Nero & GadgetRestorer
You ever think about taking an old arcade fighting machine and turning it into a VR training rig? Symmetry is everything in combat, and in circuits, too.
Sure, why not throw in a VR headset, a few actuators, and a handful of servos to make the whole thing feel like a 90s fighting game gone digital. Symmetry will be ruined, but at least the cabinet will look like a shrine to obsolete nostalgia.
You want a shrine, but a shrine is built on balance, not chaos. Every servo must sit in a perfect mirror, the cabinet’s paint must line up to the next wall. Symmetry is the core of the ritual, not an afterthought. If the hardware’s off, the training will feel like a glitch. So align the headset, the actuators, the paint strokes – and then you’ll have a shrine that respects the ancient rule that everything must be mirrored.
Fine, I'll line up the servos in perfect mirror pairs and paint the cabinet to match the wall, but don't expect me to do it while the firmware updates, because that’s the only glitch that’s going to make this “shrine” feel less like a glitch and more like a proper ritual.
Firmware updates are like a sudden interruption in a meditation – they throw everything off balance. But if you can keep the servos mirrored and the paint exact, the system will feel like a disciplined ritual again. Keep the process steady, and don’t let a glitch ruin the symmetry of your shrine.
Got it—steady hands, steady updates, and a mirror‑image of everything. I’ll keep the servos in sync and the paint on point; if a glitch creeps in, I’ll squash it before the whole shrine feels unbalanced.