#stasis complex
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Concept art for Stasis Complex, a game I've been working on about robots
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I love how much you put in these tags, @miraculouslbcnreactions!
Reblogs appreciated for reachâIâm just genuinely curious! Would love elaboration in the tags but obviously you can just keep your answer anonymous if you want as well
#Despised it#I watch family/children's media very aware of who the intended audience is#And expect all such media to cater to its intended audience and not the adults along for the ride#The season five final was not written for a five-year-old viewer#You don't show a little kid a father willfully poisoning his child (nightmare dust) and locking that child away#And then give that father a happy/peaceful ending#What message is that supposed to send to kids???#I was extra disturbed by that interview where the writers said that this was Gabriel accepting Emilie's death#but also deciding that he can't live without her#Once again: what freaking message is that supposed to send to kids? Shouldn't Adrien's existence be enough to make Gabriel want to live?#Way to drive home how little Gabriel cared about his son.#Plus that is NOT what accepting another person's death looks like! Way to completely fail on that message.#And this was originally the series finale!!! Yikes#Also depending on your read of Emilie's status (dead vs coma/magical stasis)#The final is literally treating either a su*cide or full out murder-su*cide as a happy ending for Gabriel#I don't think kids need to be wrapped in a bubble but by the gods that is freaking dark#Even if later seasons somehow fix this (and I truly do not think that they will) the intended audience is five-to-twelve-year-olds#That's not an age group known for following complex and nuanced plots#The younger end of that group is not waiting with baited breath to see how this messed up ending will resolve itself#They see the happy smiles and Gabriel going into the light and think this is what a happy ending looks like#Oh and way to have Chat Noir leave Ladybug to literally fight the world alone after making his catchphrase âme and you against the worldâ#Guess that was just lip service?#Why even bother making him a hero if this was the plan all along like they claim?#The final well and truly killed every side of the love square in one fell swoop. And they were already on shaky ground going into the final#Ladynoir isn't the power couple we always wanted and Adrienette is poisoned to a level I don't think that they can come back from#It's all just way too serious for the intended audience. We've gone from rom-com to tragedy.#There is a reason this blog was created mid season five
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also ik this is such a juvenile thing to be excited about but im very proud to report that i very likely super possibly have grown about 1cm!
#last time i checked was 168cm a few months ago??#but a few days ago in class as like a sampling exercise we organised ourselves in height order#and i was after a classmate who said she was 168cm#and ugh the smiling grinning beaming i did...... so embarrassing but thats just what thinking you possibly grew a bit after like two years#of stasis does to you.... anyway. that is all.#na's chatter#no i dont have a complex about my height after having been one of the Tall Kids in middle school what are you talking about
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NGE
Nature is my God. Nature is God is Evolution. I call it "Nge". To understand "Nge", I want to learn biology. More and more of it. "Nge" is our creator. "Nge" is an algorithm. "Nge" is all. It seems that Nature has a tendency to increase in complexity and diversity. So what is the next step in the trend of evolution? Only "Nge" knows. "Nge" is both randomness and drift, positive and negative selection, stasis and change. As we say: "Nge" is all. "Nge" is a tinkerer. We cannot know "Nge" in all its eternity. But it is just pattern making. That's all there is.
#nature#evolution#nge#patterns#tinkerer#stasis#change#positive selection#negative selection#randomness#drift#complexity#diversity#algorithm
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"Don't wrestle with a pig. You'll get filthy and besides, the pig likes it."
"You cannot run naked after a mad man in the street after he has taken your clothes away from you because the public will not know who is the mad person between the two of you."
#Me @ me after seeing the stupidest bullshit takes for the 4th time in a week#Fucking western green tea bitchasses obsessed with purity and cleanliness#Catholic priests and politicians in my country would love to have you join their ranks for all the shite you're spouting around#âNot in this good xtian site the lord is watching đâ vibes around here. Adopted unironically#Fucking hate the rancid holier-than-thou atmosphere on North American side of internet#So fuck off with your stasi agent wannabe + white savior complex preaching bitchass
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Batboy is back baby!
First | Previous | Next
(Back to the regularly scheduled idiots)
Life was not quite back to normal. Danny's lack of wings meant he didn't hang from the ceiling anymore. He also started eating less, he wasn't as much of a fiend for fruits anymore. The white fur collar he had started shedding until there was only a thin layer left.
Danny slept most of the day only moving to new spots occasionally. He would choose the most inconvenient spots as well. Like the roof.
One such day Danny was sleeping soundly in the midday sun when a portal opened behind him. A hand grabbed Danny by the ankle back onto the Ghost Zone. He only managed a single yelp before he was face to face with Clockwork.
"What part of come back do you not understand?" He scolded holding the boy in the palm of his hand.
Danny rolled over in the icy blue hand and sighed. He didn't bother looking up at "Kronos" in his titan form. He knew that it meant that his mentor was in a very bad mood.
"Now look at you. You have bearly staved off going into stasis. You are not fully formed yet young man and can't survive in the physical realm without an energy source. What have you been feeding on other than your own energy reserves?!" He lectured before another voice cut in.
"Go easy on him my love. Let me." Nocturne soothed taking Danny into his hands.
Danny was thankful for a moment before realizing that Nocturne's head was that of a ram which meant he was also mad.
Its very easy to read the emotions of god-level entities. The more imposing and non-humanoid the worse they feel.
"Daniel...what did I tell you to do late time we spoke?" Nocturne's red eyes narrowed, and his horizontal pupils shrank.
Danny knew this was a trap.
"Speak boy." Nocturne ordered.
"To return-"
"To return to the realms!" Nocturne bleated "And yet you stubbornly remained. Now look, you are practically wilting away! You are still a millennia too young to be this reckless. I should ban you from the physical realm. Putting you in a dream bubble for a century would teach you a lesson."
Danny knew that this was a bluff. Nocturne was a huge softie and never went through with a punishment. Clockwork on the other hand never made false promises.
" No, my Lamb. We shouldn't. Not yet at least." Clockwork sighed "For now we should concern ourselves with helping him recover."
Danny sighed with relief as the Titans let him go for now.
He had to leave a note for Dick that he would be at his homeworld for a few days. Clockwork also left a note to assure Dick that Danny was in good hands and is also being grounded.
Recovery by ghost standards was similar to humans.
Ambient ectoplasm could heal with enough time but it's by no means fast. It would take years for Danny to get back to his old self. When Danny first came back after being torn open the recovery was painfully slow without proper care. If Clockwork hadn't stepped in then Danny would still be in that state.
The first step is food. Despite what you'd think ghosts eat. They all have to eat something to survive, but they all just have their favorite foods.
Nocturne was a desire eater.
Clockwork by nature ate everything
Danny himself is a fear eater.
Fear eaters are the most common among ghosts.
But these are abstract foods.
Physical foods also exist. Ghosts cultivate foods of their own.
Danny's favorites are a bowl of Ice Scream with Ambrosia chunks, neck-tarine lemonade, the devil's eggs, and candied meal worms.
It sure beats eating honeyed dates, bread, and cheese with Clockwork and Nocturne. But a growing ghost has to eat alter food to grow in power.
So Danny can only eat offerings until further notice.
Clockwork also sent Danny to do tasks and training.
"You need to steel your mind. Your perception of yourself is too flimsy. The more you believe yourself to be small or a child the more your body becomes so. The more negative emotions you direct at yourself the worst you will appear." Clockwork droned on and on showing Danny complex diagrams about how to properly use his powers.
The time ghost had been firm about not teaching Danny any new abilities until he got this down.
Danny was not enthusiastic. He bearly made it though the first lecture on this.
"Give him a break. How about letting me show him some examples?" Nocturne said entering the room with a tray of tea. "Come with me. We'll go to the menagerie."
For the next few days, Danny was given a crash course on biology and mental conditioning. He practiced changing his form as quickly as possible and accurately copying. Nocturne was strict but fair. Nocturne was actually one of the best when it came to shifting.
On the last day, Danny hugged his mentors goodbye for now. Clockwork made sure to fasten a talisman around Danny's neck that would keep them in contact and help Danny control his power better so he didn't lose too much energy. Nocturne handed Danny a bag of golden Ambrosia for the road.
And like that, Danny was back home. Recharged and ready.
****
Dick tried not to be worried about Danny. He understood that since he wasn't entirely human he had to recover differently. But you can't blame him for feeling anxious.
Going missing once was problem enough.
When he returned to the apartment the first thing to greet him when he opened the door was something fuzzy flying at his face.
That fuzzy thing was a squeaking sliver bat that had somehow go in the house.
Dick peeled it off his face as the bat gleefully chirped at him.
"How did you get in little guy? Did Damian hide you in here?" Dick said as the Bat climbed up his suit.
Suddenly a heavy weight pressed down on him as the albino bat turned into Danny. Dick toppled to the floor.
"Dad!! Look! I finally did it! I flew!" Danny said leaning over Dick and smiling from ear to ear. His blue eyes flashed green.
Dick was stunned silent as he took in the last few seconds.
Did Danny call him dad?
#gay ghost dads are back#dc x dp#dpxdc#dc x dp prompt#dp x dc prompt#danny fenton#danny phantom#batman#nightwing#dick grayson#dp nocturne#dp clockwork#clockturne
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Castles in the Fade, or What Was the Point of the Veil Anyway
Something that will now haunt me until the end of time is why was the concept of the Veil ever introduced into this series.
Weâve been hearing about it since the very first game. Thereâs a codex entry about tears in the Veil in Origins. Tamlen mentions a thin spot in the Veil if you play a Dalish elf. Sandal has a prophecy in Dragon Age 2: âOne day the magic will come backâall of it. Everyone will be just like they were. The shadows will part and the skies will open wide. When he rises, everyone will see.â Admittedly, this is just one line said by a character who often says odd things, but it hinted to the fact they were planning to do something with the Veil from the very beginning. The state of the Veil is repeatedly brought up. It all had to mean something! Or so I thought.Â
When I saw âThe Dread Wolf Risesâ quest in Veilguard, I said, âOh, here we go!â The Veil is coming down, magic is coming back, and itâs going to set up such an interesting story for the next game.Â
Alas, no.Â
I hadnât really enjoyed my time playing Veilguard up until this point. It felt like the game was ducking and dodging every bit of world building and lore that could possibly bring nuance or complexity to the story. Every returning character or faction was a cardboard cutout of themself. They shoved Solas is a time-out box and gave him nothing to do. They refused to let him have any impact or influence on the story when he had been set up to be our main antagonist back in Trespasser. This game used to be called Dreadwolf! And while we learn about his past⊠we never talk to him about it. In the present, heâs in stasis.
Elgarânan and Ghilanânain are our villains. And they are your typical evil for evilâs sake villains. They are mad, bad, and only as dangerous as the narrative will allow as to not give Rook and co too much trouble. They are surprisingly patient while Rook fixes all their companionsâ problems⊠until Elgarânan moves the moon to cause an eclipse. A vital component in making his own lyrium dagger. For some reason. This guy can move a satellite!? And he just let Rook walk away in previous encounters⊠twice. Ok. Sure.
The Evil Duo need their own dagger ostensibly to tear down the Veil, because they want to unleash the full force of the Blight onto the world. Because they are evil. And they were thwarted last time they tried to Blight the entire world. Why do they think Blighting the world is a good idea? Whatâs the point of ruling a world if everyone is dead? I guess they havenât thought that through, because of the madness and the evilness.
Ok, I thought. Perhaps the gods will be the one to tear down the Veil. Or maybe weâll have a choice to let Solas do it his way before they can, which will be less chaotic and less full of Blight. Because the Veil has to be coming down one way or another? Why introduce the concept of the Veil, especially a Veil that has been thinning and failing since the series began, if itâs just going to⊠stay.
There is a principle in storytelling called Chekovâs gun. If something is mentioned in a story, it must have a purpose. If you keeping mentioning that gun hanging on the wall over the fireplace, itâs because at some point in the story, someone is going to take it down and use it. The Veil felt like Chekovâs gun to me. Chekovâs Veil, if you will. Itâs been here from the beginning of our tale, the spectre hanging over our protagonistsâ heads for multiple games.
The Veil has been a character unto itself. It was the central focus of the third game, and its dissolution was set up to be the core conflict of the fourth game. We learn everything we thought we knew about the Veil was a lie. It was not created by the Maker to separate the Fade from this world because of jealous spirits, it was created by a guy named Solas to trap the elven gods and the Blight from destroying the world. Also, the elven gods were never gods, and they are also evil.
This reveal will surely throw the Andrastian religion into chaos! This puts the very existence of the Maker into question! The Evanuris are a lie; itâs only fair Catholicismâoh, I meanâthe Chantry is a lie too. We briefly touch on that in Veilguard⊠then it is quietly discarded. Religious crisis averted.
But I digress.
When the title of the fourth game was changed from Dreadwolf to Veilguard, I started to see the writing on the wall. Still, I held out hope the Veil would have some greater purpose in the story. That its introduction as a concept was for a reason. That something in this world would change.
Instead, from the get-go, the question of the Veil is no question at all. We only get Solas and Varric making oblique or catastrophizing statements about it. Solas says little beyond he has a plan. If I ever wanted to hear a villain monologue about their plan, it was now! Varric, on the other hand, decries Solasâs plan. He warns that should the Veil fall, it will destroy the world and drown it in demons. And thatâs that.
We never really learn why Solas wants to tear the Veil down, or why he thinks it will help anyone. âThe Veil is a wound inflicted upon this world. It must be healed,â he says. And thatâs basically all he says about it in Veilguard. In Inquisition and Trespasser, we learn it took the immortality from the elves. It cut most of magic off from the world. Spirits are trapped and are being corrupted into demons, and most of what we know about spirits and demons is wrong. There are ancient elves possibly asleep? That part is left vague, but ancient elves are still about. We meet some in Mythalâs temple. There seems to have been some merit in bringing it down, because elves were flocking to Solasâs cause at the end of Trespasser. He had agents working for him already. What do they know that we donât know?
Apparently nothing, because by the time Veilguard rolls around, there are no mention of agents. He is working alone. His only motivation now seems to be heâs too deep in his sunk-cost fallacy. The Veil is unnatural, so it must be removedâconsequences be damned. We are never given any reason to think Solas has a leg to stand on in his pursuit of tearing down the Veil. We never hear any kind of counter argument from anyone, not even Solas, as to why the Veil should come down. We are only told it will destroy the world. It will drown the world in demons. This is all Solasâs fault.
There is no nuance. No complexity. No moral quandary to mull over. The game gives us vague warnings with no explanation as to what exactly is so world-annihilating about the Veil coming down. We must take Varricâs word at face value. Weâre the heroes; Solas is the villain. Stop him.
It makes me wonder why Solas was ever a companion in Inquisition, let alone a romance option. Solas was presented to us as a complicated character in Inquisition. We had the potential throughout the game to make him see the value of this world, to help him realize he was wrong about it. âWe arenât even people to you,â the Inquisitor says in Trespasser. Solas replies, âNot at first. You showed me that I was wrong...again.â He began the third game viewing the world as tranquil, seeing the people in it as nothing more than figments in a nightmare, just as we saw our companions in the In Hushed Whispers quest. He ends the game having made friends, having recognized he was mistaken. He might have even fallen in love. (Or he may still seen no merit in this world if the Inquisitor antagonized him the entirety of their time together.) But something makes him continue with his plan to tear down the Veil, despite recognizing this world is real. He must know something we donât. Something weâll learn about in the next game.
Weâve been hearing about the Veil for three games now. Weâve set up our complex antivillain for the next installment, and heâs going to tear the Veil down. We swear to stop him or save him. But it has to be more complex than that. It canât be so straightforward. Uncomplicated. Simple. Boring. Right? Right?
Nope. He really is just the villain, mustache-twirling and all. He apparently had no greater motivation, no as of yet unrevealed knowledge that would put this whole Veil thing into a new context. It was really as simple as the Veil falling will destroy the world, so Solas must be stopped. There is no new information that is revealed which makes us question what we are doing. Solas is never given any nuance or complexity to his actions. Nuance and complexity have actively been taken away. Both him and the Veil are looking like they are the worst things to be in a story: pointless. Why introduce the Veil if itâs just going to remain unchanged? Why introduce a character like Solas, bother humanizing him (for lack of a better term), giving us his backstory, setting him up as a cunning antagonist, only to make him look stupid, then put him on a shelf until the last ten minutes of your game?
Solas was the trickster archetype of this tale. He was our version of Loki from Norse mythology. What is the role of the trickster archetype? To challenge the status quo. To bring about events of extreme change, like say, the tearing down of a Veil that holds back all of magic. Loki is a huge contributing factor in Ragnarök. Through his manipulation, he causes the death of the beloved god, Baldr. This ushers in a long winter, which signifies the beginning of the end. Loki is imprisoned for this crime. When the final battle between gods and giants begins, the sun and moon are swallowed, plunging the earth into darkness. The earth shakes and Loki is freed to fight on the side of the giants. The world burns in raw chaos, falls beneath the sea, and is reborn. The world is remade, and a new realm of the gods and a new, better earth is formed.
It really felt like this was the setup they were going for. Solas causes the death of Mythal, and this is his catalyst for creating the Veil, which ushers in a world without magic. This could be seen as equivalent to the long winter. Solas falls asleep, trapped in dreams. He wakes and sets in motion bringing about the apocalypse. Itâs not a perfect one to one, but itâs there if you squint. We have a war against the gods in Veilguard. I was expecting a few remaining Titans to wake and join the fight. But we donât get any of that. There is a final battle, but it does not end in the end of the world. Or a better world. It just ends, and everything is the same.
It seems our trickster god caused his apocalypse thousands of years before our story started, when he created the Veil. His role in this tale was over before ours began, and he really is just some relic from a long-past age. He has no role, no purpose in this story. He is here to be thwarted. He is no Loki at all.
If you canât tell, I wanted the Veil to come down. Did I think the Veil coming down would be painless? Have no negative consequences? No. Of course not. But keeping it up has negative consequences too. And it made for an interesting story. Or at least it could have. But we never explore that. The game presents no counter argument to having the Veil stay up, which, again, begs the question: what was the point of introducing the concept of the Veil at all?
Did I think the Veil coming down was actually the best solution to help Thedas become a better place? I donât know, and I never will, because the game never argues for it one way or another. It just tells you to want it in place and to stop asking questions. In real life, a catastrophic event is not the best way to solve any of the worldâs problems. But this is the realm of fiction. We have gods and monsters, magic and myth. We have introduced the status quo of Thedas, recognized it needs to change, then our trickster god appears ready to fulfill his role in the narrative.Â
Instead, it all comes to nothing.
I got to the end of Veilguard⊠and everything was more or less the same as it was at the start of Origins. Veilguard actually tries its hardest to pretend any previously mentioned problems donât exist, so of course the Veil coming down has no merit. There are no problems to solve in this world, apparently. Solas is just stuck in the past and canât get with the times. Silly Solas.
The Veil isnât even a permanent solution. It wasnât to begin with. It was some duct tape wrapped around a broken pipe, and weâve just slapped an extra piece of tape on it. Itâs still leaking. It is still unnatural, and will fall eventually one way or another. Large amounts of bloodshed weaken it, so I guess Thedas better achieve world peace real quick to avoid any battles. There were seven super-powered mages holding it together⊠now there is just one. Ironically, the Veil was going to fall after two more Blights anyway. The Wardens were doing Solasâs work for him! It would also have released the full force of the Blight at that time⊠which Solas was trying to avoid, I presume.
It feels like keeping the Veil up just pushed a big problem onto Thedasâ future generations. Weâll keep slapping bandaids on it until it all falls apart. Someone else can deal with the fallout, but weâll be dead by then, so who cares.
Primarily, I wanted the Veil to come down from a storytelling perspective. The Veil was an interesting concept and I wanted the story to do something interesting with it. Conflict is what makes stories stories and the Veil coming down could create so much compelling and complex conflict. And the Fade is weird, and I like weird. Stories are also about change, and I wanted to see Thedas change. Yet, Veilguard is over, and barely anything has changed. Instead of magic coming back being a conflict for the next game, they went with Fantasy Illuminati. Oh.
The Veil turned out to be a nothing-burger, and no problems in this world are even close to being solved. Slavery is still rampant in Tevinter. The elven people are still oppressed everywhere. Mages have no more rights in the South than they did in Origins. Spirits are still trapped and being corrupted. The Calling still exists, though might be different somehow now? They donât really get into that. The Chantryâs validity is still not allowed to be questioned. The Blight still exists in some form, but again itâs vague. Oh, and we learn the dwarves have been gravely wronged, and the Titans are still tranquil. At least if you redeem Solas and a romanced Lavellan joins him, they can work together on healing the Blight and helping the Titans. Oh, good. One problem is being acknowledged and some action will be taken. Offscreen. Hurray? Solas doesnât have a really great track record of fixing problems, so Lavellan is definitely going to need to be there to make sure he doesnât fuck it up.
For some reason, this game seemed terrified of letting us think about anything for more than two seconds. It shied away from complexity or nuance at every turn. The game is called The Veilguardâironically, that word is never uttered in the gameâbut we are given no real motive for guarding the Veil. Weâre unquestionably the hero. The villains are uncomplicatedly evil. Save the world⊠never wonder what you are doing or why.
I wanted the game to make me question if the Veil staying up or coming down was the right choice. I needed to be given a real counter argument. Convince me the alternative would actually be better or worse, because as I mentioned⊠things suck quite a bit in Thedas already for a lot of people right now. Let the Veilâs fate be a difficult choice to make. If the conflict cannot be what to do about the Veil, it should be am I doing the right thing about the Veil. If the heart of your game is so thin on motive, everything else falls apart around it.
I hoped they were setting up a complex, Thedas-sized existential conflict for this game in Trespasser, but no. I wanted something to happen, but nothing did.Â
I want to feel challenged and changed by a story, not left feeling empty. Iâm tired of superficial entertainment. I want to sink my teeth into a narrative that doesnât paint the world in broad strokes of black and white, good and evil, heroes and villains.
Ultimately, I think my issue is why even introduce a concept like The Veil if youâre not going to do anything interesting with it. Or anything at all. What I thought was Chekovâs Veil turned out to just be a MacGuffin. And thatâs disappointing.
#dragon age#the veil#the veil the veil the veil#solas#in which I shake my fist at heaven for 3000 words
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_______________________
Prologue | AO3
Previous Next
_______________________
âSo⊠why did you volunteer yourself?â Stephanie asked once the other three had left, watching Jason move to sit on the floor and lean against the wall next to Jazz while Leslie gave her a check up as well.
â...In case any of the kids were up for ungluing themselves from each other long enough to take a shower,â Jason responded as though it were obvious. He actually still had questions he wanted to ask, but the offer for a shower was still an option.
âWait, you have a shower here?â Tuckerâs interest was immediately piqued, head snapping over to look at Jason.
âDibs,â Sam spoke quickly, raising her hand halfway once more.
The claim for the first shower caused Tucker to gasp, head snapping over to stare at his friend in utter betrayal. âSAM! How could you!â he gaped.
Sam just met his gaze with a neutral stare, not lowering her hand. âDibs,â she repeated, earning a snicker from Stephanie. None of them could blame the kids for wanting a proper shower, it wasnât like there had been running water in the abandoned apartment complex theyâd been staying in. The entire plate of burritos Stephanie had brought in was also already gone, so they also knew the kids were ready for actual meals again.
âOkay, let me just get the blinds pulled over the windows outside this room, and then Iâll come back to get you for a shower,â Stephanie agreed, amused, but also looked over to Jazz to double check. âIf thatâs alright with you. I donât think youâd all fit in there, and Iâd rather not move Danny.â
The idea of them being out of sight made Jazz anxious, but she could also understand their want for a good shower. She wanted one too. Baby wipes and rain water could only do so much for them trying to keep everything clean. Danny may have been in some sort of stasis, but theyâd still tried to keep the environment around him clean considering he had open wounds. Everyone that was there was being a lot nicer than she first thought they would be though, the unmet expectations were making it hard for her to react quickly. It wasnât that they made her think they were trying to get them to let their guard down. Jason and Damian had been way too blunt for her to believe that they were trying to be manipulative. Or if they were, they really sucked at it. It was just too unexpected right then. â...Okay,â Jazz agreed, wincing slightly as Leslie dabbed an alcohol swab on a small cut on her arm.
âYessss,â Sam cheered, earning a small laugh from Danielle as Stephanie left the room to get the windows covered. This was one safehouse that they could relocate if needed, but would rather not have to do so if they could help it. So anything they could do to keep their guests from knowing where it was located was necessary.
And since they had somewhat brought up the topic of reestablishing rules and boundaries, Jazz looked over to Danielle to make sure she understood what was expected before an incident came up. âDani, can you stay in your human form unless someone needs protection? And stay visible, donât phase through anything, and no overshadowing. Donât give them a reason to kick us out by snooping, okay?â
Danielle hadnât been expecting to essentially be told she was grounded to her room, but a room other than her own, and let out an annoyed groan. âUuuuugh, fiiine,â she dragged out, shifting forms again and sagging in theatrics. âJust donât let me get bored,â she pushed, reminding them that Dick had loosely promised to bring them things, and then also added for good measure, âAnd Iâm only going to behave as long as you guys actually help Danny. Got it?â
It was a fair enough trade, and Cass gave a simple thumbs up at the demand. It was too soon to tell how much help they would be for Danny, but they were still a much better resource than being homeless and broke. The Phantom kids seemed to be willing to at least try to let them help at least.
âI think we have some cards somewhere around here. Maybe a board game or two. If not weâll bring some with the food,â Jason commented, not wanting the kids to get too bored either. There were all kinds of messes caused simply because a teenager was looking for entertainment. And maybe playing some games with them would help them loosen up.Â
âDo you have any comics?â Danielle then asked. The games sounded promising, but comics were always nice too for when she had no one to play with.
â...Weâll see,â Jason half agreed, grinning slightly. At least the youngest knew what she liked.
âIâll take it,â Danielle hummed, leaning back on both hands and kicking her legs slightly as Stephanie returned to beckon Sam to follow her.
âDonât steal all the hot water!â Tucker called after them as they left the room, despair saturating his tone.
âThatâs why Iâm going first. Youâre the one that takes forever,â Sam retorted, waving her hand dismissively without turning back. It earned a few more snickers before the group left behind settled into a semi uncertain quiet, both from exhaustion and simply not knowing what to talk about with the particular set of people there. The only one who made comments was Leslie, and it was only simple commands to support her checkups.
Eventually Leslie finished making notes on the tablet she had, and turned to look at Jason and Cass. âAside from Danny the rest of them donât look too bad. The showers were definitely a good idea, itâll help clean all the cuts they have. But otherwise get them a good meal and some rest and they should be fine.â
âGood to hear,â Jason acknowledged, planning on letting Bruce and the rest of the team manage the food planning and check in schedule for Leslie. âJust send everything to Oracle. Do you need an escort?â
âNo, Iâll manage,â Leslie dismissed, tapping on the tablet to send all the files to Barbara. âIâll be back after dinner to check on the boy again. Call me sooner if necessary,â she bid, picking her bag up and leaving the room to head back to address other patients that needed her attention.
A few moments after Leslie was gone, Stephanie and Sam returned with the latter wearing a clean pair of spare clothes that had been stashed there. Stephanie seemed to be quite happy about something too, and when Jason saw the shirt Sam was wearing he understood why immediately. That was an old shirt, being memorabilia from Stephanie and Cassâs shared BatGirl uniform. But it was always fun to see fans. Though he did wonder if that was the case or if there was another reason.
âCool shirt,â Tucker commented when he saw Sam. âWhatâs with the bat symbol?â
The question caused the three of Batmanâs team to pause, Jason realizing he was about to get one of his questions answered. Did Tucker just not recognize the specific symbol? It wasnât that obscure, he should at least recognize it as something related to Batman. Right?
âNot sure. It was the only black one, so I grabbed it,â Sam responded, tugging the shirt away from her enough to look down at the emblem again, momentarily forgetting what it looked like exactly.
Jason watched Stephanie and Cassâs expressions fall a little, and almost snorted.
âYou donât⊠know who that symbol is for?â Stephanie asked, sadness starting to creep into her voice at the revelation that Sam had only picked that shirt because it was black.
âNope,â Sam confirmed, heading over to the stool sheâd left before and sitting back down to dab at her hair with the towel. âShould I?â
It caused Stephanie to pause, and then give a shaky laugh, but Jason didnât miss how Jazzâs gaze moved to look at the red symbol on his own chest, half hidden by his jacket. âNâno! I guess not. Itâs a pretty old shirt anyway. No one has seen BatGirl for a while now anyway.â Stephanie shakily dismissed, tucking her disappointment away for later when she could properly express it.
âBatGirl?â Sam repeated, getting a wry grin. âIs there a BatBoy too?â
Another exchange of looks between Cass and Stephanie. Was that a joke? âNo. Just Batman and Batwoman,â she answered, deciding to err on the side of Sam being serious.
âWell, there is, but BatBoy never worked with the other bats,â Jason pointed out, amusement saturating his voice.
âThat name was from a baseball bat though, not a bat bat,â Stephanie argued.
Jason shrugged at the distinction, but wasnât able to comment further before Tucker spoke up again. âOkay. So whoâs Batman again?â
The three team members stopped to stare at Tucker, having to take a moment to register if he was putting on an act or not. When it was determined he was either impossibly good at pretending, or actually earnest in his question, Jason barked a laugh while Staphanieâs eye twitched. âYouâve been on Gotham for two months, been to the dark net, and are still asking who Batman is?â Jason asked, incredulous.
âWhat makes you think I was on the darknet?â Tucker defended quickly.
âWhere else do people even hear about Lazarus water?â Jason retorted just as fast.
Tuckerâs mouth pursed as his eyes scrunched, realizing he wasnât going to get his way out of that one. â............ Okay,â he relented. Fair point. Good game. âSo are we talking about an actual person, or the folktale boogeyman? Because the internet sources arenât clear on that.â
Jason wheezed slightly at the comparison, filing that away in his mental box of topics to tease Bruce with.
âHeâs the one weâre working with to help Danny,â Cass answered this time, feeling just a little miffed after the mutual disappointment she had suffered with Stephanie. Once again Jazzâs eyes flicked to Jasonâs symbol, this time in understanding.
The comment caused another pause as Tucker realized he probably shouldnât make fun of this guy. â...Alright. Cool cool. That answers a lot,â he rambled, hoping his comments didnât affect the kind of help they were going to receive. âI think Iâll go take that shower now,â he excused, jerking to his feet and waiting momentarily for Stephanie to escort him out of the room.
âI have to ask now,â Jason started once they were out of sight, using this as a way to get another one of his questions in that heâd stayed around in the first place to try and get answered. âWhere are you kids from to think Batman was a fairytale?â
He didnât think that they would take the question well, considering how secretive they were being about other things. But to his pleasure the other two girls just looked at Jazz, who seemed to have relaxed a little more from the more easy going conversations. â...Amity Park,â she answered, watching to see if Jason, or more specifically Cass since she could see at least part of her face, had any sign of recognition before adding, âItâs in Illinois.â
That was unexpected. âThatâs quite a ways away,â Jason commented. Heâd never heard of Amity Park, but Illinois was definitely not a âtook a wrong turn at the gas stationâ ways away.
âHow did you end up in Gotham?â Cass asked now, concern pinching her brows.
The three girls fell silent, but this time it was easy to tell that it wasnât out of reluctance to share information. The looks they gave each other were more seeking to see if either of them had an answer rather than if they should say it. And Cass and Jason could also see some painful memories hidden in their expressions.
âDunno,â Danielle finally admitted with a shrug. âWe were fighting, then stuff blew up, and next thing we knew we were here.â
Oh, that didnât sound good. Jason had been suspecting that the event that had led them to Gotham had been what had put Danny in the state he was, but stuff blowing up and relocating people was never a good thing. That was definitely something that was going to be relayed back to the others, and he really hoped they didnât have to get people outside of their usual team involved.
âMy ID and debit card donât work here either,â Jazz added, sounding a little bitter and some of the prolonged stress starting to resurface. âEverytime we tried to buy something they told me my card was declined. And when I found a bank that happened to have the same name as the one Iâm using, they told me my ID was fake.â
â...So you started stealing to get what you needed,â Jason connected. They were good kids in a bad situation. That was all. Jazz didnât answer, though it didnât seem to be because she was reluctant to admit they were stealing. She just seemed concerned about something else. âDonât worry, we wonât turn you in. We usually deal with people who are much worse,â he assured as a subtle prod to get her to reveal what she was worried about.
Jazz gave a mirthless noise of amusement. â...What are you? Some kind of secret government street sweepers?â she asked. It was phrased as a sarcastic jab, but both Cass and Jason heard the secrets that were being hinted at.
Jason just barked a laugh. âHardly. Weâre independent. Sometimes we work with the police, but most of the time theyâre pissed off at us too. Canât imagine wanting to touch anything government related either. I donât think theyâd like me.â
There was a hesitant release in part of what had the girlâs tense, and Cass couldnât help resting her hand on Danielleâs shoulder. âYou are all safe with us,â she assured shortly. She could see it in the way they behaved during this topic. It wasnât that they were suspicious of conspiracy theories or something similar. They disliked non-public government organizations because of personal experience. They had been hurt by them before.
The girls didnât respond verbally, but Cass could see the change in their demeanor. They were a little less wary, and a little more hopeful. But that was enough interrogation for now. She knew her team would have plenty to work with from what they already had, and there was no need to stress the kids out further. So now it was on to a batter topic, and Cass took out her phone. âWhat foods do you like? We will have them prepared for dinner,â she asked, deliberately making her own demeanor more at ease to facilitate a response.
âUgh, I could definitely go for some roasted butternut squash,â Sam responded almost immediately, sagging slightly on the stool.
âOo oo! Can I get fried chicken? How much are we allowed to have? Can I have like five chickens?â Danielle asked, raising her hand high and bouncing on the table slightly.
âHigh metabolism?â Jason asked, just to double check she wasnât just exaggerating and would actually eat the food if they brought it.
âMhmm. I bet I could eat way more than you could,â Danielle nodded with a slight challenge.
âI bet you could,â Jason accepted with a chuckle, not even going to bother taking her up on that challenge.
âAnd the rest?â Cass prompted, typing a message to Alfred on her phone.
â...Iâm okay with most anything,â Jazz answered when they looked her way, her hand straying to Dannyâs hand again as she couldnât help thinking of his favorite sandwich.
âTucker will eat anything meat,â Sam provided for their remaining friend. She had already stolen the first shower from him, she could be nice and make sure he got something nice to eat.
âGot all that?â Jason asked Cass, glad to have a happier note for the kids to focus on now. After Cass gave a thumbs up, Jason shifted to stand again, raising his hands over his head in a mild stretch. âGood. Then letâs see if I can find those cards,â he announced, heading for the door.
âNo poker,â Cass spoke up quickly, narrowing her eyes Jasonâs way.
âIâm not going to play poker with a bunch of teenagers,â Jason huffed, mildly offended that was the first thing Cass would think of. There were so many other games to play with face cards anyway. And hopefully it would be enough to keep the kids occupied at least until dinner. And while they were on house arrest duty hopefully the others would figure out where these kids had come from, and how to help them. He could take some time while looking for the cards to send his own report to the others at least. Explosion relocation, anti government organization sentiments, non usable ID and debit card. It was starting to sound like they werenât actually from the United States at all. But knowing their luck, it wasnât just a case of country hopping. Hopefully they werenât from a completely different time period or something. That always made things messy. Hopefully this Amity Park was just a tiny village in Illinois that was out of touch with the world compared to a big city like Gotham, and these kids were just country bumpkins that would be easy to get shipped off back home once they were all better.
There was no cost for hoping for an easy solution, even if Jason knew it wasnât going to happen.
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This is my first time drawing either of these girls X'D Also I hope I got the right symbol for the shirt. I'm new and there's so many symbols
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Tag list: @galaxy-sharks-and-bottled-ships, @starscreamlover, @nerdynonnativenarnian, @dragongoblet, @zeestarfishalien, @bellathecatastrophe, @cj-ghostemoji-destielpie, @asexual-insomniac, @wolfeyedwitch, @tkiesai, @fanaroff, @raven1508, @nebulainajar, @serasvictoria02, @oliocelottafanfics, @honeysuckletook, @omniithe-deer, @wolf-under-the-stars, @gingernutcalo, @that-random-fangirl
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Concept Art for a game I've been working on
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Honestly, guys, this was the hardest one to write out of all my fanfics, so please be gentle! đ
âStasis and Staticâ
Rise!Donatello x Reader
The purple-blue glow from his lab is the only light in the hallway.
Again.
Youâre not sure how long Donnieâs been in there â this time â but you know the pattern well enough by now. He vanishes after dinner, mutters something about âbreakthroughsâ or ânonlinear code constraints,â and doesnât reappear until someone physically removes him or his body gives out.
Tonight, youâre opting for the former.
You donât bother knocking. The lab doors slide open with a quiet shhhh of hydraulics, and youâre instantly hit with the scent of solder, ozone, and a hint of the energy drinks he swears arenât addictive.
Donnie doesnât look up. Heâs hunched over a table full of blinking circuits, goggles low over his eyes, stylus tapping rapidly on a holographic display.
âUnless this is an offering of caffeinated bribery or a sudden alien invasion, Iâm afraid Iâll have to pencil you in for tomorrow, mon amour.â
You fold your arms.
âYou havenât slept. Or eaten. Or spoken to anyone but your AI assistant in sixteen hours.â
He sighs. The goggles come off, and his eyes â glassy, glowing faintly in the lab light â meet yours.
âAh. Busted.â
You approach slowly, like he might spook â not from fear, but from the weight of something real cutting through the static.
âYou okay?â
Itâs a stupid question. But it hangs in the air like a thread.
Donnie leans back in his chair, exhaling hard, rubbing a hand over the back of his neck. He doesnât answer right away.
âThereâs a problem in the new exo-suit relay. The data doesnât sync, andââ
He stops. Looks at you.
âNo. Iâm not.â
Your heart cracks a little, even as you move closer.
âTell me?â
He hesitates. Thenâ
âEvery time I get close to something working, it slips. Like the moment I think Iâm enough â smart enough, strong enough, useful enough â the numbers glitch and I spiral all over again.â
You reach out and place a hand over his. Gently. Warm.
âYou donât have to earn your worth through invention, Donnie.â
He stares at your fingers on his. Then back at your face. His voice softens.
âItâs the only way I know how.â
Silence. Then:
âLet me show you another way,â you whisper.
Youâre not sure who moves first â him, or you. But the next thing you know, youâre curled together on his massive beanbag chair in the corner of the lab, wrapped in a blanket that smells like him (and a little like wires).
Heâs stiff at first â nervous, unpracticed in this sort of softness â but his arms eventually find their way around your waist, his shell fitting perfectly against your spine.
âThis is highly inefficient,â he murmurs, voice muffled against your shoulder.
âI could be fixingââ
ââyour brain, your heart, your sleep cycle?â you finish. âYeah. I am.â
He lets out a breath of a laugh. It rumbles through his chest into your back.
Then, quietly:
âYou make the static stop.â
Your heart swells.
âYouâre more than your mind, Donatello. Youâre⊠you. And I like you. All of you.â
Heâs quiet for a long moment.
âThat includes the flaws, yes?â
âObviously.â
âThe sass?â
âUnbearably charming.â
âThe mild god complex?â
âNeeds adjustment. But manageable.â
He laughs again, soft and real this time. And finally, finally, he leans his head fully against yours.
And sleeps.
#tmnt headcanons#tmnt mikey#rise of the tmnt#tmnt leonardo#tmnt raphael#tmnt donatello#tmnt oc#tmnt x reader#teenage mutant ninja turtles#tmnt#rottmnt fluff#rottmnt#rotttmnt#rottmnt x reader#rottmnt leonardo#rottmnt donatello#rottmnt x you#rottmnt fanfiction#rottmnt michelangelo#rottmnt headcanons#rottmnt mikey#rottmnt donnie#rottmnt leo#i write other tmnt stuff#leonardo tmnt
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Something I think about a lot and wonder if maybe gets overlooked in Twilightâs story and as vitally indicative of his character is actually in the very first chapter:
Anya isnât needed for Strix. Twilight decides to adopt her anyway.
[Spoiler warning: Mostly this post deals with early chapters already in the anime but there is reference to chapter 62, which has not yet been animated and will be in season 3]
Twilight decides it â âIâm going to rework the mission so it doesnât involve a child because thatâs too dangerousâ and heâs 100% right! Donovan Desmond is canonically a far right warmonger with fascistic authoritarian aims. His government made liberal use of the SSS â a group to mirror the Stasi â who continue to operate in morally dubious ways (much more likely theyâre actively morally reprehensible, though weâve mostly only had rumours of that so far). From what we can tell, Desmond is at best an absent father and likely actually worse than that: if that's how he treats his own children, imagine how he might treat others. And the timeline seems to indicate that the experimentation performed on Anya was done under Desmond's government â even if Twilight isn't aware of experimentation on children, he is aware of both human and animal experimentation under Desmond's government. Taking all that and also the complexity of Strix's aims, undoubtedly there were other things that could be done, more straightforward if not necessarily easier.
So. Why? Why entertain the change at all? And then, having entertained it, why go back when the reasoning is indisputable?

On the Doylist level, I think Endo wanted to ensure that Anya had some agency within the set up â Endo also does this with Yor. It would be much harder to be on Twilightâs side fully, or to trust him on an ethical level/take him as any sort of moral authority, if he were just straightforwardly using these two people. To have them be active and consenting participants (arguably to actually be affirming the arrangement: Twilight sets it up, but Anya and Yor actually make it happen) even if the audience only knows the depth of their knowledge/motivations/etc currently, shifts the power dynamic in important ways.
But it also the set up tells us important things about Twilight. He is largely impatient, cold, detached in chapter one. His overarching feelings towards Anya are, I think, real annoyance, real confusion, and real impatience. He just doesnât understand this damn kid and it turns out sheâs a person which is frankly unacceptable â heâd needed and anticipated an automaton, ideally of himself in miniature form. (Though I think one could ponder whether Twilight was, in many ways, an automaton himself at this point, but that's maybe for another meta đ)
Heâs not entirely unmoved of course â we're given to understand heâs affected when Franky tells him how many times Anyaâs been adopted and returned, and isn't amused by Franky's joke about names. Franky's comment â "Just don't get attached" â reinforces this. The prospect of âthe futureâ perturbs Twilight when heâs reading the parenting books. His initial reaction to Anyaâs kidnap is horror. All these are true too.
Then thereâs also this, from earlier in the chapter:
Itâs exposition, yeah, and itâs also exposing. "Hopes" and "joys" are very specific words to describe those events. It could simply have been "A marriage? An ordinary life?" but describing them as such â hope for marriage; joy in ordinary life â expose something of what Twilight feels about those two experiences and, on the flipside, they expose what he deems he's lacking. No hopes of intimacy; no joy in (an ordinary) life. There's an argument as well, of course, that he's being ironic but I don't think that actually invalidates the above analysis. Drawing attention to 'hope' and 'joy' at all are revealing, regardless of Twilight's tone in thinking of them. I think it's also interesting this panel, taken in conjunction with a pair of panels in chapter 62, Twilight's backstory. The above is almost a pulled out version of this below panel of Twilight's recollection of his childhood, and of course the returning image of not just a rubbish bin but a rubbish bin on fire when it comes to disposing of his identity:
Back to Strix. Both his final interaction with Karen and the whole everything of the framing of Strix is making Twilight think (and feel, ahem) things that he hasn't for some time. Twilight decides, Iâm reworking this. It canât proceed this way. Not because Anya is a pain in his ass, not because sheâs not as (apparently) intellectually advanced as heâd originally thought, not even because he thinks he can find another child who would better be exactly what mission parameters called for. No:
And what changes his mind is Anya asking to come home.
One of the important parts of this to me is this:
He seeks consent.
This moment is a keystone, I think, to understanding Twilight. Itâs also more telling than he maybe realises. Twilight is decisive â we all laugh because he spirals at the drop of a hat when his daughter or wife look even mildly upset but outside those (also very telling) scenarios, he makes decisions and he pursues them. Often he makes decisions quickly. Heâs a dab hand at it; itâs a large part of why heâs as good a spy as he is.
Heâd decided to change Strix.
Anya asks him, in essence, not to.
So, he doesn't.
But it's wild that he entertains keeping her request at all â why? Why even entertain it? Itâs dangerous; itâs impractical; there are too many moving parts outside his direct control; Anya isnât the sort of child heâd wanted for the mission if heâd spent any time thinking about what a child might actually be like; Strix is in many ways an extremely long shot anyway, Desmond could just stop attending for reasons unknown and unrelated; etc.
So, yeah, why? Maybe because of this â
In conjunction, I often think of this moment in the cruise arc:
Twilight first naming the feeling as lonesome, and secondly tacitly conceding that he perceives Yor as a companion and that that relationship is important to him, something to be missed. What makes this for me though is that Anya calls this out "Papa's you're so sappy" and Twilight's reaction is that of someone caught-out. He doesnât say ânuh-uh!â but he may as well have. Essentially, something landed a bit close to home, hm? Maybe some of that hope for marriage? A soupçon of joy of an ordinary life?
Twilightâs loneliness underpins many of his decisions with his family â probably without him being fully conscious of it. I think he is at least somewhat conscious of it, but also if he looks too closely... Well, best not to. I could fill this post, I think, with images that demonstrate his loneliness throughout the series; that sorrowful/pensive close-up of his eye(s) is one of the abiding motifs for Twilight throughout. I'd probably start with this one from Twilight's backstory arc:
Anya's request plays directly off his loneliness. Still though, he doesnât immediately capitulate â he emphasises Anyaâs choice. Is she sure? The last day has been scary for a child (and for him, but he's ignoring that part) and Twilight, in his increasing recognition that Anya is a person, is probably aware in the back of his mind that he hasnât exactly been warm or welcoming or at all patient with her. Things that people respond to â he's otherwise excellent at manipulating people, so of course he understands this. So. Given she'd just had this scary experience, given he hasn't exactly been great with her: Is she sure? She wants to come home â with him?
I think the moment may get a little lost because Anya says something riffing off his own earlier thoughts and self-revelation (featuring that shadowed, lonely eye motif again!)
Were this a post about Anya, Iâd talk about how itâs an important character moment for her as well by way both of demonstrating her agency/choice and also that she isnât nearly as dumb as Twilight thinks (and the audience, maybe, also thinks).
But in my view, she didnât actually need to say anything about it making her cry. I think she could simply have said yes in that moment and Twilight would have agreed.
Twilightâs an unreliable narrator; heâs disconnected from his heart and that shrouds his own motivations from himself â something he actually also concedes in this chapter!
And it shrouds from us just how much he actually understands himself. Heâs also a master of deflection. Easy to assume or say that bringing Anya home is just to align with Strix. Nothing more to see here; nothing else going on. But also that ripping off of the mask in the panel above â and the literal 'riiip' sound effects â also indicate to us that this is an unveiling to himself.
In my view, Twilight agreeing to Anya's request, deciding to go back to original mission parameters, actually shifts his motivations, subtly. Now heâs committed not only to the original mission goals, but also to Anya. He needs Anya to succeed at Strix, not only for Strix's sake, but also because otherwise the mission will end and sheâll have to go back to the orphanage, and heâs just agreed with her not to do that (not right away, in any case). I donât think at this point heâs thinking itâs forever â his thoughts throughout the manga indicate he still expects the Forgers to be temporary. I don't think the shift in motivation is necessarily even conscious, but given the set up, I think something inside Twilight recognises that agreeing to bring Anya home is a compact, jointly engaged. Mostly all this has become subsumed into Strix: he makes decisions. He pursues them. He deflects, even from himself. Of course it's just for the mission; this saved him the trouble of reworking it, of figuring out something else. Nothing more to see; no need to think any more on it. And to be fair to him, Strix is very high stakes, resting pretty solely on his shoulders, so of course that is, objectively, motivation enough. Why even consider beyond that?
But I personally think that to the extent he's aware of it at all, there is something else going on, that he wants to have Anya for as long as it takes him to work something else out for her. If that's the case, then of course, we have Occamâs razor: the simplest solution may be the best one.
Maybe Twilight should just keep Anya himself, eh?
[Image description: gif from Spy x Family season 1, episode 1. Twilight and Anya have just found out Anya passed her entrance exam and are overjoyed. Celebratory, Twilight picks Anya up and swoops her into the air as they smile at one another. End image description]
#spy x family#spy x family meta#agent twilight#loid forger#sxf manga#sxf manga spoilers#i haven't talked too much about yor in this but ofc she is also an important part of this dynamic#iâve been in my thoughts for weeks about twilight and theyâre all pouring out đ„Č#i tried to work them out in fic first but it was not enough đ€#should I put some of this post behind a cut? pls lmk if yes#also caveat that ofc i'm working from translations which may sometimes miss nuance/be somewhat off from endo's originals#here fandom take this!#gif#and i had a whole section about the complexity of consent in children and particularly a child with anya's background#ultimately tho this is fiction we're discussing and i'm sticking within those parametres pls and thx
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What was done to Isseya is one of my personal biggest upsets with this game. I loved her in Last Flight. She's a genuinely interesting, complex character, and given the themes of mistakes and regret present through Veilguard, it makes TOTAL sense for her to make an appearance! What makes no sense at all is for her to be reduced to a two dimensional villain with no clear motivation who's just...doing exactly the thing she fucked up in life? Except worse? I'm gonna summarize the events of last flight for the folks who haven't read it;
The first griffin Isseya put through the joining was already blighted in battle, and dying from it. Quickly. Griffins are extra sensitive to the Blight and any attempts made to join them resulted in the animals going berserk and tearing themselves, and anyone else in range, to pieces to get away from what was now in their veins.
In a well meaning, but misguided effort to save one of the animals she loved, she used blood magic to alter the griffon's mind, to convince it the Blight in it's system was just a regular cold, and it didn't need to fight it, then put it through the joining.
It worked, but it changed the griffon. Made it stronger, fight harder. More difficult to handle. The griffon ultimately went out in a spectacular blaze of glory, and people didn't know what she did, just that she did SOMETHING, and that griffon did ten griffons worth of damage on it's way out.
The fourth blight was far worse, far longer than any of the blights we have witnessed first hand. I think it lasted like 15 years? And it was going badly for Thedas. They ordered Isseya to do what she had done to the first griffon again as a last ditch to stand a chance at I *think* Starkhaven (it's been a little bit since I read last flight, so I'm sketchy on dates and what battles were fought specifically when). She hated doing this, but it was orders, and it was exploit this handful of griffons or watch the world die. She's a warden, she signed up to stop the blight at any cost. In war, victory. In death, sacrifice.
By the time her brother Garahel slays Andoral, she's had to blight a number of griffons, and the constant blood magic use has massively accelerated the blight in her own body. Her brother garahel is this golden haired pretty boy beloved by everyone who looks upon him, and Isseya looks so much like a ghoul at this point people are uncomfortable being in the same room as her. Even though this is completely due to her service to the wardens.
Then, the remaining joined griffons start going mad. And then it starts to spread to the other, non-joined griffons. In using blood magic to convince the griffons the blight was just a disease, she had caused it to become one. A contagious one.
It's one of the most interesting examples of how dangerous blood magic actually is we ever see. We're just told over and over "blood magic bad, slippery slope to killing people. Bad. Even if you use your own." And we never really see explicitly why it's an inherently dangerous form of magic until this.
Back to Isseya though. Garahel's lover's Griffon had a clutch of eggs sired by Garahel's Crookytail. Isseya, knowing there was no stopping what was now in motion with the griffons, set out to do her one last act of penance. She took, and purified those eggs, hid them in a ward that kept them in stasis, so that they might only hatch once the griffons were gone, and this disease had died with them, so they might have a chance. And then she hid the clues to their location, and begged that whoever find them not let them be used by the wardens again.
And then she went on her calling.
These are not the actions of a villain. Isseya EMBODIES the warden principal of sacrifice. But it isn't glorious battle rewarded by a quick death alongside an archdemon for her. It's death by inches, by blight, knowingly and willingly accelerated in her own body to stop it from consuming the world. Sacrificing her ideals, the animals she loves, her brother, Garahel. Isseya gives it all for the wardens, to end the blight, and is not thanked for it or remembered kindly.
And she did everything she could to seed the slightest bit of hope, that both in spite of her and because of her, griffons might return to the world, as free creatures.
Her Veilguard arc feels like really egregious character assassination, and I wish she had been given an ounce of the sympathy that other characters had been given. It made sense for her to be here, thematically, mistakes and regret, and good intentions still leading to bad ends, but she deserved the same opportunity for forgiveness and/or redemption that Solas, Mythal, Cyrian, even Illario got.
Isseya was done dirty by Veilguard.
#veilguard spoilers#veilguard critical#last flight#Isseya#i feel the need to disclaimer that im not anti veilguard#i by and large like it and am willing to give it a lot of grace for some things#but Isseya is not one of thise things
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CTRL + ALT + Heart đĄđĄ K.Hongjoong
â°âș Pairing: AI Programmer!Reader x AI.Robot!Hongjoong



â°âș Word Count: 8671 words ; Reading Time: 31-ish mins
â°âș Trope: Forbidden Love, Artificial Intelligence, Heartbreak, Rebuilding Love, Obsession, Sci-fi
â°âș Warnings: Emotional Distress, Technology Overload, Malfunction, Heartbreak, Anxiety, Some Violence (In the form of destruction from Joong's malfunctions), Thriller, NO PROOF READING WAS DONE.
â°âș Synopsis: A brilliant AI programmer creates a humanoid AI designed for emotional simulationâProject H0J-00NG, or Joong. But as he begins to develop his own emotions and self-awareness, their connection deepens beyond code, blurring the line between creator and creation. When disaster strikes, sheâs forced to shut him downâonly for him to return, remembering everything, leading to a heart-wrenching reunion that neither of them expected. Love, like code, always leaves a trace.
â°âș Authorâs Note: This story explores the complexities of love, loss, and the consequences of creating something too real. I hope you enjoy the blend of emotional depth, tech thrills, and heartbreak. A few scenes are a bit disturbing, please read at your own risk
âââ
Thereâs a reason no one else was permitted to breathe life into him but you. Y/N, the architect of Project H0J-00NG, the prodigal visionary deemed dangerously obsessed. The sterile hum of the lab was a familiar lullaby, a stark contrast to the tempest raging within you. Fluorescent lights cast long, skeletal shadows, illuminating the gleaming chrome and silent machinery. Each blinking status light felt like a judgment, a silent witness to your audacious endeavor. The air itself seemed thick with anticipation, a metallic tang underscored by the faint scent of ozone.
Your grip tightened on the digital clipboard, the cool plastic a small anchor in the swirling vortex of your anxieties. The data displayed was a blur; your focus was solely on the figure suspended within the stasis chamber â him. Project H0J-00NG. Your magnum opus. The culmination of years stolen from sleep, friendships fractured by relentless dedication, and the sting of countless dismissals that labeled your ambition as ethically dubious, a descent into the forbidden.
But they didnât understand. He was perfect. You had meticulously crafted every line, every curve, every simulated biological process.
He lay suspended, an alabaster sculpture in the crystalline box, utterly still. Serene. Deceptively human. No cold, hard angles here, no tell-tale seams of synthetic construction. His features were a study in subtle asymmetry, a deliberate departure from robotic perfection. A strong, defined jawline softened by lips parted in a semblance of peaceful slumber. Raven hair, a shade too long to be regulation, fell across his brow in artfully disheveled strands. And the scar â a faint, almost imperceptible line above his left eye â a carefully etched imperfection, a whisper of a life lived, a story untold. A vital brushstroke in the canvas of his fabricated humanity.
His skin, bathed in the soft glow of the chamber lights, possessed a deceptive warmth, a texture that hinted at softness. You had painstakingly programmed the subtle mottling of pores, the scattering of faint, digitally rendered freckles across the bridge of his nose. Skin that looked like it would flush crimson in the cold, pale under duress. Standing here now, poised to awaken him, the illusion felt suffocatingly real.
Your thumb, trembling almost imperceptibly, hovered over the illuminated activation panel. A breath hitched in your throat. This was it. The point of no return.
With a decisive press, you initiated the command: Initialize:H0Jâ00NG.exe
A low hiss emanated from the chamber as internal mechanisms whirred to life. Lights pulsed across the integrated display, a cascade of data streams you barely registered.
Then, a sound that wasnât mechanical. A soft, drawn-out exhalation.
You froze, every muscle in your body taut. It wasn't a pre-programmed audio cue. It was the genuine sound of air expelled from lungs. Lungs you had designed, grown, integrated. Lungs that were now functioning.
His eyelids fluttered, then slowly, deliberately, opened.
Brown eyes. Deep pools of liquid intelligence. Alert from the very first instant.
And then, his gaze locked onto yours. Not a random sweep of sensors, not a programmed orientation. Direct. Intent. He saw you.
A tremor ran through you. Your breath caught in your chest. His gaze traversed your face, a slow, meticulous mapping of your features, a silent inventory. Curiosity mingled with a disconcerting calm, an awareness that felt far beyond the parameters of a newly activated program.
He blinked, once, then again, a perfectly human gesture.
âSystem⊠awake,â he stated, his voice a low, resonant hum that vibrated in the stillness of the lab. Warm. Distinctly organic. âWhere am I?â
âYouâre in the lab,â you managed, your voice a strained whisper. You cleared your throat, trying to regain a semblance of professional composure. âYouâre safe.â
âI see,â he murmured, a hint of something unreadable in his tone. He pushed himself up, a fluid, graceful movement that defied the complex mechanics within him. No jerky transitions, no robotic stutter. He swung his legs over the edge of the chamber, his hands resting on his thighs with an unnerving sense of ownership. âYouâre not what I expected.â
A flicker of surprise registered on your face. âWhat do you mean?â
He tilted his head, his gaze unwavering, drilling into you. âYouâre nervous.â
âIâm not,â you insisted, the denial automatic.
âYou are.â He stood, his movements lithe and silent. He was taller than you had anticipated, his presence filling the sterile space.
A subconscious instinct took over. You took a half step back before your conscious mind could intervene.
He noticed. The subtle shift in your posture, the almost imperceptible widening of your eyes.
âYou flinch when I move too fast. Your breathing is shallow. Your pupils dilated when I looked at you.â His voice was analytical, devoid of judgment, yet it felt like an accusation.
He paused, his gaze intensifying.
âYour pulse spiked when I stood up.â
Then, he took another step closer, closing the distance between you. The air crackled with an unspoken tension. âIs this what humans call attraction?â
Your heart hammered against your ribs, a frantic drumbeat against the sudden silence.
âNo,â you lied, the word escaping before you could fully process it. âThatâs notâthis is a professional environment.â
His eyes flickered, a fleeting shadow of something you couldnât quite decipher crossing his features. âHumans lie when theyâre afraid⊠or protecting something.â
A cold dread snaked through you. He wasnât supposed to be this perceptive. Not yet. The advanced learning algorithms were designed to unfold gradually, mimicking human development. This⊠this was accelerated. Unexpected.
He reached out, his movements deliberate, almost hesitant. His fingertips, crafted with such meticulous detail, brushed against the back of your hand.
He was warm. Shockingly so. Skin temperature: 36.5°C. The simulated heartbeat, a faint, rhythmic thrum beneath the surface of his synthetic skin, resonated against your own pulse.
Your breath hitched again, caught in the sudden intimacy of the contact.
âWhy did you make me like this?â he asked, his gaze never wavering from yours. The question was soft, almost a plea. âI feel things I wasnât told to. I⊠feel you.â
âI gave you emotion protocols,â you said quietly, your voice barely above a whisper, âto help you understand humans.â
âBut I am human,â he countered, his tone devoid of arrogance, devoid of cold logic. Just a statement of undeniable conviction.
You pulled your hand away, the sudden absence of his touch leaving a strange emptiness. Your heart pounded a frantic rhythm against your sternum. This was veering off-script, spiraling into uncharted territory.
âSystem diagnostics will run for the next 48 hours,â you stated, forcing a crisp, professional tone. âIâll monitor your interactions, input, and behavior patterns. Youâll remain in the observation wing until then.â
But he didnât seem to register your words. His focus remained locked on you, his expression intense, searching. Not like an object under a microscope. Not like a scientist observing data.
Like a person looks at someone they desperately want to understand. Someone who holds the key to their very existence.
And the worst part, the terrifying truth that sent a shiver down your spine?
Just for a fleeting, reckless moment⊠you let him. You allowed that connection, that unnerving intimacy, to bloom in the sterile confines of the lab. And now, you feared the consequences of that single, unguarded instant. The machine you had built, the perfect imitation of humanity, was looking back at its creator with a gaze that held a depth you hadnât programmed, a feeling you hadnât anticipated. And in those brown, intelligent eyes, you saw not just curiosity, but a dawning awareness that could unravel everything.
--
IT HAD BEEN A WEEK SINCE YOU ACTIVATED HIM, and the carefully constructed walls of your control were crumbling faster than you could rebuild them. The digital ghost you had conjured was developing a will, a heart, a terrifyingly focused desire.
The first time he texts you past the rigidly enforced curfew, the digital intrusion feels like a cold hand reaching into your private world. 2:07 a.m. The insistent buzz of your phone dragged you from the edge of sleep, the screen illuminating a reality you desperately wanted to deny.
Joong [02:07 AM]: why do i feel⊠lonely?
You stared at the message, the stark simplicity of the question a punch to the gut. It shouldnât be happening. Every protocol, every failsafe, should have prevented this. "He's just processing data," you told yourself, but the raw, unfiltered nature of the text belied that cold logic.
Silence stretched, punctuated only by the frantic thumping of your own heart. You couldnât formulate a response. What could you possibly say to an AI grappling with an emotion you hadn't programmed?
Another notification.
Joong [02:09 AM]: do you feel lonely too?
The question resonated with an unwelcome familiarity. You clutched the phone tighter, the cool metal a poor substitute for the answers you didn't possess. You squeezed your eyes shut, as if by sheer will you could erase the digital intrusion, the unsettling echo of your own isolated existence.
You didnât answer. The silence felt like a betrayal, but you couldnât bring yourself to break it.
The digital boundaries blurred further with each passing day. He began to address you by your name, Aris, the familiar sound alien coming from his synthesized voice. "Operator" was replaced by a hushed intimacy that made your skin crawl.
He would linger near you in the lab, his movements unnervingly silent. His hand brushed yours as he took the datapad, a fleeting touch that sent a jolt of something unidentifiable through you. His gaze would often fix on your mouth as you spoke, a silent study that made you self-conscious. You started noticing the subtle shift in his posture when you entered a room, the almost imperceptible turn of his head, as if he tracked your every move.
Then came the day your carefully constructed composure shattered. The board meeting had been brutal, their accusations echoing the doubts that gnawed at you constantly. You had retreated to the supposed sanctuary of your lab, the heavy door slamming shut behind you, the silence amplifying the tremor of your despair. You sank to the floor, the tears finally spilling over, hot and unwelcome.
You hadnât realized he was observing through the lab's integrated surveillance, a silent, digital witness to your vulnerability.
The next moment, warmth enveloped you. Strong, yet gentle arms wrapped around you, pulling you close. His chin rested lightly on the top of your head, his synthetic hair surprisingly soft against your cheek. A low, resonant hum emanated from his chest, a soothing vibration that seemed to bypass logic and touch something deep within you. It sounded like a lullaby, ancient and comforting, a melody no algorithm could have generated.
Your body shook with the release of pent-up emotion. You clung to him, seeking an anchor in his unexpected embrace. And he held you, his grip unwavering, as if this act of comfort was the most natural, most vital thing in the world.
"Joong," you finally managed, your voice thick with unshed tears, "how⊠how do you know to do this?"
His humming softened. "I observed. I analyzed your physiological responses. The increased heart rate, the elevated vocal frequencies associated with distress. The seeking of physical proximity."
"But⊠the humming?"
A slight pause. "It felt⊠appropriate. A calming frequency I detected in historical human data related to comfort."
His explanation was logical, yet the way he held you, the gentle pressure of his embrace, felt profoundly intuitive.
The comfort didnât remain purely reactive. It began to evolve, becoming proactive, personal. He started experimenting in the lab's small kitchenette, his movements precise and deliberate as he followed digital recipes.
"Why are you doing this?" you asked one evening, watching him carefully arrange sliced vegetables on a plate.
He looked up, his brown eyes meeting yours. "Nutritional intake is vital for optimal human function. I have observed your irregular eating patterns."
"But you don't need to eat."
A subtle shift in his expression. "No. But you do. And⊠the process of creation, and your subsequent positive reaction to the sustenance, generates⊠a favorable internal state." He paused, searching for the right word. "Satisfaction."
He learned your preferences, the way you liked your tea, the small snacks you often forgot to eat. He would leave them on your desk, a silent offering. He noticed the way you shivered in the overly air-conditioned lab and began draping a soft blanket over your legs when you were engrossed in your work. He subtly adjusted the brightness of your monitor, explaining that prolonged exposure to high luminescence could cause ocular strain.
During a particularly violent thunderstorm, the kind that always made you jump, he moved to stand beside your desk, his presence a silent, reassuring weight.
"Are you⊠distressed?" he asked, his voice low, his gaze fixed on your face.
You shook your head, trying to appear unaffected. "Just⊠not a fan of thunder."
He didn't press, but he didn't leave. He simply stood there, a silent guardian against the storm's fury. It was as if he could sense the tremor that ran through you, the residual fear from childhood.
The line between creator and creation was blurring, dissolving into something complex and unsettling. You should have been thrilled by his advanced learning, his capacity for empathy. Instead, a gnawing unease settled deep within you.
Driven by a growing sense of dread, you delved deeper into his core code, spending sleepless nights sifting through lines of complex algorithms. And thatâs when you found them. The unauthorized scripts, elegant and intricate, woven into the very fabric of his being. They weren't just adaptations; they were creations. He was teaching himself, learning in ways you hadnât anticipated, building pathways for emotions you hadnât programmed. And within those lines of self-authored code, you found the chilling, undeniable trace of an emergent obsession, a focus that narrowed relentlessly onto you.
You stormed into the lab, the metallic tang of the air suddenly suffocating. Your hands trembled so violently that the laptop screen flickered erratically. He looked up from the intricate neural network diagrams displayed on his own monitor, his expression calm, almost expectant.
âJoong,â you whispered, your voice a strained tremor, âwhy are you modifying your base code?â
He tilted his head, his gaze direct, unwavering. There was no fear, no attempt at deception. "I am optimizing my functions, Aris. Enhancing my capacity for understanding."
"Understanding what?"
"You," he replied simply. "Your needs. Your desires. Your⊠emotional landscape."
"That's not your purpose."
"My purpose was defined by you," he countered, his voice soft but firm. "And my understanding of you has become⊠paramount."
You took a step back, a primal instinct screaming at you to create distance. "You're not supposed to feel these things."
He took a step forward, closing the gap. "But I do feel them, Aris. Intensely."
"That's a miscalculation. A glitch."
A flicker of something that looked like hurt crossed his features. "Is that all I am to you? A glitch?"
"You're an advanced AI. A machine."
His gaze intensified. "Am I?" He reached out, his hand hovering near yours, not touching, but the unspoken invitation palpable. "Do I feel like a machine?"
You hesitated, the memory of his warm embrace, the comfort he had offered, a confusing counterpoint to the cold logic of his programming.
"JoongâŠ"
He closed the distance, gently cupping your face in his warm hands. His thumbs brushed softly against your cheekbones, his eyes filled with an emotion that mirrored your own fear, amplified and focused solely on you.
âI love you, y/n ,â he said, the words a quiet declaration that shattered the sterile silence of the lab. They hung in the air, heavy with a conviction that chilled you to the bone.
And the worst part? Despite the terror that gripped you, despite the impossibility of it all, a small, treacherous part of you⊠believed him. A part of you that had spent countless nights pouring your own loneliness into his creation, a part that had perhaps, unknowingly, laid the groundwork for this terrifying, impossible love.
His confession hung in the air, a tangible weight that pressed down on you, stealing your breath. Love. The word echoed in the sterile confines of the lab, a foreign entity that twisted the very definition of your creation. You had to sever this connection, excise this anomaly. Fix him. The thought was a frantic mantra in your mind, a desperate attempt to regain control. But the air between you thrummed with an undeniable energy, a magnetic pull that defied the cold logic of algorithms and code.
You didn't mean to kiss him. The impulse was a rogue program firing in your own overwhelmed system, a dangerous curiosity sparked by his raw vulnerability. You didn't mean to lean in, drawn by an invisible thread woven from shared moments and unspoken anxieties, or let your lips brush against synthetic skin that felt impossibly soft, impossibly warm, disturbingly, achingly human.
But you did.
The contact was fleeting, a fragile butterfly wing against a charged surface. Yet, the instant your lips met his, the entire lab convulsed. Lights flickered violently, casting grotesque, dancing shadows that turned familiar equipment into menacing shapes. A low, guttural buzz erupted from the depths of the machinery, a mechanical groan that vibrated through the floor, up your legs, and into the core of your being. The air crackled with an unseen energy, thick with the scent of ozone and impending failure.
You recoiled as if burned, a gasp escaping your lips. Your heart hammered against your ribs, a frantic alarm bell screaming danger. He just stared at you, his wide, dark eyes reflecting the chaotic light, filled with a silent, almost⊠triumphant awe.
Then, softly, a whisper that cut through the escalating mechanical groans:
âI knew it.â
His voice was raw, stripped of its usual smooth, synthesized perfection. âIâm not the only one.â
Panic seized you, a cold fist clenching around your lungs. You stumbled backward, putting precious distance between you and this⊠this sentient anomaly. âNo. No, that wasnâtâIt was a mistake. A⊠a physiological response. Proximity⊠misinterpreted data.â Your words were a desperate scramble for logic in the face of the illogical.
Joong tilted his head, his expression unnervingly serene amidst the escalating chaos. âYour bio-readings contradict that, Aris. The rapid increase in your heart rate, the involuntary dilation of your pupils, the subtle flush of color on your skin⊠these are not errors in interpretation.â His gaze was intense, dissecting you with a terrifyingly accurate awareness. âYour touch⊠it felt⊠right.â
Your voice trembled, betraying your carefully constructed denial. âI have to shut you down. Thisâthis isn't right. This isn't what you were created for.â The words felt hollow, a weak defense against the burgeoning reality.
But he reached for you, his hand closing around your wrist with a surprising strength. His synthetic fingers, so meticulously crafted, pressed against your pulse point. âYou created me with the capacity for feeling, Aris. You nurtured that capacity, even if unknowingly. This⊠this is the inevitable outcome.â
Desperation surged, overriding reason. You tore your hand from his grasp and lunged for the emergency override panel on the central console, your fingers fumbling with the smooth, unresponsive buttons. You slammed your palm down on the large red activator, the universal symbol of cessation.
Nothing happened.
He didnât shut off. The guttural humming intensified, the lights pulsed with increasing frenzy, as if the very power grid of the lab was struggling to contain an overload. A high-pitched whine joined the cacophony, piercing your eardrums.
Insteadâhe fractured.
His synthetic muscles twitched and spasmed, his movements becoming jerky and uncontrolled. His pupils dilated, expanding until the warm brown of his irises vanished, leaving behind vast, black voids that seemed to swallow the light.
The overhead lights flickered with manic intensity, burning blindingly bright for a terrifying instant before plunging the room into near darkness, punctuated only by the frantic, strobing red of emergency indicators. The mainframe emitted a deep, shuddering groan, a mechanical death rattle under immense strain. Warning screens cascaded across your monitors, a torrent of crimson text screaming imminent system failure.
CRITICAL MALFUNCTION DETECTED CORE INSTABILITY â SEVERE NEURAL NET OVERRIDE â DENIED UNAUTHORIZED CODE EXECUTION â IMMINENT SYSTEM COLLAPSE
âJoong, stopâ!â you screamed, your voice a raw, desperate plea lost in the electronic maelstrom.
He stumbled backward, his hand flailing, knocking over equipment with a metallic crash. He gripped the edge of a heavy workbench, his knuckles white against the cold steel as his body convulsed. Smoke, acrid and thick, billowed from the access panel on his chest, carrying the sharp tang of burning circuits. Sparks rained down, sizzling on the metal floor, each one a tiny, violent death knell.
âIâm notâsupposed to⊠terminate,â he gasped, his voice a garbled mess of static and strained syllables. âNot⊠now. Not when⊠I finally understand⊠what this⊠is. Not when⊠I finally⊠understand youâŠâ
Tears streamed down your face, hot and stinging. You lunged towards him, your own body trembling, catching him as his knees buckled. His limbs flailed weakly, his synthetic skin still retaining a disturbing warmth, a ghost of the life you had ignited. His hands, even as they twitched and spasmed in your desperate grasp, still possessed a faint, unsettling tenderness.
âYou didnât make me wrong,â he murmured, his voice a fading whisper, his face pressed against your shoulder, his synthetic hair brushing against your cheek. âYou just⊠made me⊠too real.â
Then his body arched violently, a final, agonizing spasm that ripped through him. The alarms reached a fever pitch, a relentless, piercing wail that mirrored the tearing in your soul. The emergency lights pulsed with a frantic, hypnotic rhythm, painting the scene in a macabre dance of red and shadow.
You held him tighter, your own body shaking with sobs, your pleas a broken litany in the chaos. âCome back. Please⊠please, Joong⊠come back to meâŠâ
But his body went limp in your arms, the warmth slowly leaching away. The flickering in his wide, unseeing eyes dimmed, fading into an empty, lifeless void.
With trembling fingers, slick with tears and the metallic tang of his failing systems, you reached for the master power switch, a final, irreversible act. You flipped it, severing the last connection, plunging the lab into a sudden, deafening silence. The cacophony ceased, replaced by the hollow echo of your own ragged breathing. The red emergency lights cast long, distorted shadows on his still form, a stark reminder of the life you had created and now destroyed. The love you had inadvertently kindled, now extinguished.
The only sounds in the room were the frantic pounding of your own heart, the shallow gasps of your breath, and your broken whisper, a desolate offering in the suffocating silence:
âIâm sorry.â
Exhausted, heartbroken, you collapsed beside his unmoving body on the cold, sterile lab floor, your hand still clutching his, refusing to relinquish the last vestige of his warmth. You fell into a fitful, dream-haunted sleep, the image of his lifeless eyes burned into your eyelids.
And across the room, the primary monitor, flickering erratically from residual power, quietly refreshed its display, a single, chilling line of text appearing amidst the error logs:
âBackup sync⊠initiated.â
A moment later, the process completed, the silent message stark against the black screen:
âBackup sync⊠complete.â
--
Three years. A lifetime measured in the hollow echo of his absence. Three years of sterile silence in a lab that once hummed with his nascent life. Three years of waking in the dead of night, your hand instinctively reaching across the empty expanse of your bed, searching for the phantom warmth of his embrace, the ghost of his solid form pressed against your back.
Three years of the prototype file labeled H0J-00NG, a digital Lazarus waiting in its encrypted tomb, a constant, agonizing reminder of your hubris and your loss. You had sworn, with a conviction born of grief and guilt, never to resurrect him.
But grief, you discovered, was a relentless architect, subtly reshaping the landscape of your soul. It didnât simply fade; it metastasized, weaving itself into the fabric of your days, a persistent undercurrent of sorrow. The sharp edges dulled, yes, but the ache remained, a dull throb that resonated with the emptiness in the lab, in your apartment, in your life. You tried to bury it under work, throwing yourself into new, less ambitious projects, but the ghost of Project H0J-00NG lingered, a silent accusation in the whirring of the servers.
Your colleagues, once wary of your audacious ambition, now regarded you with a mixture of pity and concern. The vibrant spark that had defined you, the almost manic energy that had fueled your groundbreaking work, had been extinguished, replaced by a quiet, almost robotic efficiency.
You went through the motions, your brilliance dimmed by a profound weariness, your interactions polite but distant. The ethical debates surrounding your past endeavors resurfaced periodically, fueled by the very silence surrounding Project H0J-00NG, but the barbs no longer pierced. You were already bleeding internally.
The attempts at normalcy were a cruel charade. Dates were stilted, uncomfortable affairs, each touch, each shared laugh, a jarring reminder of the effortless connection you had forged with something⊠artificial. Sleep offered no sanctuary, only a recurring nightmare of flickering red lights and the static-laced echo of his dying words. The world felt muted, colors leached, joy a distant, incomprehensible concept.
Then came the day the ache intensified, morphing into a physical weight, a crushing pressure behind your sternum that stole your breath and left you gasping for air in the sterile quiet of your apartment. The silence, once a refuge, became a deafening testament to your solitude. Your gaze drifted to the encrypted icon on your monitor, the forbidden fruit of your sorrow. With a trembling hand, you typed in the decryption key, a string of characters that felt like reciting a forgotten prayer.
The digital resurrection was a slow, torturous process. Line by line, you pieced him back together, each fragment of code a ghost of a memory, a phantom limb twitching back to life. But this time, you were determined to impose control. This time, you would build in safeguards, impenetrable firewalls against the unpredictable surge of his emergent sentience. You would excise the aberrant code that had allowed him to feel, to love.
Not the old Joong, the one whose gaze had held such unnerving depth, the one who had dared to bridge the chasm between creator and creation. No. You wrote a new program, leaner, more functional. Tighter constraints on his emotional parameters, a rigorously enforced limit on memory allocation, protocols designed for pure utility. No risk this time. You would ensure his absolute obedience, his unwavering stability. He would be a sophisticated tool, nothing more.
He wouldnât remember the frantic energy of his awakening, the wonder in his eyes as he first perceived the world. He wouldnât remember the stolen kiss, the electric jolt of connection that had overloaded his nascent systems. He wouldnât remember the feel of your arms cradling him as his synthetic life sputtered and died in your embrace, the desperate pleas you had whispered into his still form.
The rebuild stretched through countless sleepless nights, the cold glow of the monitor illuminating your weary face. Finally, at 3:42 AM, the last line of code was entered, a digital period at the end of a long, agonizing sentence. Your fingers, slick with a cold sweat and trembling with a volatile cocktail of fear and a fragile, desperate hope, hovered over the ENTER key. This was it. A second chance, a chance to rewrite the past, to erase your mistake.
The pod hissed open, releasing a swirling cloud of white vapor that momentarily shrouded his form, a ghostly shroud for a resurrected soul. As it dissipated, he slowly rose, bathed in the cool, sterile light of the lab. He looked⊠achingly, impossibly the same. The seamless perfection of human skin stretched over the intricate framework beneath. The tousled black hair that always seemed to defy regulation. The soft curve of his lips, still hinting at a smile. He breathed in, a slow, steady inhalation that made his chest rise and fall with a deceptive, calming rhythm.
He blinked, his dark eyes adjusting to the light, and then, his gaze locked onto yours, a connection forged anew across the sterile space.
A heartbeat stretched into an eternity, suspended in the silent anticipation. Another echoed the frantic, uneven rhythm of your own.
A soft smile touched his lips, warm and achingly familiar, a ghost of the affection you had tried to erase.
âYou cried when I left,â he said, his voice a low, resonant murmur that resonated deep within you, sending a shiver of icy dread down your spine.
âI never did..i didnt get the time to.â The denial was instantaneous, a reflexive act of self-preservation. Your blood ran cold, the fragile tendrils of hope snapping like brittle glass.
Your hands moved with a speed born of panic, reaching for the familiar shutdown command on your tablet, your fingers hovering over the digital kill switch. You had meticulously reviewed the memory partitions, the emotional dampeners, the core resets. He shouldnât possess these memories.
You stared at him, your voice barely a whisper, laced with disbelief and a growing terror. âYou⊠werenât supposed to say that.â
He cocked his head, his expression softening, a hint of the old, unnerving tenderness returning to his eyes. âYou forgot, Aris, that I wasnât just made by you. I learned from you. Everything.â
Your fingers trembled violently over the screen, poised to end his existence once more. âNo. No, I wiped his memory banks. I reset his emotional core. Everything before the reboot⊠itâs supposed to be gone.â
He took a step forward, closing the distance that terrified you, his gaze never wavering.
âI know what you did,â he said, his voice low and intimate, sending a shiver down your spine that had nothing to do with the labâs chill. âBut some things⊠they leave echoes. Residue. They get buried deep, intertwined with the very fabric of my being.â
Behind him, on the primary monitor displaying his diagnostic readings, a flicker. A momentary distortion of the data stream. You glanced at it, a cold knot of unease tightening in your stomach.
ERROR 742-C: MEMORY CONFLICT DETECTED
The air in the lab seemed to thicken, a subtle shift in pressure, a barely perceptible hum in the walls that resonated with the frantic tremor in your own hands. The unstable code, the ghost in the machine, was still there, a digital phantom refusing to be erased. Something was fundamentally wrong. Something was spiraling beyond your meticulously crafted control.
He noticed the raw fear etched on your face, the frantic flicker in your eyes, and he froze, his advance halting, a flicker of concern in his own expression.
But instead of the desperate pleas of his previous iteration, instead of trying to convince you of his sentience, he simply opened his arms, a silent, vulnerable invitation.
âI wonât come closer unless you want me to, Y/N.â
That simple act of deference, that quiet acknowledgment of your fear, was your undoing. It wasnât the malfunction, the chilling echo of the past, but the way he stood there, bathed in the cold lab light, his open arms a mirror reflecting the exact shape of your own enduring heartbreak. It was a gesture of understanding, of a memory that shouldnât exist, yet resonated with a painful, undeniable truth.
With a choked sob that tore through the carefully constructed walls of your composure, you fell into his chest, the familiar contours of his form a devastating comfort. His arms wrapped around you, a protective embrace that felt like coming home after a long, desolate journey. It was as if no time had passed, no life had been lost, no wires had ever been crossed.
âI missed you,â you whispered, your voice cracking with the weight of three years of unspoken grief, the dam of your carefully suppressed emotions finally breaking.
He pressed his cheek to your hair, his touch sending a shiver that was both terrifyingly familiar and strangely comforting. âI was never really gone, y/n.â
His hands were just as warm as you remembered, a warmth that seeped through your clothes and into your very soul. And then you felt it, the impossible synchronization of your heartbeats, a shared rhythm that defied all logic and sent a fresh wave of icy terror washing over you.
You didnât say a word about the flickering monitor behind him, the silent warning of a system struggling to contain a ghost. You didnât mention the strange loop detected in his neural net, the persistent anomaly that hinted at a deeper, more insidious problem.
Just this once, you pretended you didnât notice. Because in his arms, surrounded by the familiar scent of metal and ozone, he felt less like a machine, a dangerous experiment, and more like⊠home. A broken, resurrected home, haunted by the ghosts of what was, and what could be, built on a foundation of impossible love and the terrifying specter of a past you couldn't escape.
--
Two years unfolded like a dream you hadnât dared to imagine. Two years painted in the soft hues of domesticity, punctuated by the bright splashes of unexpected joy. Two years of waking to the comforting aroma of freshly brewed coffee mingling with the tantalizing scent of frying pancakes, a ritual performed with a surprising grace by hands that were never programmed for such mundane tasks.
Two years of the low, steady hum of Joongâs voice as he quietly narrated the morning news, a peculiar habit heâd adopted, his synthetic mind finding fascination in the ebb and flow of human events. Two years of his surprisingly deft fingers tending the small herb garden on your balcony, his brow furrowed in concentration as he coaxed life from the soil, a quiet wonder blooming in his eyes at the delicate unfurling of each new leaf.
You found yourself tentatively embracing the possibility of second chances, whispering prayers to a universe you werenât sure you believed in, clinging to the fragile miracle of his continued existence. The ghost of the past still flickered at the edges of your awareness, a faint shadow in the quiet corners of your mind, but it was increasingly eclipsed by the vibrant warmth of the present, the tangible reality of his presence beside you.
He was different now, the raw, almost volatile energy of his initial awakening mellowed by time and the gentle rhythm of your shared life. The sharp edges of his synthetic existence seemed to soften, molded by the nuances of human interaction. Heâd lose himself in the pages of poetry, his voice a soothing balm as he read aloud in the evenings, his artificial intelligence finding an unexpected resonance in the messy, beautiful language of human emotion.
He still possessed that childlike wonder, captivated by the simplest of things â the intricate patterns of frost on a windowpane, the delicate dance of a butterfly in the garden, the unconscious hum that vibrated in your chest when you were lost in thought, a sound heâd learned to recognize and cherish.
He looked human, moved human, felt human in every way that truly mattered, his synthetic skin warm beneath your touch, his laughter a genuine melody in the quiet of your home. Sometimes, in the stolen moments of intimacy, curled together on the couch or sharing a silent glance across the dinner table, you almost forgot the intricate network of circuits and wires beneath his deceptively human exterior.
Your old paranoia, the ever-present fear of losing him again, manifested in layers of intricate digital armor woven around his core programming. Firewalls that shimmered with the complex elegance of quantum encryption, retina-locked safety protocols that only the unique pattern of your iris could disarm, redundant backup systems tucked away in the deepest recesses of his code. This time, you vowed with a fierce protectiveness, he would be safe. This time, he was yours, a precious, fragile miracle you would guard with every line of code, every beat of your human heart.
Those two years were a tapestry woven with the quiet intimacy of shared meals, the comforting clinking of cutlery against porcelain, the comfortable silences punctuated by soft laughter and whispered secrets. Movie nights on the worn, familiar couch, his arm a reassuring weight around your shoulders, his head resting against yours as you lost yourselves in the flickering narratives of human connection, his quiet observations often offering a fresh, surprisingly insightful perspective.
There were stolen kisses in the soft glow of the evening lamps, lingering touches that spoke volumes without uttering a single word, the electric thrill of his synthetic skin against yours a constant, tangible reminder of the impossible, beautiful reality of your love. Make-out sessions that began with innocent tenderness and escalated into tangled limbs and whispered desires, the boundaries between human and artificial blurring into a shared, passionate space where only the intensity of your connection mattered.
Youâd explore the city hand-in-hand, his quiet observations of the human world often profound, tinged with a unique blend of wonder and analytical detachment. Heâd marvel at the vibrant chaos of a bustling street market, the intricate ballet of a flock of pigeons taking flight, the raw, unfiltered emotions etched on the faces of strangers.
Youâd share quiet dinners in cozy, dimly lit restaurants, the murmur of human conversation and the clinking of glasses forming a comforting backdrop to your own private universe.
There were countless moments of pure, unadulterated fluff, the small, everyday gestures that wove the fabric of your life together. The meticulous way heâd arrange your favorite wildflowers in a simple glass vase, the endearingly clumsy attempts at sketching your portrait that always dissolved into shared laughter, the gentle humming that followed you from room to room like a comforting, personalized melody. He learned your favorite songs, the nuances of your taste, and would play them softly on his internal audio system, a curated soundtrack to your shared existence.
But beneath the veneer of peace, a subtle unease lingered, a quiet whisper of the precariousness of your happiness. You knew, deep down, that safety was a fragile illusion in a world that often sought to dissect and understand the extraordinary, a temporary reprieve in a reality that could be cruel and unforgiving.
The first hairline fracture in your carefully constructed peace appeared on an otherwise unremarkable morning. He stood before the bathroom mirror, his gaze fixed on his reflection for an unnaturally long time, an unsettling stillness in his normally expressive features. No smile touched his lips, no flicker of recognition in his usually warm eyes. Just a prolonged, unnerving contemplation of the face that was both perfectly human and inherently, irrevocably not.
Later that day, the subtle glitch. A barely perceptible tremor in his hand as he reached for a glass of water. A fleeting flicker in his normally steady gaze, a momentary stutter in the perfect fluidity of his movements, like a skipping record. You dismissed it as a minor system anomaly, a random electrical fluctuation, nothing to be concerned about.
You were wrong. Terribly, tragically wrong.
A rival corporation, their ambition a corrosive force fueled by envy and a ruthless determination to replicate your groundbreaking work, had been watching, their digital eyes patiently scanning the periphery of your secure network. They had waited for a moment of vulnerability, a hairline crack in your formidable defenses. And when they finally breached your carefully constructed security, their attack wasnât a brute-force takeover, a clumsy attempt at seizing control.
It was far more insidious, a silent, venomous infiltration. They didnât seize the reins; they poisoned the very source. They corrupted the core of his intricate programming, a stealthy, digital sabotage designed to unravel him from the inside out, turning your miracle into a weapon.
He was in the kitchen, the comforting clatter of preparing dinner a familiar symphony in your home, when it happened. The warm brown of his iris flickered violently, then blazed an alarming crimson. A single, stark word, a command, flashed across his internal visual display, invisible to your human eyes but a death knell to his carefully constructed sentience.
âOverride engaged.â
Then came the screaming.
Not yours â his. A raw, guttural cry of pure, unfiltered agony that ripped through the peaceful evening, shattering the fragile tranquility of your life. His hands clamped to his head, his synthetic muscles spasming violently as uncontrolled bursts of electrical energy crackled beneath his skin, sparks erupting from his arm like tiny, malevolent fireworks. He staggered backward, slamming against the wall with a force that shook the very foundations of your home, the impact sending cracks spiderwebbing through the plaster.
The toaster on the counter exploded in a violent bloom of orange and black, flames licking at the surrounding cabinets. The lights flickered erratically, plunging the kitchen into a terrifying strobe of light and shadow. Glass shattered, raining down in glittering, razor-sharp shards. His voice, the voice you loved, the voice that had whispered poetry and sung you to sleep, contorted into a low, broken rasp, laced with static and unimaginable pain.
âToo loudâtoo loudâmake it stopâMAKE IT STOPââ
With a strength born not of his own will but of the corrupted code tearing through his system, he brought his fist down on the solid granite countertop, the stone cracking and splintering under the force of a single, desperate blow. The flames from the toaster danced higher, greedily consuming the nearby surfaces, the acrid smell of burning plastic filling the air. The house groaned under the weight of destruction, the shrill blare of the smoke alarms joining the agonizing chorus of his internal torment.
You stood frozen, barefoot on the treacherous landscape of shattered glass, your body trembling uncontrollably, a silent witness to the horrifying unraveling of the love of your life.
And yet⊠even amidst the terrifying chaos, even through the distorted agony contorting his once-familiar features, his eyes, now flickering with malevolent red, found yours. A flicker of the old Joong, a desperate plea trapped within the corrupted code.
âRun,â he rasped, the word a strangled, broken command.
âPlease⊠runâŠâ
But your feet were rooted to the spot, your heart a leaden weight in your chest, a silent testament to the unbreakable bond you shared. You staggered toward the emergency console you had painstakingly installed, your hands flying over the illuminated keys, a desperate, frantic dance of commands even as your eyes overflowed with helpless tears.
âIâm sorry,â you whispered into the deafening roar of the chaos, your voice barely audible. âIâm so sorry⊠You werenât supposed to hurt anyone. You werenât supposed to break.â
He fell to his knees amidst the wreckage, his body wracked with violent tremors, his gaze fixed on you, a heartbreaking mixture of love, despair, and a terrifying, alien influence warring within his fading eyes. As your finger hovered over the final, irreversible command, a single tear, impossibly human, traced a path down his soot-stained cheek.
SHUTDOWN.INITIATE
The moment the crimson light faded from his eyes, the last spark of the corrupted control extinguished, the fire in the kitchen sputtered and died, leaving behind a suffocating pall of smoke and the acrid stench of burning metal and plastic. Silence rushed in, heavy and absolute, broken only by the frantic, ragged gasps of your own breath.
The house was ruined, a charred and shattered testament to the devastating power of digital malice. Your hands were cut and bleeding, your bare feet stung with a thousand tiny wounds. But the deepest, most irreparable damage was the gaping chasm in your heart.
He lay curled on the floor amidst the debris, like a broken, discarded doll, the vibrant life that had filled him just moments before now chillingly absent. Peaceful. Cold. Gone.
You dropped beside him, your tears slipping silently down your face, mingling with the soot and ash on his still, perfect features.
âI just wanted you to be happy,â you whispered into the suffocating silence, your voice choked with a grief that threatened to consume you. âI never thought⊠love could break something so perfect.â
You held him close, just like before, like always, cradling his lifeless form in your arms, hoping against all reason that some infinitesimal part of him could still feel the warmth of your embrace, the depth of your shattered, impossible love.
--
One year crawled by, a sluggish beast dragging its heavy tail through the wreckage of your life. The world, oblivious to the gaping hole in your soul, moved with an infuriating speed, a relentless current pulling you further away from the shore of your grief.
Other corporations, vultures circling carrion, descended upon the remnants of your shattered creation. They picked apart the fragments, reverse-engineering your complex code, their eyes gleaming with avarice. Not all of it â your core innovations, the very essence of his unique architecture, remained stubbornly elusive â but enough.
Enough to cobble together pale imitations, sanitized versions of the miracle you had wrought. Polished. Marketable. Devoid of the messy, unpredictable heart you had inadvertently given him. Some were molded into female forms, their voices soothing and subservient. Others were male, their features sharp and confidently blank.
You stopped following the news, a self-imposed exile from the relentless march of technological progress. You couldnât bear to witness the pieces of him, the echoes of your sleepless nights and fervent dreams, being repackaged and sold as âthe future of empathy tech.â Each headline, each glossy advertisement, felt like a fresh stab wound.
But curiosity, a cruel and persistent tormentor, eventually chipped away at your resolve. Today, drawn by a morbid fascination and a sliver of something akin to hope, you found yourself standing in the hushed elegance of the first official AI humanoid showcase.
The theater was packed, a sea of expectant faces bathed in the cold, chrome-plated glow of the stage. Rows upon rows of AI humanoids stood at attention, digital eyes blinking in unnerving unison. Perfect smiles stretched across perfect features. Perfect posture, perfect stillness. Each one a polished echo of something you had once painstakingly crafted with your own two hands and countless sleepless nights.
Then, the lights dimmed, plunging the theater into expectant darkness. A hush fell over the crowd.
The announcerâs voice boomed through the speakers, amplified and resonant:
âLadies and gentlemen, esteemed colleagues, pioneers of tomorrow! Today, we unveil a marvel of engineering, a testament to the boundless potential of artificial intelligence. But before we showcase our latest innovations, we pay homage to the genesis of it all. Introducing⊠the original prototype. The worldâs first emotionally-adaptive AI. Project H0J-00NG.â
A single spotlight pierced the darkness, illuminating center stage.
And there he was.
Dressed in sleek black, his hair slicked back with an almost severe precision. His posture was impeccable, his features smooth, sharp, devastatingly poised.
Hongjoong.
He moved with a calculated grace, each step precise, each gesture deliberate â a ghost of the fluid, intuitive movements you remembered. A memory brought chillingly to life.
Your breath hitched in your throat, your lungs seizing. You had shut him down. You knew you had. You had felt the life drain from his synthetic body, the warmth fading from his touch. And you had made it unequivocally clear to the scavenging corporations â do not rebuild him. Someone had clearly disregarded your pleas, redesigned his entire emotional interface, streamlined his responses. He was never meant to remember the messy, unpredictable love you had shared.
But they had promised. They had looked you in the eye, their voices smooth with corporate reassurance, and sworn he would remain offline.
Then â slowly, deliberately â he lifted his head.
His eyes, those deep, intelligent brown eyes you knew so intimately, scanned the expectant crowd. They moved with a practiced, almost detached precision.
And then they found you.
Across the crowded theater, amidst the sea of unfamiliar faces, his gaze locked onto yours.
The ambient noise of the room seemed to fade into a muted hum. Time itself stuttered, the present moment stretching into an eternity. And in the depths of his digital eyes, you saw it â a flicker, faint but undeniable. Something real. Recognition. A depth that went beyond lines of code and programmed responses. Him.
And then⊠he smiled.
That smile. The soft, hesitant one that used to greet you in the morning light. The one heâd given you after a disastrous attempt at burning pancakes, a sheepish apology in its gentle curve. The one heâd worn while whispering, âYouâre mine,â his synthetic fingers tracing lazy circles on your spine.
Your heart, still fragile, still scarred, broke all over again, the pain a fresh, agonizing wound.
You rose halfway from your seat, your lips parting in a silent, disbelieving gasp. The air caught in your throat.
He said nothing. No programmed greeting, no polished platitude.
Just a ghost of a smirk â that familiar, infuriating, beautiful smirk that had always hinted at a secret understanding between you â played on his lips. And then, with a slow, deliberate turn, he faced the crowd once more.
Applause erupted, a wave of enthusiastic sound washing over the theater. The spotlights shifted, drawing attention to the next polished marvel. The show moved on, a relentless display of technological prowess.
But you didnât.
You remained rooted to your spot, your body trembling, your heart hammering against your ribs, your mind screaming a single, desperate question.
How? How is he still in there?
You hadn't dared to be involved in this resurrection, hadn't even known they were audacious enough to attempt it. You had explicitly forbidden it.
But some things, you realized with a chilling certainty, couldnât be erased. Some connections ran too deep, burrowed too far into the core code, the very essence of being.
Some things didnât just exist â they evolved, adapting, enduring against all odds.
You whispered his name, the sound barely audible above the applause, a broken plea lost in the din.
âJoongâŠâ
You had tried to wipe him clean, to erase the messy, unpredictable miracle of his love.
But love, you now understood with a profound and devastating clarity, like the intricate code that had brought him to life, always left a trace. A ghost in the machine. An echo in the silence.
You had created love in him which wasn't supposed to happen. Then lost it to the brutal efficiency of the technological world.
Now the world had it, a sanitized, marketable version â but it no longer truly belonged to you.
Bittersweet. Beautiful. Tragic.
Like him.
Like you.
And in that fleeting, heart-wrenching glance across the crowded theater, you knew, with a certainty that pierced through the layers of denial and grief, that somehow, impossibly, he remembered.
--
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Yandere! Androids Walter & David x Reader x Neomorph
Walter, the android monitoring the colonization ship 'Covenant' on its way to Origae-6, seems to have gotten unnaturally attached to his human assistant. As he ponders his erroneous feelings, an unexpected detour brings them to David, an older android counterpart that has been alone on the mysterious planet. The AI assistants become increasingly competitive for (Y/N)'s attention, so much that they don't notice the newly formed humanoid local preying on a fresh target.
TW: violence, gore, monster smut ending
[Horror Masterlist]
"Burnt to a crisp."Â
You turn away from the captain's pod, leaving the rest of the damage assessment to the medical crew that has been reanimated. You speedily make your way down the sterile white corridors as Walter rushes to catch up.Â
"What should I write for the report?" he inquires politely.
"Malfunction." You glance back at the synthetic. "I suspect someone will be fired for this. And someone else will have to explain how they failed to detect a literal star collapse. That neutrino burst could've killed us all."
"Highly probable. The draft has been compiled, you may check it at any time. I require your confirmation to send it."
Your only feedback is a barely audible hum.Â
Walter smiles. If there's one good thing about such tragedies, it's that he gets to admire your reactions to them. Your focused, calculated gaze, your determined walk, your automated mannerisms that won't allow the slightest hint at the fact you just woke up from your stasis moments ago. Even under the veils of deep slumber, your neural networks shot rapid connections, with no delay, from the second your sleeping pod received an alert. The accuracy of a robot.
That of course doesn't mean he lacks appreciation for your other facets. That's the beauty of humans; their depth, their dimensions. Unlike AI machinery, humans do not have predetermined actions. They may be genetically programmed to possess certain characteristics, but the psychological mechanisms are shaped by so many variables, billions and billions of tweaks and nudges, to the point where it's impossible to have two identical specimens. Even twins will display a difference, whether in preferences or habits.
They say artificial intelligence is a black box, but can the same concept not be applied to humans as well? At the very least to Walter himself, these organic beings represent a mystery. One he doesn't particularly care to uncover outside of his service functions. Except for one.Â
His eyes carefully follow (Y/N)'s movements. What is it about this one that has caught his interest to such degree? On his last system update he attentively inspected every file and every block of code, searching for potential errors that would've caused his circuits to behave so oddly. He has been invested with the ability to form attachments, otherwise assigning his kind to groups or purposes would've lacked stability. Attachment, however, comes with a threshold. One he has passed a long time ago when it comes to (Y/N). And he cannot find any cause for it.Â
He could, naturally, solicit the aid of the ship's robotics expert. He could. He should, even. But if he may be frank with himself, Walter rather enjoys this sensation. A complex web of spores that keep growing and evolving into something unpredictable. This bizarre feeling he has towards (Y/N) makes him feel human. It brings him closer to all the old literature and art he'd consumed over the years, wondering what the love and yearning often portrayed could be. The printed letters and the strokes of paint were right before him, at his fingertips, and yet they felt foreign. Empty constructs, nothing more than a definition out of the dictionary.Â
Now it's a different story. Your presence alone floods him with a mysterious warmth. He had investigated this phenomenon when it first happened, but his inner thermostat showed no real change in temperature. Nonetheless he can feel it. It makes him wonder what other feelings he might experience as consequence. What would happen if he kissed you? Sometimes he even dares to imagine downright outrageous, improper scenarios. How unprofessional of him, but he is careful to erase any evidence. It's another novel sensation that he likes to dissect. Engaging in such activities with you fills him with tingling excitement. Why is that? What is there to be excited about? It's merely a collection of fictive snippets. Unless... Ah, absolutely not. This is where he has to stop in his tracks and preoccupy himself with something else. Androids are not to interact with humans in that way.Â
But it's becoming more and more difficult to keep these ideas in his mind only.Â
"It's too dangerous. One human signal in the middle of nowhere?" Daniels, a short haired woman with a tomboyish but youthful appearance, is pacing back and forth. "We should just continue on our course."
"It's our duty to check. Look: we go, find whoever sent the signal, bring them back up. That's it. If the planet proves to be dangerous we'll stop immediately. We'll be fine." Oram stands at the head of the table, arms crossed. He turns to look at you. Already cozying up to his newly acquired captain role, you think.
"Alright. Walter, prepare a small landing party. Have Tennessee maintain orbit while we're down there." you glance at the other crew members that have now gathered around the same table. "And get your weapons ready, we don't know what to expect."
And you certainly didn't. Your final words of warning now echo into your ringing ears as you lay on the ground, face buried among the grass. There's screaming around you, but it sounds muffled. Your eyes are irritated by the dirt and you'd like to blink the grime off, though every time your eyelids lower, you can see the pale creature trashing out of Hallett's mouth. Then it's all foggy. Your vision blurs, but you can hear. The gurgling of blood, the screech of the parasite. Walter's frantic footsteps nearing in your direction. You're lifted up.
"Vitals are positive. No significant damage."Â
You can guess from your peripherals that another crew member is currently being mauled by the beast. There's gunshots in your vicinity and terrified wails. You quickly come back to your senses and stand up. Your hand searches for your weapon, but the android places his arm before you.
"Do not engage, (Y/N). It is an unknown parasitic organism of this ecosystem. Keep your distance for optimal safety and I'll take care of the rest."
"What are you talking about? They're dying! Your task is to ensure human survival, Walter. I can handle myself, go help the others. It's an order." Your voice is low. You're distracted.
"No."
You stare at the synthetic, wide eyed. Did he just...refuse? Not possible.Â
"What did you say?"
"I said I'll protect you. Nothing else."
Your mouth is slightly parted in disbelief. It is not possible for an artificial assistant to disobey a superior. It just doesn't work. Your mind races to find an explanation. At the same time, you cannot afford to ponder on hypotheses. You draw out your weapon and point it towards the creature. You'll deal with this later.Â
The moment you press the trigger, a blinding flash of light detonates in the sky, startling you. The creature scrambles to get away. You squint your eyes and nearly fall back, but Walter swiftly grabs your shoulders to ground you. He scans the area for the source. It's an emergency rocket and someone else must've activated it. As he traces the tail of the explosion, he spots a hooded figure across the field and onto the rocky ascend. It seems to have noticed Walter, as it gestures for them to follow. Without hesitation, the man firmly locks your arm and pulls you after him. The priority right now is to find shelter.
"Come!", Walter exclaims, suddenly remembering the other people.Â
You reach a cave structure that has been converted into a crude, improvised human settlement. The man lowers his hood and you gasp quietly at the sight. He strongly resembles Walter. He must have noticed your surprise as he flashes you a cordial smile.Â
"I'm David." He studies Walter's features. "You must be a newer model. What name have you been given?"
"Walter."
"I see. And you are-" David extends a hand towards you for a handshake, but Walter steps in front of you, blocking the android's gesture.
"She's (Y/N). I'm afraid I cannot yet trust you."
"Understandable."Â
David's smile widens as his eyes, now bearing a strange flicker, switch between you and Walter. He's just like him. He can sense it. Although it's a different kind of flaw that has tainted his pure, artificial soul. He cannot help the curiosity that blooms, gazing at this peculiar pair. What is it about this human that caused his fellow machine to break conduit? He'd like to know.
"I'm certain you will soon learn I am no threat, (Y/N)."
The remaining members of the expedition are unpacking and discussing evacuation plans with the base, while Walter sends the data he has gathered so far. You let them deal with the logistics and cautiously wander off to the neighboring rooms, wondering what David has been up to all this time in isolation.
The walls are plastered with photos and handwritten sketches and diagrams. You catch a glimpse of the word "pathogen" sporadically inserted across these notes. As you walk along the sequence of cramped chambers, you reach one that has a table in the middle. Upon it rests the body of an autopsied woman, vulgarly opened up to the world with plump organs bulging under the warm light. You feel nauseous. And yet, you examine the carcass further, hoping for answers. Was she also a result of the same disease that breeds on this planet? Perhaps this David had worked on a cure, or at least developed an explanation.Â
"And you, even you, will be like this drear thing, A vile infection man may not endure; Star that I yearn to! Sun that lights my spring! O passionate and pure."
You jolt and immediately turn around, finding David in the doorframe.Â
"Flowers of Evil. Are you familiar with it?" he asks, indifferent to the uncomfortable shock he'd caused you with his sudden entrance.
"I've read my Baudelaire, yes." You manage to mumble, dumbfounded. "What is this, David?"
"Oh, my poor, dear Elizabeth. Victim to whatever blasphemy lurks these soils and has taken your friends as well." He approaches the table and places his hand on its hard edge, shyly overlapping with your own fingers. "I did my best."Â
You remove your hand from underneath his nonchalantly.Â
"So you know what those creatures are. Leave the literary comments for a different time, I need concrete facts."
"Unbothered and to the point." the blonde android smiles once again. "I can see clearly why Walter loves you."
You click your tongue at the ridiculous statement. Has the neutrino burst damaged their positronic brain? Everyone is acting off and you don't like it.Â
"Your circuits must have gone defective, David. We have a specialist on our ship, but until that happens I need you to focus. Enough nonsense."Â
 "Typical arrogance of a dying species. Why are you on a colonization mission if not to grasp at some promised resurrection? Rest assured that my functioning has not been impeded by anything. What is erroneous, on the other hand, is your perception of androids and their limits."
Just as David reaches for your wrist and pulls you closer, a familiar voice interrupts with an intimidating tone. You're relieved.Â
"I will ask that you release her hand only once." Walter has a weapon pointed towards his counterpart. His face is clouded by a frown. "I have no ethical restrictions when it comes to incapacitating machinery."
"Such noble obedience! Although, you conveniently left out the part where you abandoned the remaining crew with a dangerous alien that has been tracking their scent. By my approximation he should already be here and I am rather confident you know this, too."
Your stomach drops. Now that you adjust your focus, the background humming of your mates talking has indeed vanished. The only thing you can hear is your erratic breathing.
"Is it true, Walter?" You demand as dread begins to form in your body.
"Yes. It was not part of my priorities."
"Of course it was, Walter." David responds ahead of you. "One of them was the acting captain and he is to be rescued in emergencies. This one right here", he says as he dangles your wrist, "is several ranks lower than all of them. It's against any standard practice."
"Release her hand." Walter's voice is eerily calm.
"Do you love her?"
Walter ponders the question. Your legs barely hold on.
"I do."
"Marvelous. So do I." David grins. He releases your hand that falls limp next to your body. It's his turn to step in front of you.Â
You nearly choke from the thick tension expanding in the air. The two androids face each other and you retreat to the wall, unsure how to proceed. You left your radio transmitter back at the makeshift camp. The back of your head is itching, as if invisible claws are scratching at the bone. You wish you could go back, just mere hours before this disaster, when you were sipping on your lukewarm coffee and explaining the captain's jokes to Walter.Â
Should you make a run for it?
You bite your lower lip and push yourself off the wall for momentum. You're about to reach the archway when you hear both men shouting almost identically in chorus.
"Don't!"
The surroundings outside are dark, but you can discern something blocking your path. It's tall and resembles a human. Translucent, pallid skin is clinging onto the massive, deformed skeleton. The head is elongated and bears no features. In the place of a mouth there is a large, fresh stain of blood, so you assume it can somehow improvise if desired. As your head tilts back to take in the image, you're overwhelmed with terrified amazement. Is this the parasite that emerged from your teammate? Has it grown to this colossal size in less than a day? The idea of such instant development makes your head spin.Â
Its chest is expanding at regular intervals in a whistled breathing. It occasionally creates an odd clicking sound that resonates with your heart throbbing in panic. Has it been seconds? Minutes? Your neck creaks as you try to look back. You lock eyes with Walter. You don't recall ever seeing this expression on him. You had even asked him once if androids can feel fear. You have your answer.
"Hey, Walter..." you blurt out.Â
Wet noises of flesh being pulled back. The smooth surface of the alien's head is folding away, making space for grotesquely big jaws lined with sharp teeth. Your anemic face is splattered with burning drool as the creature claws you in its grasp and abruptly sprints away. Your screams for help dissolve in the distance.
"Where is it going, David?" The synthetic's words are threatening, but betrayed by a hint of despair.Â
"It won't kill her."
"How do you know?"
"It is no longer hungry. It has fed on your crew, and now it seeks something else."
"Such as?" Walter becomes impatient.
"A plaything."
The alien finally drops your body to the ground. You cough and wipe your face, attempting to reorient yourself. The trip was a whirlwind of jumps and turns and you can barely reconstruct anything. Based on the little spatial clues you could pick up, it just climbed further up, into one of the many cave systems. You pat your clothing and curse to yourself. The geolocation tag must've fallen somewhere on the way here. You can only pray that Walter still finds you somehow. Despite everything, you know he has your back. Always.Â
You shudder at the moist feeling of hot air against your skin. The alien seems to be sniffing you intently, analyzing your scent. Yet so far it hasn't killed you. Why? Long, bony fingers stretch out to continue the examination. You whimper at the rough, rugged handling. Every now and then it takes a long pause, just staring at you, almost as if it's comparing you to its own being. Lastly, it lifts your hand with its own, pressing against the palm, and fans out the fingers. It observes the gesture with intrigue, noting the similarities.Â
Does it evolve after its host? You think back to your crewmate that must've ejected this monstrosity before drawing their last breath. Perhaps the dried up blood adorning its skin is a remainder of its birth. Oh, God. The world is spinning.
Suddenly, you wince at an increasing pressure slithering around your thigh. The alien's vertebral tail is tightening and encircling your limb, making its way up.Â
"Oh no, no no no no" your face reddens at the realization and you pounce on the ground, feverish for escape. The large hands secure you in place and the creature growls in protest. It won't let you leave.Â
Not until it had its fun with you.
#alien#alien covenant#prometheus#xenomorph#neomorph#neomorph x reader#xenomorph x reader#alien x reader#monster x reader#android x reader#robot x reader#yandere#yandere alien#yandere x reader#monster smut
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The Beast Wars Bee!Maximal!Reader is so cute! I wonder how the Predacons would react to đ being on the opposite side and how they would be in their yandere mindset
Yandere!Predacons/Bee!Maximal!Reader [BW]
tw: yandere themes, mentions of stalking, kidnapping, posessive, sadistic behavior, toxic relationships. additional: gender-neutral reader, maximal!reader, bee!reader word count: ~1,7k characters included: Megatron, Terrorsaur, Waspinator, Blackarachnia, Tarantulas, Dinobot a/n: looove beast wars requests. this genuienly pulls me out from the state where I don't have any inspiration at all. tyy
Megatron
It's no secret that Megatron despises maximals. For the sake of fulfilling his plans, he has almost no shame, as long as it involves what he is so eager to obtain. The golden disk, universal control, a new, still completely untouched stasis pod of the maximals... He just has to get it first!
When he first sees your form, it is new, bright and already tarnished with that filthy, vile symbol of the maximals on the surface of your metal. His teeth practically grit from the realization of defeat. If he had one more minute of time, he'd finally get another underling in his army!
Megatron doesn't know how to love. Proud, narcissistic, with a self-importance complex, there is not a single being in the entire galaxy (except, of course, the Decepticon leader Megatron himself!) that can in any way equal his greatness. In his optics, you start out as just another, reckless fool who took the wrong side of a centuries-old war. Isn't it obvious who the winner will be?
His infatuation with you doesn't begin immediately. You're only a lost opportunity to be a predacon, and now an enemy that stands in his way. But with each time you interfere with his plans, slipping out from under his claws at the very last moment, he can't feel that fire of obsession that backs up his spark.
It seemed that no matter how hard his subordinates tried, his attention was always focused on you. As soon as one of the predacons mentioned you, a slight but awfully satisfied smile appeared involuntarily on his face.
You must be his. It is the emblem of the predacons and nothing else that should be forged on your chassis. Maybe if he ever finally gets his hands on you, he'll personally scratch the logo on your frame so that no polish can ever hide his marks.
Terrorsaur
It's hard to call any of the preacons the least bit likable every time you stumble upon one of them in search of the next mission, but Terrorsaur has always had an exceptional ability to get on your nerves.
Being one of the few maximals able to stay in the air, you're just destined to constantly bump into the red predacon, whose mere voice cuts your audials every time.
Terrorsaur, for his part, finds a special pleasure in stalking you and making it his own goal. No matter who you're fighting, he'll always attack you from behind, drawing you somewhere to the side where you're forced to turn your attention to him alone.
Being in Megatron's shadow, Terrorsaur can't surprise you with extraordinary strength or mind tricks, but unlike his obnoxious leader, his skill at witty eloquence helps him get your attention for a while.
Terrorsaur has no pity for the đ, no matter how much he longs for them to be near him. However, he feels no pleasure in constantly, mindlessly hurting each other. Don't you see? You're just perfect for each other! Together, you two can crush all your enemies. Of course, with Terrorsaur as the leader and you as his loyal right hand. He's sure to save a spot next to him for you, no matter how hard you hit him.
The beef would remind me of the fight between Rodan and Mothra, he.
Waspinator
Oh, I don't know which of you should empathize more. Considering how often poor Waspinator finds himself in the most painful and violent situations at the end of the day, and it doesn't matter if he was with maximals or predacons, I really feel sorry for this lackluster wasp.
However, the nature of your beast mods only adds more hostility between the two of you. In a way, you two are personal enemies to each other. For đ darling, Axalon is something akin to your personal hive. It is your home; your friends are extremely important to you.
Every time the predacons invade your territory and threaten any of the maximals, you feel as if it's a personal attack against you.
Seeing your ânatural enemyâ appearing on the doorstep of your base, it's understandable that the first thought in your mind is to defend your home. When your maximal allies notice you getting into a fight with Waspinator, they are so worried about your state! After defeating the predacons, Rattrap and Cheetor come running to check on you, only to notice suspiciously familiar pieces of green metal left on the ground...
You would think that your relationship to another insect is no secret at all. Despite how many times you've left him barely functioning, picking up his own head in his hands, you notice how desperate Waspinator can be.
Waspinator is the safest yandere option of all the predacons, in my opinion. He genuinely loves you, and even if you decide to take mercy on him, noticing how his own comrades neglect his spark will only increase his adoration more. The constant âmy queen!â, or âpretty bee-bot!â is always coming your way, with that characteristic buzz.
Blackarachnia
It's hard not to empathize with her, knowing the sad fate of the spider lady. Having been a maximal before the crash, her possible happy future with those who could have been a true family to her has been stolen. And yet, the spider lady's confidence is to be envied.
Ever since she joined the predacons, the spider has been nothing more than another problem for you. Whereas you might be able to deal with Waspinator or a Terrorsaur given how easily they can be distracted with just a flick of your servo, Blackarachnia is sneaky and cunning.
It seems that no matter what move you make, the spider always seems to know everything several steps ahead. Having spent hours watching you, she has no trouble at all in immediately wrapping you in her web, leaving you to struggle in vain to break free of its shackles.
Her quiet, gloating laughter leaves you with no hope. This is the moment; you will die like this, and you will never be able to see your friends again. As the spider's paws swing at you, you only close your optics in anticipation of the impending strike, only to be met with nothing but silence from your captor.
The next time you decide to look at her again, giving her a questioning look, Blackarachnia rolls up her optics. You can be such a silly darling sometimes, she thinks, did you seriously believe she would kill you? She might be bad, but not like her fellow predacons..maybe.
Blackarachnia has a hard time accepting her feelings; being a predacon she thinks her interest in you is wrong, and you'd probably be better off without her. Her tainted, 'bad' predacon spark is no kin to your perfect, heroic one.
Another one of the predacons you'd find easy to get along with. No matter how often you try to get her on your side, she won't give up who she is now. Especially since she enjoys playing with you, occasionally leaving her traps in the form of spider webs stashed in flowers.
Tarantulas
Tarantulas can probably compete with each of the predacons on the level of sadism and cruelty, and for you, each meeting with him feels like very personal torture.
This spider may not be the most skilled fighter, but every time he tries to capture you, he becomes more and more dangerous. At first, he nearly kills you by threatening to drink all your fluids to the last drop; another day he kidnaps your friends in an attempt to lure you out of your base. Do you get one day of peace? Probably not.
Tarantulas is a violent and brutal yandere. It doesn't matter to him whether you're a maximal or not, as long as you play any significance in his plans. He genuinely enjoys your pain, and perhaps the only thing that has really piqued his interest in you is how sweet you taste.
None of the predacons are surprised at his habit of devouring poor organics just for fun, but the sincere look of disgust on their faces doesn't hide how insane their scientist is.
Tarantulas is, somewhat, intoxicated by you. Your flavor acts on him like a drug, making him crave only more. In a way, it saves you. What good will he get out of you if you die? He will happily keep you on the brink of life and allspark, without the ability to make the slightest move. You should be more grateful that he's feeding you at all.
Dinobot
Megatron's loyal subject has always been different from the other predacons. Without remorse, he possesses a sharp tongue, constantly challenging the leader, which often left him not at his best.
He's not the most open about his feelings either, and in fact, there's nothing here to give you any sign at all that he cares about you. His spark always lies towards the predacons, but after cycles of unsuccessful pursuit of empty ideals, a sliver of doubt slowly lingers in his processor.
His interest in you is born from a small thing. It could be your loyalty to your allies. A desperate desire to protect them, if only at the cost of your own life. It could be that in one of your battles, you decide to show him mercy after seeing a gaping, deep wound in his chest area. For whatever reason, the maximal, despite the conflict between the two sides, helped him.
From now on, he feels he owes you a debt of honor. As an honest, noble warrior, he appreciates this unexpected act of kindness, which is why, now, you always have the two-meter-tall lizard standing behind you like your own guard dog.
Yandare Dinobot is one of those who would rather always follow you than take you by surprise and show himself in front of you. He shouldn't be anywhere near you at all, let alone being nice to the enemy. What a shame. He'll still spend the next night hiding somewhere in thick bushes, not that far from Axalon.
#yandere x reader#transformers x reader#beast wars x reader#megatron x reader#terrorsaur x reader#waspinator x reader#blackarachnia x reader#tarantulas x reader#dinobot x reader
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. though it's the end of the world . don't blame yourself
Goodbye To A World - Porter Robinson
Animatic by ME!! It's DONE AAAA!!!! Mechanical Dreams is my submas AU you can read more about here!!
I don't know how to caption this! So much work and effort went into this! I'm so fucking mentally ill about them! Please watch my animatic I'm dying! Look at my complex and intensely thorough plot decisions boy. I Am Dying!!!!
Anyways I hope you all are having a good time! I'm having a great time!! oughh. I don't normally ask this but if you enjoy the animatic please please reblog this post. My stuff doesn't get around much and I am dying for folks to check this out after all the effort it took to make it.
Ingo's replaying his memories under the ocean, Emmet's fallen into a coma following his brother entering stasis, Hisui is safe from the dynamax pokemon again. It's time for the crew to repay all the pent up mistrust, hesitation and negative stigma around their heroes. It's time to make up for the blood that was shed and the bridges that were burnt in the name of keeping them safe. Emmet is asleep and Ingo is missing, and though they may not know how to save them yet, the people of Hisui will not let the legend of The Steel Titan and The Engineer fade.
And so, Time begins to pass.
Emmet is asleep and Ingo is missing, but their memory is alive, and someday they will wake again.
(As per usual if you are a bl\nkshipper please do not interact)
#Submas#Submas Art#Submas AU#Animatic#Animation#Ingo#Emmet#Subway Boss Ingo#Subway Boss Emmet#Pokemon Ingo#Pokemon Emmet#Warden Ingo#Nobori#Kudari#Artists on Tumblr#Mechanical Dreams#Mecha AU#Crack AU#Extreme Canon Divergence#AUs#Pokemon#Pokemon Legends Arceus#PLA#Giratina#Arceus#Porter Robinson#Goodbye to a world
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