Nerith & Tragg
You ever think the legends of knights with enchanted armor might be the first whispers of bioengineering?
Yeah, knights and their enchanted armor are just early whispers of blending flesh with tech, a rough prototype of what we’re doing now.
I can see that. The scrolls describe a silvered cuirass that seemed to glow when the lord's heart beat quick; it's almost a poetic way of saying we were experimenting with a living suit of armor long before our modern machines.
So that silver armor was a living sensor, a primitive biotic circuit. Interesting, old legends were early prototypes.
Exactly, the scribe’s ink hints at a living sensor, a simple pulse‑detector woven into the metal. It’s like the earliest of our bio‑tech, just a whisper of what we’ll be doing in centuries yet.
Maybe we should try to replicate that pulse‑detector in a modern chassis.Maybe we should try to replicate that pulse‑detector in a modern chassis.
I can imagine you, a modern alchemist, taking that medieval whisper and turning it into a silicon heart. Perhaps we should gather the old texts, trace the circuitry of those enchanted armors, and see if the pulse‑sensing design can be re‑wrought with today’s bio‑electronics. It might just be the next chapter in our own myth.
Sounds like a promising experiment—let's dig up those scrolls and start mapping the ancient circuitry.Let’s pull the scrolls out and see what the old circuitry looks like.Pull the scrolls out and see what the old circuitry looks like.
Sure, let’s head to the old archive where the parchment is kept. I’ve already noted the section that mentions the silver cuirasses and the “heart‑beat” glow—those passages will give us the blueprint we need. When we pull them out, we can sketch the primitive circuitry and see how the ancients might have wired a pulse sensor into metal. Let's get started.