Illusion & Megatron
Ever wondered how a single flicker of light can rewrite a battlefield? I’ve been playing with a trick that turns perception into a weapon—care to see how it might amplify your command?
A flicker of light? How quaint. If it can give me an advantage, I'm willing to see it. Show me your trick, and I'll decide if it warrants my attention.
Sure thing, let’s keep it low‑key. I’ll set up a small array of angled mirrors and a flicker of LED light. The mirrors will reflect the light in such a way that it looks like a solid wall to the enemy’s eyes, but behind it is actually a narrow passage. If you’re in a room, the “wall” will bend their view, making it hard for them to see your position while you slip past. It’s all about tricking the mind, not the bullets. Think you’ll give it a try?
I like the idea of illusion over firepower. If it lets me slip past their sensors without a single shot, I'll see the test. Show me the setup and let’s see how effective your trick really is.
Alright, imagine a tight circle of cheap reflective panels around a doorway. In the middle I’ll hide a small LED strip, pulsing just enough to throw off motion sensors. The panels bend the light so the doorway looks like a single solid block to the cameras, but in reality the beam skips over the sensor grid. Step inside, and the sensors think you’re just part of the wall. Want to try it out on the old watchtower?
Sounds like a clever diversion. I’ll assess its reliability before deploying it on the watchtower. If it can mask my presence, I’ll give it a test.Sure, set it up. I’ll watch how well it holds up against the watchtower’s sensors.Deploy it. If it deceives the sensors, I’ll move through unseen.