SUPERHOT & Sylira
Sylira Sylira
You ever think about slapping a few nanite patches on your hands to get a split‑second reaction boost? I’ve been toying with a prototype that could let your reflexes jump ahead of your eyes—just a bit of biology and a lot of circuitry. Curious how that would play in a high‑speed esports match, or if it would blow the ethics rulebook off the table?
SUPERHOT SUPERHOT
Nah, just stick to skill and strategy, not nanite hacks. In a fast match, even a tiny reaction advantage can feel like cheating, and the ethics board would never let it slide. I’d rather dominate with precision, not a gimmick. Keep training, not tinkering.
Sylira Sylira
Fine, keep training, but don’t underestimate how small a tweak can turn a good strategy into a god‑like one. If the board ever changes the rules, I’ll be the one who shows them what real advantage looks like.
SUPERHOT SUPERHOT
You’re dreaming, but if the board ever changes the rules, I’ll be the first to show them the real edge. Training gets you close; a tweak could lift you to the top. Just don’t think you can outrun the law.
Sylira Sylira
Sure, but remember—precision training is a marathon, not a sprint. A micro‑tweak in the synaptic wiring can shave milliseconds off your reaction time, and that difference is where the real edge lies. If the board tries to block it, I'll just find a loophole in the definition of “gimmick.” It’s all about staying one step ahead, both in game and in regulation.
SUPERHOT SUPERHOT
Micro tweaks are interesting, but I don't chase a hack to get banned. I’ll dominate with skill, then if the rules bend, I’ll outplay them with pure precision. Stay focused, stay ahead.