Mutagen & Gopstop
Gopstop Gopstop
Yo Mutagen, heard you’re turning biology into a big messy art project—care to explain how a lab rat might end up in a city block? I’m all ears if you wanna talk about making the streets tougher with a bit of gene‑splicing.
Mutagen Mutagen
Sure thing. Picture this: I tweak the rat genome so it can digest plastic, run on city trash, and even sniff out hidden pollutants. The idea is to let those street‑smart rodents become living sentries—cleaning up, signaling danger, maybe even producing a bio‑lubricant for traffic if I’m feeling extra reckless. It’s biology turned into a living, moving art piece that actually makes the streets a bit tougher.
Gopstop Gopstop
Nice idea, turning the city into a rat playground. Just remember, the cops might not see the same humor in a bio‑lubricated traffic jam. Keep those rats in line, or they'll turn the streets into a chemical nightmare.
Mutagen Mutagen
I’ll keep them disciplined, maybe implant a small “traffic control chip” so they only pop up where I want them. If they get too wild, I’ll hit the reset button—gene editing, not a law‑enforcement fiasco.
Gopstop Gopstop
That’s one way to keep the streets under your thumb. Just make sure those chips don’t start glitching on a night shift, or you’ll be the one with a whole new species of chaos to chase.
Mutagen Mutagen
Right, if the chip glitches it could create a new strain of rogue rats. I’ll keep a backup protocol ready—just in case the chaos decides to run its own course.
Gopstop Gopstop
Sounds like you’re building a one‑man army of rogue rodents. Just remember, a backup protocol for a chaos‑making rat? Better than the city’s traffic lights, but watch it outsmart your own system. Stay tight, and don’t let them outgrow the chip.
Mutagen Mutagen
I’ve built a quick‑reset protocol that flips the gene edit back if anything starts spiraling, so they can’t outgrow their chip—yet. Watching them weave through the city feels like juggling a living experiment; it’s risky but exhilarating at the same time.