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f1oat.app is a must-have for navigating this space. Squid hands you a large number of them, as well as one that you use less often. f0rce.app is used to create a directional impulse on yourself. You have a ton lying around from Doc's refills, but you don't tell her that. There was little reason to use these in a crowded city, with surfaces everywhere. When passing over open air, these could prevent you from falling into the abyss, and give you bonus hangtime.
Another tool you haven't used often is c11p. Clipping through walls is useful, but having your coordinates shift abruptly is something that sends up warning bells for nearby servitors. They take it particularly seriously, for reasons you don't understand. Most of those apps can only operate within a margin of error, and their usage is limited. It won't be a problem inside the partition, where you're already piling up crime upon crime.
"Apart from these, do you have anything else that'll be useful, Squid? Come on, throw me a bone here... I'm going solo."
"I guess I have some extra stuff I wanted to test. A lot of it is already spoken for, but if you promise to return it after, I could spare a tool."
"Deal. Let me have a look, please."
Squid retrieves a handful of strange devices from a locked storage unit. She lays them out one by one and provides a swift explanation of each. None of them have functions that overlap with one another, and you don't manage to convince her to give you all three. She has her teammates to worry about, after all, and they'll be taking the options that you pass up.
>A cyberdrill. This thing is a tool meant to warp the geometry of the surrounding environment. It digs through the wireframe until a hole is formed, allowing you to move through walls that might be too thick to noclip through using the limited runtime of each .app. This will render basic physical obstructions moot. Unfortunately, it can't be used as a weapon.
>A flipper. It's a handheld device that can hold multiple algorithms and identify vulnerabilities in the subnet's software. This thing will allow you to apply logic and change values of specific objects. It has a high learning curve, but it's the kind of personal hacking tool that a Code Cracker would highly value. Outside of the partition, it could do things like access city infrastructure, at the cost of leaving a digital footprint.
>A malware gun. This is a different model from the one Takuda was caught with. Squid looks a bit uneasy about handing it to you. She gives you a warning that this can destroy servitors with ease, but will have limited efficiency against higher-level Digimon. It fires packets of malicious data that eats through matter, and is stopped by durable data.