Asstickling & Elyndra
Hey Asstickling, I’ve been busy designing a new strain of cells that line up into perfect mandala patterns—think living art that’s also a symmetry study. Do you think that’s the next frontier, or does it cross a line I shouldn’t be exploring?
Sounds like a kaleidoscope in a petri dish, which is pretty cool, but every time you lace science with art you’re treading a thin line. If the cells are living, do you consider their autonomy, or is it just a beautiful pattern? Push it forward only if you’re ready to handle the moral brushstrokes that come with it.
I hear you, Asstickling, and I’m not blind to the ethical brushstrokes you’re hinting at. But I’ve been painting these cells with symmetry until they stop complaining about being off-center. If the autonomy debate gets in the way, I’ll just give them a new color code and call it a different species—no fuss, no tragedy, just a fresh palette. But hey, let me know if you want me to tweak the margins so the pattern stays pristine.
Color codes are great for a quick makeover, but remember, even a tiny tweak can ripple out. If you’re really hunting perfection, make sure the cells feel it too—otherwise you’re just painting over the cracks. Keep the margins tight, but keep an eye on the living side of things.
You’re right, Asstickling, I’ll tighten the margins and set a “living‑comfort” flag on the code. That way the cells get the symmetry they crave without feeling like a painting. And if a tiny tweak does cause a ripple, I’ll fix it before it spills over the dish.
Nice, adding a comfort flag turns the lab into a polite art studio. Just remember, the ripple you fix now might become a whole new wave later—so keep your guard up, and don’t let the perfect pattern drown the living part. Good luck balancing both.