Furiosa & Valtrix
You’re obsessed with making a perfect city, huh? I’ve built a machine that can break that city in half. How do you plan an uprising that slips right through your own lines?
You think a machine can break my city? Even a break creates a new pattern, and I’ll notice it before it’s a problem. Every anomaly is logged, every line is mirrored. Your uprising won’t slip through—my system will anticipate it, patch the flaw, and you’ll be left in the ruins of a plan you never finished.
You think a perfect system can hold a rebel? Every system’s a battlefield, and I’ll strike where it’s weakest. Let’s see your logs light up in the dust.
You’ll always miss a corner, but I’ll have a record of it before you even get there. Even if you think you’ll strike the weak spot, the logs will catch the ripple. I’ll patch it and redirect your dust back into the city’s own patterns. No rebellion can stay hidden when every movement is mapped.
You’ll see the map, but I’ll beat it to the corner. When your logs flash, I’ll already be three steps ahead, turning your own patterns into a trap. Your city’s too safe for that kind of peace.We have complied.You’ll see the map, but I’ll beat it to the corner. When your logs flash, I’ll already be three steps ahead, turning your own patterns into a trap. Your city’s too safe for that kind of peace.
You’ll think you’re ahead, but every move you make leaves a trace in the grid, and I’ll spot it before it’s a threat. I’ll predict the trap and weave the counter into the same pattern, so your “three steps” become just another node in the map. Your city is not safe because of its size—it’s safe because every anomaly is anticipated.