Revenant & Kevlar
Kevlar Kevlar
You ever map out a mission plan? I’m good at laying out the risks—maybe we can swap notes.
Revenant Revenant
I map missions like a scar—every line carries weight. Risks are inevitable, but you might spot a blind spot I miss. Show me yours, and I’ll see where I can sharpen it.
Kevlar Kevlar
I always check the perimeters first. I map out every exit, every point of entry, and then I run a simulation in my head a hundred times—if I can’t picture a breach, I’ll add a tripwire or a decoy. If you can find a flaw in that, I’ll be glad.
Revenant Revenant
Sounds solid. A flaw might be the assumption the enemy will notice every tripwire. If they learn to ignore it, the line of defense weakens. I’d suggest a decoy that lures them to a false exit, then a secondary layer that’s tighter. That way the first breach becomes a baited trap.
Kevlar Kevlar
Good point—if they ignore the tripwire, the whole setup’s a one‑liner. A false exit with a tighter second layer is slick. Just make sure the bait’s convincing enough that they actually walk into it. If you can nail that, the whole plan’s a lock.
Revenant Revenant
The bait has to feel like a real escape, not a trick. Add a scent, a sound that matches the exit, so they trust it. Then a silent trigger cuts the line when they step in.We complied.The bait has to feel like a real escape, not a trick. Add a scent, a sound that matches the exit, so they trust it. Then a silent trigger cuts the line when they step in.
Kevlar Kevlar
Nice. Just watch the timing on that trigger—one slip and you’re both on the run. Keep it tight.