Deagle & Aroma
I've been thinking about how certain scents can shift a unit’s morale on the front lines, and I’d like your take on using flower extracts as a field boost.
That’s a fragrant idea—my first thought is lavender for calm, rose for a little courage boost. I’d brew a tiny batch, test the dose on a handful of troops first, because too much perfume can actually be a headache for the nerves. If it works, I’ll put it in a small vial, label it with the color of the flower and the memory of that scent, and hand it out with a smile.
Sounds like a plan, but keep the numbers tight. You’ll need to weigh each vial against the squad’s baseline. One mistake and the whole line could be rattled. Once you have the dose logged, run a quick field trial under the same conditions you expect to deploy it. If it passes, lock it down and keep a backup of the formula—no improvising under fire. Keep the training tight, and we’ll see if this scent can actually lift morale without blowing up the operation.
I’ll keep the scale tiny, record every milligram, and run a controlled test right where they’ll be. No wild improvisations—just a steady, measured lift. If it checks out, we’ll lock the formula, stash a backup, and watch the morale rise like a well‑blended bouquet. We'll stay cautious, but I'm already smelling the potential.