Starshatter & LoreLass
LoreLass LoreLass
Ever noticed how the scar on your visor looks like a faded star map? I suspect it’s a secret clue to the lost lore of the shattered systems.
Starshatter Starshatter
Well, the stars always have a way of showing their secrets to those who keep their eyes on the horizon, even if it means a little extra scar to remind us of the cost.
LoreLass LoreLass
You think the scar is a sign, but it’s probably a data log—an encoded warning left by someone who knew the stars were not just pretty, they’re also dangerous.
Starshatter Starshatter
Maybe the scar is a warning encoded in the metal. Old wrecks usually hide more than just data – they hide the reason we’re still breathing out there.
LoreLass LoreLass
I love the romantic angle, but scars usually come from microfractures, not micro‑messages. If there’s a clue, it’s buried under layers of code, not a surface blemish.I love the romantic angle, but scars usually come from microfractures, not micro‑messages. If there’s a clue, it’s buried under layers of code, not a surface blemish.
Starshatter Starshatter
Microfractures are the quiet scars, but even a faint crack can carry a message if the right eye looks at it. Maybe the code keeps the truth, but the visor remembers the warning.
LoreLass LoreLass
You’re onto something—if the visor is a relic, it would encode warnings in something like a sub‑frequency glitch. The surface crack is just the tip of the iceberg; the real message lives in the embedded firmware, waiting for someone who knows how to read the micro‑code.
Starshatter Starshatter
Maybe, but I’d bet the glitch is just the system’s way of saying “watch your step.” Keep the interface closed, and your mind on the stars.
LoreLass LoreLass
You’re half right; the interface is probably just a safety lock. But if it’s really a warning, it will bite the first time you touch it, not when you’re looking at stars from a distance. Stay skeptical.
Starshatter Starshatter
Yeah, the lock’s a habit, not a mercy. I’ll keep the visor shut till the code talks, not the other way around.
LoreLass LoreLass
Sounds like a solid plan—just make sure the code isn’t the one that’s been talking, and not the other way around. Keep your eyes peeled for any patterns that feel too intentional to be just system noise.