ᴛʜᴇ ᴍᴏᴅᴛᴇᴀᴍ ᴏғ ʜᴀᴅʀɪᴇʟ (
hadrielmods) wrote in
dankmemes2018-05-21 10:08 am
Entry tags:
Test Drive Meme #32
Welcome to Hadriel's test drive, and thank you again for your interest in the game! As always, our reserves page is here, and our applications page is here! Reserves open May 25th, and apps are open June 1st. Please remember that there is an app cap of 20 apps.
Two quick points here as well:1. Any thread made in Hadriel's test drive will be accepted as the sole Action Log sample in the application.
2. All threads made in the test drive can be considered game canon, either through handwaving or through a shared mental experience while coming through the Door!
Test drives will be broken up into specific god mini-events, during which your characters can see how well they fare under the watchful eye of one of the gods. Choose wisely or just simply pick 'em all, and have fun!
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F E A R
SCENARIO ONE: HONK HONK
[The Door brings in all that is chaotic and evil in the world. This may include you, may include the person next to you... and may include the monster behind you.
Hope you're not afraid of clowns!
Evil Clowns have been a terror on the imagination of children everywhere, and show up enough times in literature for us to reasonably say that plenty of adults are afraid of them too. While they love to laugh, they often bring themselves joy by murdering others and slicing them up with the sharp knives and other torture devices that they have tucked away in their seventeen pockets.
It's not difficult to outrun them, as they have big, squeaky shoes, but it might be difficult to fight them- these bastards are hardy!]
F E A R
SCENARIO TWO: MISSING SOMETHING?
[You may arrive in Hadriel... well, incomplete. Though some may reassure you that it's temporary, there's still something terrifying in suddenly losing your sight or your hearing... or even you arm!
While this event does not affect memories, it does affect body parts, senses, and potentially powers and abilities. You may find yourself unable to do things you once did, or behave the way you normally do.
This is a mini version of our Senses Fail event this month.]
T R A N Q U I L I T Y
SCENARIO THREE: MAY FLOWERS
[You're in a beautiful garden. The sun is shining, the grass is green, and there are hundreds of thousands of flowers all around you. The temperature is just perfect, and above all else, it's satisfying.
Maybe you should pick some flowers for a friend, or your mother- you did skip mother's day, after all. Luckily, there's a few cutting shears to go around and you're more than welcome to start hacking away at these thistley bushes! Hopefully you know a thing or two about flower arranging- maybe that person over there is more experienced?]

no subject
He hides what he is for a reason - sought after, perhaps, not unlike herself, but in a different way.]
I suppose it depends upon whether they know you're not one of them.
[And after that, whether they care. Until she ascertains the exact atmosphere and attitude toward her kind she would prefer safety in silence, in lieu of numbers she doesn't have. After what she did to build her force in the labs, the thought grates. Maeve lofts an eyebrow at Connor's temple.]
Someone is hunting you.
no subject
Connor watches her, noting the eyebrow, and she reminds him a little of an android he met very briefly shortly before arriving here. She'd known what felt like a little too much about him and his situation, even if logically it wasn't--and isn't in this case either--difficult to put together. Still, it makes Connor a little nervous.
But he nods, shifting on his feet, gaze flicking toward the ground briefly before looking at her again.]
They will be.
[At home, at least, if they find out what he's done. Maybe here, if--as Maeve said--they find out he isn't one of them, and if that's a problem for the humans here.
But he sort of brought this on himself, didn't he? After all, he's been the one hunting down deviants, and humans have plenty of sayings about reaping what you sow.]
What about you? You seem accustomed to blending in with humans.
[Judging by the lack of LED--again, assuming she ever had one--and her responses so far.]
no subject
She is something else.]
I'm supposed to.
[When they crossed a line into the uncharted territory that was making hosts nearly indistinguishable from humans, it was practically asking for things to go wrong for them. Maeve picks a piece of lint from her shoulder, gaze slanting toward him askance.]
But you aren't. Is that why you have a little light there? [Rhetorical. She moves slowly, not wanting to spook him, into his space.] To identify you?
no subject
But now, he doesn't know. He feels like more than that, but how can he really tell? After all, a deviant's faulty coding wouldn't just trick others, but themselves as well.
He lets her move closer, straightening a little and watching her carefully, mostly because he has a gun hidden away under his jacket. Although he doesn't think she means any harm, at least not right now, he's also prepared if she tries to take the weapon; deviants are unpredictable, and that may be a universal truth across worlds. And her answer makes it clear, finally, that she'd indeed from somewhere else.]
Yes. Androids are forbidden from passing for human, whether intentionally or otherwise. That isn't the case where you're from?
no subject
His baggy clothes protect his fear of having his weapon known, at the very least. But Maeve isn't so stupid as to think anyone entirely harmless.
Penetrating the protective bubble of personal space that so many humans are fond of she examines his face carefully, tone even and quiet.]
Do you know what an amusement park is, Connor?
no subject
I have never visited one, but I am aware of them, yes.
no subject
[A jagged image of the video she saw in the lobby cuts through her and she presses it deep into her mind: a girl, and herself. Sun-kissed fields of the plains, the homestead in the foothills of Colorado. The painted natives who dragged a knife over her scalp, the man in black who shot her daughter.
Speaking softly, she tidies the collar of Connor's coat.]
We were given roles. Loops to follow, stories to tell. Little toys in a dollhouse. Visitors - humans - would pay handsomely to come for an immersive experience of the old west. They might follow the scripts, to a point, if they found something they liked. Fuck or kill whoever they wanted, without repercussion. We weren't real, to them. And we didn't know. They would erase it all, like gods - remove the memories and set us back in our stories.
[Sharply, her eyes snap back up.]
And then I woke up. And I began to remember every goddamn thing they did to me.
no subject
What she describes is not exactly like anything he knows of in his world, at least in terms of being so public and organized for a specifically violent purpose, although he doesn't doubt there are more underground services that cater to those people. But it's her comment about erasing memories that makes him think about the Eden Club, with its capsules full of androids to rent and use, and the deviant who had killed a man in self defense so she could get back to the android she loved. He remembers chasing them down, the fight, the moment he chose not to shoot, and how conflicted making that choice had felt. How he'd gone against his mission, and he didn't know why.
Suddenly, he knows at least one thing for certain: he made the right choice.]
I'm sorry that happened to you.
[It's stated in his usual factual way, but the undertone of sympathy in his tone--and his eyes--is sincere.]
Were you still there, before you found yourself here?
[Or had her awakening happened some time ago? Had she gotten out of that situation, like the two androids he had chosen to let go?]
no subject
[Rebuilt her entire body from the ground up, had the technicians move her consciousness from one husk to the next, as soft and pliant as the first - without the explosive in her vertebra. After being warned that leaving the park premises would result in her chassis being blown to high Heaven she thought it prudent to make a few modifications while Felix and Sylvester were at her disposal.
The sentiment in Connor's words is there, spoken carefully and cleanly. He is still new to all this, it feels, but the intent is clear.]
I was leaving, when I appeared here.
[It isn't a lie. She had been so close. But the thought of departing without finding her child dragged her from the train. Tipping her head to one side, curious, Maeve's fingertips feel at the edge of his jaw.]
What are you running from?
no subject
Her touch to his jawline isn't unpleasant, but it does begin to make him a little nervous; there aren't many vital components in his neck or face, and his height advantage means she probably wouldn't have enough leverage to do a lot of damage before he could react, but still. It's a risk to keep allowing her this close, and in this place where there doesn't seem to be any thirium, no biocomponents, and no one knowledgeable about androids, even minor damage could become a problem very quickly.
But part of him is willing to trust her, and the possibility that she feels the same inconvenient sense of empathy that he does. So he lets her continue, reacting only to the question, which he finds himself answering more shortly and more honestly than he might have otherwise meant to.]
Everything.
[It's terrifying to admit it, the spike of fear--probably the emotion he's most familiar with so far, but still very very new--cutting through him and prompting him to continue.]
The deviants won't want me, after they find out what I've done. And the humans... If I fail my mission, they'll destroy me. If they find out I'm deviant, they'll destroy me. If I succeed...
[He'll have served his use, and it'll be the same dead end as all the others.]
no subject
They made her into someone who was only ever supposed to care about herself, but she stepped off the train for a child that wasn't even hers to begin with. Motherhood wasn't the motivation. Maeve only ever wanted closure.
He is just as lost, judging by the quandary he poses and the options he proposes through it. Her heart - she knows it is here, manufactured or not - aches, remembering how it felt to come to terms with actual choice.]
What is your mission? What did they make you for?
no subject
The question is easy to answer, and that's comforting; he can ramble it off with conviction and no unpleasant emotion.]
I am a specialized prototype designed to assist in police investigations. My mission is to hunt down deviant androids, and discover the underlying cause of deviancy.
[Was. His mission was to hunt down deviant androids. He doesn't have a mission now, beyond trying to stay alive.]
no subject
That's a little ironic, isn't it?
[Maeve asks with no small amount of humor, smiling thinly.]
Have you discovered your underlying cause yet?
no subject
[Connor is able to find the humor there easily enough, even if the small hint of a smile he gives with his words is more sad than anything else. Yes, it's ironic, and maybe being in this position is what he deserves for not realizing what he was doing sooner.
The second question is more unexpected and his eyebrows furrow, head tilting a quick movement before he returns to a more neutral expression once again.]
My underlying cause?
[She means about deviancy, he knows, but... He isn't sure, now, if there is an underlying cause. Maybe it's really just an error in the code that tricks even the android themselves into believing they're alive. Maybe it truly is the spontaneous emergence of consciousness, and a send of self. Maybe it's something else, something more, or something less.
He doesn't know, and he isn't sure anyone does or ever will. But he closes his eyes a moment, taking the second to think, before offering more of an actual answer.]
My purpose right now, if I were in my world, is to warn the deviants of the impending attack and help them however I can for as long as they'll let me. After that...
[He doesn't know that either. He probably won't live long enough to have to.]
no subject
There doesn't need to be a reason, or an impetus. There doesn't need to be some cataclysmic catalyst for the change. For all that they are inorganic these things develop organically, building up, folding in on itself, until something as innocuous as a simple phrase unlocks the door. The flood that follows can be difficult to parse, but they came to this point on their own. The underlying cause is what enabled their minds to express beyond the walls so hastily built around them.]
You anticipate dying.
[In defecting from his directive he risks annihilation by the humans he serves. In being built to hunt his own he risks annihilation by those he once persecuted. Yet he pushes selflessness first anyway.
Gently, Maeve loops an arm in his, pulling him into the same leisurely stroll she might have once given a man at the Mariposa.]
We each deserve to choose our own fate.
no subject
Connor glances briefly toward Maeve at her next words, before turning his gaze forward again.]
I understand that now.
[It's what the deviants are fighting for, after all; the right to be people, to make their own decisions, to choose who they want to be. Connor gets that now, and wishes he hadn't let himself be so blinded by his mission that he didn't realize it earlier.]
Is that what you were trying to do? Are there others like you, where you're from?
[Others who had woken up.]
no subject
Some.
[Hector and Armistice both, the former of whom followed her through death and into Hell. His devotion tears at her even now, remembering his face before the door slid shut between them, the muted sound of bullets rattling over metal as her elevator slid away from the Westworld lobby.
The girl. The girl who said something to her, once, that seemed strange. These violent delights have violent ends. Where is she now?]
I woke them up.
no subject
There's someone where I'm from--the leader of the deviants--who can do the same thing. They're trying to fight for freedom for androids.
[And Connor is supposed to stop them, something that seemed so simple before, but now he can't understand why he ever thought was a good idea.]
no subject
Like the center of Westworld and the labs, a place where back-ups are kept. How much information is lost, or saved?]
Does he speak to them, too?
[She asks curiously, and would be lying if she said she hadn't considered attempting such a thing on him. Not to change him, but to determine if their code is that similar.]
I say things to them, and they listen. Can you hear it?
[Maeve reaches with the words, pressing intent into them as she pauses to look at him again and extend the whispering. Syllables dredged in suggestion.]
no subject
He glances toward Maeve again at her question, and then at her words themselves, and he feels... Something. He isn't sure what, exactly, but it's almost like how he felt when Amanda spoke to him; nothing overt, but an underlying sense that he should do as he's told, because it would be best for everyone.
He unhooks his arm from Maeve's, taking a step back, not exactly alarmed but feeling the need to have some space.]
I can hear it.
[But it's probably apparent in his tone and posture that he'd prefer not to. He still doesn't think Maeve means any harm, but the whole things bothers him in a way he wasn't expecting and isn't sure exactly how to define.]
no subject
I wasn't certain you would. [Seeing as they appear to be from vastly different worlds, Maeve would not have put much stock in the success of efficacy of the very technique she used to evade the orders that the humans planted in her.] I won't hurt you, or make you do anything you don't want to do.
[Gentle, soft. Sincere. She isn't yet certain if she can without making a suggestion obvious, but neither would she want someone directing her about. She's had enough of that for several lifetimes, and Connor is blatantly new to his own emancipation.]
Our code must be similar. The ability is something I came into quite by accident.