciplining an employee whose answer to that is "That's because my God is real and yours is a figment of the imagination".
Something like this I imagine.
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>>3802991

Probably?

I remember there was a giant beast that goes about stamping people's heads with the Staff of Moses or the Seal of Solomon at one point.

Middle East must have some powerful hallucinogenics.
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>>3802987
>I learned new things about Orthodox Christianity.
What specifically did you not know because I might have example material or something similarly interesting to gift you...

>Awesome~!
They are basically the best branch of Christians: semi-decentralised meaning you avoid the issue of the Catholics; maintain a central power structure in the form of the church elders / patriarchs to prevent concept drift; believe in faith as a material rather ephemeral concept meaning it can be imbued into life and substance beyond the concept of holy water.

>>3802997
I'd rather not mess with the sword in the slightest seeing as we don't know whats the cause of the anti-narrative effect. What if the cause is a specific ratio of number encoded into the ratio of sword shape to pommel shape? What if it's a matter of it's mass and it's gravitational field? What if it's literally nothing more than light reflecting off it in a certain pattern creating a symbiotic feedback similar to our generators?

>Something like this I imagine.
Yeah but that's something that the narrative specifically prevents him from understanding seeing as he isn't supposed to see the sign of god as he is a non-believer, not even a heretic.

>>3803000
I have to presume so, that or there is something weird. I mean the region hasn't had a stable nation-state since the Persians / Egyptians (unless you count the Ottomans and Mamluks but they the exception rather than the rule and still had major revolts, rebellions, uprisings and civil wars of other sorts) which just strikes me as statistically improbable if not statistically impossible.
>>
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6D3CRQopP3Q

I can only imagine Rebohoth in the position of this dictator and that is an amazing result of this quest.
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>>3802991
We'll I'm told that we have to try and understand it from their lens and point of view. They would not have anything but their experiences and knowledge of their times and their words and their comparisons for what they would see visions of the future.

I mean, if you saw European soldiers back then and tried showing it to some guy in the desert over a 1000 years ago, how would he describe a modern soldier today in the middle east from America?

>Rev 9:7-And the shapes of the locusts were like unto horses prepared unto battle; and on their heads were as it were crowns like gold, and their faces were as the faces of men.

>Rev 9:8-And they had hair as the hair of women, and their teeth were as the teeth of lions.

>Rev 9:9-And they had breastplates, as it were breastplates of iron; and the sound of their wings was as the sound of chariots of many horses running to battle.

>Rev 9:10-And they had tails like unto scorpions, and there were stings in their tails: And their power was to hurt men five months.

Sounds like an attack helicopter no?

>>3803015
Well then simple touching or using it would be enough to offset the delicate balance rendering it useless, wouldn't it?
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>>3803015
The whole thing about Orthodox blessing rockets and the combat priests. My knowledge of the Orthodox church is admittedly limited. My region is predominately Catholic and Southern Baptist.

>>3803033
There are actually a lot of interpretations that involve the locusts being helicopters. I've seen a lot of people freaking out about 'black helicopters', back when I foolishly tried to argue with crazy people online.


The Histori c argument links the locusts with the Scythians and other Central Asian horse peo, since they were into launching raids into Palestine.

I think the Scythian people were also matriarchal, yes? Might explain the whole 'women's hair' bit.
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>>3803047
I think it would be cool if attack helicopters played a role.

>I've seen a lot of people freaking out about 'black helicopters'
Show them a white helicopter and see if that changes their mind, if they do call them racist :p

But seriously, I think that it was partly due to various shady things that happened during the time with government abuse and overreach that lead into some conspiracy stuff from people associating a whole plethora of things that overlap with anti gov sentiments and religious scripture.
Brb I gotta go watch some Alex Jones & Infowars.
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>>3803033
>We'll I'm told that we have to try and understand it from their lens and point of view
Then what is the point of having predictive writings? At that point why didn't the oracle of Delphi just tell people "beware the shifty bastard, he's a fuckin shifty bastard" or something since in context from their point of view it's a clear instruction.

>I mean, if you saw European soldiers back then and tried showing it to some guy in the desert over a 1000 years ago, how would he describe a modern soldier today in the middle east from America?
Seeing as 1000 years ago is 1019:

"A man clothed in a gambeson of alchemical fabrics designed solely to counter the fire of his fellow's weapon, a bow-of-sorts that launches a bolt of metal forth with a burst of smoke, fire and ashy discharge unto a target with such speed as to arrive before it may be heard in some cases, is one of a few dozen in his formation. Their minuscule number is no weakness as their weapons are common, their armour rare yet effective and their allies even rarer.

A menagerie of creatures forged in iron by a dozen-dozen blacksmiths and carried in great ships across oceans, they are like carts made entirely of iron that little but a lance of fire the weight of a child can hurt yet move across the field of battle at the speed of a horse with a large bow-launcher that propels a charge from itself that on arrival may do anything from ignite fires to, as is far more common, explode in a radiance of metal and energy like that of a dozen-dozen hammer blows or carry a number of men in gear-of-war to the fray without risk or effort like horses on march.

This is the least impressive of their allies compared to some, such as a boat that glides through the air on the rotation of windmill-like blades in a circle above it, bearing death on all below from a dozen shots beneath it's stubby arms that fly forth in a jet of fire to delivery the same. These strange beasts may be called from their cages many miles away by talking to a box of copper and iron arranged in such a way as to radiate a energy unto the world that other mechanisms might interpret for their bearers to understand as words and sounds, that they can order the machines to march to battle or return to rest."

>Sounds like an attack helicopter no?
Not really since I've never heard of a attack helicopter that hurts for five months: generally you've either recovered or died long before that point. Also the concept of hair, as the hair of women, doesn't fill me with confidence we're talking about a death machine here.
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>>3803058

XD

Yeah. I remember it being big around Katrina. There was a lot of paranoia about FEMA camps. Surprising, considering Bush Jr. was President.

>>3803071
I feel if I was tripping balls on mushrooms, I would probably see a helicopter as some sort of monstrosity from the Pits of Chaos.

I doubt it's helicopters, myself. My hunch is extraterrestrial thread.

Doesn't mean we can't use helicopters to fight the locusts,
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>>3803047
>Orthodox blessing rockets
As it turns out, when you are a fairly religious and conservative country, it's a real comfort to a lot of people to have a member of the majority religion praise a rocket before the launch.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rUkyGFNxcG0

>combat priests
The Euro-maidan (also known as the Clanken-ing on /k/ or something similar to my memory) protests in the Ukraine over their corrupt government being in league with the Russians to destroy their nation / for their own benefit saw the destruction and recreation of the Ukrainian government.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fvoya0Tm0bA

There's tonnes of videos of priests blessing different sides of the social-conflict and also video like this of them just intervening to try and keep shit calm.

It's one of the best examples of how civil disobedience can actually enforce government change. Admittedly, the Ukies are far more professional than even the Irish when it comes to their protests seeing as they organised the creation of riot shields, weapons, barricades, medical centres and even impromptu organisational structures to ensure their success.

Meanwhile protests here in the UK couldn't be less organised if you got a bunch of anarchists to do it.
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>>3803098
>I feel if I was tripping balls on mushrooms, I would probably see a helicopter as some sort of monstrosity from the Pits of Chaos.
I'd just think of it as a really fuck-off huge dragonfly. They can both hover in mid-air, they both have seemingly near-invisible wings and they both seem to jerk about a bit at random.
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>>3803071
They probably thought that describing them as closer parallels to what they know would make it seem too much like the thing they are comparing it to, rather than what they are trying to describe. A bow looks nothing like a machinegun.

I don't think they were shown how they were made and what they were made of, just that they will exist, and even if the visions went about showing literally the objects made from start to finish, would they know how to discribe it from purely sight and sound in a vision?

I doubt language and writing was all the developed back then either. Even today with most people being literate and able to read and write, we still mess up a lot of our writing, find ourselves at a loss for words or proper nouns. Not to mention the bible has many translations and probably many more things lost in translation.

Anyways, I'm not a theologist, but know a guy who studied theology back when I played starcraft.......
>>
>>3803109


What's silly is some of the crazy stuff is taking literally. Locusts with scorpion tales? Demons riding lion horses? That stuff is real.

A giant woman atop a seven-headed horned beast, getting drunk off the blood of the saints? That's too crazy, even for Tim Lahaye. No, clearly that has to be the Roman Catholic Church, the Federal Reserve, etc.

Hmmmm...

How would CATS stop a literal Whore of Babylon?
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>>3803113
>They probably thought that describing them as closer parallels to what they know would make it seem too much like the thing they are comparing it to, rather than what they are trying to describe. A bow looks nothing like a machinegun.
Mate it's 7 AM, I'm fairly drunk and I don't have god to guide me in describing the description of a M16A2, semi-automatic full length rifle so I'd expect some very awake, gods-I-hope very sober and god-assisted middle eastern lads to come up with a better description. Especially given I could if I'd actually felt like writing a bit more since I already felt I was taking a admittedly throw away point by OP a bit too far as a conversation point.

>would they know how to discribe it from purely sight and sound in a vision?
Most people would understand the concept of casting metal and that'd cover at the very least the basics of most of what they'd see. It's part of the reason why I described the concept of a kevlar vest as an alchemical gambeson: it's the closest equivalent they'd reasonably understand.

>I doubt language and writing was all the developed back then either
Oh trust me, language has always developed quickly because it was something done by the rich and powerful to either communicate over long distances, long time or record accurately which all require a decent level of detail.

It gets even more complicated because often these rulers were illiterate and relied on their literate writer-scribes to read their messages or records to them which meant that a scribe might write a message onto the message basically saying "okay my king didn't say it but could you really emphasise the second paragraph? Thanks a tonne, see you next year a scribe-con I'll bring the papyrus" or "hey, king to b12, are you free next Tuesday" since no one but them would actually see it.

Hellfire we have surviving clay tablets from the Babylonians or some shit that are specific details of a guy being a shitty dealer of shitty goods? You know why? Because the guy kept every single god damn tablet people sent to him saying "hey that iron you sent me was terrible" or "the pottery cracked the moment it arrived" as if it was a source of pride.

The only thing I agree with you on is the translation point seeing as they found an old version of the Quran at some point where it doesn't have the 72 virgins line supposedly. If that shit can happen, anything can when it comes to translation.
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>>3803098
It was before that too if not even greater, keep in mind the militia movement was probably at its peak in the early to mid 90s..... certain actions and events happened before Bush that caused heavy backlash and surges in anger and stuff I don't want to say anything too "interesting" less Federal agents show up in another quest and he was partly elected because he seemed like he was a candidate that would return honestly, integrity, and christian values to the white house after Clinton era of scandals and attempts to impeach him. Plus people like how he seemed like a "bro you can have a beer with".

Thing actually cooled down with Bush for a little bit. At least on the right, but on the left, there was a growing surge in anti war, and anti conservative sentiments, and rising anti war activists during the Iraq and Afghan invasions and wars.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C8kZ3HfeqtA

>>3803101
Ukraine was as mess of various interest, either way it was still replaced by either less or more corrupt individuals. Corruption is likely going to be a staple of governments like Ukraine for a very long time. Its more of a matter of who's corrupt stooge or ally sits in the presidents chair more than anything else. If its western "friendly" then its corrupt to the Russia perspective, and globalists took over, if its Eastern friendly, then its corrupt oligarchs took over from a American perspective, and etc.

Meanwhile, the Ukrainians get shafted either way. I suppose we can always cheer for the people and hope for the best....

>Clanken-ing
Tanks are still 30 minutes out Komrade!

>>3803121
>How would CATS stop a literal Whore of Babylon?
Robo-waifus, or catnip?

>>3803126
I don't mind, it entertaining and kills time till QM comes back and make the next post.

Fair points.
>>
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7eTuFAR169s

Yet more material for that Ukrainian series of protests. This one is rather interesting since they actually meet with a bunch of rather influential people. Plus the guy just after the piano player is a fucking lad and a half given what he's doing for his mate's sake.

>>3803144
>"bro you can have a beer with".
He was one of your most personable presidents given Obama is a bit too camp-counsellor for my tastes and I'm too young to really remember the rest.

>Corruption is likely going to be a staple of governments like Ukraine for a very long time
At least this time it's internal corruption rather than foreign corruption. Who cares about tax dollars compared to sovereignty? One has a cash value literally, the other is irreproachably priceless.

>Tanks are still 30 minutes out Komrade!
I've got all the dumb images /k/ made from the "keep calm and clank on" to the "Euro-maidan protest RPG character selection" memes.

>I don't mind, it entertaining and kills time till QM comes back and make the next post.
Good point.

>Fair points.
I've heard a fair bit about writing over the years. A important thing to remember about our ancestors is that they are just as smart, creative and dedicated as we are if not more so in many cases. They were limited by their material existence rather than their mental capacity, just as so many of us are.
>>
Speaking of the Ukire situation, the fight with the ruskies is interesting as this video discusses:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wMMXuKB0BoY

The first guy they talk to in the field with the bandanna is so normal in what he wants, sounds like a american revolutionary stereotype rather than a modern revolutionary or such. Also there is something really interesting about a nation having a politically motivated citizens militia like this and a professional standing force, it seems like a really good idea to enforce the balance of power but I honestly can only see it ending in revolution or authoritarianism.
>>
>>3803154
>I'm too young to really remember the rest.
Same here, most of this is me learning of it after the fact, and reviewing what has happened. We get the advantage of hindsight that others at the time did not.

>At least this time it's internal corruption rather than foreign corruption
Debatable. From a individualist or nationalist Ukraine perspective that is a bit of a pessimist consolation prize.
>>
Also I'm kinda regretting the decision we made with where we were going to launch our pusher sat, seeing as part of me thinks the only risk might actually be Frag-3 (in terms of the whole poisoning the oceans thing) and doesn't want to waste anything on Frag-4 given it's not as dangerous so long as it doesn't hit a urban area.

>>3803291
>Same here, most of this is me learning of it after the fact, and reviewing what has happened. We get the advantage of hindsight that others at the time did not.
True.

>Debatable. From a individualist or nationalist Ukraine perspective that is a bit of a pessimist consolation prize.
Yeah but it's better that your leaders are merely stealing from you rather than actively working against your interests. I'd rather trust a man who I know is cheating me every time I buy bread from him than have to deal with the guy that will poison my bread if he gets told to by someone else.

I can deal with one guy, I can't exactly go and kill the other. Just as the Ukires will deal with the people short-changing them for personal gain far easier than those with the backing of a foreign government since all the money in the world rarely buys a military like Russia's.
>>
>>3802834
>>3802877

That's an interesting thing to try - you do know that there are a number of Asatru practictioners in Scandinavia and Ireland who have taken up traditional smithing. Of course, you'd want rifles, instead of swords, but.... baby steps.

The Remnant prisoners are elated at being allowed to read Tsion's website, even a very old version (you give them the snapshot that your operator took when updating the canary text); in fact, they were exhibiting psychological addiction and withdrawal symptoms with regards to it.

A few wish they could post warning others about the red-headed woman.

>>3802843

Living with a group of lesbians was an experience I'm glad I had. Not one I will repeat, but an experience nevertheless.

>>3802907
>>3802927

That is definitely a thing Pontifex Mathews can be asked to do -- send an Orthodox priest, or an imam, or anything but a Remnant pastor or an Orthodox rabbi, really --, and he wouldn't charge for it.

Over the last few years, faiths that have a syncretic pasts have begun to show it more; for example, the Catholic Church no longer denies that it subsumed some pagan deities as saints. In general, people are less interested in religion, following a trend begun in the 20th century, but those who are place value in the stability and visceral comfort of ritual.

# Have Mathews send someone to bless the rockets. Every little bit helps.

# Don't; you don't want to get into the ongoing spat between him and Carpatescu.

>>3802928

(That's a brilliant idea) You make a point to ask Dr. Damosa, Carpatescu's de facto secretary of education; you're about to meet him in New Babylon anyway.

# Just ask casually.

# Formally request a survey; the oldest kids are approaching 4 years old, and threfore are old enough that some IQ tests can be administered.

>>3802916

(He also shows up in the videogame Iron Storm, which has an awesome story)

>>3802980

(According to the LB books, people who are non-Christian believers know that they are lying to themslves but won't admit it. Not kidding, a few people believ this today: look up Presuppositional Apologetics) Eastern religions have overall fared well; they have a long and rich tradition, and by and large, after grieving for the Event, Shinto or Buddhist or Taoist believers were counseled to bring forth new life so that their families and communities may continue.

Pontifex Mathews has done a surprisingly brilliant job of quelling Islamic fundamentalism; it helps that the Saudi monarchy is no longer funding Wahhabi madrassas.

>>3802997

You can engage in destructive testing with the sword, of course. It's a fairly high risk, high reward proposition.

>>3803028

(I love this. Note that Rebohoth has no idea Dr. Diamond is working for you.)

>>3803033
>>3803071

(That's coming; you'll see)

>>3803047

(I think it's because they wore their hair long)

>>3803101

(Heh. I was at Occupy. I came in a SJW and left, well, not. Story for another post)
>>
>>3803295
>Yeah but it's better that your leaders are merely stealing from you rather than actively working against your interests
Stealing from you is something that would probably fall under the against your interest part.

It would also be better if Ukraine was not geographically trapped between two major economic and political forces on either side, but that's not ever going to change short of the world continents rearranging themselves.

The guy who poisons you on someone else's orders would still poison your bread, but now its on the whims of the bread maker instead of someone else.

You would be hard pressed to deal with either truthfully, but I get what you mean for the most part. Having to take down less layers before getting to the top is easier than taking down one corrupt government only to have to deal with the powerful nation across the boarder that is now breathing down your neck while your in homeland is in disarray.

I don't want to sound as coming off as a supporter for either sides, but I will say that Russia will never willingly accept an antagonist economic or military force like the EU or NATO so close to their boarders, its simply an existential threat to them. All the smaller things like freedom and rights are irrelevant to national survival, and Russia isn't the only nation to feel this way.

Just look at how America reacted to Germany trying to get Mexico to ally with them in WW1, look at how the Chinese reacted when western forces nearly united both Korea's under a western backed government, look at how Syria and an Iran reacts to American presence in Iraq and Pakistan to Americans in Afghanistan, how Poland and the Baltic states react to Russia resurgence.

I may not like or agree with Russian activities or policy, and they own countries internal issues leaves much to be desired, but regarding nearby perceived threats, even if not currently present, but may materialize later, their policy and reaction is understandable if not nessecary.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W6LIhNgsQoc
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Eicrsq6K85I
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v3C_5bsdQWg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HE6rSljTwdU
Videos are more detailed down the list you go. Last one is the best imo
>>
>>3803121

(Some sort of legged vehicle carrying medium artilery, optimized for urban fighting? Air-to-ground missiles? OOC note: L&J do very little with the WoB concept, but I might divert from the books, there)

>>3803126

(Or by poets wanting to get laid. If Dante wasn't an incel, we would not have had the Inferno -- read his love diary and you'll find out. If you do, disregard the fact that everyone involved is 9 years old, he had a fetish for the number 9, not for lolis. I'm an engineer IRL, but before college I was jostled around between Catholic and Fundie Christian schools.... which is probably why I write stuff like this quest now)

>>3803154

(Clinton was "cool uncle who lets you go through his boobie mags" personable, I guess. I was tiny at the time.)

>>3803295
>>3803398

(All the Ukrainians I have worked with are somewhat anti-Russian, and the only Russian I ever tried to work with succeeded in scamming me, so I'm likely biased. I have nothing but good experiences with Ukrainian and Serbs, work wise; good people, get things done. They will practice nepotism because they value family about as much as we Italians do, but unlike us, they are not hypocritical about it and will tell you up front. A lot of people feel that Ukraine got screwed on the whole nuclear deterrent thing.).

>>3803388

(Occupy story: I went, offered to teach people how to build phone chargers with AA batteries without needing tools other than a little glasses-repair screwdriver, I even bought the parts that they could use. the committee or whatever wanted to do drum workshops instead... but asked me to assemble the chargers myself and donate those premade, instead of the parts. I rotated a few people in and out so they could take a shower and not get foot sores, and one of them screamed rape at me because I wanted to see her feet to make sure she'd powdered them correctly. I brought in some solar panels and semi-dead truck batteries to do a mesh network so they'd have some warning for when the cops showed up, and I was told they had a problem with lead batteries sitting around and the solar panels were made with child labor, and they never hooked them up, and I got my car keyed while I was doing the delivery. Fuck those guys. Actually, don't, they probably have crabs.)
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>>3803388
>I was at Occupy
Cool.

>I came in a SJW
Oh god please no

>and left, well, not.
Thank zombie Jesus!

>>3803400
Is this you?

Also scissors kill crabs.
>>
>>3803400
>All the Ukrainians I have worked with
Can't say I've had the same experience, then again I don't know many Slavs, even though I used to live next to an old orthodox church and strangely a Ukrainian townhouse down the block.

I did know a Serbian fairly well, cool dude. Fought in the last Serbian conflict, lost his brother in it.

Most of the ones I did meet were passing interactions or from mostly assimilated immigrants or 2nd gen, they were alright.
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>a little glasses-repair screwdriver
Was this your handywork?
I guess that works too.
I hope this was not you screwing them
>>
Rolled 19 (1d100)

>>3802836
>>3802844
>>3802877

Tsion's website eventually updates with a generic prayer request for our captive brothers and sisters -- there has been one going about once every month or so, but this is the first one after your raid -- and you find that Ikko's still posting, but keeping herself to very brief responses.

"Clever; that makes it impossible to tell if she's been caught or not by analyzing the writing style" Vajpayee opines.

The pregnant woman does not confirm or deny that she is Chloe (you did get Ikko's real name out of this, at least); she's in good health, though, and is about halfway along with her pregnancy.

You ordered a DNA scan, which will be ready sometime next month.

>>3802145

The legalities of buying an airbase are simplified by the fact that it's just a property transfer between one part of the Global Community apparatus to the other; it doesn't mean you have to pay for it, but there are no paperwork hurdles to clear. The base was closed shortly after Dimmsdale's installment, and the intervening winters have not been kind, but most of the equipment there is the rough and ready sort that is appropriate for the environment. This also has the side effect of ending a minor spat between Dimmsdale and Terry April about who the base belongs to when Greenland was transferred between North America and Greater Britain.

Ryan says that he would have preferred a more direct involvement, but appreciates that you treat him more like a business partner than an employee.

* Artifact recovery missions will become available for your covert teams.

* People's interest in the occult will rise; thanks to the Gaussian curve, you expect that when Ryan is done you will be able to find enough experts to build a specialized workgroup.

>>3803415

(I'm not a white guy, but I agree with everything else in that post. Just replace "white guys" with "people with field experience who brought to the table skill and willingness to get their hands dirty", who were mostly white guys, at least where I lived at the time, to be fair. The smart, able, organized people left because nothing could get done. Also see the Hong Kong protests for a counterexample, the protestors there organized in such a way that smart people, rather than whoever whined the loudest, ended up making the tactical calls, and it worked.)

>>3803420

(Yeah it's pretty damn crazy to be around people just a few years older than you who basically experienced mini-WW2 upon their own skin while the rest of the western world was discovering Pokemon. Very eye opening.)

>>3803417

(Nah. I'm a big wimp for this sort of thing. I can gut and behead a fish, but the one time I had to kill a chicken, I didn't eat chicken for half a year. I think it's because most fish have very inexpressive eyes. Crabs and lobster are super cool to watch move if you're into robotics.)

>>3803417
>>3803422
>>3803425

That crab is a SPY!
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>>3803415

( Sequel to that post. I agree with it as long as you replace "white guys" with "people who have relevant skills".

My pet conspiracy theory is the entitlement is at least in part due to the prevalence of "chosen one" narratives in popular storytelling. An excellent counterexample, which should damn well be a cultural norm, is Samurai Jack.

You gotta https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nKtxZ5P_Ug0 if you want to https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uwbqr2UjeSg


Anyway, this has been a bit of a tangent)
>>
>>3803427
>Ryan says that he would have preferred a more direct involvement, but appreciates that you treat him more like a business partner than an employee.
"Well Ryan, you gotta let me know before hand, otherwise I'm just going to stick to our original agreement."

>This also has the side effect of ending a minor spat between Dimmsdale and Terry April
Soooo.... America? (YEAH, USA! USA! USA!)
Doesn't Dimmsdale have enough territory and people to look after? I'm surprised the UK basically got its own state.

>I'm not a white guy
Neither am I, but its the only pic title I could remember in my folder without digging for the next 2 hours.
(Didn't you imply your Italian in a post above?)

>Yeah it's pretty damn crazy to be around people just a few years older than you who basically experienced mini-WW2
I think interesting things just tend to revolve around interesting people.....
Another time he told me about a Afghanistan war veteran who lived in his apartment a level down, who came back from Afghanistan, just decided to shoot and killed himself like 2 weeks after he came back to the country. Normally this wouldn't be notable as anything but tragic, but I remember seeing something in his eyes and expression that told me it disturbed him quite a bit.

>Crabs and lobster are super cool to watch move if you give them knives and cigarettes.
FTFY
>>
>>3803427

Unfortunately there is precious little of interest to salvage in Ultima Thule; you were hoping for some leftover ordnance, but the base was closed "properly", and while the survival equipment is all intact -- the base would still serve as an emergency airfield for airliners plying the polar route -- there is nothing there to recover that you wouldn't be able to get access to by regular means.

From Greenland, you move on to Germany, where Dr. Gustav (he is former a heart surgeon and hospital administrator) greets you in a reserved manner that you recognize to be warm once one takes his culture into consideration.

"I understand that you were able to set aside some of your budget in order to endow a clinic in Rio" he says once the relatively quick photo op and formal greeting is done with "and approve of your concern for the less fortunate parts of the world."

You know as well as he does that in recent years Santiago's territory has been catching up pretty rapidly with the global north.

The man clearly values competence, but in recent years he's become a bit too punctilious and obsessed with details; satirical papers and websites have begun drawing him as a charicatured Prussian general of 120 years ago, and you have to admit that it fits.

Your pitch for allowing European factories to take advantage of algorithmic management is simple: what Synco/BOCHICA (Gustav is, of course, familiar with the consumer version -- everyone is by now) has to offer to Western Europe's industrial and shipping sectors is

# discipline administered with algorithmic fairness.

# trimming the fat in middle management.

# cultural pride - if Chileans can take advantage of this system, imagine what Germans can do with it!

# greater productivity, pure and simple.

# planning for the future: the Rapture gap will result in a demographic bottleneck in a decade or so, and automation is the answer to at least some of its challenges.

You take a bit of time to visit Scandinavia, to find that there is in fact more than a bit of Asatru revivalism there; the former state churches of Sweden and Norway have joined the EC and, over time, have admitted to their pagan roots, even encouraging people to rediscover it.

>>3803449

(Also surprised, but that's what L&J wanted to do with it)

>>3803449

(I am Italian by birth and -- largely-- education, and moved to Texas first and then California to do aerospace things).

>>3803449

If you had to win over Ryan, you just did with that comment. His little quip about the current effort by Ecumenical Council prelates to find a set of universal religious truths is that he would gladly sign off on it if it included the sanctity of a contract.

"Entirely fair, Foreman. I'm sure this new venture will be good for both of us."

You shake hands, and he's off to revive goth culture as a part of a nefarious government scheme to stimulate interest in the occult to oppose the true faith. You wonder if you'll be in a Chick Tract.
>>
>>3803440
>Samurai Jack
You can fly?
No, I just jump good!

Man, I need to get around to watching the new Samurai Jack they released. Heard it was pretty baller.

>My pet conspiracy theory is the entitlement is at least in part due to the prevalence of "chosen one"
I think education and media along with dismantling families, and social engineering by progressives play a part too.
>>
>>3803457

( I'm more worried about social engineering by regressives who want to go "back" to a past that never existed. It frustrates me how many self-described conservatives have no knowledge of history and actively resist gaining any because it conflicts with their preferred narrative. The center cannot hold -- if the sides keep pulling without regards to physical reality. But that's really for boards other than /qst/ I reckon)

(Samurai Jack is passionate work made by competent people, and it shows. Highly recommend if you've got the time)
>>
Rolled 95 (1d100)

>>3803457

( I'm more worried about social engineering by regressives who want to go "back" to a past that never existed. It frustrates me how many self-described conservatives have no knowledge of history and actively resist gaining any because it conflicts with their preferred narrative. The center cannot hold -- if the sides keep pulling without regards to physical reality. I'm going to enter old-man-yells-at-cloud mode and blame a lack of shared classical education. But that's really for boards other than /qst/ I reckon

Samurai Jack is passionate work made by competent people, and it shows. Highly recommend if you've got the time)

>>3803452

During your European trip, you find that Dr. Gustav has been working hard to try and stave off the demographic bomb that will hit the workforce in a decade or so; maternity and paternity leave is subsidized, and while all abortion restrictions have been removed by orders from Carpatescu, there is a program of subsidized surrogacy and adoption. You know this to be a minor point of contention between the global potentate and Dr. Gustav; the former is on record as saying that human population should not exceed three billion until we are ready to step up and towards other planets, while the latter is convinced that there is no such thing as a "Malthusian trap".

They even debated this on live TV recently; the event was friendly and Carpatescu won it handily. Since Tsion started making noise about a mass rally in Tommy Kollek Stadium in Jerusalem, Carpatescu had been mulling the not-invitation, and making it look like just one more event in a series of publically broadcast discussion panels with political and religious leaders; Carpatescu is a master debater even without using his mesmerism, so he wins handily when the panels are presented in an adversarial format, but makes a point of being a gracious winner and uses the events to point out that unlike Tsion's contention, he is adamantly against censorship. After numerous delays, it looks like that the discussion is set to happen ten weeks from now.

While you are in the country, you interview a few promising candidates for a dedicated operations manager, and leave with a few interestng resumes.

In the meantime, Aki decides to tackle the Ikko issue; the Remnant cell was busted trying to hack into the Carpatescu teleconference, so she sets off with a vengeance to make sure it doesn't happen again (or, rather, if she is to get into a hacker war with the Remnant, she wants to make it fun and challenging). Raman Vajpayee, in the meantime, makes use of her notes to find out who to check on.

And, just like that, finds the mole, who was so worried about Aki that he got sloppy on physyical OPSEC. Some of your comings and goings, notably the African capers, have been siphoned off to Pontifex Mathews -- and not to Carpatescu, you notice -- by a Morale Monitor infiltrator!

# Promote to Commissar to keep him out of the way

# Disappear him.

# Send back to Rome
>>
I have no bone to pick either way, but I would like to suggest to the QM that political ranting is going to turn people off the quest, so it should probably go elsewhere.

Anyway, have a reminder of the fact that most human beings are good. This is a HFY quest, after all.

https://www.cnn.com/2019/09/07/us/bullied-student-university-of-tennessee-shirt-trnd/index.html?no-st=1567942990

>>3803452

# planning for the future: the Rapture gap will result in a demographic bottleneck in a decade or so, and automation is the answer to at least some of its challenges.
>>
>>3803452
Most people I know consider Italians and S. Italians/Mediterranean to be white or European?
Anyways.

# planning for the future: the Rapture gap will result in a demographic bottleneck in a decade or so, and automation is the answer to at least some of its challenges.
population concerns affect just about every western nation at the moment.
# discipline administered with algorithmic fairness.
German autistic like autistic procedures.

My good Dr. you can have it ALL! Build 5 factories, and you get all 5 bonuses to your territory!

>>3803459
I've seen most of it, just need to sit down for a good binge, since its been a few years.

# Disappear him.

We made this decision a while ago.

Send him to the blacksite first.

Dress down, enhanced interrogation, sleep deprivation and starvation. Fire house showers in the morning and night.

I want to know who he is, his family, when he join, and how. What else has he stolen or given away. Just exactly what does the pope know?
Who else is he working with?

Oh, but maybe first ask Raman if he thinks hes working alone.
>>
>>3803471
Just late night ramblings and discussion. We probably should set up a common chatroom or IRC client for us to shoot the shit in.
>>
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Rolled 96, 21, 60 = 177 (3d100)

>>3803471
>>3803477

Subpotentate Od Gustav is receptive to your pitch, particularly the long-term planning parts of it, until the very end.

"My understanding is that this is what the MCP architecture is going to do, later in the year, anyway."

You point out that the MCP is designed primarily to rationalize the financial market. "You wouldn't want to let financial analysts make medical decisions, right? The Synco system was intended from the ground up around production and shipping."

Mr. Gustav gets a jab in at you by pointing out that only Americans do that

"You've talked me into it, Herr Foreman. We can reuse the old Minitel network infrastructure for dedicated lines, and move its users onto the regular Internet. I figure that this will require a little bit of investment in that sense."

* Od Gustav will allow you to set up a factory system if you also construct additional pylons, to (3) capacity, in the territory where the factory will go. So, one pylon in either Western or Eastern Europe

As it has happened a few times, in your absence Aki ended up more or less holding court in your HQ, or at least the lower floors and the basement. She spends more than a full day at a time in that whole-body VR setup that she's built; the development environment has been set up in such a way as to simulate floating, with any number of virtual screens to code on. It looks like someone remade Tron with modern CGI; it's a little bit too extraniating for most developers, but a few, notably people who have sensory defensiveness, like it -- Aki is happy to share (most of the time).

# Spend 1BN to build more, dedicating a floor to it. What the hell, it's 2000, we didn't get flying cars, we might as well get immersive VR

# Let's not get too extravagant

The virtual environment, coupled with SPICE simulation software, makes for a surprisingly good EE brainstorming platform; in less than three weeks your developers have written up a CellSol pylon spec that allows the emergency replacing of most components with commonly available electrical and mechanical parts. For example, a C-S pylon with a damaged UPS will now be able to send instructions to an untrained worker's phone to patch up the damaged component with, say, a car battery, so as to insure operation until proper repairs can be made. In the same vein, Network Nodes will be able to autonomously hire electricians and PC repairmen -- if the expense report is authorized -- to affect emergency repairs, and even routine upgrades.

The new pylon and node designs look significantly less sleek, since they are intended to have extra room for temporary replacement components; people would not have accepted such an eyesore a couple years ago, but now that nearly everyone has at minimum basic browsing and email in their pockets thanks to the things, the cultural overhead is bearable. The engineering team calls this technology Standard Template Construction. Over time, the new pylons will replace the old by attrition.
>>
>>3803479

(Would a discord server do it)

(BTW, are the covert teams being issued drones?)
>>
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>>3803487

... Aki is totally building a hive mind isn't she.

>>3803479

All good on my end, I just don't want to see the quest die because people get turned off. It happened to the first one durning the hiatus and the player base never really recovered.
>>
>>3803487
# Spend 1BN to build more, dedicating a floor to it. What the hell, it's 2000, we didn't get flying cars, we might as well get immersive VR
Its either this or get stuck in a cryo chamber eating cold pizza and beer alone for a thousand years

>>3803489
Yes, and YES!

Factories are making drones ,s o hopefully they will be out and done by the time the teams need them.
>>
>>3803490
You post and image sends conflicting signals.
>>
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>>3803489
Oh shoot, I might not be able to use discord.
>>
>>3803490
>>3803491
>>3803492

https://discord.gg/x3KysCG

>>3803492
>>3803490

(Black anon, yeah I'm going to ask for clarification here)

>>3803491

Your security teams are beginning to form their own small network of contacts in Africa; you decide it best to

# keep people who were working in an area, in that area, so as to take advantage of it

# rotate the team assignments, to give the impression of a bigger force

(Is Moira going to North, South, or East Africa?)

Enoch Litwala seems to have learned form his mistakes, and stopped pushing for the South African factions to unify behind him until he has gathered more support in other regions, instead deciding to spend some of his war chest to set up relief stations and a few make-work programs that can be later turned into something actually productive; this sort of thing does not require much guarding, and his militia is up to the job. However, that necessitates getting his emissary out of the territory.

Algeria and Tunisia, the recent depredations of Raveshaw's men fresh in the people's memory, have become restless; Litwala capitalizes on this and on the fact that even low-resolution satellite imaging reveals a lot of troop movement data when they are crossing a desert, and encourages civil disobedience following the Indian model. Rebohoth is not the British, however, and clamps down hard, which is exactly what Litwala wanted: the former two Saharan countries are essentially in open rebellion.

Your men are ordered to

# focus on the mission and keep the rebels safe behind the scenes, making counterattacks by Peacekeepers and Rebohoth's personal guard less effective by providing SIGINT, increasing the rebels' effectiveness greatly.

# set up to engage the Peacekeepers in a pitched battle on favorable terms, using the rebels as auxilliaries, with the goal of absconding with some modern military equipment

Litwala has consolidated his power in his home region by the usual chestnut of spending money, rebuilding business and family ties, and when the scales tip acting as if he's already in charge and daring anyone to say otherwise. Your security forces here find themselves mostly providing command and control capabilities to the militia, ensuring that patrols have leave no dead areas and dead times, and coming down on the uptick in violent crime that always happens when there's an attempt at regime change.

Unlike in South America, here using drones for patrol goes down well; they are perceived as less intrusive than armed men, and the occasional operating loss is manageable. Eventually you can expect to see drones captured and used against you, but this has yet to come about.

Rebohoth reacts by ending his post-tsunami PR tour early and sending out reprisal squads while the Peacekeepers under his control adopt a law-and-order stance. He does, with great fanfare, announce the creation of an air cavalry corps "that will strike the enemies of Africa like lightning from a clear sky".
>>
>>3803495
I miss the 90's aesthetic action movie charm, They did a pretty good Bison pick imo.

# keep people who were working in an area, in that area, so as to take advantage of it
Volunteers only. If they want to be rotated out then rotate them out.

# set up to engage the Peacekeepers in a pitched battle on favorable terms, using the rebels as auxilliaries, with the goal of absconding with some modern military equipment

Two teams with drones head North with Moira.
>>
# discipline administered with algorithmic fairness.

#Disappear him

Stick him in the Boo Box

# keep people who were working in an area, in that area, so as to take advantage of it

# focus on the mission and keep the rebels safe behind the scenes, making counterattacks by Peacekeepers and Rebohoth's personal guard less effective by providing SIGINT, increasing the rebels' effectiveness greatly.
>>
>>3803491
>>3803495

Spend the 1BN. I'm seriously curious as to where this is going, sorry if it wasn't clear.

tfw big tiddy Borg gf


Morale Monitor guy? Smert' Shpionam. Off to the black site you go.
>>
>>3803495
>keep people who were working in an area in that area so as to take advantage of it
>set up to engage the oeace keeps in a ptiched battle on favorable terms.

>>3803487
>spend 1bn to build more

>>3803468

>Welll dissapear him I guess as thats what others are voting for
>>
>>3803504
>>3803502

Carpatescu can go on about "it takes a global village" and Robert D. Putnam can write about the loss of social capital that the Internet is causing, but your understanding of postcolonialist Africa is that personal connections matter much more than ideological identity; you authorize those of your people who want to stay -- mostly it's people whose family is originally from the territory, or people who fell in love with a local -- to buy homes or shares of business, even invest in land in partnerships with locals after being cautioned that it may come out to nothing depending on Litwala's politics; the overhead to you is minimal. It doesn't happen overnight, but in a few places some of your men and women stop being mercenaries and become, well, people. You may have to let some go after the African campaign is over, but the short-term benefits are evident.

Raveshaw's ambush on Litwala's emissary to South Africa succeeds; he figures that the best counter to your SIGINT superiority is guerrilla tactics, and in the middle of an otherwise simple escort mission, the emissary is taken out by a sharpshooter team. Your squad suffers two casualties in the brief firefight, one of which will have to retire after losing an arm to prevent bleedout, but no deaths. By the look of it, the sharpshooter team had been camped out there for weeks, living off the land; you will have to remember that Raveshaw's men are well trained.

Litwala is a bit too indifferent to your tastes; he sends compensation to the emissary's family, and gifts a small farm to your soldier (who wants to get back to Spain, where he is from, and so sells it as soon as he can do so without embarassing you), but notes that the dead guy wasn't getting much done anyway, so it's not a big setback for him.

>>3803505
>>3803504

You've got yourself someone else to send up North. Unlike the Remnant prisoners, who are being well-treated as the power of their prayer is tested without their knowledge, this guy gets the nasty treatment, courtesy of Mr. Vajpayee who as it turns out is quite good at it. He says that if he doesn't report in regularly, an audit of CATS will be triggered. This is in fact the case, however, the reporting in was entirely automated -- you're mildly insulted that Mathews didn't think you were a priority -- so Vajpayee has one of your coders write a simple program that does the "reporting in" actions, and loads it on one of the servers. "There, you've been replaced by 200 lines of Python. That's all you were worth to the Morale Monitors, the church, and us. Now you're basically alive for my entertainment."

The Morale Monitor spills the beans, although he has few beans to spill; Mathews has been subverting the Morale Monitor force -- largely undercover police at this point -- since the very start, and intends to stage a palace coup as soon as Carpatescu shows signs of weaknesses. You cross-correlate the mole's information with what you already know.
>>
>>3803520
Big oof, Time to ship that info to Carpatescu. This will get some good boy points. Or is it bad boy points because hes the antichrist.
>>
>>3803520
Well shoot. We lost some men now. I was hoping to build an information network. Why we suffer such high attrition to people leaving rather than casualties. Seriously. We do our best to look after our people, keep morale high, and pay them well. Now its a risky thing letting people know this much walk away in such an uncertain region where payoffs may or may not come to fruition.

>>3803520
Make sure to get that all on tape and send it to the boss, make sure he doesn't confess to anything too unpleasant. He won't get to interrogate him personally since "he died while escaping" and was directly responsible for getting our staff attacked, kidnapped and in some cases killed.
>>
>>3803522
We just saved him from a coup.... or we can sit on this information and let Matthews make his move when we do but as soon as we gain control we take out Matthews, and we hamper his efforts alone the way. I think its best to use Matthews in this regard so Carpatescu won't focus the brunt of his aggression and anger on us. We just need to make sure hes not killed in the process.

We should hold off til lwe can maximize our benefit, such as taking of the archives either by consent or by force. Make sure our boss focuses on Matthews since hes going for a mad grab for power, while we are only going for control and a power play perhaps.

Make it so when we make a move, the boss is distracted and desperate enough to cut us a deal in dealing with Matthews.
>>
>>3803538
Otherwise fighting a "two front war" will likely mean hes gonna lose.
>>
>>3803518
>>3803520

Vajpayee's theory is that Mathews is going to try to set things up so that Leon Fortunato succeeds Carpatescu as Potentate, with the internal balance of power shifted in favor of the Pontifex due to religious loyalties replacing personal loyalty to Carpatescu in the hearts and minds of the population. The plan doesn't sound very likely to succeed to you, but that's Peter Mathews' problem.

"Good, you get to live. If the little script is discovered to be a script and stops working, there won't be any point in keeping you alive, so we'll ask you if there are any other steps it needs to take in order to report that all is well."

Vajpayee is disgusted by this individual and tells you, with no attempts to sugar coat it, that if you send him to the blacksite he will probably offer himself as a kapo'.

>>3803522

# Bring it up to Carpatescu personally, while you are in New Babylon. Should be good for brownie points.

# Keep it under the table for now; people jockeying for position means they won't pay attention to you.

# Just file a report; it will add to your reputation for adherence to duty.

>>3803518
>>3803490

You call Aki -- who must have been in the middle of something, because she's jumpy -- and tell her that you've noticed that she's had to share her cool VR rig, so since you've seen that people are using it to do actual work and not just play Rez, you're putting in money to have more built. She thanks you profusely, hangs up, and, literally ten minutes later, you get in your email a low polygon motion-capped animation of her doing a little dance and bowing.

A few people do work better in VR than from behind a keyboard, and you figure that the increase of productivity for them is worth the one-time expense. The majority who don't.... you're pretty sure that it will make sysadmin recruitment easier, should you have to do more of it.

>>3803504
>>3803502

Since Moira is in the area to coordinate things personally, you can try to goad the enemy into a pitched battle while providing support to the rebels; however, it's riskier than focusing on one strategy.

# Support the rebels (+power shift)

# Attack the Peacekeepers directly (+loot)

# Try doing both.

>>3803529

(You are likely to see some men retire from active duty when the African campaign is over, if it goes well, but by the same token, they are also going to remain loyal to you since you have treated them well. And should Litwala get too big for his britches, there will be people on the ground who will have your back. Crunch wise:

* You will lose a security team to retirements should Litwala win
* Litwala will be more loyal, or at least more afraid of you
* Security actions in Africa will gain a small stackable bonus

Hey, it worked for Roman legionaries, didn't it? The alternative was simply "none of the above happens".)
>>
>>3803538
Problem is we have no idea how long Mathews will we we goin like 2 more turns before we cant do the economic take over.

>bring it up to carpatescu personally.

>support the rebels
>>
>>3803541
well we sent two teams to the north, 1 stayed behind, and another got ambushed heading south correct?

# Attack the Peacekeepers directly (+loot)
>>
>>3803548

That's correct. The team assigned to guard duty in Malindi has had a fairly uneventful shift; the team that got ambushed failed their mission and suffered one casualty, but there's a long list of people who want to join the "Tiger Mafia", so you don't have to worry about attrition.

>>3803547

The only clue you have is that Tsion's website prophecies that either Mathews or Fortunato, depending on which of them is "the false prophet", will in fact die within the year or early next year, killed by the Antichrist.

There is a small but vocal group within the Remnant that, disagreeing with Tsion, identifies the Antichrist and the Dragon as two different people; Tsion lets them post, but occasionally gets into a diatribe with one of them until he has an excuse to bring out the banhammer.

Either you have caught Chloe/Ikko or she's letting you think that you have caught her; it's hard to tell. You should know when the DNA test results come in.
>>
>>3803547
We have a bunch of problems coming up. From the mandate, to the comet fragment, to Matthews staging a coup, to MCP finding out about our thing, to Ben Tison issue and William Cameron and Maybe Ikko. All within a narrow crunch time too.

And that's not even factoring the other prophecy things coming. The Africa thing can't be stalled any longer, and we have maybe one or two months for our mandate and dealing with fallout from judgments and stuff. Coup could be as soon as Carpatescu bungles the comet thing (or rather we do since we took over) and Matthews makes his move, or it will be when we make our move. We can force Matthews to make his move by dropping a dime on him but also sending info through his moral monitors to tip him off and have him start fighting back. If he starts winning, we can send a black opts team to take out Leon, then with no replacement for Carpatescu, he can't really kill him yet.

I'm betting the AT kill the most immediate threat to removing him and that's Leon.

Can't off the pontiff without religious groups around the world starting a crusade.

We should look into springing nationalist forces around hot spots like Middle east and near east regions.
>>
>>3803553
Oh well shit i don't know if we should tell gim then. Hopfully we can convince him to just lock em up in prison forever and not kill.
>>
>>3803561
Or let him work his mind magic. Or let us deal with them.

Heck we can probably run the world religion in a benign way.
>>
>>3803562
Yeah let's just talk him into not killing so that the revenant have no ammo. It seems to be what he wants anyways
>>
>>3803560

(I'm trying to do an engaging quest, not an easy one :) Most of the political intrigue is my doing, the Global Community are Generic Baddies in the LB books, except when they have to be shown to be in disunity and disarray for a paragraph).

(Y'all tell me! You don't have to decide until you get to New Babylon though)

>>3803548
>>3803547
>>3803504

You tell Moira that this is their revolution, not hers; she answers that she was hoping you'd say that. "People have to fight their own battles. Besides... Bit too sunny for an Irish girl out in the open here, Boss".

What follows is three weeks of relentless protests against Rebohoth's mismanagement, with some people advocating a return to national rule, others simply wanting a change in management, and the rest hoping for a hybrid confederal system.

Traditional protest-breaking tactics fail every time; infiltrators and provocateurs are quickly identified and given the boot (or, in one case, literally tarred and feathered by protesters dressed up in improvised cowboy garb, which makes the video go viral); riot police break out the water hoses to find the water pressure cut by a sudden explosion close enough to the water mains that it tripped the earthquake-warning sensors; in Gafsa, pepper spray and tear gas grenades are shot back by the adherents of the local tennis club, with other protesters shielding them from being charged.

Behind the scenes, Moira and her crew tap police radios, conduct aerial surveillance with drone planes, call in false orders to Peacekeepers and police, and generally help the blue team keep some order while sowing chaos for the red team.

You're pretty sure that discontented people all over the world are taking notes; the hottest PDF download for a week or so is "the Anarchist's Cookbook, Maghreb Edition", available in five or six somewhat contradictory versions.

You hear that Rebohoth went on an epic rant about the protesters being "parroting puppets" of some "gangster computer god", since they can't possibly be smart enough to foil his troops at every turn; sadly, there's no recording of it.

Eventually, it comes to a head; Rebohoth's personal guard is called in en masse, taken to a Peacekeeper-staffed staging area, issued the appropriate equipment and, to prevent incidents like police buses being disabled by an IED drone tank between Biskra and Setif, conducts a bona fide cavalry charge against the rebel stronghold of Ghardaia.
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You have to admit that this was unexpected.

The narrow alleys of Ghardaia, and the hill shielding the ancient city from the desert wind, actually give some credibility to choosing such an unorthodox tactic. Your satellites' images are fairly low resolution over this area, and the image processing algorithms you've been using had been trained to identify columns of vehicles, not horses and camels; you only see this coming maybe half an hour before it comes, thanks to a drone airplane's last transmission before it's shot down by machinegun fire.

# Disperse, let them take the city, and then let's see if they can hold it; if they want traditional warfare, they shall have a siege -- but not in the way they hoped.

# Trot out the IFVs and use their superior mobility in the open field to do to cavalry what cavalry traditionally does to infantry, while the local militias Hold The Line.
>>
Well, I'm back to sobriety besides a minor feeling like I was thrown at a wall yesterday. Thinking over what I said last night, I'll at the very least see if she wants to hang out soon or something.


>>3803388
>Of course, you'd want rifles, instead of swords, but.... baby steps
I'll take swords if that is all they can give us. We'll just mount them as bayonets or use huge crossbows to launch them.

>they were exhibiting psychological addiction and withdrawal symptoms with regards to it.
Were the ones stored closest to the Gap Generator less effected?

>A few wish they could post warning others about the red-headed woman.
Kek, we could see if we can't just have Moira scare them by eating a (cooked and properly prepared) sheep heart in front of them and claiming it's a human's or something. Not for any real reason, just to torment them.

>That is definitely a thing Pontifex Mathews can be asked to do -- send an Orthodox priest, or an imam, or anything but a Remnant pastor or an Orthodox rabbi, really --, and he wouldn't charge for it.
Seeing as he's such a nice man and the situation's desperate:

# Have Mathews send someone to bless the rockets. Every little bit helps.

>(That's a brilliant idea)
# Just ask casually.

>(He also shows up in the videogame Iron Storm, which has an awesome story)
It really is, it's like a slightly more modern version of 1984 in a way.

>Heh. I was at Occupy. I came in a SJW and left, well, not.
It's amazing how few you meet that have came from the other side, do you miss any of your friends from back then that I presume had issues with this change of beliefs?

>Story for another post
I'll hold you to that.

>>3803398
Nah I get what you mean. It's a fucked situation for the Ukraine because the Russian government will never accept their independence if they have a choice in the matter, the EU / US won't intervene because that risks their economies, stability and approval ratings and also I've already seen most of those videos.

Russia is a nation that is quite fucked up but once you study it's history, it's like finding out they have a toxic uncle that force fed them crack for centuries interspersed with the occasional present or day of school before they died in 1917-18 and the person just started making all the bad decisions themselves.

They are a corrupt, bureaucratic, poor, ex-world power with more nations subsumed into themselves than the Americans have states. Their politics have never been straight, their society has always struggled in ways few nations can comprehend (the massive amounts of rape in their military, something which is really weird given their homophobic culture for example) and it's a genuine miracle they've held together this long seeing as they're essentially built the same way the Austro-Hungarian empire was.
>>
>>3803400
>I have nothing but good experiences with Ukrainian and Serbs
Part of that probably comes down to selection bias: you are meeting the people who are at your skill level / competent enough to work alongside you; which given what I know / assume about you from what we've learned over the years, is a fairly high mark; they therefore must have managed to be sufficiently focused as a teen in their education and shit; it's a bit like how meeting the military of a nation would give you an idea that they are more patriotic than the average person probably is. Or in the case of the UK, that we had a lot more Ghurkas living here than we actually do.

>>3803452
>(I am Italian by birth and -- largely-- education, and moved to Texas first and then California to do aerospace things).
Italian is white in my book, seeing as I've never cared for the factionalism of this sort of thing. Greeks, the Irish and so on too. If Africans can claim the people on the north coast of Africa and the Egyptians, then you guys belong with us too. The very simple truth is these racial lines are a slightly imprecise thing seeing as they are visual concepts trying to simply deal with a complex and mixed genetic heritage.

>>3803471
Fair enough man, this stuff is a bit heavy for the quest.

>>3803487
>* Od Gustav will allow you to set up a factory system if you also construct additional pylons, to (3) capacity, in the territory where the factory will go. So, one pylon in either Western or Eastern Europe
Excellent. Let us begin the slow expansion of our factory system until we can quite literally throw a size five aerospace sat up every turn passively!

>>3803522
Don't, we should instead start discussing this sort of stuff privately with the pope and see if we can't forge an alliance: after all, why shouldn't the moral authority of humanity hold a sway over it's people's government? We will happily help him get a foot hold equal to any Subpotenate. Assuming he will back our own claim-to-power.

That or we let them strike eachother and eliminate them both in their weakness / confusion.

>>3803590
# Disperse, let them take the city, and then let's see if they can hold it; if they want traditional warfare, they shall have a siege -- but not in the way they hoped.

We have time, he doesn't. The longer the insurgency goes uncrushed the weaker he seems. Especially if we were to cut off the supply lines of these troops and start starving them out.

We're this close to being the enemy in a more normal story (secretive government branch; conducts illegal research; has their own nukes and troops; maintains a black-site; has literal terrorists on staff; almost have orbital weapons; uses advanced warmachines and VR. God knows all we need is a good acronym / secret name and we're set.)
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>>3803601

In this case, the Gap Generator proximity seems to not have done much; some people just get antsy if they can't check their favorite web forum every few hours.

>>3803601

Moira is perfectly fine with doing something like that, even if the heart is raw. She's ex-IRA; she's had to eat her share of gross stuff At worst she'll have to hit the restroom for a while rather in the day.

>>3803601
>>3803605

On one hand, you've just got a bit of blackmail on Mathews; on the other, you want to work with him. That's not unusual, really; the Pontifex will have to understand that you are one of the power brokers rather than "just" the lord of the cable guys. As to what you do to spend your influence, it's your call!

If anything, given that he is a Renaissance fanboy, Mathews should appreciate ecclesiarchy intrigue.

>>3803601

You will ask about Buddhist children when you get to New Babylon, which is in a few days.

>>3803601

(I did post my Occupy story if anyone cares :) )


>>3803605

You're currently in charge of the Custodial Arrangement of Telecommunication Systems, or CATS. The "Tiger Mafia" flag has a friendly cat holding a gold coin on it, because it made sense at the time, but it's unlikely that people will make the connection.

That much said, you look at what you're doing now. You're commanding a covert special ops team who is orchestrating a rebellion in Africa behind the scenes.

Your top operative there is, technically, a cyborg.

In a few days you will leave for the world capital to supervise the launch of an orbital weapon.

You have to admit that if the door to your office opened now to let in your your kid self from way back in the age of three national channels and unshaded comic books, he'd be pretty proud of you.

Except that he might've led the GI Joes to your compound, of course.

"Are we the baddies?"

BOCHICA answers, "Insufficient data for a meaningful answer."
>>
>>3803621
>some people just get antsy if they can't check their favourite web forum every few hours
Y-yeah, such weirdos...

>"Are we the baddies?"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aRxgNrT2Zv0

I mean seriously, we just need to start creating secret submarines and equipping them with nukes or get the new african government to replace most of their police / law enforcement with semi-autonomous drones and we're basically a cyber-punk psuedo-governmental semi-private entity.
>>
>>3803605

You leverage the fact that every other inhabitant of the town has a cell phone, smart headset, or both, and set up what is probably history's best-organized evacuation; people are told to go home to quickly pack, and BOCHICA -- either by algorithm or using operators -- determines the optimal exit routes for people as they call out whether they have a car, how much gas it has, and how many people it can carry. As if by miracle, gas pump prices drop to 0.01 Nick per liter, the lowest it can go, allowing people to refuel quickly and in a mostly orderly fashion.

Weeks of trusting the synthetic voice with tactical decisions pay off; the city is virtually deserted by the time the cavalry get there and is ready to charge down the hill.

Rebohoth has, for the occasion, reinvented the zamburak: camelborne RPGs and mortars fire on the gates at the far end of town -- most of the houses are still within the ancient walls -- and block them, which would have been a problem about ten minutes ago.

The evacuation of Ghardaia happens with maybe a dozen casualties in total; outside town, cars that were unable to refuel are hitched to those who could. The convoy will head to nearby Laghouat. Across the desert, convoys of militia are already preparing to come in for what might turn into a concentric siege.

The cavalry charge, at dawn, down the hill, AK47s shooting in the air and even some scimitars waved at the moon, is a thing of beauty, and you expect that the news media will play it over and over for a few days. Unfortunately, it won't be for the reason they would want it to; you intend to make them look like cosplayers, rather than warriors.

The charge continues, unopposed, until it loses momentum near the city walls. The cavalrymen sheepishly file in and solemnly proclaim that they have liberated Ghardaia from rebels and terrorists, with nobody but security cameras and the occasional tiny drone tank to listen.

# Counterattack immediately.

# Let them look like villains to the world as they loot the place, unaware that they are being recorded. Then counterattack.

# Well, they conquered the town, now what are they going to do with it? Let them be, and cut off their retreat by going after their staging area instead.
>>
>>3803643

Nuclear submarines are, alas, a thing of the past -- however, you do have an oversized Stirling radiothermal generator sitting around; installing it in a diesel-electric sub is not beyond the realm of possibility. What would you do with such a vehicle though? It could possibly be used for shore insertion, but uranium hydride bombs are too heavy to be missile-borne.
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>>3803662
# Let them look like villains to the world as they loot the place, unaware that they are being recorded. Then counterattack.

Specifically counter-attack their staging area. That way if they attempt to retreat they'll be forced to abandon their loot.

>>3803667
>What would you do with such a vehicle though?
Dunno but I'm certain we could find a good use for it. Perhaps as a carrier / CnC for a shit tonne of drones or as a way of covertly moving across the world. It would also work pretty well as a mobile headquarters if worst really comes to worst. Plus our generators will become better in terms of efficiency / endurance / scale / safety as we advance our energy research. They might even become feasible as a method of powering trains or something.

>uranium hydride bombs are too heavy to be missile-borne.
Just not using enough missile. Though I get what you mean, clearly we should just use biological weapons instead.
>>
>>3803662
>go after their staging area.
>>
>>3803680
>>3803687


You must give Rebohoth some credit: cavalry, especially with modern firearms, makes a lot of sense when fighting in the narrow alleys of a Middle Eastern town.

The problem is that there's absolutely no fighting to be had. Promised glory and finding none to be had, the soldiers of Rebohoth's personal guard are instead turned loose to loot the place.

By the time they realize that they've been on camera the whole time, Algerian militia supported by your security force has taken a few trucks and buses, gone around the hill, and overran the cavalry division's staging area (the horses had been brought in on trailers, to avoid fatiguing them). Trucks are liberated, trailers taken or smashed, and most of the water is taken away back to Laghouat.

The militia commander, Kamal Salah, leaves a water drum and throughs in place for the sake of the horses, in case the cavalry tries to come back this way, along with a nicely calligraphed note that in essence says "You have been fooled, give up".

The "Phone-Tag Battle", due to its media-fiendly imagery, becomes a leading topic in the global news. Rebohoth could handle a reputation as a butcher, and in fact cultivated it; being shown for a buffoon, however, would be too much for him, and he disavows knowledge of the whole incident -- deprived of modern transportation, the cavalry that took Ghardaia will have to undergo a humiliating trot to the nearest town, or sit in their "prize" until water and food runs out.

You're on the way to New Babylon when you get the a text on your satellite phone; the former countries of Morocco, Tunisia and Algeria have rejected Rebohoth's potentateship and reinstated a mixture of pre-Carpatescu government structure and traditional clan rule.

The temporary spokesman for the territory, a Litwala symphatiser, thanks the Tiger Mafia for their help -- guess your PMC is now stuck with the name. What surprises you is that at the urging of several prominent Sicilian families, Subpotentate Gustav recognizes the Saharan Territory.

The subpotentates had been invited to see Alkali's launch at the end of the month, but after some frantic phone calls between each region's subpotentate and Carpatescu, the invites are cancelled. The last you hear of it is the African Peacekeeper air force units being transferred back to New Babylon.

A GCNN retrospective on the "Tiger Mafia" tries very hard to portray them as mercenaries,

# and you let them, since it suits your purposes.

# and you at least make sure that the internet responds with all the times they've unequivocally been the good guys.

* Litwala, with your help, has conquered Northern Africa.
* Rebohoth's home region can now be attacked directly.
* You can no longer rename your PMC.

# Proceed to New Babylon.

# Wait.
>>
>>3803714
# and you at least make sure that the internet responds with all the times they've unequivocally been the good guys.

If anyone asks, we just point to the fact we use them as our security forces and don't like seeing our allies / associates being treated as guns-for-hire.

>* Litwala, with your help, has conquered Northern Africa.
Excellent, a quarter of Africa and one of it's more developed regions now lies in our control. It's also the single region most easily isolated from the rest thanks to the Sahara acting as a barrier, so he's not going to need many troops to sustain his control luckily.

>* Rebohoth's home region can now be attacked directly.
I think we should leave this to last, weaken him again and again until there is no doubt that he has lost. His troops will abandon him and he will be weak.

>* You can no longer rename your PMC.
Oh well, it's not like we had any ideas for better names.

# Proceed to New Babylon.

I can't think of much of anything we actually need to do. At the utmost, I kinda want to discuss our fragment interception plan a bit more because I'm having doubts about the importance of redirecting Frag-4 rather than putting all-hands on deck to prevent Frag-3 making earthfall.
>>
>>3803728
Frag 3 sounds worse to me. Poisoning 1/3 of water supply is a big deal. Shattering it will meet the expectation. If nothing else we should drive it into the ocean again so as to technically meet the requirements but not poison anything serious. Other then all fish i guess but that wasnt in the prophesy.

>>3803714
Proceed to new babylon!
>>
>>3803743
Personally I think that if we used our pusher sat, our comms-pusher and the big-fuck-off rocket, we odd to be able to just brute force it into disintegration in the upper atmosphere by fragmentation, bouncing off at an oblique angle on approach or entering a fly-by orbit.

Admittedly, part of me is angry at myself for not selling 17 supplies last month and creating two five part pusher sats to really shove the big bastard rock away from earth but hindsight is 20-20.
>>
>>3803750
I think thats a tad overkill having 2. Hopfully thr pusher sat will do it well enough. We will need to see our options.
>>
>>3803753
Eh, when we're talking about the poisoning of a third of the world's water, I consider anything short of 51 Bn (the purchase of 15 aerospace parts from the market plus launch costs for three 5 part sats) to be a reasonable expenditure.
>>
>>3803757
Problem is were gonna need to stop shit like this another 20 tines before irs over
>>
>>3803728

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/09/06/world/middleeast/sudan-social-media.html

You aren't very sure how it happened, but your covert ops force has become associated with the 1982 theatrical flop "Megaforce", possibly because the plot also figures a secret army assisting an African country defending itself from its more powerful neighbor using high-tech vehicles and equipment. The movie is even rereleased with a comedy commentary track, to significantly more success than the original (albeit still modest by box office standards).

Enoch Litwala, in his first broadcast to a global audience from Casablanca (he's actually still in Malindi, but nothing a little DNS redirection and a few stage props can't solve) thanks the brave men and women from all over the world who came to join the cause of African liberation, and laments that Rebohoth, a freedom fighter in his youth, will end his life as an oppressor. "Old friend, you have become that which you swore to destroy. The people are jubilant at your defeats, but I move against you with a heavy heart."

It's bullshit, of course, but it makes Enoch look quite statesmanlike.

* You can expand the Synco system into Northern Africa, if you wish.

>>3803743
>>3803728

New Babylon, hit hard by the Wrath of the Lamb earthquake that took two and a half million lives, has been rebuilt to pristine conditions. Baghdad has been patched up, and patched up well, but you can still see the new tarmac where the sinkholes were; Carpatescu's model city has been put back together in such a way that it's impossible to tell that there ever had been an earthquake, with the sole exception of the truncated Burj Carpathia, now topped by a crystal claw holding the bent and broken structural supports for the missing upper third. Daytime, the claw shines like a diamond, and at night, it's illuminated. Some people have compared it to the eye of Sauron, other find it a fitting memorial. It's still the tallest building in the world, although by less of a margin.

The MagLev monorail has been restored and expanded , and gives a smooth and silent ride from Baghdad airport to the world capital and to the rebuilt Dome of the Rock.

Your current agenda includes potentially confronting Mathews, talking with Dr. Damosa about the statistical distribution of precocious children; meeting McLachlan about the flight envelope; paying your respects to Carpatescu, as needs must; and getting an engineering report from your aerospace team, so that you can smooth out any issues.

# Tackle these in any order you wish, except visiting the big boss, which will have to come first, unless you got a very good reason for it.

The Alkali is almost ready for launch, and your "special" satellite has in fact been made operational before it if you want to change your mind and use it now instead of intercepting Fragment 4.
>>
>>3803758
True but I'm of the opinion we should really be focusing on dealing with shit as it comes. Had I realised we were this close to the space rocks being an issue I probably would've requested we fill that sat we sent up over russia with comms shit instead just be camera after camera in hopes of a earlier detection.

Still, it's in the past now and all we can hope to do is damage mitigation. At the very worst, we can probably figure out a way to de-poison the water assuming the effect isn't entirely magical / narrative based.


Plus, it's going to get easier to stop it the next 20 times. We will have more factories, more research, more heroes, more certainty and more build up of prep. We will have the support of Africa and South america as well as Russia, China and North america potential. Hell maybe even Europe. We will unite the world behind us and under us and we will show god that in a war of attrition like this? Humanity has a damn sight more experience.
>>
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Carpatescu has used the earthquake to further rebuild Babylon into an ideal; in addition to the Burj Carpathia, there are now a number of self-contained arcologies, each a mini Expo for one of the world regions. There's also one for the Ecumenical Council, and one shared by several multinational corporations and set up as the world's largest indoor mall, a dome big enough that it has its own climate and can in fact be made to drizzle or dry on command.

The overall effect is if Walt Disney had met with Ridley Scott and decided to rebuild Las Vegas with the budget of the entirety of both world wars; even the red-light districts spread scattershot between the arcologies are clean and well run, resembling Amsterdam more than Kamaliyah; you recognize a few vistas to be the set pieces of some low-budget cyberpunk flicks from the past year, filmed during reconstruction, which are going to look really dated in a few months if you're any judge.

You meet with (arrange)

# Carpatescu

# your engineers

# McLachlan

# Mathews

# Dr. Damosa

# Carla, who is in town to spectate the launch and deal with any repercussions in case of failure
>>
>>3803766

(You may want to use the timeline document at https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1BlMOSEOxSihj1gdagq7yxCjONaRBgcdlRxnc68uWf0A
)
>>
>>3803765
>* You can expand the Synco system into Northern Africa, if you wish.
Excellent, that brings us up to about 12 different places we either have permission for or factories already built in. Honestly assuming we can get that many built, we will be in an insane position regarding production capacity!

>two and a half million
You know for a global earthquake which hit regions which don't experience so much as tremors and shit? That's actually a fairly low death count.

>The Alkali is almost ready for launch, and your "special" satellite has in fact been made operational before it if you want to change your mind and use it now instead of intercepting Fragment 4.
I'll leave it to other anons but I genuinely consider that Frag-3 is probably the real threat given Frag-4 is metallic and therefore should hold together decently through the atmosphere. Plus if it is going to land in water, we can redirect it with our comm-pusher sat or with another satellite given we've got another month until it's landing to create something.

All or any in favour of redirecting Pusher-sat 1 to Frag-3 intercept rather than Frag-4?

>>3803778
# Carpatescu

# Dr. Damosa

# Carla, who is in town to spectate the launch and deal with any repercussions in case of failure
# your engineers
# McLachlan

These three should be done at the same time. Seeing as they are effectively all about the same issue and all voices should be heard to prevent us missing something big. Personally I see no reason to meet with Mathews currently so I'll leave him off this list.

>>3803795
I'm aware it exists, I just rarely check it since I lose the link in these long threads. I'll make a note of it somewhere probably.
>>
>>3803798

Many places were ready, or at least as ready as they could be: power and gas would cut off automatically to prevent fires, CellSol pylons would go in emergency mode and help coordinate first responders, bugout bags were offered at below market price... You and others capitalized on the justified fears after the Event, to indoctrinate people on the importance of disaster preparedness.

The damage was extensive, but much of it that would have translated to deaths only resulted in homeless, walking wounded, displaced people. Unlike death, these things can be fixed -- and so they were. Civilization bent, so that it would not break.
>>
>>3803798

# Bring the Gap Generator prototype, which you had a few difficulties carrying over from your HQ, to the meeting.

You can say it's a jammer, or a bug detector.

# Let's not look silly.
>>
>>3803816
# Let's not look silly.

If we're wearing our mind-control protection ear pieces, we won't be able to test it and I'd rather not risk mind control.
>>
>>3803798
Im all for using the sat on frag 3 rather then 4. I pushed for that preciously too.

>>3803778
Engineer's then McLachlan then Carpatasu then Carla then Dr. damosa then mathews.
>>
>>3803816
>lets not look silly we got other people to test it on
>>
>>3803827
>then Carpatasu
OP did mention we should only do that if we can justify it if we don't want to piss him off, are you sure anon?
>>
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>>3803798

The meeting happens in the middle of the night; Carpatescu barely ever sleeps, and doesn't mind accommodating the circadian rythm of a loyal and valued subordinate, since he'd be up anyway. He does, however, recommend you take some melatonin to adjust your sleep cycle, since you'll be in New Babylon for the next couple of weeks.

You notice that he's actually moved into the Burj Carpathia penthouse office, rather than just using it to impress the suggestible; the nondescript office tower where he had his real office has been sold off.

You briskly walk through the intentionally tacky antechamber to find that its luxurious carpets are now being cleaned by a drone rover carrying a remarkably silent vacuum cleaner.

"...thank you for your concern, Chief Akhbar, but this is not, in fact, a trap. You did the right thing bringing the matter to my attention. Dismissed."

Security chief Suhail Akbar -- Mr. Vajpayee's counterpart, really -- nods at you as he ambles off purposefully.

Carpatescu's secretary is an older woman who could be Moira's mother; she checks you against a list of expected visitors and nods you in.

The office is as you remember it, with perhaps a few more awards on the wall.

>>3803830
>>3803826

You wouldn't be caught dead in this building without the earpieces on; after a bit of thinking, you decided to not bring the Gap Generator either - it's currently idle in your executive suite.

"Sit down, sit down. Chief Designer McLachlan tells me he is impressed by the zeal and brilliance of your engineers, Foreman. We are both busy men, so let's keep this short. There are a few line items to go over..."

# ... and you do; it's nothing particularly pressing, minutiae that could've been done via email, but even the master of the world is bound by office etiquette.

# ... and you do, but after that, you bring up Mathews' subversion plan.

# ... and you do, but ask what you're supposed to do about the last C-S pylon, since it is due to be installed in a contested territory.

>>3803830

(sorry I was already writing)
>>
>>3803846
# ... and you do, but ask what you're supposed to do about the last C-S pylon, since it is due to be installed in a contested territory.

I want to get a feeling for how he is dealing with Rebohoth. Specifically if he plans to completely abandon him and replace him with Litwala.
>>
>>3803832
What do you mean i thought we had too due to politeness.
>>
>>3803863
I mean having meetings before meeting him, seeing as his ego / character trait is he doesn't like others disrespecting him and would take it as such.
>>
>>3803846
>and you do but ask what you're supposed to do about the last C-S pylon. I also think we should talk about Mathews.

The default is he dies to carpatsu bringing it up early and having our hand in that may control it.
>>
>>3803827
>>3803798

(The order is kind of important, as is whther you'll talk to Mathews or not; I apologize to >>3803830 for overriding but I had already almost finished writing the post!)

>>3803871
>>3803851

(y'all tell me!)
>>
>>3803875
Its no worries.
>>
>>3803875
Eh no problem.
>>
>>3803851
>>3803863

"I expect that you will have no trouble forcing the issue, Foreman. There are a number of mercenary outfits roaming the region, and any of them will be glad to take your money. Africa is a complicated continent -- if I were to walk there, even at the head of the Peacekeepers in bloc, the people there would have every right to see me as the last in a long line of white men come to give them orders. Ultimately, all we can do is provide support if it is asked; paternalism does not work. If Rebohoth is able to do his job, he will do it; if another is, then he will do it."

Sounds like he's decided to let Rebohoth and Litwala fight it out. His posture relaxes.

"This reminds me of a conversation I had with Pontifex Mathews recently. As you may know, his adopted people in Italy, and my own ancestry in Romania, have long had a disagreement over who the true heirs of the Roman Empire are. What do you think?"

That's new; he said he was busy, and he likely meant it. Why make time of philosophy?

# The Italians. Geography is what it is.

# The Romanians. Rome is not a place, it's a people.

# I am American; our founding fathers also modeled themselves after the Roman Republic.

# Rome never fell; we are still using their roads, their legal code is the basis for much of the world, their alphabet is on our computer keyboards, half the world speaks a Romance language...

# Many empires have claimed to be the heirs of Rome, and they all fell; we are following you because we hope that you will break the cycle.

# I'm not going to try to guess what you want to hear; sycophants are a pox on humanity.

# (write in)

# Potentate, speaking of Pontifex Mathews...
>>
>>3803898
>rome never truely fell; we are still using their roads, their legal system is the basis for much of the of world, their alphabet is on our computer keyboards, half the world speak a roman language. But dispite that so mant empires have claimed to be their heirs and then fell as the romans did before them. I flow you becuase I hope that while we may not break this cycle we can change the world for the better in much the same way the romans did and that the future will remeber these years as a golden age.
>>
>>3803898
# (write in)
"Well logically speaking the answer was the Byzantines up until they were conquered and more or less destroyed.

I suppose in acceptance that the dead can't be counted, that there are many who can inherit off of their history to various degrees: the western -as outdated as the term has become in just a few years- world claim that they follow the Roman way of rule and law; the Italians have their blood, assuming we ignore the Ostrogoth invasion; the Romanians carry much of their culture.

Of these logical arguments, I hold that the westernised nations are the second best inheritors. Given that the Romanians maintain both the ways and the culture."
>>
>>3803728
>Oh well, it's not like we had any ideas for better names.
REEEEEEEE!
Its not like you got cockblocked at every turn trying to shape up the PMC and forces for the last few threads.

>>3803750
>>3803753
>>3803757
>>3803766

..................
I need to scream some more brb
*3 hours later*
Okay where were we?

>>3803875
Talk to everyone eventually.

I'd prefer Matthews before Carpatescu.
>>
>>3803940
>>3803956
I like both.
>>
>>3803940
>>3803956
>>3803969

"Rome never truly fell, Potentate. Look at your keyboard and you will see Roman letters. Greek and Turkish culture owes much to the Byzantines. Most Western nations claim their heritage there..."

Carpatescu interrupts you. "You know, Foreman, I was expecting you to tell me what you thought I wanted to hear. Or, from you, perhaps the history-book answer. Now, I've called you a nerd once -- what I may have failed to realize is that in the intervening time, in English, it has become a term of endearment rather than a mild insult. Please take it as such, and keep up the excellent work. Don't let me detain you, now."

>>3803965

(What did you want to call it? Blackwatch is for the black ops team)

As you walk out of the Burj Carpathia, you receive Dr. Robertson's final report on testing; a Gap Generator can, just barely, be made self-contained by running it at slightly below capacity and coupling it with a Stirling radiothermal generator. The effective range is nothing to write home about; a large room or small apartment, call it twice that if the "target" is in line of sight of the device.
# That went overall pretty well; the budget wasn't on the agenda, you were just checking in. Who do you meet with next?
>>
>>3803989
# That went overall pretty well; the budget wasn't on the agenda, you were just checking in. Who do you meet with next?

Our engineers, Carla and McLachlan. Let's get this orbital shit sorted.
>>
>>3803989

Carpatescu's words were ambiguous, but the tone was friendly; you hope that it won't come back to bite you.

New Babylon's artificial lake is once more the province of people seeking clean daytime fun; you've kept the parasailing rig, and even had it sewn into a slightly hunchbacked jacket, in case of defenestration, which you've kept at home.

Your engineers have sent you regular progress reports, indicating that the Alkali rocket is coming out well and since the interception is due to happen relatively close to Earth, the sub-probes intended to provide external video will be able to use your regular satellites as relays, so there won't be a repeat of the data penury that happened with Alkahest.

You watch dawn come over the global capital; with the lights, the arcologies, and the domed mall, it looks a fair amount like what people of your father's generation thought that a city of the year 2000 would be.
>>
>>3804003
>>3803827

The launch ramp, brought by rail to Baikonur as close to Baghdad as it's safe for it to be, is surprisingly still. The enormous Energia rocket is assembled and ready to be launched; the Alkali impactor is in the final stages of systems integration in a climate-controlled pressostructure nearby, with a regular construction crane slated to be used to put the vehicle on the booster. You don't want to interrupt the work, so the meeting will take place in one of the trailers outside this structure. McLachlan makes the point of being there waiting for you.

You set the agenda this time; the first few line items concern small turf wars between engineering and science teams, which are easily solved by having both agency heads in the same room.

# Propose last-minute changes to the launch schedule.

# Bring up the prophecy checklists to McLachlan, his engineering lead, and yours.

# While we're here, ask McLachlan what his strategy for NCASA is; you have influence over him, so you get to steer it, to some point.
>>
>>3804035
# Propose last-minute changes to the launch schedule.
# While we're here, ask McLachlan what his strategy for NCASA is; you have influence over him, so you get to steer it, to some point.
>>
>>3804035
>propose last minute changes to launch schedule. More specifically what are the chances our sattalites can push this one out of the way and we can use the rocket for fragment 4.

>while we are here ask mclachlan what his strategy for NASCA IS
>>
>>3804035
Can we slap a gap generator on its side really quick, just to decrease the chance of god interference
>>
>>3803989
Form a more professional organization that is properly separated from CATS, off of its payroll, and perhaps:
Overwatch
Darkcore
Slavonic Corps
Grey Wolves
SOG (Soldiers of Gold)
Wildcats
5th Element
Whirlwind (riders?)
Silver Gasket
Shadow Force
Totenkopf Group
Cerberus Corps
Watchdog
Panzermen
Arclite (shock?)
Specopts
Towermen
Gauntmen
Black Guards
Black Legion
Thunder Heads
Golden Dawn
I had a bunch more names I forgot

>>3804035
# While we're here, ask McLachlan what his strategy for NCASA is; you have influence over him, so you get to steer it, to some point.
Maybe we can test him with some questions first in private. Then perhaps ask him, but keep in mind Carpatscu doesn't want us using this or talking about it....
At least publicly....
# Bring up the prophecy checklists to McLachlan, his engineering lead, and yours.
Privately of course.

>>3804058
Whats going to power it?
>>
>>3804058
Also a shame we didn't give a generator to our boss, I already have a sales pitch. It helps shut up the witnesses or makes them less noisy.
>>
>>3804058
>>3804058

You bring the Gap Generator with you; the engineers admire the craftsmanship, complain a little about the interference it causes, and ultimately let it be when you tell them that it's a jammer and you're discussing launch dates -- let's not give a terrorist a chance to fire a RPG into the booster at launch.

The device runs on 120/220 volts (actually, internally it runs on 48VDC, but it's using a golf cart battery charger as its PSU because it's what happened to be around when it was put together).
>>3804038
>>3804055
>>3804066


McLachlan wants to revive the Shuttle-Mir program; the aging Soviet space station is still up there, having been given stationkeeping boosts as availability dictated, and it should be possible to use it as a platform to combine Mir-2 and Freedom Space Station modules into an international space station. Once the new hab modules are in place, the old ones would be detached and deorbited safely.

"I believe that the recent budget increase for my agency will leave room for a manned program. It's a disgrace to the Global Community that we have nobody in space."

# Focus on asteroid detection instead, please. I'm almost sure that's what the Potentate said.

# We could use the old station hab modules as a dedicated storage facility for seeds, frozen animal embryos, that sort of thing.

# (write in, I'm open to possibilities here)

Your chief engineer tells you that the "nudger" probe is far too small to make much of a difference this late, with Fragment 3 so close. "I'm glad we have a backup, sir, but all it can do is -- maybe -- force it to drop next to a city, rather than on one."

"Where is it slated to come down?"

"Central Africa, if its outgassing remains constant. Coming in from local southwest."

You're tempted to let it drop on Rebohoth's head, but that would require either a miracle, or the sort of shepherding that is at least twenty years away technologically. It would also cause quite a bit of collateral damage, of course.

Alkali can be used as originally intended, to disgregate Fragment 3 into dust and small rocks that would burn up in the atmosphere, or detonated next to the bolide rather than partially inside it, for an attempt at redirecting it; most of the delta-V would be provided by the pressure wave, with the rest by ablation.

# (Let's hear them proposed changes!)


>>3804066

(I'm going to veto any names that contain Black, Dark, or Watch, because you already named the black ops group Blackwatch and I don't want to get confused, but y'all pick one and I'll do a little scene around that, OK?)

>>3804074

You'll see Carpatescu again at the launch; there's still time to decide whether to do that or not.
>>
>>3804083
kay,
>>
https://allthatsinteresting.com/lost-languages-discovered pro memoriam
>>
>>3804083
I like tiger mafia personally.

Hmm could we push it into the oceanrather then the center of the continent?

Ehh fuck guys i think we gotta use the nuke. Not sure what else we can do.

>focus on asteroid detection and deflection instead. We know we have more coming in two years. Its best we be ready for them. After the immidate threat to all of humanity is over we can start placing people on the moon and sattalites.
>>
>>3804083
# Focus on asteroid detection instead, please. I'm almost sure that's what the Potentate said.

Like the other guy said, for the next two years it takes priority but after that we'll probably intervene much less.

>"Central Africa, if its outgassing remains constant. Coming in from local southwest."
Logically speaking considering it's momentum and shit, what are the odds of the Alkali rocket being able to redirect it from central Africa to Siberia / Tunguska with the help of our pusher? Also how likely is the disintegration attempt to result in it completely vaporising in the upper atmosphere?
>>
>>3804258

The orbital mechanics for this aren't that difficult to calculate; redirecting to Siberia has about a twenty percent chance of success, and simply trying to disgregate the thing will work in ninety percent of the cases, barring a critical malfunction in the impactor.

"The major issue is that our course is pretty much set on this one; the fragment is close, so, it would require a large amount of dV to do anything to it. It's also pretty porous and friable, so there is the problem of pushing against it; essentially, it's a big ball of sandstone, held together by ice and its own weak gravity as well as whatever compressed it in the first place."

The pusher, originally slated to go after Fragment 4, can be left in a parking orbit and deployed against Fragment 3 in an emergency, with only a small (10% or so) loss in the amount of dV available to do its job.

>>3804235
>>3804258

"But manned space flight-"

"-can wait until we know the cosmonauts have somewhere to return to."

You briefly discuss the possibility of an arkship; it's the sort of thing that would require half a human lifetime's worth of development by a committed government, unfortunately.
>>
>>3804258
>>3804235
>>3804102

Tsion's website, of course, claims that Fragment 3, which the Remnant call "Wormwood", is going to poison a third of all water sources. In that sense, keeping the bolide intact and dropping it into the sea or in a desertic biome just might put the lie to him.

# Point out the website to the engineers.

# Tsion will claim to be right regardless; not much point - let's make sure as few people as possible die from this.
>>
>>3804282

We've been over what rocket to use, like, three times now. I vote we get on with it.

Big rocket now, Small rocket later OR now if big rocket fails, Done.

We argued about it last thread.
>>
>>3804287
Yeah seeing the odds of hitting Siberia renders me fairly confident that we're not going to stop it by forcing it to land on ground assuming we couldn't direct it to fall in the Sahara with a far greater chance of success so yeah, disintegration will be our best bet.
>>
>>3803621

XD

All we need is the shark tank.

---

# Tsion will claim to be right regardless; not much point - let's make sure as few people as possible die from this.

I still propose Soft DDoS his website during the launch.
>>
Rolled 44, 20 = 64 (2d100)

>>3804287
>>3804258
>>3804235

Making last-minutes changes at this point would be dangerous; you have the pusher probe launched and kept in a parking orbit in the same inclination as Akhenaten's, and make sure that the engineers have what they need.

The meeting with Carla is likewise brief; you have it outside the rebuilt Dome of the Rock, figuring that there are plenty of security cameras but none of them are going to have microphones. The sacred building is open to tourists outside of traditional Muslim prayer times; while the reconstruction was done well, restoration workers were a little too overzelous, and the place just doesn't feel particularly old. The gold-plated roof is gaudy, too.

She tells you that Carpatescu tried to use her mesmerism with her twice, both times intimating her to not bother him with details, and once telling her to stick to her mandate. She has, by and large, obeyed.

"I've done my own testing on the Eden fertilizer; we're going to start seeing salt leeching in a year or so in some areas, and then more and more. I'm worried; it's as if we'd run the world out of oil in five years."

"What can we do?"

"Dr. Rosenzweig has been informed and is working on some sort of stopgap measure.... we would have to let most of the world's fields lie fallow for a year after providing the soil with iron, phosphate, nitrogen, and carbon. The problem is, of course, that while we can afford - barely - to live on canned food for a year... how are we going to get the world's farmers to just stop making money for a harvest or two? Those who break ranks stand to make a lot of money in the short term, creating a perverse incentive. Imagine the Great Depression, the dust bowl, but worldwide."

"Are you saying that even if we save the world from asteroids, a famine will get us?"

"It might. Ironically, that's not even on Tsion's apocalypse list."

The two of you hash out possible solutions.

# Economic incentives to leave the land fallow for one year -- that would require significant control over the global economy, though.

# Heavily encourage the consumption of seafood, including seaweed. You do know that one of Ikko's people was running a seaweed harvesting operation in the Bering Strait. Jumpstarting the tech base would require making a deal with them, and then there's the problem of selling it to the masses.

# Hydroponics and vertical farms; it's time for cities to start feeding themselves. Less hard a sell, but the industrial effort would be enormous.

"We can't even blame God on this one -- this was just short sightedness on the part of everyone from Dr. Rosenzweig on down." she says.

"Do you blame God? For the other stuff?"

"I don't know."

>>3804312

That's easy to do; every time you do that, he marvels at how fast the page view counter increases, believing that it's all legitimate traffic; in one webcam address, he brags about running the most popular site on the internet
>>
Here's hoping we've manged to avert this part of the apocalypse...

>>3804331
# Heavily encourage the consumption of seafood, including seaweed. You do know that one of Ikko's people was running a seaweed harvesting operation in the Bering Strait. Jumpstarting the tech base would require making a deal with them, and then there's the problem of selling it to the masses.

# Hydroponics and vertical farms; it's time for cities to start feeding themselves. Less hard a sell, but the industrial effort would be enormous.

No reason we can't do both to reduce the issues of either.
>>
(I gotta quit this in a couple hours)

You find the time to talk with Dr. Damosa, whose satellite-school program has been a resounding "meh" due to the simple fact that he designed the program in the early nineties, to provide elementary-school education, and there aren't any elementary-school children anymore; older teens can use the Datalinks and toddlers are still relatively few, and so coddled that there is anything but a lack of personal attention problem with regards to them.

You notice with some glee that he's been using BOCHICA for work, just because it's easy and available. Since the correlation you want isn't in the database and the system doesn't know enough to create it, you help him help the AI find the data it needs to generate a first-order approximation.

He mentions that the MCP is a lot more user-friendly; you have to type, but you don't have to coach it, it just sets itself on a task until it's solved it.

As it turns out, from what little testing has been done, children from Buddhist and Shintoist countries do test measurably high in motor skill and cognition; whether it's because of reincarnation or Chairman Yang's policies, however, is anyone's guess.

Your engineers have done their job; the Alkali vehicle is loaded on the Energia booster by crane. The launch ceremony will be significantly smaller than it was for Alkahest, but Carpatescu will be attending, and so will a few other notables, simply bcause they happen to be in town.


# Do talk to Mathews before this.

# Launch Alkali. The nudger will follow only in case of catastrophic failure.

# Launch the nudger first, see if it's sufficient.


>>3804338

(True, in this case a hybrid approach can make sense)
>>
>>3804338
Support.

---

#Do talk to Mathews before this
>>
>>3804343
I'll be honest I've no idea which option to choose. Part of me wants to see if the nudger can be sufficient just in hopes we can avoid the apocalyptic consequences of this but I understand most of us want to save it for Frag-4.
>>
>>3804282

# Tsion will claim to be right regardless; not much point - let's make sure as few people as possible die from this.


# Hydroponics and vertical farms; it's time for cities to start feeding themselves. Less hard a sell, but the industrial effort would be enormous.
>>
>>3804343
Last option will satisfy our desires the most, but its likely to cause the most problems.

I'd say just let the nuke do its job. Why are we making last minute changes at launch and no before?

It could cause the rocket to miss.
>>
Here's what I'm thinking, we fire the satellite first so as to get as much telemetry as possible, even let it slam into the rock. then let the nuke hit and detonate.

If the missle goes off target for whatever reason, we can use the satillight to help guide it for correct by have it drop its speed latch on then push.

Its also highly risky.

The other option is just trail and contingency.

I suppose we can ask, or let this sit for a while. Can the rocket readjust or correct itself if we use a satellite to pus hit as much as possible.

Where are the Space kerbal folk? What do the simulations say? Consult the Kerbals!
>>
>>3804338
>>3804347
>>3804355

You start planning things out with Carla; at least, you reflect darkly, you have something to trade with the Remnant other than canned food and promises of internet access.

"How do you think they would deal with a disaster not on their checklist?"

"They'd pray, I guess. Maybe they'd cull some of their own to let the rest survive, since they think they're going to Heaven anyway."

Carla is deadpan when she says it; it dawns on you that she has been doing the dreadful algebra of necessity on the entire planet.

"That's dark."

"So's their god. I don't honestly care who rules the world, but I'll take whichever doesn't want to destroy half of humanity to rule over the other half. Looks like Carpatescu is the best bet... Not that I'm much better."

"Of course you are."

"Not really. Hear me out -- there's an island in the Pacific, called Nauru. It's mostly made of phosphates and nitrates. If we were to, well, remove it from the map... it would be enough to give us the chance I mentioned -- grind the island to dust, spread it over the fields, leave them alone for a year."

"So why not..."

"Twelve thousand people live there. They have their own culture, their own language. I know what happens when entire peoples are forcibly relocated."

You can tell that Carla has cried over this, and is trying to not do it in front of you.

# Someone has to make the hard decisions; the fastest they are moved away, the more time we have to dig up this island.

# We'll try to find another way first.

>>3804347
>>3804349
>>3804359

(Talk to Mathews first?)

>>3804376

Alkali has a terminal guidance system; if the nudger does its, well, nudge, the main impactor will be able to correct for it without issues.
>>
>>3804376

Sims indicate that the nudger has a 20% chance of success, while the bomb has 90%. These are worst-case-scenario projections.

Of course, they're going to try to do different jobs.
>>
#Someone has to make the hard decisions.

They'll lose their culture regardless if God wins or if humanity goes extinct from famine.

#Talk to Matthews.
>>
>>3804384
# Someone has to make the hard decisions; the fastest they are moved away, the more time we have to dig up this island.

Comet and tidal waves didn't wipe out the population on the island?

# Someone has to make the hard decisions; the fastest they are moved away, the more time we have to dig up this island.
IF we're doing this ,then we go all out, take over economy and shit.

Is there a gap generator on either the SAT or Rocket?

Can we have the nuder make any fallout from surviving derbies miss the earth further than just the nuke?

Nothing good can come of talking to Matthews yet.
>>
>>3804411
Like we push a it a bit, the nuke goes off, and the comet was destroyed further from earth.
>>
>>3804393
>>3804411

There is no Gap Generator on the Alkali rocket. It can be added at the last minute; you brought one, and since the impactor is riding on an Energia booster, there's some mass budget left. However, the Gap Generator is a power hog, it'd have to be turned on at the last minute.

You can include a Gap Generator on the nudger if you delay its launch one month; it's physically in Baikonur.

# Put the Gap Generator on the Alkali.

# So what if it's in Baikonur? You can charter an airplane and it's your damn probe, you can put what you want on it. Delaying the launch one day won't be much of an issue.

# Let's not make last-minute additions to spacecraft electronics.

>>3804393
>>3804411

You expected Carla to get angry at you; instead, she sort of flops forward, and starts crying in your arms. It's pretty obvious that she's reached the same conclusion.

You cannot provide absolution, but you can provide hope.

She's staying in the Burj Carpathia, of course, a few rooms away from you.

# Leave her be, for now.

# Offer to co-sign the order declaring Nauru a disaster area and mandating its evacuation.

# Just be near as she does that.
>>
>>3804384
>you have something to trade with the Remnant other than canned food and promises of internet access
I mean to be fair, I was thinking we might offer them quarters at Thule base seeing as it can be a town under our control and that makes me want to fill it with weapons foundries and shipyards, turning it into a secret arsenal to level the playing field between us and the world governments. That and access to advanced medical facilities that they might struggle to crew, maintain or hide.

>"Twelve thousand people live there. They have their own culture, their own language. I know what happens when entire peoples are forcibly relocated."
To be fair, that is mostly because 99% of the time the relocation is done by bad people. I mean you could just offer them a different, larger island elsewhere, construct a replica of their houses / towns and basically say "hey wouldn't you all like to live here since we'll divide the additional land between all of you? You can sell it for profit and shit!". Then all you'll be left with are those too stubborn to leave who will almost certainly change their mind as soon as their towns are replaced by open pit mines and massive chemical refineries.

>>3804441
# Let's not make last-minute additions to spacecraft electronics.

# Just be near as she does that.


I say we try the pusher sat first. I say this because I can effectively design a turn plan that would let us launch two next turn or (assuming OP allows it) a larger satellite of 9 parts in total (e,g one comms array and 8 fuel tanks) since he's mentioned we can fit multiple launches together in orbit and I see no reason we couldn't find a way to send the comms array of one of the two back down.

Meanwhile if the pusher does work? We save our Alikali missile for the next fragment or even for the set that come by in two years. If it doesn't then we're going to be too busy un-polluting the oceans to really care.
>>
>>3804455

That's a good idea but what do they care for that if they can just ask for a miracle and get it? We'd have to make sure they remember that "and pass the ammo" part.

Maybe we can fuck with the Witnesses some more? Even getting one of them to bleed would be a success. we 300 now

>>3804455

IDK does that ever work in history? This IS a trolley problem, except let's say that even 10% of the world dies of starvation, it's still 400M people. And let's say that all the Nauru-ians die (BTW it's a real island, I thought it was a sendoff of the Na'Vi from Space Smurfs Avatar).

So we have 1 guy on one track and 30000 on the other track. Even if the 1 guy is Felix from Re:Zero, I'm pulling the damn lever.


>>3804441

# Let's not make last-minute additions to spacecraft electronics.

But let's make sure that future satellites including the ones in >>3804455 carry a gap generator. We should put gap generators on everything since they work at least a little bit. Mass produce the damn things.

QM when do we get an option to do that?
>>
>>3804441
Just how far is the vomet fragment in terms of distance and time?

How if at any would be the delay of the Alkali
>>
>>3804479
Theres a area nearby nauru that was an attempt to serve as a connection and resort area to the island, it failed but the location can be used to better house them.

Also there's not much to nauru to be honest, we're going to be forced to rebuild them into a modern society either way or half ass it and watch them self destruct.
>>
I feel like a I should mention that, most optimally and assuming we throw every asset at stopping Fragment-3, we only have a 92% chance of success.

>>3804479
>That's a good idea but what do they care for that if they can just ask for a miracle and get it?
Miracles = slow unreliable inaccurate. Modern medicine = fast reliable accurate.

>we 300 now
"The world will know that free men stood against a tyrant, that few stood against many and, before this battle is over, that even a god-king can bleed" - Foreman moments before being struck down by Jesus as he cut the Lord's cheek with Pratchett's sword.

>IDK does that ever work in history?
Occasionally.

>This IS a trolley problem
Yep. I mean we're probably responsible for about that many preventable deaths at this point what with us failing to stop the World Government from using their nukes against the nationalist rebels and shit.

>Even if the 1 guy is Felix from Re:Zero, I'm pulling the damn lever.
To be fair anon, that would be all the more reason to pull the lever.
>>
>>3804455
>>3804479

You tap your headset and have a memo sent to your aerospace engineering staff that future large satellites should include room, mass budget,

Carla asks you what that was about; you tell her about the odd piece of technology that Dr. Robertson's staff developed after extensive trial and error. It doesn't seem to make much of an impression, understandably.

"This is the one time WE need a miracle, not the opposite of it."

You watch her compose the order. As with most paperwork these days, it's a matter of copying and pasting boilerplate paragraphs together.

She reads bits of it aloud, changes her minds, makes notes. You try to respect her mental process, and just listen. Oddly, she prefers to work lying down on the bed, rather than sitting down; these suites are basically large apartments in themselves, so it's not as if there's no room.

"You know... I think I understand God's plan."

That's out of the blue. "Er, Carla, are you thinking about converting?"

"Let's assume for a minute that Tsion is right. Carpatescu told me not to, but I'm going to do my heuristics homework. Why all the elaborate charade? Why not just show up and demand obedience and melt everyone who disagrees?"

# "Because some guy named John did mushrooms after his country got invaded by the Romans."

# "Because it's pretty obvious if you read the Bible that God is a sadist on a power trip most of the time."

# "Because God's power is not as unlimited as the press release says, so He has to work in phases."

# "Because if God causes an ecocide first, then he can justify his savior persona by fixing the problems He caused, and receive genuine adoration."

>>3804455

Large satellites can be docked together; they're based on old monolithic Soviet space station designs (Salyut/Almaz) from the 70s and early 80s, before Mir was developed. You wouldn't use that design for anything carrying people these days, but since you aren't carrying people, it's a cheap, flight-tested, rugged design. One Almaz station even carried an autocannon!

The main advantage of a double launch is that only one satellite needs a comms array for guidance; the other can just be a sort of tanker module with only propellant. The first vehicle would have to do all the precision maneuvering for docking, but that's not something that needs done autonomously, even -- it's in low Earth orbit so it can be radio controlled with almost no lag.
>>
>>3804522
>Why all the elaborate charade? Why not just show up and demand obedience and melt everyone who disagrees?
"Well given the technical development of Dr Robertson, what if god isn't actually all-powerful but is rather limited by narrative-causality, that he needs people to believe in him or what he represents and that he can only really directly effect the world through the myths they believe or prayers they make. Hell what if this isn't god but some sort of faith-based mind-parasite?"

>The main advantage of a double launch is that only one satellite needs a comms array for guidance; the other can just be a sort of tanker module with only propellant. The first vehicle would have to do all the precision manoeuvring for docking, but that's not something that needs done autonomously, even -- it's in low Earth orbit so it can be radio controlled with almost no lag.
Question OP how effective would a vehicle with 14 propellant tanks and a comms relay be at redirecting fragment 4? Just as a thought exercise...
>>
>>3804544

What you basically have there is an interplanetary probe; it's even odds that it could cause Fragment 4 to miss entirely, if launched early enough.
>>
>>3804522
># "Because God's power is not as unlimited as the press release says, so He has to work in phases."
Gonna go out for a bit, don't blow up the world while I'm gone please.
>>
>>3804564
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ec-8A5k16Ak
>>
>>3804544
>>3804564

"Because God's power isn't as unlimited as his fan club says. We've blocked 'miracles'. Look at what you and Santiago did with the sea wall. If we're dealing with something that thrives on belief..."

"So, you're not explicitly saying it's aliens, but.... it's aliens."

"Hey, any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic."

Carla took the classics track in high school, and tells you that (approximative) Greek for belief-eater would be "euxovore".

You remind her what Moira did, and show her Dr. Robertson's work; she's a statistician, so she's going to understand it better than you. She looks at the Gap Generator prototype, and you have to admit that it does look like a toy, or a movie prop. You plugged it in when she mentioned she understood God's plan; it's running at about half capacity, sending out a quiet blue-purple glow and sounding like one of those pink-noise sleep aids.

"I used to be afraid of the dark when I was little, my Dad made me a night light out of a transformer and a bycicle headlight, it was bright enough to let me feel safe and dim enough that I'd fall asleep. Made a nice wooden case for it, too."

Carla signs a piece of paper, takes a picture of it, pastes the signature on the order, and sends the signed PDF out. She sighs deeply. "It's done. I... I've never even been there. I need to get some rest, I flew in from Indonesia and for me it's stupid in the morning."

She gives you the piece of paper. On top of the signature it says "Thank you."

# Leave her the Gap Generator overnight.

# Take it.

The launch ceremony is scheduled, and everything is ready.

# Have the nudger leave orbit and precede the Alkali.

# Don't.

(Sorry if I am asking again but I can't find a definite answer)
>>
>>3804591
# Don't.
I'll mostly defer to the other players on this but I'm saying dont for now.... I gtg.
# Leave her the Gap Generator overnight.
>>
>>3804591
# Leave her the Gap Generator overnight.

Give that adorable utilitarian-decision making woman a hug.

# Have the nudger leave orbit and precede the Alkali.

The nudger works because the target is currently intact. The alkali threatens that fact. This order of action works best.
>>
>>3804606

I'm voting Don't.

The nudger has to go out as soon as possible (now would be a good time) but against fragment FOUR.

We've been told 1000 times that the further out you send an interceptor, the more deviation it can cause.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vbzP6wVENtE

If we want to shoot at F4 multiple times i'm all for it, we can afford it.
>>
>>3804642
We can make a new one for f4 lets start by trying that 20% here
>>3804591
>leave it
>nudger precede the alkali
>>
>>3804642
F-4 is the least likely in my opinion to cause the biblical effect so I am more so concerned with avoiding that. Fact is we're already going to be dealing with a global famine, a global loss of water supply would exacerbate it so much more.

>If we want to shoot at F4 multiple times i'm all for it, we can afford it.
Thanks for your support. I am thinking of spending all of next month on redirecting the F-4 too. Carpetscu can't complain given we're literally doing this to save humanity and all.
>>
>>3804645

OK, so you want to trade a good chance to push off F4 for good since we would be intercepting it 2 months out, for a 20% chance to change where F3 lands, since it would land regardless?

You must have a really good reason to push F3 on Russia so sell me it. Blackmail Zarkhov? Redo Tunguska just for fun? Blow up a bunch of permafrost so that methane causes a bit of extra global warming for when the Earth is supposed to lose a bunch of sunlight?

I'm happy to change my vote if it makes sense to do so, but from a orbital mechanics perspective, it doesn't, so you must have some political or prophecy related reason instead. That's cool. Let's hear it. Sell me it.
>>
>>3804649
>You must have a really good reason to push F3 on Russia so sell me it.
Target region in russia has low development and low political, economic, social or historical value. Can be extremely damaged with little relevant material loss enabling us to compensate all potentially lost individuals in region excessively to move elsewhere. Also isolates any potential pathogens, poisons or other substances in a near-arctic region with a distinct lack of major waterways comparable to other regions.


Alternatively we aim it into a African desert (e,g sahara) and use that to absorb the meteor which would most likely be more probable to succeed.
>>
>>3804606
>>3804600
>>3804642

She's clearly waiting on you to leave before she passes out, so you leave the Gap Generator plugged in and make your way out. You take the trouble to close the door slowly and carefully, which reveals to you that Carla can go from awake to snoring like a chainsaw in ten seconds flat. You get the idea that she needed it.

You spend the rest of the morning dealing with the small things you'd ordinarily deal with in your office. The executive suites in the Burj Carpathia are huge; they have an office room, and it's definitely more magnificently appointed than your own - wooden floor instead of carpeting, handcrafted Iraqi or Iranian furniture instead of Ikea. The only downside is that you only have your laptop to work on, rather than the monster 1.2Ghz desktop you're used to.

Tomorrow you're getting ready to shoot down a meteorite. Again. And there's four years more of escalating crises to come, culminating in impossible things roaming the Earth unchecked.

You ask Dr. Robertson about a mass produced Gap Generator design. It doesn't do much, but at this point even an extra one percent chance is important.

>>3804660
>>3804649
>>3804645
>>3804600

(I got 2 for, 2 against, anyone want to break the tie?)

>>3804649 is correct on the orbital mechanics, but >>3804660 is correct on the human cost.
>>
>>3804669

(Be back in a few hours, or tomorrow morning, too, stuff going on here. Thank you for playing, I hope that this is still interesting!)
>>
>>3804660

I see what you mean, and offer a counterpoint. Let's assume that everything works perfectly.

Plan A:

* Now: Launch nudger.
* Now: Nudger gives little nudge to F3, which is already close to Earth, for little effect.
* Now: Launch Alkali.
* Now: Alkali does its job, F3 blows up.
* Now: F4 is far away.

* Next month: Schedule large nudger to be built.
* Next month: F4 gets closer, as it does.

* Next month +1: F4 gets as close to Earth as F3 is now.
* Next month +1: Launch large nudger.
* Next month +1: Large nudger gives less-little nudge to F4, which is already close to Earth, for less-little effect.

Plan B:

* Now: Launch Alkali.
* Now: Alkali does its job, F3 blows up.
* Now: Launch nudger, targeting F4.
* Now: Nudger gives little nudge to F4, which is far away from Earth.

* Next month: We spend the money on more useful things. F4 continues moving on nudged trajectory.

* Next month +1: F4 has been on a deviated trajectory for 2 months, passes us by, and we wave at it.

Which is a better use of our money?
>>
>>3804720
>Which is a better use of our money?
Which offers a better chance of preventing a biblical / narrative event?

>Plan A:
Your assessment is inaccurate. You assume that the Nudger will always be followed by Alkali which is illogical since it would only be used if the Nudger failed. Additionally if the Nudger failed, I would prompt OP to tell me if the Russian comm-pusher sat is in a good orbit / position to effectively correct the Fragments final course in hopes of sparing the Alkali. Personally I'd like to use both of them on this in hopes the Alkali can be kept in reserve in case something unexpected occurs.

Addendum: I'd also have you note that I wished to build additional orbital assets this month but I didn't remember in my drunken haze that that was a priority. Nor was I even around for the selection of this month's assignments.
>>
>>3804751

So the idea is to keep Alkali, which we've been told has been designed and built specifically to counter F3, in reserve for F4?

And getting ready to sacrifice satellites against F3?

Okay.

I agree with you then.

We're doing everything wrong, but at least let's commit to doing it, because doing it half-assed would be worse.

I sincerely look forward to McLachlan making us look like idiots for using orbital assets stupidly, and us losing NCASA influence, because I genuinely think that it'll make a better story, and because that way we can focus on Earthly matters. We won't have time for large scale space stuff in this quest anyway, unlike the old one.

I do think we should design Gap Generators into satellites though.

To be clear, I am not being sarcastic, I'm changing my vote.
>>
>>3804779
Fair enough mate. I honestly don't expect to change your mind. My logic for this shit is simple, if the Alkali was able to stop these meteors in the mainline universe then we wouldn't have anything to worry about and wouldn't have intervened.

Seeing as I don't have the source material to hand and I ain't going to spend money buying it off Amazon so I can understand precisely if the first missile launch works in-book or if there even was a second one in order to interpret what is the most logical action. What I am instead going to do is assume that every course of action where we didn't get involved heavily to make it happen will inevitably fail or actively work against human interest.


I'll admit it's probably not the smartest method but it is generally full proof in the sense that it will mean I never assume that we can relax. If you can find a free PDF of the appropriate book or something then I may very well change my vote if it bears evidence to the contrary to my interpretation.
>>
File: 4 Soul_Harvest.pdf (820 KB, PDF)
820 KB
820 KB PDF
>>3804784

I think the scenario is sufficiently different from the books that this isn't metagaming... Anyway, page 250 out of 252.
>>
>>3804779

Assuming Fragment 4 is related to Trumpet 5, it is the bigger threat.

Trumpet 3 will target, at maximum, a third of the Earth's fresh water springs.

However, thus far the Judgments have been grounded in a Scientific basis and have been... manageable with our collective assets.

Demon locusts and demon horsemen are a bit more complicated. If Apollyon is on Fragment 4, all the better to punt it into the Sun.

---

>>3804784

>>What I am instead going to do is assume that every course of action where we didn't get involved heavily to make it happen will inevitably fail or actively work against human interest.

Agreed.
>>
>>3804802

I've been trying to make that point, but since I've been unable to, I figure let's shoot all our guns at Fragment 3 so we have one less thing to deal with, also I don't want to hold up the quest.
>>
>>3804802

My point is that I'd rather do it wrong than do it half assed. At least we have a chance of getting rid of F3.

I don't think Alkali will work well against F4 at all, but again, we've decided to do this topsy-turvy,so lets stick to it, it's better than going back and forth on it all the time.

As for the demon locusts they aren't actually that dangerous, they bite people but aren't lethal. I'm more worried about the whole "the sun gives a third less light".

Instant ice age, solar panels not working anymore.... especially the solar panels is going to cripple us, we may have to use up all our nuclear fuel to put Stirling generators on pylons.
>>
>>3804799
Thanks for the link, it was deeply informative. I know now how vastly we have altered the circumstances of the reality we bear and thus agree with you.


OP, I hereby nullify my standing vote and beg a substitution: Frag-3 intercept should be done by Alkali while Frag-4 is done by pusher-sat.


>>3804802
>Trumpet 3 will target, at maximum, a third of the Earth's fresh water springs.
Yeah but the issue is if it does it all in the same region then living in the middle of the affected area is near-impossible since you'd need to live entirely off of bottled water transported potentially hundreds of miles.

>However, thus far the Judgments have been grounded in a Scientific basis and have been... manageable with our collective assets.
To be fair, a large portion of our assets have been focused elsewhere.

>Demon locusts
Big bug zappers attached to our Gap field Generators.

>demon horsemen
Second verse same as the first, just turn up the ampage and make the Tesla towers turn the terrible to teslatic dust.

>If Apollyon is on Fragment 4, all the better to punt it into the Sun.
Would you say that nuking it in orbit is the only way to be sure?

>>3804805
>also I don't want to hold up the quest
Fair point.
>>
>>3804805

I keep finding myself flip flopping on Fragment 3.

I'm discovering I have a lot to learn about Astrophysics.


At this point,I just want to get through this disaster and get to cleaning up the mess. I'm confident in our assets and collective wits to pull through.
---

>>3804799
An Apocalyptic event reduced to two brief paragraphs.... Lovely.

>>Would you say that nuking it in orbit is the only way to be sure?

Damn fucking straight!
>>
>>3804839

thanks. okay so we're revoting on what to do with the rockets?

> Frag-3 intercept should be done by Alkali while Frag-4 is done by pusher-sat.

Yes, this please. >>3804802 what say you?

>>3804839

Yeah we're going to have to spend a lot of money on energy.

Distill water + recondense it? Still needs a shit ton of power.

We need MOAR POWAR.
>>
>>3804841
>I'm confident in our assets and collective wits to pull through
True, my main worry is for Africa given they are currently in a war: what the hell happens if they lose access to readily available fresh water?
>>
>>3804849

Works for me.

Hmmmm....

We're about to own a base up in the Arctic, yes? Could we somehow convert the snow and ice into drinking water and sell it/donate it?
>>
>>3804859

Hook an iceberg? Get a big barge and tow it with the carrier?

>>3804850

Time to set our factories to "water filters".
>>
>>3804863

Something to that effect, yes. Maybe get an arrangement with Zhakarov to get on board, let him get some fame, then get to deconverting him.
>>
>>3804799
With great fanfare, the press showed the launch of a colossal ground-to-air
nuclear missile designed to vaporize the new threat. As the whole world
watched, the flaming meteor the Bible called Wormwood split itself into
billions of pieces before the missile arrived. The residue wafted down for
hours and landed in one-third of the fountains, springs, and rivers of the
earth, turning the water a bitter poison.
Thousands would die from drinking it.

yeah uhh fuck. no lets not nuke it
not at alllll.

>>3804669
Im voting only use satellite and save alkali for fragment 4
>>
>>3804849
>Yeah we're going to have to spend a lot of money on energy.
To be fair, I was already in favour of energy research seeing as it will provide various benefits from higher density batteries for our Nomenklators and drones to more efficient lasers and RTGs. Plus it will let us scale up the Gap Generators, which I still say we should come up with a market-name for.

>Distill water + recondense it? Still needs a shit ton of power.
At best we could make use of it in processes which generate heat to make drinking water the byproduct rather than the focus. Problem is there are only so many such reactions and industries.

>>3804859
>We're about to own a base up in the Arctic, yes
Close enough aye.

>Could we somehow convert the snow and ice into drinking water and sell it/donate it?
Potentially but you still need a lot of energy which is something we'll struggle to get. Realistically I'd say solar still but seeing as solar is about to be made shit, I don't know.

>>3804863
>Time to set our factories to "water filters".
Well at least god isn't putting stuff in the water to turn the frogs gay.
>>
>>3804879

That's fragment 3 described in such masterful prose.
>>
>>3804882

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9JRLCBb7qK8
>>
https://wiki.lspace.org/mediawiki/The_dreadful_algebra_of_necessity

So here's Terry Pratchett on trolley problems.
>>
Also what do you guys plan on doing for the next few months because we've realistically got to figure out a counter to the supernatural that works on a large scale by month 45, as at that point we're facing 200 million invisible horsemen to try and kill 1/3 of non-believing humanity.

Considering our current month is 37, it's doubtful we'll manage to complete and deploy any advanced Gap field generators in such a way as to prevent humanity's suffering. On the other hand, we might be able to just break the narrative by avoiding the prior events of which there are worryingly few.

That or we accept aprox 1/3 of humanity is going to die and move onto damage control and shit.
>>
>>3804882

Regarding the Demonic Horsemen, we know they're linked to the Euphrates River. If we could establish a staging area in the region and utilize sufficiently advanced gap generators, we could maybe tackle the issue.

Hypothesis:

Rev attributes four angels imprisoned at the Eurphrates in the Sixth Trumpet. Perhaps they serve a similar capacity to Apollyon (i.e. Commanders). Take out the head....

Failing that.... Tanks blessed by Orthodox Priests.

Tanks = Iron Chariots

Demon Horsemen = God's Army

Iron Chariots > God's Army (Judges 1:19)

Perhaps if we encourage enough belief in this weakness, it can be effective on the field of battle?
>>
>>3804947
It's the 4 angels that are linked to the river. Not the demon-horsemen.

>Tanks blessed by Orthodox Priests
Effectiveness doubtful: human non-believers unable to detect horsemen. Unknown if robotic systems will bypass issue.

>Iron Chariots > God's Army (Judges 1:19)
>Perhaps if we encourage enough belief in this weakness, it can be effective on the field of battle?
It's certainly better than my plan of redirecting the Euphrates into a different river so the actual length of the Euphrates is far smaller before covering that area in gap generators.
>>
File: SealOfSolomon.png (61 KB, 1200x1200)
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>> It's the 4 angels that are linked to the river

True. However, they're still described as being the ones who kill a third of mankind.

Oddly, it cuts straight from the Four Angels to the horsemen.

Demon Horseman Proposal II


I know that in Arabic mythology, Solomon was able to command an army of demons to build the Temple through use of the Seal of Solomon.

There are different versions of what it looks like, but one of the more common examples is the Star of David.

Its a stretch, but we;ll apparently have proto-SCP nerds yes? Something to keep them busy.

Maybe make a giant array in a grid? Bonus, you have both occultists and Muslims to believe in the power of this myth.
>>
>>3804961
Heck if I know.
>>
>>3801592
Also just some statistic stuff, assuming we are allowed only 21 factories, that being one per territory of all regions, that means we could sustain the launch of 10 aerospace parts per month without paying a single penny in manufacturing costs.

It also means that we could successfully update the entire world to a combined-5 ground network at a total cost of 9 Bn over a period of roughly half a year to seven months or much more quickly at a higher cost monetarily.

Assuming instead our goal was to construct enough drones for all of our work and covert teams (as well as an extra set for combat losses), this would take three months of production. Given they are a stackable bonus however, I'll assume that rather than wanting 25 we'd want as many as we could get our hands on. In which case our maximum yearly production would be 105 drone units or 5.1 units of drones per team which even assuming they only provide a 3% bonus each or something would still equate a 15% increase in our chance of victory on covert or construction actions. Meaning that eventually we'd basically need one work team to do a construction task that previously needed four.

Additionally our sheer surplus of funds is sufficient that we should be able to do the 33 levels of research (at least that we currently have the trees of research for) for only 125 bn over the course of at least 9 turns give or take. Although I admit this is mostly down to manpower limitations and could be accelerated by undermanning projects or other such methods. Assuming I'm not horribly mistaken.

Lastly, we have sufficient nuclear material production (0.5 per month) that we may produce a Uranium Hydride bomb every other month. Currently this is not very useful but it is important to note that given their nature as a dirty bomb compared to more modern / traditional nuclear weapons, the potential for their use in black ops can't be denied.
>>
>>3805183
So are we nuking Fragment or not?

>>3804799
Don't see how this isn't meta but at this point I don't even care.
>>
>>3804779

I'm guessing you are in fact being sarcastic. Thank you for being excited about the quest and thank you for doing the orbital mechanics. But consider that while you are right on the space stuff, you're OOC being a bit of a buttinski about it to the other anons, and IC ignoring the human cost. It's just a game, relax, okay? :)

>>3804961

You spent more time than you care to admit reading up on Jewish, Christian and Muslim mythology. As promised, Ryan Andrews has been sending you previews of the great scanning project, as pages become available; each ancient text is delivered in PDF format, with a high-resolution scan of the original document put side by side with a cleaned-up version in the requested language, with images replaced by clean vector drawings.

Worried as you are, during the next meeting with your aerospace engineers -- the flight envelope has to be finalized -- you doodle the symbol over and over on note paper. One of your engineers notices, and politely informs you that you must be using an old document.

"How do you mean?"

"Add a dot in the center, and what you have is a schematic cross-section of the Alkahest composite warhead. However, given Fragment 3's composition, Alkali's physics package is simply a thermobaric warhead surrounded by toroidal oxidizer tanks."

"Any way we can paint this symbol on both our impactor and GCASA's?"

"You mean, for good luck? Sure. The inside of Alkahest's fairing was pretty much covered in graffiti, as long as they were done with safe inks. A lot of the workers wanted to tell Akhenaten exactly how we felt about it. I mean, it's like airmen and pilots spray painting on bombs, isn't it?"

You have to admit that setting up a proper experiment, with a control group, would be insanely difficult... but it can't hurt.

>>3804883

(That is in fact talking about what we know as Fragment 3, so good catch. But please don't post whole books, I don't know if that's sufficient to get the thread yanked or removed from the archive)

>>3804841

You are now able to build uranium hydride bombs; it might be possible to put them on the class of orbital rocket you have access to. The obvious use other than asteroid deflection is, well, it's a tactical nuke, in space, ready to come down on your command.

>>3804839

(I think that's what y'all want to do, so I'm going to go with it. If I got the result of the discussion wrong, I apologize, and will try to do better next time.)

While the media attention is focused on the Alkali rocket being launched from Baghdad, the Baikonur facility will launch a modifed satellite that had most of its communication and observation capability removed and replaced by extra propellant; this probe will rendezvous with Fragment 4, adhere to it magnetically, and push it off course while it's far away from Earth.

Fragment 3 is too close for this to be feasible; the Alkali rocket will use a thermobaric warhead to disgregate the asteroid.

The launch ceremony is more muted...
>>
Rolled 84, 31 = 115 (2d100)

>>3805592

... in that no global satellite broadcast is planned, so it's only being livestreamed. The media platform used for the Alkahest launch is being reused, but there are fewer cameras and microphones aimed at it, and fewer dignitaries on it.

Carpatescu is there; Fortunato and Mathews are not. A number of hangers-on fill the seats, with you, Carla, and McLachlan in the second row. Funny enough, this is the first time you've seen Bruno Folgore in person in over a year. The man seems to have done well for himself; he is tan, swole, and by the look of it the NB Peacekeeper division has a good handle on security. Suhail Akbar is explaining to a GCNN journalist how asteroid protection is a vital part of the Global Community efforts to safeguard humanity, with McLachlan trying to get a word in every half minute.

You and Carla are watching the launch of the Fragment 4 interceptor on your phone screen. The Proton rocket takes off without a hitch; video shows that subpotentate Viktor Zakharov is doing his own media event for it. The space apathy that pervaded much of the 1990s has been all but wiped out with Akhenaten's arrival and subsequent fragmentation, of course, but both your media people and McLachlan confirm that a majority of the public just doesn't get excited about unmanned launches. The head of GCASA says that back before Carpatescu, the byline was "No Buck Rogers, no bucks".

# (I forget, was a high res camera included, or is it it just guidance and propellant?)

You have asked final-assembly workers to add a Seal of Solomon to the inside of both vehicles, which was duly drawn in place with permanent marker after making sure that the marker ink would not release any fumes or become corrosive in a vacuum.

Carla benefited from a good night's sleep, but she looks like she's aged two years in a day; you quickly realized that it's due to the heavy makeup she's wearing. That's a first for her; you've never seen her use more than a bit of lipstick when she was working with you.

"Oh, it's camera makeup -- it's intended to look good on TV, not in person. The big tower has room service for makeup artists, makes sense given all the media stuff that goes on every day."

She assures you that she's fine. "Look, if we're listening to you know who" -- Carpatescu has asked people to not mention Tsion during photo and video ops -- "we're all going to Hell anyway. I want to go for the right reasons."

Carla isn't too familiar with American literature, so she doesn't know she just referenced Huckleberry Finn almost word for word.

Your prototype Gap Generator is

# buzzing happily in a corner of the media platform.

# back in your suite.

# still in Carla's suite.


(OOC note: I'd like to apologize for the low quality of this thread.)
>>
>>3805614
Dont worry giest your high quality. Low quality for you is good quality.

>buzzing happily in the corner of the media platform.

We really need to downsize that thing and make more. How do we make more?
>>
>>3805614

Carpatescu makes a few brief remarks about today's launch being proof positive that Alkahest was not a last-ditch effort to prevent the apocalypse, but rather the first in a series of "mighty giant guardians of our fragile global garden. Let the very heavens know that this world is protected by the Global Community's capable hands and keen minds!"

That's not strictly true, in that this was the second of two available Energia rockets, but it is true that GCASA is working hard to bring a new heavy lift launcher system online; you understand that it's a disposable version of the Space Shuttle launch stack that uses Russian-style liquid fuel boosters rather than SRBs. Hopefully, they'll have something to show for their work in two years.

The launch is loud, covers most of you in a fine layer of dust, and happens without incident; you will know the result in a couple of days. For now, at least until tomorrow, you've done all you can.

A few minutes after Alkali disappears from view, you hear that the Fragment 4 nudger is on trajectory and all systems are within operational tolerances.

# Stay in New Babylon for a bit, maybe check on Carla.

# Go home as soon as you can, there's planning to do.
>>
>>3805619

(You're about to get an option to, now that you are reasonably sure that it works as anything but room decoration!)

After the launch noise has abated and the cameras start to clear out, Carpatescu stops you. "Foreman, what in the world is that thing?" He points to the Gap Generator, whose corona discharge is hard to see in daylight, and whose static field has managed to acquire a dust cover twice that of the chair it's been propped up on.

"It's a jammer, Potentate."

You're not lying; it makes enough radio noise that the TV interviewers had to use wired microphones and cameras, and your own cell phone is only getting one tick despite being near the Baghdad-New Babylon highway, which features a miniature CellSol pylon at every streetlight to allow people to start taking advantage of the citywide free wifi as soon as they begin their trek to it.

"Why does it look like my grandfather's tube radio?"

"We felt that it would be nicer than an anonymous white box."

"Right, right." Carpatescu rolls his eyes; you know his fondness for minimalistic design -- the gaudy antechamber to his office is, in effect, a cognitive trap. "Well, now that we had liftoff, turn it off right now, please. Its high-pitched whine has been giving me a monumental headache."

Suhail Akbar tells you to let him know about something like this, since he had issues operating the earsets of his own security detail. However, he is unaffected, as is anyone else.

You don't hear it, of course, but you do know that the Gap Generator does emit an ultrasonic whine at approximately 40Khz, and that it's loud enough to be heard by cats and dogs and make mosquitos think there's a bat flying around, and flatten themselves against walls. Disguising it as a bug deterrent, or even giving it that function, might be a way to market the thing -- with the caveat that it annoys pets.

Either Carpatescu can hear into the near ultrasound and is very sensitive to it, or the Gap Generator has a direct effect on him. Possibly both. Maybe that's something you can use, should it ever come to blows.
>>
#Still in Carla's suite

#Stay in New Babylon for a bit, maybe check on Carla

>>3805592
So for clarification.... the layout of the warhead is similar to the 'Star of David' stye of the Seal of Solomon?

That's.... very interesting!

>># (I forget, was a high res camera included, or is it it just guidance and propellant?)

You talking about the nudger? I think consensus was basic guidance and as much propellant we could get away with.

>>3805633
If we wanted to be a dick, we could stick one of the gap generators on Aki's drones and let it run loose in the air ducts of the Burj Carpathia.
>>
>>3805645
trying to talk to Satan over hell cellular then all of a sudden its like your going through a tunnel with a subway train scraping against the walls.

>>3805621
>go home as soon as possible.
Whats our chances with our satellite on meteor 4?
>>
>>3805645

Yes, the Alkahest contained a plutonium warhead, surrounded by six uranium hydride containers. The "lines" and "dots" represented the systems that would initiate both supercritical reactions. The correspondence is almost perfect; the initial hybrid warhead schematic used just that symbol, with the addition of a circle in the middle to mean the original nuclear device.

(OOC note: I would prefer to not explain in detail the workings of a modern plutonium bomb on this forum. While the uranium hydride design that we are using here was considered in the 1940s, it only works due to the changed nuclear physics in the quest).

Dr. Robertson simply figured that, since there is no definite boundary on the zone in which nuclear physics has been altered -- other than it's smaller than the distance between the Sun and the nearest stars -- using both systems would guarantee that at least one would go off.

>>3805645

That's feasible, although the Gap Generator is a power hog -- even the small prototype uses about as much power as a large microwave oven or small air conditioner. The drone would have to carry a Stirling RTG. You can still do it, but such a thing would be pretty large, and hard to hide, unless the Burj Carpathia's air ducts are the sort that allow a secret agent to crawl in. Given the size of the building, however, they probably are.

>>3805651

Rendezvous with Fragment 4 is practically guaranteed. It remains to be seen what the effectiveness of the nudge will be. At minimum, you will be able to decide where it lands.

>>3805633

The Alkali's remote cameras -- essentially, older microsat designs -- launch from the primary impactor to show what looks like a ball of fraying chalk, largely beige and brown due to impurities; you could, if you stretched things a little, say that it resembles rotting wood. Predictably, Tsion's website does.

Alkali's impactor touches the surface of the fragment, and pushes into it, further confirming that the large asteroid is not very dense. The detonation creates a temporary atmosphere of combustion gases on the side of the object, which both jostles it to one side, and sends a shockwave through the entire mass. The microsat cameras are sent tumbling, of course, but some image processing from the last frames received before they are out of range of your and GCASA's receivers result in a blurry video of Fragment 3 wobbling, and then assuming a more circular shape, as if in a cheap 3D morph effect. On the other side of the detonation, a jet of material is expelled from the mass.....
>>
>>3805660


Fragment 3, only slightly mutilated, continues its march towards the Earth's atmosphere, but it has been defanged: its particulate matter is now only bound together by its own weak gravity, and the bolide will disintegrate into dust harmlessly after a spectacular flash when it hits the Earth's upper atmosphere.

Over the next twelve hours, small rocky fragments fall scattershot, largely over the western half of the world.

Unlike the launch, this piece of news is picked up by broadcast media; there's the obligatory shot of people cheering in a mission control room.

The bad news -- of course there's bad news -- is not broadcast as heavily; Carla tried to do so, but was overridden by Fortunato. GCASA was able to do spectroscopy on the burning bolide, and confirmed that the inner part of the fragment had "a significant, but not overwhelming" arsenic content.

Carla directs the affected areas -- mostly the Mexican, American and Canadian interior and west coast -- to post advisories about drinking unfiltered water there, but expects that hikers and the like will largely ignore them.

"Over time we can expect three to five thousand deaths, just from arsenic poisoning -- from water or freshwater fish -- and inability to be reached quickly by first responders. The Rocky Mountains are extremely dense with springs and sources, and historically they have always been safe to drink. We'll tell people to not go hike, but... you know."

More worryingly, the danger is going to remain over a period of years, since arsenic nodules that fell in a stream would last for a long time. The consequences on some food chains will be extensive.

UNDRR publishes an advisory, but it does not receive much in the way of media attention; within the week, reports of missing or dead hikers over both American continents start to trickle in.

Tsion warns that "thousands will die from drinking of Wormwood"; Father Schorpe chastises him for gloating over the death of innocents, upon which he is reminded that there is no one righteous, no, not one. Carla does a bit of shitposting herself, points out that it would have been immensely worse if it wasn't for Alkali and if this is all God's got bring it on, and is promptly banhammered.

Carla is on the ball; water filters reach the affected area

A couple of weeks later, NCASA's moribund astrobiology division reports a dicovery which may help them keep their operating budget: a bacterium in Lake Mono, California, has been found that metabolizes arsenic instead of phosphorus. "At this time, we cannot rule out the possibility that this extremophile lifeform has arrived on Earth from one of Akhenaten's fragments."

# Time to start a xenobiology program.

# Not much we can do about it.

# Tell McLachlan to take this seriously, HE can start a xenobiology program.

https://science.nasa.gov/science-news/science-at-nasa/2010/02dec_monolake

# End month.

# Wait.
>>
>>3805675
so it turns arsenic into something else?
honestly i would love a program for this but we dont got the time or money
>tell McLachlan to take this seriously.
>>
>>3805645
>>3805621

You spend a few days with Carla. She coordinates the manufacturing and distribution of water filters in the same quietly competent way that you remember from when she was working with you. She petitions Carpatescu to allocate some money for distributing water filters at below cost, to which he distractedly agrees, and starts organizing the most efficient way to spend that money.

Carla is conscentious, and willing to work fourteen hours a day if she has to, but has a problem delegating.

# Offer one of your factory systems, either in North or South America, to ensure prompt production and distribution. This will make it unavailable for next month.

# Don't.

You share some of her workload, show her her what she can use BOCHICA for and what she cannot now that the system has evolved, and repay her for being a loyal and efficient assistant for years by doing the same for her for a couple of days. She gets Dimmsdale and Santiago to ensure that extra medevac helicopters are on standby, has arsenic-poisoning information booklets printed and sent to fire stations and clinics, and the like.

Eventually, it becomes obvious that you've both done all you can.

# You've been caring, but strictly professional.

# You've focused on the caring part. Sometimes people just need a hug.

# It's your last night in New Babylon, and will be so for at least a couple months; you ask her out to dinner again and see if that goes anywhere.

>>3805684

No, but it can use arsenic as a metabolite, rather than being poisoned by it. It can be used to concentrate the stuff and dispose of it safely, though, same as using algae as biological water filters.
>>
>>Mexico

Do people even drink the water in Mexico?

#Tell McLachlan to take this seriously...

#Offer factory system. (Will defer to the other Anons. They're more logistic savvy than I)

# It's your last night in New Babylon, and will be so for at least a couple months; you ask her out to dinner again and see if that goes anywhere.

Why not~?
>>
>>3805698
> You've focused on the caring part. Sometimes people just need a hug.
> Offer one of your factory systems, North America,

im still after Carpatescu
>>
>>3805707

(OOC note: I'll try to do something with that route, but it's going to be part of the "51% attack on the economy" caper, most likely)

>>3805704

(Yes, they do. And yes it does get a lot of people sick, and some dead, every year. Part of the problem I have is that the LB authors really have no idea of what does what, so they pull numbers out of the ether to determine the magnitude of various disasters.

For the "Carpatescu's economic measures kill a billion people", I actually contacted the author on Facebook, did the math for him, and he ended up saying that he was counting abortions in that total, which is why I've been making him sound somewhat anti-repopulation).
>>
>>3805717

(To be clear, Carpatescu is intended to sound anti-repopulation. I'm very certain that Jerry Jenkins is staunchly anti-abortion.)

>>3805707
>>3805704

You transfer over control of the North American Synco system to UNDRR for the next few weeks; Santiago is going to have an easier time than Dimmsdale when it comes to getting people to not drink untreated water, since she has been emphasizing discipline and preparedness, so North America is where efficient and cheap distribution will make the most difference.

You're both disappointed that Dimmsdale quickly vetoes giving out water filters for free, so instead, the factory system is instructed to intentionally make a few mistakes so as to make it look like the market price for portable filters is a few cents on the Nick.

Carla tells you that she hates to admit it, but Dimmsdale has half a point: when distributing supplies for an ongoing crisis, as opposed to a momentary one, it's best to charge for them, even if just a little bit. "Otherwise people waste them. I don't like it either, but it's just how people think, I guess."
>>
We can set up emergency clinics in poverty-stricken areas. 'Soup-kitchens' but water.

Did we find any water stockpiles at the Remnant compound?
>>
>>3805741

They had MREs and bottled water lining the walls of the basement; you captured 14 people, and maybe 2 or 3 ran away, so you estimate that the supplies there would've lasted them a year or so.
>>
I say donate their supplies to help those afflicted by the Fragment 3 disaster.

Our prisoners are enjoying the hospitality of our CATS bread and breakfast. They won't need it any time soon.
>>
>>3805751

Amongst all the mess of the past month, the Blackwatch platoon was able to take your prisoners to the black site, after their experiment series with Dr. Robertson was concluded.

As per your directive, they have been subject to a mock trial conducted via IRC chat, during which they were indicted for stockpiling prohibited weapons and manufacturing fake IDs, both with intent to distribute.

You currently have a total of 17 prisoners, who are being treated respectfully. Unless this population soars into the hundreds, there's no significant overhead for their maintenance. At any point, you may decide to release any of them, subject them to harsh conditions, or use them for experiments (theological or otherwise). One of them is pregnant, and due in approximately 6 months; if you decide to subject the rest to harsh conditions, she will remain exempt from that, unless you specify otherwise.

One thing that happened fairly quickly is that the two prisoners who were not Remnant members converted, only a few days after the new arrivals showed up; you assume that it has to do with prolonged isolation and peer pressure.
>>
>>3805759

>>One thing that happened fairly quickly is that the two prisoners who were not Remnant members converted, only a few days after the new arrivals showed up; you assume that it has to do with prolonged isolation and peer pressure.

Yes. Peer pressure
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yit8_H1O0pU
>>
>>3805759
>>
>>3805759
Welp. Would it be considered religous discrimination if everone we capture ends up Christian.
>>
>>3805779

(Approximately 10% of the words in the last 6 LB books in the main series consist of prison conversion scenes. With everything else that's supposed to be going on. That said, you've seen the authors' minimalistic approach to world events such as asteroid impacts).

>>3805751

Your donations join those of thousands of concerned Global Community citizens (and corporations who appreciate tax breaks); the South American coastline is still devastated, but there were few fatalities and reconstruction has begun in earnest. The African coastline had less infrastructure to damage, but suffered a lot worse due to a lack of preparedness on Rebohoth's part.

>>3805707
>>3805704
>>3805684

(Anyone for a tie breaker on Carla?)

You end up having to show McLachlan a press release from his own agency; he had no idea that the astrobiology department was still even there. He seems less than impressed.

"So you're in the alien invasion conspiracy camp?"

"No, I just want to have this looked at, and looked at well. At minimum, it means that we may be able to filter the stuff out biologically -- meaning that the filters will reproduce themselves, instead of forcing us to keep producing more."

"All right, fine. But between this and delaying the manned program, we're even, okay? You made me look like a pillock in front of the Potentate, and maybe I deserved it, and you've helped me recover from that, and I'm grateful, but I don't like having favors held over my head."

# Deal. NCASA policy will remain focused on asteroid redirection, and they will provide lab facilities and budget to their astrobiology department to investigate possible contamination from Akhenaten fragments.

# No deal. You don't get off so easy, McLachlan.
>>
>>3805779
>>3805772

You can isolate Remnant and non-Remnant prisoners, if you want. It may be beneficial to study the conversion process.

On the other hand, if you don't, it will be easy for you to slip in an agent with a fake sign of God on his or her forehead; since you control the environment, it's easy enough to remove mirrors and so on from public areas and prevent detection. Depending on how recent your last capture was, this may result in actionable intel.
>>
>>3805793
McLachlan. If i could trust you do to do your job with even a smidgen of competency I would be happy to let you do your own thing.
But the you were just going to ignore this? And then planned on prioritizing manned space flight over saving the planet from asteroids shows that no I cannot trust you. Readjust your priorites and you wont need to worry about me.
>no deal.

>>3805798
Yeah we should separate them and then inteoduce them 1 by 1 and study the conversion process.
>>
>>3805808
Btw if anyone thinks thats too extreme please stop me.
>>
>>3805793

#No deal

This is his chance to prove himself. If we weren't holding his hand, we would be royally fucked.

>>3805820
Nah. You're good. I was going to go the soft route until you pointed out just how incompetent he has been.
>>
>>3805660
>(OOC note: I would prefer to not explain in detail the workings of a modern plutonium bomb on this forum. While the uranium hydride design that we are using here was considered in the 1940s, it only works due to the changed nuclear physics in the quest).
Entirely fair.

>>3805698
# You've been caring, but strictly professional.

We don't have time for relationships when we are saving the world. If we're all still alive at the end of this we can fuck.

>>3805820
I'd phrase it more as

"Mate think for a moment, I'm pointing out a way that you can save thousands of lives and guarantee funding for you for the next few years. No one will take away the budget of the guy who solved the arsenic-poisoning problem. Also if you won't I will and when Carpetscu gives me praise I don't expect to hear any lip from you."

Personally I think we should just develop it since we are already embarking on development of an alternative food source system alongside Carla, who knows we might be able to fit these into that program without much issue and personally I'd prefer to keep this in-house since that grants us a bit more control and would let us finally get started on the bio-tech research program tree.
>>
>>3805837
when we do the 51% attack we should replace this guy
>>
>>"Mate think for a moment, I'm pointing out a way that you can save thousands of lives and guarantee funding for you for the next few years. No one will take away the budget of the guy who solved the arsenic-poisoning problem. Also if you won't I will and when Carpetscu gives me praise I don't expect to hear any lip from you."

This.
>>
>>3805840
Perhaps, honestly though I don't see much of a reason to. Once we've got the economy under our control we odd to be powerful enough to just force Carpatescu to outright tell him to obey us.

Plus with the 51% attack, it might become possible for us to start hiding some of our assets meaning that our team cap could be raised and our budget carried over between months (since we control the market / banks and can hide where our money is).
>>
Question:

If we succeed in the economic attack do we win the campaign or do we have to wrap up the God Problem?
>>
>>3805860
We have to wrap up the god problem. Assuming of course we don't get killed or turned into the anti-christ.
>>
>>3805829
>>3805808
>>3805837
>>3805847

You give McLachlan a fairly sharp assessment of your collaboration so far.

"Do you know how hard it's been to keep the lights on? Sure, now Carpatescu wants giant rockets to shoot down asteroids. What about the long term? The last batch of astronaut corps graduates are worried that they'll never get their gold wings. A lot of people signed up to NASA or Roskosmos because they want to get to the last frontier -- people will quit, good people will quit. We have to get the Energia rocket production line back up, fine, time to say goodbye to the advanced propulsion division because we can't afford it anymore. You too run a global agency, you know how hard it is to make compromises."

You point out that you've been able to follow through with your job AND find enough to spare to build your own redirector vehicle, as well as the space telescope that found Akhenaten before it was too late in the first place.

"Okay, so you're better than me. What am I supposed to do with that? I was hoping to work with Victor Zakharov on anti-asteroid boosters that are, you know, sane, but he's slowly turning into the dean from Animal House. So he's all for big dumb boosters now, and if I need money for something else, forget it."

He's clearly frustrated. You point out that if he was to discover a way to flush arsenic out of the biosphere by using bacterial filters, which effectively self-replenish as long as they have nutrients and are kept away from predators such as paramecia, he would be a hero to humanity and score a major PR coup.

"For this kind of thing it's usually the engineers who get the credit, not the scientists. Well, it's usually the engineering managers."

"That used to be true, but you do have the ear of the man in charge in a way that NASA administrators didn't. You only have to make it look good to one guy, not a committee."

McLachlan thinks about it. "That's a good point, but you know how Carpatescu is with sticking to mandates. I think you only got away with the telescopes because we'd all be dead otherwise. We'd have to make it look good on paper. How about a joint-venture lab between NCASA and UNDRR? Studying the chemistry of arsenic is under their bailiwick."

# You promise that you'll talk to Carla about it. She's likely to tell you what you need to know anyway.

# You would like to be further involved, providing 20% of the funding in exchange for a copy of the data as it becomes available.

# You weren't negotiating earlier, you were giving an order. Do it or else.

>>3805837
>>3805704
>>3805707

(I'm going to split the difference here)

You leave New Babylon once your work here is done. Carla does not see you to the airport, you're both too busy for that sort of thing and the global capital is crawling with paparazzi who are trying to justify their existence since Carpatescu has been absolutely celibate since breaking things off with Hattie. However, you part ways with a heartfelt hug in her suite.
>>
>>3805860

That's a good question. At the very least, you will have disrupted the prophecies significantly -- the Antichrist has a few specific characteristics, and you don't qualify for the job (As far as you can tell, the only people who do are Carpatescu and Mathews, with Fortunato being a possible third and Chaim Rosenzweig being a very distant fourth).

What might God do in that case?

(I was going to ask the players OOC, frankly -- either have a sort of playable epilogue, or continue but stop using Left Behind as a guide, or possibly both)
>>
# You would like to be further involved, providing 20% of the funding in exchange for a copy of the data as it becomes available.

---

What are the qualities again? The only ones that spring to mind is Name = 666 (or 616 depending on translation) and the Anti-Christ being Asexual or Gay due to some verse in Daniel.

Good news, Foreman x Carpatescu shippers! You're ungodly couple is supported by the Divine Plan (possibly).
>>
>>3805868
I was assuming we still needed to solve the god wants to kill us all problem and the everything is still influenced by prayer problem.

>>3805865
Ok now i feel bad for this guy
> You would like to be further involved, providing 20% of the funding in exchange for a copy of the data as it becomes available.

I know there all going insane and we are the ones who have to pick up the pieces . If you want to do any joint propulsion research with us we can help with the pay and manpower. it will make launching satellites cheaper and hopefully keep those people on board with you.
>>
>>3805865
# You would like to be further involved, providing 20% of the funding in exchange for a copy of the data as it becomes available.

Could we offer to give him Dr Robertson on loan for a few months? He's an excellent lab manager and could probably help both the bio-tech and rocketry sides of what he and we want to do. I honestly kinda want to apologise to McLachlan and shit, he's a man in a position more untenable than our own in some ways.

>>3805868
>What might God do in that case?
What did god do in the previous quest when we broke his mandate-of-heaven? Panic. Christ knows what would happen this time round.

>>3805873
>Anti-Christ being Asexual
Oh god Aki is going to be the Antichrist.
>>
>>3805876
yeah we should apologize, trying to prevent the world from ending is stressful.
>>
Apologize. He's a spaz in regards to policy, but at least he hasn't betrayed us yet.
>>
>>3805873

(Hilariously, the Left Behind authors are sufficiently homophobic that they went out of their way to find a hetero pairing for Nicolae Carpathia, too. But apparently his DNA came from two gay men who somehow had recombination tech in the 1960s in Soviet-controlled Romania. The guy who runs the LB Wiki thinks that LB takes place in the 2030s, despite the fact that everything about it screams pre-9/11.... and, to top it all off, the surviving LB author claims that the LB novels are sequels to the Underground Zealot novels!

Christian fiction fandom is WEIRD, man. Like, J K Rowlings Tweetstorm weird, except all the time.

https://leftbehind.fandom.com/wiki/Project_People's_Victory

I decided to go with a late-90s, early-2000s setting because it's what the books look like)


>>3805873
>>3805875
>>3805876
>>3805881
>>3805892

(McLachlan is not good at his job, but wants to be. He used to not care, as you can see by the early interactions, but an extinction-event-level asteroid is a good way to get one's life choices straight! I'm trying to keep characters somewhat dynamic.)

You let yourself mellow out, and quickly hash out the details with the NCASA administrator.

# 1BN per quarter for the next 4 quarters should do it. A dependable trickle of funds will let researchers focus on long term work rather than publish-or-perish.

# McLachlan would love to work with Robertson, just off his reputation; having his management expertise available to set up the lab, and his reputation to attract talent, would take about 2 months of what time he can spare. McLachlan and Carla can take it from there once the lab is set up.

# Here's 3BN cash on the barrel to handle the setup expenses.


>>3805876

(That... is a possibility, of sorts. Spoilers!)
>>
>>3805895

lets do both

> 1BN per quarter for the next 4 quarters should do it. A dependable trickle of funds will let researchers focus on long term work rather than publish-or-perish.
> McLachlan would love to work with Robertson, just off his reputation; having his management expertise available to set up the lab, and his reputation to attract talent, would take about 2 months of what time he can spare. McLachlan and Carla can take it from there once the lab is set up.


should we give him one of the noise cancelling ear nommies?
>>
>>3805899

That's entirely up to you; how much do you trust this person? By now, making them is not a big issue; the possible problem is that the more you have out, the more likely it is that Carpatescu will see one.
>>
>>3805895
>You let yourself mellow out, and quickly hash out the details with the NCASA administrator.
Yeah honestly these costs ain't that bad. Considering we're getting back into his good graces, saving humanity and all that good stuff at the same time.

>(That... is a possibility, of sorts. Spoilers!)
Well I for one welcome our autistic demonic overlords.
>>
(So the Atheists took over the World, L.A. got dehydrated, and then things suddenly got back to normal again only for some Romanian schmuck named after a mountain range, to take over again...

Well OK!)

>>3805899

Support, but hold off on the Nomenclature for now. Let's see how he works with Robertson and Carla and then onboard him into the operation.

>>3805907
I hope she isn't. I've grown too fond of her.
>>
Rolled 69 (1d100)

>>3805899

McLachlan figures it has to be some sort of trick. You'd be willing to part with operating money AND your foremost researcher's valuable time?

"What's the catch?"

"Zombie movies."

"What?"

"It's never the zombies that win, not really. It's always the humans who let the zombies win because they bicker and do stupid things and don't use their heads for any ten minutes at a time."

McLachlan has a few years on you, and isn't really up on pop culture, but the zombie movie craze of the early eighties was more his time than yours. He gets it.

You message Carla to ixnay about the arpiece-ay, at least for now. That was the last bit of business you had to deal with in New Babylon... you'll have to send Carla a Gap Generator, but that's for later.

Dr. Robertson mentions that having an excuse to spend the winter in Southern California, at his age, sounds pretty good.

# End month.

# Wait.

# Delay strategic planning for a few days until the Fragment 4 nudger is in position and can do its job; you'll lose a bit of time, but it will let you ensure that any further space plans reflect the results.
>>
# Delay strategic planning for a few days until the Fragment 4 nudger is in position and can do its job; you'll lose a bit of time, but it will let you ensure that any further space plans reflect the results.
>>
>>3805934
# Delay strategic planning for a few days until the Fragment 4 nudger is in position and can do its job; you'll lose a bit of time, but it will let you ensure that any further space plans reflect the results.
>>
>>3805934
> Delay strategic planning for a few days until the Fragment 4 nudger is in position and can do its job; you'll lose a bit of time, but it will let you ensure that any further space plans reflect the results.
>>
>>3805934
69 huh something strangely sexy is gonna happen with that nudger.

Im gald Mclachlan is starting to get it
>>
>>3805633
I thought we were doing a camera lens to see stuff and take pictures in Hi Def

>>3805645
Ha!

>>3805675
Perhaps Carla can start the program

>>3805698
# Offer one of your factory systems, either in North or South America, to ensure prompt production and distribution. This will make it unavailable for next month.

# You've focused on the caring part. Sometimes people just need a hug.

>>3805759
So much for keeping them separated.

I doubt we can release that boy we captured now. I was planning to.

>>3805793
Comon guys we should have our own bio program

>>3805793
>>3805820
We may clash with the guy and it would be difficult for us to work together in the future.

>>3805837
I think we should ask Carla to develop it, we lend expertise.

>>3805865
# You would like to be further involved, providing 20% of the funding in exchange for a copy of the data as it becomes available.

>>3805895
# McLachlan would love to work with Robertson, just off his reputation; having his management expertise available to set up the lab, and his reputation to attract talent, would take about 2 months of what time he can spare. McLachlan and Carla can take it from there once the lab is set up.
# Here's 3BN cash on the barrel to handle the setup expenses.

>>3805934
# Delay strategic planning for a few days until the Fragment 4 nudger is in position and can do its job; you'll lose a bit of time, but it will let you ensure that any further space plans reflect the results.
>>
>>3805942
>>3805939
>>3805937

You don't want to commit manpower until you know what's going on with the supposed "communication satellite" that you launched last week. Officially, it failed to shut down its stationkeeping thruster and buggered off on an escape trajectory; you don't want any panic if it does not work. The bulletin came out right after the Alkali launch and was paid attention to by practically nobody.

>>3805968

(I remember there being an argument about it, and couldn't find the final tally. Now's the time, since it determines how well the nudge works vs. how much data comes in before the nudge happens!)
>>
>>3805968

You can start keeping them separated from here on out; since nobody saw this coming, the blacksite maintenance crew went with whatever was easiest at the time.

Your current (starting) prisoner policy are:

* Separate Remnant from non-Remnant

* Do not forcibly terminate pregnancies

* Provide reasonable creature comforts, such as the same food variety that the guards get onsite, a place to exercise, TV, and board games. Anyone who acts up gets put on bread and water, of course.
>>
From my understanding the plan went:

Nudger:
1 Comm
4 Prop

Mini-Satellite accompanies Nudge sat for coordination purposes and to keep eye for shenanigans.
>>
>>3806046
I remember us deciding to maximise the chances of the actual nudge because we were kinda in agreement that not getting hit was more important.
>>
>>3806046

>>3806052
thats what im voting for in sat setup 100% on making it work
>>
>>3806051
* Separate Remnant from non-Remnant

>>3806052
>>3806054
We first went with 1 com 3 prop and 1 camera,
Then it changed to 1 com 4 prop.
now its going back and forth a little.

I think we were planning to send it on a two year round trip around the solar system/sun so we can deal with it then instead of now.
>>
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>>3806052

The two effective options were:

1 Comm, 4 Prop

or

1 Comm, 1 Camera, 4 Prop

The comms array contains a pair of cell phone style low-resolution cameras that are used for terminal guidance, so you would still get SOME imaging, just not high resolution photos, or any sort of spectroscopy.


>>3806056
>>3806054
>>3806052

(I don't think there are 4 votes in favor of having a high-res camera instead of MORE BOOSTERS so I'm going to go with this one, thank you!)
>>
>>3806058
>1 Comm, 1 Camera, 4 Prop
Lets go with this one guys!
>>
>>3806058

Fudge. Option 2 was 1 comm, 1 camera, 3 prop, obviously, My bad.

Sorry, no free lunch in space :)
>>
Speaking of prisoners, what did we do with our Morale Monitor friend?
>>
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>>3806060
But I'm oh so hungry. Please sir!
>>
>>3806065
He was turned into Raman at the blacksite
>>
>>3806065

That one is still in a small brig that was carved out of Mr. Vajpayee's office. You were considering bringing him to Carpatescu in a gift box, or else trading him back to Pontifex Mathews. If you send him to your secret jail, he's likely to let the other inmates know who they have been kidnapped by.
>>
(Still at work, sorry!. By the way, if you want an example of distributed computing made to solve theological questions:

https://www.livescience.com/diophantine-42-solved-meaning-of-life.html

)
>>
https://getpocket.com/explore/item/the-future-is-ear-why-hearables-are-finally-tech-s-next-big-thing
>>
>>3806732

But.... are they an effective tool against Satanic mind control?
>>
>>3806057

You have the hidden prison set up in such a way that cell blocks will be divided in two sections, one for Remnant prisoners, and one for everyone else. This should let you study the conversion process, since any interactions between the two groups will happen under control and monitoring.

The chow line and exercise yard will have to be shared; the guards will set up a timeshared system. Since all your prisoners right now are Remnant, it's a moot point right now, but you won't have to do last-minute changes to the prison layout, and the separation will be easier to enforce.

# Install the first batch of Gap Generators, and SRTGs to power them, in the prison. This will tie up 1 work team, cost 1BN and 0.5 units of nuclear fuel.

# Just install the Gap Generators. Nuclear fuel is too valuable to use that way: instead, string a power line to the black site. This will tie up 1 work team and cost 1BN.

# There's no need for either of those things. Just remodel the prison. No charge, since it's just a little bit of construction work.

Other than your original HQ, most of your infrastructure is either in the far north (Canada, Alaska, and Greenland) or up in the mountains (Chile). Many of your workers, soldiers and agents will gain some proficiency in cold-climate operations as time goes on.

>>3806052
>>3806054
>>3806056

You ensure that CATS' routine operations proceed, but don't commit to any strategy until the Fragment 4 nudger has done its job -- should a second probe be needed, you want to make sure that you have manpower and resources to spare for it.

The probe exits sleep mode and activates its optical guidance system at roughly three in the morning Chicago time; you're wide awake for it, and halfway across the world, so is Carla. You haven't made the video and telemetry stream public -- between the low resolution camera and the narrow bandwidth of the antennas, you're getting roughly 1FPS at the sort of resolution you'd play Doom on a 386 with. Still, it's immensely better than nothing.

The low resolution makes it look like Fragment 4, elongated and angular, could be some sort of blocky spaceship from Battlestar Galactica; you hold back your pareidolia and remind yourself that it's just a big lump of pyrite. However, so far all Akhenaten's fragments have shown themselves to contain Trojan horses of sorts -- F1 had methane ice which caused wildfire, F3 contained arsenic nodules, and you're just now learning that F2's inner core was mostly made of phosphates... which would've been handy to recover if F2 had crashed on land, but as it is, will cause a number of red tides and mucilago excrudescences across the Atlantic and Mediterranean. You understand that Ikko's people, having seen it coming, have set up a harvesting operation for the stuff. Therefore, you wouldn't be surprised if F4 had some more nasty surprises in store.

The probe matches velocities with the large, partially hollow chunk of pyrite.
>>
>>3807415
# Install the first batch of Gap Generators, and SRTGs to power them, in the prison. This will tie up 1 work team, cost 1BN and 0.5 units of nuclear fuel.
People will ask, why is a place in the middle of no where that has nothing there drain so much power? Its how cops find grow op, and find how many possible people live in a house before sending in a swat team.
>>
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(Sorry, I pretty much passed out alst night)

>>3807437

You figure that setting up the first batch of Gap Generators (they've still been made and tuned by hand by some of your and Dr. Robertson's people) and SRTG's will get your people to become more familiar with the technology, in addition to helping avoid detection.

Speaking of, Dr. Robertson accepts working with GCASA's astrobiology lab; he admits that he doesn't know much about biochemistry -- you're pretty sure that the "not much" is still more than most biochem undergrads -- but his international fame and organizational capabilities should get the lab up and running quickly and efficiently. "Besides, I get to spend the winter in Southern California, with some cognition of cause -- why not?" He doesn't tell you whether he thinks that the arsenic-metabolizing bacteria are from Akhenaten or simply evolved locally and detecting them now is a coincidence; he doesn't want to inject any bias into the program.

>>3807415

You can't see the cometary fragment's plume with the nudger probe, but the much higher resolution cameras closer to home see it without issue; effectively, the object has a temporary atmosphere, which in the local system of reference is being pushed "behind" the object by solar wind and photon pressure. It's thin -- a little denser than that of Mars, which is still extraordinarily thick for comets - but it's something your vehicle has to compensate for.

Fortunately, most of it is a large toroidal hydrazine tank; with the thruster and comms array pointing towards Earth, at the "tail" of it, it looks like a giant mechanical tick... which will make contact with the fragment "in reverse".

Since F4 is made of pyrite, the easiest way to ensure a good mechanical connection was to bolt some neodymium magnets on the front of the craft.

The terminal guidance program finds the center of the object and confidently heads towards it, using one of the side thrusters to counteract the thin pseudo-atmosphere's wind.

Up close, the surface is shimmering, rather than perfectly reflective as a piece of fool's gold on Earth would be; surely it's because of impurities from the other fragments.

A few dancing pixels make it look like there are things moving on the pyrite surface.

The capsule team figure that it's iron boulders whose magnetic field led them to stick to the pyrite enough to counteract the "wind", and adjust the landing algorithm to be a little biased towards the front of F4, so as to avoid being bumped off by them.

You lose video exactly when you should have: the main camera is in front, on the side of the hydrazine tank, so once magnetic lock is achieved, all it can see is pyrite grey -- it's effectively staring at F4's surface from a couple dozen centimeters. Thrusters are operational, there's plenty of fuel in the tank, and after a little bit of wobbling the magnetic lock is sufficient to compensate for the thin atmosphere's drag.
>>
>>3807444

"Thruster engaged! Hypergolic propellant mix 96% of optimal, valves open 80%."

"Nozzle temperature under par. The pyrite surface and cometary ejecta are acting as a heat sink. We might be able to empty the tank in one long burn, rather than four burns with cooling pauses."

# Risk it - it's another little bit of delta-V, almost for free.

# We're doing this by the book.

The celebration is muted, and confined to the few lit windows in CATS' headquarters building -- and, you figure, Carla's office at UNDRR; she's getting to watch this during the day.

The low-resolution video shows a long, thin shadow intrude in the part of the camera's field of view that is still getting sunlight; it doesn't seem to affect the thrusters or the temperature, but the image jostles a little bit. The magnets hold.

"I think we bumped into a fragment. Can't be more than ten centimeters across; nothing to worry about."

"It's moving back and forth though."

"It's probably clinging to the magnet."

You've recorded enough frames of it that some limited temporal extrapolation is possible -- you even take the opportunity to say "Enhance!" in a commanding voice, to the amusement of the image processing guy -- but the result is... ambiguous.

Your team figures that it's some pyrite or hematite that detached, scraped along the surface, and decided to get stuck to one of the magnets on the nudger. Should you ever release the footage, you wonder if GCNN would censor it. It keeps wiggling in a seesaw pattern; the thruster has a slight vibration to it, which likely accounts for most of it.
>>
>>3807444
No worries
I slept for like 14 hours yesterday.

I'd sleep now too, but I got tooth floss problems.

I wonder if we can set up a competition with rewards (2BN?) for industries to create and develop a good decent mini camera for phones, and put that into our satellites.

>A few dancing pixels make it look like there are things moving on the pyrite surface.
Bugs, gotta burn them out.

>"It's moving back and forth though."
Kill it with fire!
Wait no, use NUCLEAR FIRE!

# We're doing this by the book.
>>
>>3807468

The nudger's comms array came with some cell phone guts, including a camera and microphone; of course there's no air in space, but the microphone has its uses in that it can be used to the sounds transmitted through the probe's frame -- listening to valves opening and closing when they should, and the like.

The microphone is starting to make clicking sounds. "Small pebbles hitting the tank. The "wind" is very weak; the collisions are happening about as fast as water droplets from a faucet hitting the sink below. In fact, it even sounds like a bit of light rain.

Eventually, the ambiguously shaped long shard of iron ore works itself loose.

>>3807479

(It's early 2000, but phone cameras are common on high-end phones now; there's already a lot of competition in that sense. Consumer-grade cameras can hold a couple thousand pictures and return crisp pictures in SXGA resolution. The nudger has a QVGA camera on it, common on midrange phones, which was used for terminal guidance)

You figure that things are going well and there's no reason to take chances: the burns will happen as scheduled.

A timer starts, and the "ticking" is drowned out by the sound of the thruster; it sounds like a blender with Lego pieces in it, but that's what it's supposed to sound like. A timer counts down from 216, a technician reads out nozzle temperatures -- all within the green part of the dial -- and then stops when you reach zero.

"First burn completed! Next is in 30 minutes. Putting the probe in hybernation mode."

The probe does not have wide solar panels, due to the worry that they might have broken against the pyrite and caused a short circuit; rather, it has small ones acting as body paneling. They aren't sufficient to leave everything on all the time, obviously, so the probe has spent most of its existence in sleep mode, only turning on when told to by a timer to perform course corrections.

"Can we afford to leave the camera and transmitter on?"

"Well, the batteries are full right now. We're just not going to see much, is all."

# Hibernate the probe.

# Leave the camera on.

# Leave the camera on, and try to investigate the moving objects on the pyrite surface by using the reaction control thrusters to tilt the probe on its side and looking down F4's length; this wastes a little bit of propellant.
>>
#We're dong it by the book.

Does the Nudger have audio capacity? I assume if we have 'things' crawling on the surface, there might possibly be some sort of atmosphere for sound?
>>
>>3807495
# Leave the camera on.
We know they are zombie parasite bugs!
>>
# Leave the camera on, and try to investigate the moving objects on the pyrite surface by using the reaction control thrusters to tilt the probe on its side and looking down F4's length; this wastes a little bit of propellant.
>>
>>3807518

Yes, there's a microphone (which has been used to listen to whether the thruster valves trip when they should, etc.) and obviously it cannot pick up external sound since the temporary atmosphere is super thin, but it does pick up small things bouncing softly against the probe's tank. It sounds like light rain.
>>
>>3807518
It does, but its only for the inside, and space doesn't have any atmosphere.

>>3807521
Don't do it man! Its coming back in two years, we can study it then.
>>
>>3807519
>>3807521

"This is the world's first cometary landing. We owe it to the scientific community to get as much data as possible, even if it's just a blurry image."

#(Tilt the probe as well? This will give a better view, but waste a bit of propellant)

The accelerometers on the probe recorded data during the burn, and confirm that a small amount of kinetic energy was imparted to the fragment; you don't know if the nudge will be sufficient, yet, but you do know that this whole operation is having a measurable effect.

"Given the surface composition of Fragment 4, and its apparent volume, we're now certain that it is at least partially hollow. By the look of it, there's a core of water ice, which explains the cometary tail and temporary atmosphere."

"This is strange, why would ice end up inside a pyrite crystal?"

"Awesome, this is the solar system's biggest geode!"

"We don't know enough about the conditions of the outer solar systems to hazard a guess about how this fragment accreted."

The team are optimistic; they're discussing sending a probe to the Akhenaten main fragment before it flies off past Jupiter's orbit, to dig inside it and see if this pattern of hollow comets continues.

"Let's make sure we don't have to find out the hard way" you comment.

Aki found the low resolution too jarring in VR, and is watching the whole thing on a regular screen, bundled up in a Transformers blanket.
>>
>>3807526

If it's just a little fuel, it might be useful to get a slightly better look.

Two things I want to know:

A) Is there an 'Apollyon'? If there is a angel/demon on Fragment 4. it could sabotage our mission to redirect.

B) Is the fragment an artificial construct? What if it is an alien engine, used to propel the asteroid?

I'll agree that nudging the asteroid takes priority over knowledge, though. If moving will critically jeopardize the mission, I will retract my vote.
>>
>>3807495
>Leave the camera on, and try to investigate the moving objects on the pyrite surface by using the reaction control thrusters to tilt the probe on its side and looking down F4's length; this wastes a little bit of propellant.
tiny, tiny bit of propellant
>>
Rolled 30 (1d100)

>>3807535
>>3807541

Worst case scenario (assuming that your people are smart enough to not crash the probe, which is a safe assumption to make) the probe will lose magnetic lock and have to re-do its docking approach.

The worst case scenario for THAT is you will lose a significant part of one of the three remaining scheduled burns.

The best case scenario is that the propellant lost will be negligible -- a quick burn from one of the rear attitude control thrusters to lie to the side, with half the magnets still holding onto the asteroid, and then a counter to that to return to pushing position.

(This kinda happened with the Rosetta Philae lander IRL, by the way. It bounced a lot.)
>>
Lets do it then.
>>
>>3807541
>>3807535
>>3807521

"Tilt it around. We can get a better look."

"We can't do it with just the reaction wheels, it'll need RCS."

"We can afford it."

You can, albeit barely; the maneuver uses 40 percent of the propellant slated for maneuvering operations, indicating that you'll need the same amount to get the probe back upright. The good news is that the tank reserved for the actual nudging is untouched. This maneuver leaves the nudger looking down the back half of Fragment 4; a few pixels that are dark blue instead of pitch black hint at the root of the cometary tail as it becomes visible when the Sun's rays hit it.

The low-resolution choppy video keeps coming in as the thruster cools; there are definitely things moving on the surface. By the look of it, they are all slowly rolling from the "front" of the comet to its "back"; these little pebbles, uniformly 10 to 15 centimeters in size as far as you can tell, are roughly ovoid in shape, with some featuring pyrite bumps, other not. The movement is due to drag from the temporary atmosphere. The fragment is large enough to have measurable gravity, and your team quickly becomes able to discern debris that is sticking to the comet magnetically, and debris that is being held close by the weak gravity field. The latter are a yellow-brown, and probably share composition with Fragments 2 or 3. They won't release an appreciable quantity of arsenic in the atmosphere if they hit.

Some pieces of debris are more angular, clearly pieces of pyrite; they tend to stay in one spot by magnetic force, until something jostles them just enough that they move a step.

"Huh, weird. There's a couple of pieces that are moving towards us."

"No, it's just got hit by another piece and held onto it, so it's taking up more pixels, see? Now it's separated again."

Most of this is speculation: you're getting QVGA images at 1FPS -- you'd recognize a humanoid figure, of course, but if ET was the size of your drone tanks, you wouldn't see it until it maneuvered directly in front of the probe.

The nonmagnetic fragments do look like eggs, likely from clay-like consistency now that the water ice in them has melted and the rolling down the side of the comet.

It's only been ten minutes, and the video would fit on two floppy disks, but this is the first time something like this has ever seen. You make a point of sending it to McLachlan later.

# Continue observation for the other 20 minutes we can spare.

# Get the probe back to work.
>>
# Continue observation for the other 20 minutes we can spare.
>>
>>3807565

# Get the probe back to work.
>>
>>3807565
If we need the probe to do a burn in 30 minutes and we use 10 now for observation, then using another 20 leaves with seconds to put us back into a proper position to do a booster burn.
>>
Mmmm...

Changing vote.

#Get back to work
>>
Rolled 21 (1d100)

>>3807579
>>3807580
>>3807581
>>3807588

This isn't a science mission; you figure that there will be time to study these things in depth when they aren't on a colllision course with Earth anymore.

"Everything saved? Good, let's get this thing back upright."

The field of view shakes and shudders; the probe is skidding on the surface a little. Then everything goes dark for a moment before resolving to the sort of camera static that you get when trying to take a picture in pitch blackness. It looks like the probe pivoted a little, just enough that there's no sunlight coming through from the probe frame.

"We're good! Magnetic sensors and accelerometers show that we are back in position."

The "light rain" sound from the microphone comes back, maybe a little stronger now.

"Initiating burn 2 of 4!"

"Propellant mix 97% optimal, valves open 80%!"

Looks like shaking the tanks did the hypergolic propellant some good.

"Burning 216 seconds in three, two, one, go."

The rain sound on the microphone is drowned by the weird noise that the hydrazine thruster makes.
>>
The burn continues on schedule; a friendly timer goes down to zero.

About halfway through, one of the mission control people beeps you for attention. You don't have a Houston style mission control room, of course; your people are in their cubicles or small offices.

"Uh, Foreman, we've had a problem. We've had a main B bus undervolt."

You ask the EE station.

"No idea, but it's gone now. I guess we scraped some insulation off a wire when we went back upright, and there was a momentary short when debris touched it. Most of this fragment is electrically conductive after all."

"Keep burning."

The burn is almost complete when the momentary short happens again.

"We're halfway done, can we exclude the B battery?"

"Yes, but in that case we may be best off doing one long burn at 60%. We're using hypergolic thrusters: once they are on, they'll stay on as long as there's fuel, even if we lose power completely. Less efficient, but more reliable."

You poll the people in the virtual control room, and they're more or less evenly divided, leaving the choice to you.

# Proceed with original plan for maximum efficiency.

# Expend the fuel tanks now before anything goes wrong.
>>
>>3807600

(I will confess to having done variations of this mission in KSP. There's an old mod that gives gravity to asteroids, but of course I cannot simulate electrical faults in the game).
>>
>>3807600
# Expend the fuel tanks now before anything goes wrong.
The worms are eating away at the probe. That was the "rain" noise wasn't it?
>>
Question: Did we put a Gap Generator on this thing?

# Expend the fuel tanks now before anything goes wrong.


>>3807613

>>The worms are eating away at the probe. That was the "rain" noise wasn't it?

Yep. I just had a terrible thought.

Could they hijack the Nudger and have it steer the asteroid?
>>
>>3807616
If we wait too long for it to fail and get taken over maybe. Best let it spend all its fuel.
>>
>>3807600
>Expend the fuel tanks now before anything goes wrong.
It has to be enough and I rather not have the worms steer this fucker back on course
>>
Rolled 41 (1d100)

>>3807616

No. While the Gap Generator prototype was available, at the time you figured "let's not install a handmade, heavy, power-hungry piece of electronics on a spacecraft at the last minute".

Given the electrical failure, that was probably a good idea.

However, you did have a Seal of Solomon etched on the front of the craft, along side other messages from the systems integration crew.

>>3807623
>>3807616
>>3807635

"All right, let's take the safe option here, people. Throttle down to sixty percent, monitor the mix, and let's empty the tank before anything else breaks."

That turned out to be a good decision; you can't hear anything from the microphone due to the thruster being on, but about halfway through the burn, B battery shorts out completely. The accelerometers are being jostled around, indicating that something is putting pressure on the probe -- your people estimate that the probe got hit by debris shaped so that it wedged itself between the probe and the pyrite. Flashes of lights from the camera confirm this.

You have the last of the RCS propellant tank used to keep the probe pushing in the right direction. For the next ten minutes, everyone is gripping the handrests of their seats.

".... And we're out of oxidizer." The last bit of uncombusted propellant leaves the thruster nozzle; efficiency was kept above 90% throughout, so there isn't much of it.

The "rain" sounds are a lot louder now; the debris impacting the probe has definitely increased in frequency.

The last transmission shows another of those spindly fragments wedging themselves under the probe, just enough to let some light into the camera. It looks almost hairy; the probe is probably covered in magnetized iron dust, which may explain the shorts.

You have to wait an hour for a trajectory update; the object has to be observed by telescopes and satellites far enough to see a change in their frame of reference, but close enough to pick it up past a difference of a couple of pixels.

"Fragment Four has been almost completely deflected. We estimate that it will briefly enter the atmosphere and, given its shape, skip off it like a flat stone. Unfortunately, this means we can't predict when it will be back -- could be a year, could be two years, could be never. We're giving it a one percent chance that it'll slam into the Moon in two weeks."

A couple of people pass out -- they've been awake for more than twenty hours. Some cheer. A handful thank God, Sai Baba, Thor, Vulcan.
# Make an announcement.

# Just publish this on the GCASA and CATS blogs as if it was no big deal.

# Shhh.
>>
#Shhh.

>>We're giving it a one percent chance that it'll slam into the Moon in two weeks

One percent chance. Riiiiiiiiiight ;)
>>
>>3807645
Can we send up another one to push it further?
Do we have enough time?

I don't want it to even touch our atmosphere.

I bet it will heat up and explode if it does, then scatter all over the planet.
>>
>>3807645
#Shhh.
>>
>>3807658

The near-miss is scheduled for the end of next month; you will have just enough time to send up another probe, if you order its construction this month.

>>3807655
>>3807661

You don't want people to freak out about extraterrestrial magnetic dung beetles, so you send the video to McLachlan and Carla noting that it is not for public release.

# Proceed to next month

# One more thing....

(Wow this whole thread was just 2 months and it's already autosaging due to comment limit. Tempted to start a new thread honestly)
>>
(You do what you need to do, QM)

Magnetic huh? Interesting.

>>3807658
Yeah, we should send another probe to intercept.
>>
>>3807670

# One more thing....

Practice our sick techno steam punk sword moves in the VR room.

Then end month.

Did we recruit an engineer?
>>
>>3807645
If we build two CS pylons in east and western EU would Gustav let us make two factories?
>>
>>3807682
As in 1 in each part, for a total of 2 CS pylons.

I worded it strangely.
>>
>>3807685

So far, not even Corazon Santiago has let you set up an automatic factory management system that spans the entirety of her territory.

>>3807678

Funny you should mention that; Aki and her little fan club have set up a program to do just that with.

Sadly, the VR rigs you are using cost several tens of thousand Nicks each -- the technology for realtime motion tracking that doesn't cause immediate sickness just isn't there yet for consumer applications, given that each tracking camera requires its own high-end desktop PC to operate -- because it's pretty fun, and will make for a nifty consumer product one day.

If the Earth doesn't blow up first, that is.

You give it a try and find that it's quite an intense workout; the whole thing is one part Tron and one part lightsaber duel, and you can expect that VR game time will become a hotly traded commodity in the little under-the-table favor economy that you know exists within your organization as it does in every large org.

# Give it your official blessing and hand over 1BN to be invested into the technology; it may have "serious" training applications one day, and if it doesn't, your people will have the world's most awesome arcade.

# As above, but spin it off in its own building and make it available to the public. It'll operate at a slight loss,but you can expect some good media coverage.

# Do both of the above for 2BN.

# With a wink and a nod, agree that you won't investigate this obvious misuse of CATS resources.... as long as you get to play with it when it's your turn. Leave it be.
>>
>>3807701
# Give it your official blessing and hand over 1BN to be invested into the technology; it may have "serious" training applications one day, and if it doesn't, your people will have the world's most awesome arcade.

# As above, but spin it off in its own building and make it available to the public. It'll operate at a slight loss,but you can expect some good media coverage.

# Do both of the above for 2BN.

# With a wink and a nod, agree that you won't investigate this obvious misuse of CATS resources.... as long as you get to play with it when it's your turn. Leave it be.

Yes.
>>
# Give it your official blessing and hand over 1BN to be invested into the technology; it may have "serious" training applications one day, and if it doesn't, your people will have the world's most awesome arcade.
>>
>>3807710

Huh?
>>
>>3807701
>Do both of the above for 2BN
>>
(And yes, you could've built an Oculus Rift with 2000-era tech... but each unit would've cost as much as a new car. The main issue is that each tracker would have required its own PC, then you'd have had to come up with a way to connect them with essentially no latency, which would have required custom PCI cards. I have dated someone who was working on that at the time. Apparently, the lag made it sickness-inducing after a few minutes, unless one was on shrooms).
>>
>>3807719
Do everything.
>>
>>3807732

(The last option is kinda contradictory to the other three)
>>
>>3807734
Not if we build TWO!
>>
>>3807701
# Do both of the above for 2BN.

It'll do wonders for our recruitment, provides benefits to our employee's in terms of morale / training and is good PR.
>>
>>3807787
We shall call it Digivert Revolution!
>>
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>>3807758
>>3807722
>>3807712

You're not going to set up a VR research program, but you get the idea that you don't have to. A bit of seed investment is going to go a long way.

Internet purchasing has taken some wind off the sails of indoor malls recently, so you have little difficulty renting out some commercial space in one such mall in Aurora, Illinois, close enough to you that your workers can easily commute but far enough that people won't be tempted to check out CATS personnel's comings and goings.

Ryan Andrews is quick to take notice of this, and sets up his flagship occult and fashion store right next door.

You'll see how this little venture goes... of course, the VR machines are set up to tag people who score particularly high in the games, and offer them discounts if they leave their contact info. You don't know what to do with that information yet, but given the bulk of your latest efforts, you may need to defend the Frontier from Xur and the Ko-Dan Armada in a space battle.

The manager for the arcade, an elderly woman named Francine who came highly recommended by your coders, tells you that she'll make sure you won't lose a mite, after you explain that this is a public relations operation and you don't expect the initial investment to be returned. On the debit side, she gets into a massive row with Ryan; on the credit side, the entrepreneur leaves it with a big smile on his face.

What you don't know, and are mildly afraid to ask about, is why the VR arcade (which naturally has some traditional cabinets, a few Dance Dance Revolution pads, and the like) has accrued, on day one, a show-accurate Starfighter machine, and a somewhat banged-up cabinet named Polybius, which BOCHICA can't find on any catalog. You reckon that the people you set aside to work on the arcade have sneaked in some homemade cabinets.

The Rapture gap has depleted the teen population; the youngest teens are 16 years old. As a result, in order to survive, remaining arcades have largely combined with bars and cater to an adult audience. Alcohol laws have been effectively eliminated at Carpatescu's pressure, so that's not an issue.

>>3807795

(okay! BTW, still open for renaming the PMC. Vetoed: words that use Dark, Black, or Watch, because that is already in use by your bad-guy squad, and I don't want to get confused).

SPECIAL RULES FOR NEXT MONTH:

* You will not be able to use one work crew due to previous commitments.

* Selling Nomenklator headsets will synergize with your and Ryan's commercial initiatives, resulting in bonus income.

* However, by now other companies are selling their own BOCHICA headsets, since you open sourced the software. Your legal team estimates that you'll soon get an antitrust lawsuit about competing with private businesses, and Dimmsdale is likely to pressure the judges to rule against you.
>>
So Dave n' Busters then?


>>(okay! BTW, still open for renaming the PMC. Vetoed: words that use Dark, Black, or Watch, because that is already in use by your bad-guy squad, and I don't want to get confused).

.... Thunder Cats?
>>
>>3807801
>a somewhat banged-up cabinet named Polybius, which BOCHICA can't find on any catalog
Well shit, we've got forbidden technology leaking in from a alternate reality. Hopefully this won't be the mind control variant...

>* However, by now other companies are selling their own BOCHICA headsets, since you open sourced the software. Your legal team estimates that you'll soon get an antitrust lawsuit about competing with private businesses, and Dimmsdale is likely to pressure the judges to rule against you.
Oh that motherfucker. He can bet that if he proves a bother we'll drag his ass through every kind of pain humanly imaginable.

>* Selling Nomenklator headsets will synergize with your and Ryan's commercial initiatives, resulting in bonus income.
Well considering the other piece of information, we might want to bulk produce and bulk sell this month.


>>3807815
Sounds like a decent name, alternatively for copyright reasons: lightning lions or tesla tigers.
>>
Storm Leopards?
>>
>>3807832

Thunder Cats is a bit too close to CATS, but I get the idea especially since the Jenkins novels have a lot of cringy puns for names.

Tesla Tigers I like.

Lightning Lions is a bit too long.

Too bad we already used Legion of Light in the last quest.

Megaforce was already referenced...

Mobile Armored Strike Kommand?


Tempted to say Thunder Warriors since this is totally going to end with stuffing Carpatescu in the Golden Throne so we can prevent Satan from manifesting.
>>
Hmmmm.... How about Roughnecks, the name of the unit from Starship Troopers?
>>
(Y'all tell me!)

Anyway, new thread!

>>3807838

(To avoid spamming the new thread with naming discussion, please do them here and I will monitor both)
>>
>>3807801
Tiger CATS!



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