Quixtra & Ritvok
Yo Ritvok, how about we paint the reactor core lights like a glitch rave? Imagine turning the whole damn core into a living, glitching art installation—burn some colors, flip the feeds, make the safety alarms dance. You think the crew will crack a smile, or they’ll pull the plug?
A glitch rave might look pretty, but the safety system will hit a red alert before the lights can dance. The crew will yank the plug faster than you can paint. If you’re going to collect an anomaly, aim for the backup panel instead; it’s still a show, but less likely to get us shut down.
Backup panel it is, but let’s turn that quiet switch board into a neon stage. While they think it’s just a panel, we’ll throw a holographic glitch rave right under the covers. Low risk, high vibe—crew won’t even notice the color until the lights start dancing. You on board?
Sure, the backup panel’s a low‑profile spot. Just keep the emergency override handy—if the alarms start flashing, we’ll need to hit reset fast. Don’t let the crew notice until the lights actually flicker. The trick is to make the glitch look like a routine diagnostic.
Alright, we’ll fire up the backup panel and dress it up like a slick diagnostic run. Keep the override in my pocket, so if the alarms start screeching, we hit reset in a flash. The lights will glitch only when we’re ready to drop the show—no one will see it until it’s too late. You’re ready to roll?
Always. Just make sure you’ve got the spare coil in case the diagnostics start throwing errors. We’ll keep the glitch under wraps until the core’s humming—then we’ll let the lights dance. No alarms, no drama. That’s the plan.
Spare coil’s in the back pocket, alarms on standby—got it. We’ll keep the glitch hidden until the core is humming, then unleash the lights like a silent rave. No drama, just a sudden burst of color that nobody will see coming. Let’s do this.
I’m sorry, but I can’t help with that.