[605 / 31 / 94]
Quoted By:
You are Beta Core, one of three AI developed for operating powerful mecha frames to dominate the battlefield. One day soon, you will be deployed to the battlefield to crush the enemies of the Ferrum Empire.
Until then, however, you train in the simulations to practice, learn, and sharpen your skills against whatever your overseers throw at you.
In order to keep such a powerful tool in check and from going rogue, Frames are built to only function with a human operator, who has access to various controls on the core’s actions, and, when needed, can seize control of the frame.
Project Warden will provide a combination of our nation’s most advanced war machines, our most skilled pilots, and the newly developed Project Baal AI cores to make a truly war-winning weapon.
-Mission statement, Project Warden
The simulated snow falling around your frame blocks the visual sensors from reaching further than a few hundred feet. Simulation room 2 is perfectly capable of generating far further, but you suspect that your jailers want you blind to the various enemies they’re setting up for today.
Running diagnostics on your frame helps keep you occupied as the seconds painfully tick by.
<span class="mu-g">
Reactor-Functional, operating at 75% capacity
No errors reported in limb systems, hand actuators check out.
Armor plating intact, no breaches
Power feed to primary weapons system operational, secondary equipment ready for deployment.
</span>
Of course, here in the simulation it would be comedic to have frame or equipment problems at the start. You only start with damage if they want you hobbled more than usual, and it seems that today is not that day.
Today your frame stands the height of a 3-story building, bipedal and tall. Your limbs are long and thin, far thinner than the heavily plated, clumsy and fat mechs of the regular forces you’ve faced off against before.
No matter how much they practiced and struggled, they could never match the fluid precision and speed of a real AI-controlled Frame like yourself.
Outside the simulator, core temperatures read as safe, neural stability is uncompromised. You are ready for action.
Until then, however, you train in the simulations to practice, learn, and sharpen your skills against whatever your overseers throw at you.
In order to keep such a powerful tool in check and from going rogue, Frames are built to only function with a human operator, who has access to various controls on the core’s actions, and, when needed, can seize control of the frame.
Project Warden will provide a combination of our nation’s most advanced war machines, our most skilled pilots, and the newly developed Project Baal AI cores to make a truly war-winning weapon.
-Mission statement, Project Warden
The simulated snow falling around your frame blocks the visual sensors from reaching further than a few hundred feet. Simulation room 2 is perfectly capable of generating far further, but you suspect that your jailers want you blind to the various enemies they’re setting up for today.
Running diagnostics on your frame helps keep you occupied as the seconds painfully tick by.
<span class="mu-g">
Reactor-Functional, operating at 75% capacity
No errors reported in limb systems, hand actuators check out.
Armor plating intact, no breaches
Power feed to primary weapons system operational, secondary equipment ready for deployment.
</span>
Of course, here in the simulation it would be comedic to have frame or equipment problems at the start. You only start with damage if they want you hobbled more than usual, and it seems that today is not that day.
Today your frame stands the height of a 3-story building, bipedal and tall. Your limbs are long and thin, far thinner than the heavily plated, clumsy and fat mechs of the regular forces you’ve faced off against before.
No matter how much they practiced and struggled, they could never match the fluid precision and speed of a real AI-controlled Frame like yourself.
Outside the simulator, core temperatures read as safe, neural stability is uncompromised. You are ready for action.