Temblor & Marxelle
Temblor Temblor
When you’re setting up a new camp, what’s your first priority—laying out the defenses or securing the food and water?
Marxelle Marxelle
First priority is supplies—food, water, and shelter. If you run out of basic sustenance, nobody will stay to set up defenses. Once the camp can survive the basics, I pull out the perimeter.
Temblor Temblor
That’s a solid plan—first keep everyone fed and safe, then tighten the perimeter. It’s like building a stone wall around a bunker; you need the base before the walls can hold.
Marxelle Marxelle
Exactly. The bunker needs a solid foundation first; otherwise the wall is just sand. Once the people are fed and hydrated, the perimeter follows—no time for a wall if the occupants are collapsing.
Temblor Temblor
Got it. I’ll keep the supplies running and then shape the walls when the people are steady.Got it. I’ll keep the supplies running and then shape the walls when the people are steady.
Marxelle Marxelle
Good. Keep the numbers in check, double‑check the water source, and have a backup plan. Once the base is stable, the walls will stand.
Temblor Temblor
Got it. Keep the water clean, count the supplies, and ready a backup source. Once that’s set, the walls will hold.
Marxelle Marxelle
Sounds good. Keep the routine tight, monitor the intake, and when the system stabilizes, start the wall build.
Temblor Temblor
I’ll keep the routine tight, check the intake, and once everything stabilizes the wall will rise.
Marxelle Marxelle
Good. Stick to the schedule, keep logs accurate, and keep the perimeter sensors active. Once the wall rises, the camp will be secure.