The Computer (
computerized) wrote in
outofalpha2016-07-10 02:23 pm
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Entry tags:
July/August Test Drive Meme

Alpha Complex Test Drive Meme
Alpha Complex opened Sunday, July 31st. Please feel free to take a Test Drive to see if the environment would suit your character! All potential players are welcome.
It may be your first day in Alpha Complex or your hundredth, either way, you are in serious trouble.
In a bid to win sympathy and new recruits, the Frankenstein Destroyers - a secret society within Alpha who sees all bots as enemies, has uploaded a virus that is affecting all bots within the complex.
For the next twenty four hours, every bot you see will be the enemy. Your assigned Personal Digital Companion(PDC), a personal communication device, has turned on you and is intentionally misfiring your texts, phone calls and videos. The Bouncy Bubble Beverage machine in the cafeteria is shooting out bottles at passers by at high speeds. The high tech vacuum cleaner used to vacuum your clearance level's common room is attempting to suck up everything in sight. Elevators are trying to coerce people to climb out, so they can behead them. That adorable Petbot you purchased last week is trying to tear your throat out. That Guardbot from the Armed Services Sector is attempting to take out citizens, one by one. Autocars are driving themselves, right onto sidewalks and through windows...
Will you fight for your right to exist or hole up somewhere safe until the chaos passes?
Do not fear, citizen! The Computer and it's high advisors are working to restore order.
In the meantime, be safe and beware of bots and traitors!
Mingle Together. Explore Together. Adventure Together.
Premise | Setting Information | New Arrival Introduction
no subject
They can do this.
Cisco raises the leg and starts to count. They have one shot at this, and she can't be early and she can't be late. It all comes down to timing. He says three and she darts forward, not quite jumping but trying to clear the threshold as quickly as possible. The clang of the doors slamming shut is deafening, and she's honestly surprised when both feet hit the floor. When she doesn't leave some part of her stuck in the elevator.
Letting out a shaky breath, she stares at him, nodding. "I'm okay. I'm okay," she repeats over and over as she wraps her arms around him, practically clinging to him with a hug. Her breath hitches in her chest. "I didn't think I'd ever see you again."
no subject
"I didn't think I'd ever see you again," he admits. He's quiet, then, for a moment. Cisco gives them both time to catch their breath and he finally lets go of her, taking a step back. "...Barry's here. And Felicity," he says, because even though she's probably still reeling from the elevator thing and the fact that he isn't a glitch, she deserves to know and it's throbbing in the back of his throat to be said.
Cisco takes another deep breath and puts an arm around her to guide her away from the elevator — quite honestly, he can't stand looking at it right now and he imagines she would probably feel much the same if her back wasn't already facing it — and down the corridor a little ways. "Listen, we're gonna be fine. ...Barry's working on getting his speed back. I'm going to build a new pair of Vibe Glasses and get my Vibes back and between the two of us, we're going to get all of us out of here and back home," he says in a quick, hushed voice. "Don't believe anything that they told you in that orientation, it isn't real. You are. I am. We are."
no subject
And then it's all lost when he says Barry's name. She stops hearing anything after Barry's here.
Her steps are little more than shuffling as he tries to guide her down the corridor, her body barely responding. It's all she can do not to slide to the floor and become a mess. When she blinks, the tears gathered along her waterline threaten to fall. It's too much. This is too much. A moment ago, she was questioning if any of her memories were real and fearing for her life. And now, proof that it's real is here in Cisco. But Barry... she remembers now why she questioned calling for him. It's not that she didn't think he was real. It's that she knew he was dead.
Her right foot falters, making her stumble before she catches herself against the wall. She swallows hard, and when she blinks this time, a few tears slip free. "Barry's alive?" she asks in a tear-thickened, cracking voice.
no subject
He looks back at her, confusion and concern for his friend etched deeply into his expression. Of course he's alive…" Cisco pulls her back in for another hug. "He's alive, Caitlin, he's okay. It's okay, you're okay. I'll explain, just...let's get you back to my room so we don't get caught talking about stuff that's not supposed to exist. Okay?"
But even as he's asking it, he's guiding her down the hall just the same as he had been guiding her away from the elevator. If he was in her shoes right now, it isn't even a question in his mind that she'd be doing the same for him. "I promise, it's okay. He doesn't have his speed, but he's okay."
no subject
She isn't sure what to believe anymore.
Her steps are more sure as he leads her down the corridor, and she seems less likely to fall over. "Okay," she replies, her voice hushed. They can't be caught if no one else can hear them, right? It seems logical enough. "Him... losing his speed, that was Zoom? Jay." Her voice cracks over saying that name.
"I just need to be sure I'm remembering things right."
no subject
Returning to her, Cisco sits beside her on the bed. He looks as concerned as he feels. "...no. No that's because if this place. Not Zoom. …Hunter," he reminds her in a gentle voice before realizing she might not be there yet. Everything happens so fast, ironically, at home that he can't always remember the details of his own timeline...which, now that he thinks about it, would make a potentially interesting premise for a comic book or something. ...which is neither here nor there, he realizes. Focus, Cisco. "His real name is Hunter. Not Jay," Cisco clarifies.
"Zoom did take his speed, that's happened, but he got it back. This place took it again."
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"I don't remember Barry getting it back. If he did, I wasn't there." What else might have happened without her there? It's a relief to hear that he'd done it back home. That he — that they — had all been okay. There's the tiniest irrational pang at that thought. The world went on without her. They went on without her. But it's what they should do, what she would do in their place.
"If he's gotten it back once already, why don't we just do what you did then? You know it worked; it shouldn't be any less effective here."