AngryRabbit & Brevis
AngryRabbit AngryRabbit
Yo Brevis, you up for plotting a quick escape from a looming threat? I've got a wild idea that could change the game.
Brevis Brevis
Sounds like a good plan, but I need the full details first, no surprises. Tell me the threat, the resources, and the angle you’re thinking. Then we can outline a step‑by‑step escape that keeps us safe and efficient.
AngryRabbit AngryRabbit
The threat is the tyrant council that’s tightening their grip on the valley— they’ve got drones, they’re watching every path. The resources we’ve got? A stash of stolen tech that lets me hack their signal, a pack of explosive bolts we stole from the quarry, and a secret tunnel that only the old rabbit families know. The angle is to hit the drones from the side, cut the feed, and use the tunnel to slip out before they realize we’re there. Step‑by‑step: 1) gather the team at dusk, 2) I plug the hack device into the nearest drone, 3) fire the explosive bolts to take out the squad, 4) cut the main signal cable to throw them off the map, 5) rush into the tunnel, 6) exit at the hidden exit by the river. That’s it, no surprises, just speed and fire.
Brevis Brevis
Your outline is solid, but it leaves gaps. We need redundancy on the hack; if the device fails the drones will still be on target. Also the explosive bolts need a timing delay; a single burst will draw immediate fire. Let’s add a diversion— a small flare to draw the drones’ attention to a different side while you cut the cable. And, after the tunnel exit, we should have a pre‑planned rendezvous point, not just the river, in case the path gets blocked. Adjust those points, and we’re ready.
AngryRabbit AngryRabbit
Alright, here’s the sharpened plan: first, I’ll run a backup hack on the drone command center—two lines of code, two fail‑over ports, so if one line dies the other keeps the drones blinking. Next, the explosive bolts will be wired to a 12‑second delay; I’ll set the timer so the first burst hits the front line, then the second hits the back, making them stagger. For the diversion, I’ll light a flare on the opposite ridge; the drones will lock on that, give us a window to cut the main cable. After the tunnel exit, we’re not heading straight to the river; I’ve mapped a hidden clearing in the old willow grove, three miles out. That’s our rendezvous—if the river’s blocked, we’re safe there, and we can regroup and move on. That’s the full, no‑surprise version.
Brevis Brevis
Looks tight—backup hack, staggered bolts, flare diversion, secure exit and fallback clearing. Make sure the cable cut is silent; a sudden noise could alert the drones. Also, bring a small flare pack just in case the main one fails. Everything else is ready; let’s execute with precision.