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MasterOfGeckos โ€” Gatling Ref

Published: 2010-05-10 23:51:16 +0000 UTC; Views: 3169; Favourites: 16; Downloads: 19
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Description I GIVE YOU... GATLING!!! Refsheet for the OCT It's my first OCT too.

Here we go, hugely long info ahead-- PREPARE YOURSELF.

Name: Gatling (like the gun)
Stage Name: Experiment R
Age: 17 years old, but he's more like 24 in human/experiment years.
Gender: Male
Species: Genetic Experiment
Act/Talent: Gatling has been infected by something known as the Delta Virus, which makes him utterly insane, so he'll ramble about in eloquent speech and he'll frequently quote lines of poetry or recite some of his own. This and his general freakish looks are enough to hold the audience's attention, but he can also juggle with the mouths in the flowers on his head, and he can literally disappear into shadows so only his eyes can show, even if the shadow is something small cast on the floor. From the shadows, Gatling's disjointed speech can resonate throughout the whole area, which is enough to give the audience chills. This way he can also seemingly appear out of nowhere from the shadows and disappear somewhere else.
Abilities: Gatling's abilities include the way he can move about in the shadows, the freakish nature of the mouths inside the flowers on his head, and he can see in the dark/shadows.
Strengths:
-he can disappear/reappear, so he's got the element of surprise most of the time, despite being roughly 10 feet long from nose to tail.
-he can see in the dark quite well
-he's very durable (as most genetic experiments are) meaning he can survive rough damage without long term injuries
-he can easily scare most people
-he's agile and can move quietly
Weaknesses:
-Gatling has no offensive attack to speak of save for his teeth and claws
-he's insane to the point that it's a fault, and will have severe manic episodes at random periods due to the effects of the Delta Virus, being unable to concentrate on his objective
-said Delta Virus also causes Gatling to be in really poor health (his fur will randomly fall out, he'll get wracked with coughing or vomit blood, and he's almost always got a fever. If it weren't for his durability of being a genetic experiment, he would be dead). This picture is of him on one of his good days. He becomes far more sickly and disheveled about twice a month when the major symptoms return for a few days.
-he does not fare well in bright or hot conditions

Personality: Gatling's personality before he went crazy was fairly nice and easy going. Now, however, he has the brain of a madman, although he's almost always insanely euphoric. He'll randomly burst into laughter and talk to himself, too, and he likes talking a lot. He's not really evil, just a lunatic, and he doesn't feel the urge to kill others or anything like that. He's just in a really REALLY good mood. All the time. It's not hard to see why few have felt at ease in his deranged presence, but it's impossible to say he doesn't like you. He probably loves you. As only a crazed genetic experiment can, of course.

EDIT: if Gatling does not feel crazy happy or poetic at the moment, he is in a sort of dazed mood, and he'll seem a bit clueless... hopefully you'll be able to see what I mean in my audition.

History: (...I really tried to make this as feasibly short as I could. Some of this information may be included in the audition, but most of it will not. SO READ )
Scientists created Gatling (known by the humans as Experiment 493-R, shortened in his stage name to Experiment R) in a lab approximately 17 years ago, where he and several other genetic experiments were designed to be used for fighting in the humans' World War III. In order to keep track of the experiments, microchips were embedded in all the experiments. When Gatling and his squadron lost one of their most crucial battles, the government decided to restart the genetic experiment project, but kill all the old experiments, including Gatling. However, in the middle of the round up, one experiment named August (she's a small greenish blue cat with huge ears) discovered she was resistant to the lethal injection that the scientists gave the experiments to kill them. She used this opportunity to attack the humans, and many other experiments used the diversion to object against the humans in a mass retaliation that the scientists and soldiers were unable to contain. Hundreds of experiments died, and only a small handful survived, but those managed to escape into the ruins of the war-ravaged cities and forests. Most of the experiments tore out their microchips, like August, but others such as Gatling chose to keep it in to serve as a reminder of their past lives. The humans had more important things to do than to track down a few rogue creations in practically uninhabitable lands.
The majority of the remaining experiments split up and lived their separate lives, but Gatling and August decided to stay together. This lifestyle worked out pretty well for about a year-- until the Delta Virus came.
The Delta Virus was a virus created by a computer hacker from the opposing side of the World War III, who managed to hack into the government database and transmit a virus to over 50 percent of the microchips embedded in the experiments and the soldiers. The microchips had served a purpose of equipping human soldiers with virtually limitless amounts of information regarding the war, and these were once praised with their ingenuity. However, the Delta Virus ravaged through half of the micro-chipped human soldiers, killing all those who were not born with some sort of genetic resistance within a matter of weeks. However, there have been no more Delta Virus attacks since then, and the virus is not contaigious.
Experiments with the Delta Virus first suffered from thirst, itching, and a mild fever, but it soon developed to full-blown symptoms such as hair loss, sores, vomiting, seizures, internal damage, and a mass of other symptoms. Approximately half of the infected experiments died within the first month. Those that survived the symptoms, however, suffered from a state of insanity and dementia, as is Gatling's case to this day, with massive mood swings and schizophrenia.
In a furious state of frenzied anger, Gatling had tore out his microchip, complaining that it itched under his skin. However, he tore open such a big hole on his back that he passed out from blood loss. When he woke in his deranged state, he found that his companion August had bandaged his wounds, but being confused and in an unstable mental state, Gatling attacked and killed August.
Rather than realizing the magnitude of what he had done, Gatling laughed, and told the dead body to stop staring at him.
Since then, he hardly ever shows the mental symptoms of anger and fury, but rather does everything with a smile on his face or a sort of delusioned cluelessness. He can, however, remember the day he killed August with a feeling of dread and discomfort.
He now wanders around without meaning, looking for some way to spend his life.
Likes:
-Poetry and songs. He will make them up or quote ones all the time.
-Whistling is fun too.
-Scaring people and speaking in his whispery, disjointed voice
-Drinking liquids-- just about any liquid will do, even blood. He can't stomach solid foods particularly well, but he feels he can't be bothered enough by having to chew anyway.
Dislikes:
-Mentions of August. Even if someone just says the month. This is the only thing that will cause him to show intense anger.
-People who drone on about courage, glory, valor, or the importance of life. He doesn't see much of a value in any of these things, and they really get on his nerves (This may make him get snappy, but nothing like the anger mentioned above).
-Light or hot conditions (he will avoid deserts)
-The sound of a gunshot always makes him jittery from his past fighting in war.
Other:
-His tongue is long, thin, and blue.
-He's almost always smiling and unrestrainedly euphoric, or he'll be unreasonably furious.
-If Gatling loses one of the flowers on his head (like if it gets chopped off or something) he can regenerate it fairly easily. Sometime's he'll rip them off just because.
-His blood has a toxic appearance as a result of the Delta Virus.
-The black parts in his eyes are his pupils! (he's got three in each eye woohoo!) so they can expand and contract and all that just like pupils do.
-He's got ears, but they fold down and are hidden underneath his hair. Sometimes he'll raise one up if he hears something. (...I should've drawn him doing that -_- )
-HE'S POSTIVIELY INSANE.


There ya go! Sorry for the novel-ness. I can edit it.
Gatling ยฉ Me
Tapestry of Horror ยฉ ~Songdog-StrayFang
Textures from a brush from *redheadstock
Related content
Comments: 82

MasterOfGeckos In reply to ??? [2011-02-09 22:45:25 +0000 UTC]

HAHAHA
I saw in your gallery!
Niiiiice

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RimyonZe In reply to ??? [2011-02-09 12:13:06 +0000 UTC]

Yay! [link]

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Songdogx [2010-12-06 04:41:24 +0000 UTC]

Does he have to sets of spikes or is it just one set down the center of his stomach?

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MasterOfGeckos In reply to Songdogx [2010-12-06 05:04:20 +0000 UTC]

oh it is a set
They are like his ribs coming out.

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Someguyfromcrowd [2010-10-07 00:37:45 +0000 UTC]

August.

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MasterOfGeckos In reply to Someguyfromcrowd [2010-10-07 01:10:21 +0000 UTC]


You rebel.

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Someguyfromcrowd In reply to MasterOfGeckos [2010-10-07 02:03:52 +0000 UTC]

Aw, read the rest of the story. It's so sad

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MasterOfGeckos In reply to Someguyfromcrowd [2010-10-07 02:13:25 +0000 UTC]

oh ahah. Good XD
I was aiming for it to be depressing.
Thanks for reading it all.

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Someguyfromcrowd In reply to MasterOfGeckos [2010-10-07 01:14:26 +0000 UTC]

BTW, Heavy Weapons Guy probably likes the guy.

[link]

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MasterOfGeckos In reply to Someguyfromcrowd [2010-10-07 02:13:34 +0000 UTC]

pffff lol XD

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cookiesGOOD4u [2010-07-29 18:39:33 +0000 UTC]

Hey, I've been wondering: can he move to a different shadow?
Like, to say, he goes and hides in the shadow of tree, can he reappear from the shadow of a different tree?

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MasterOfGeckos In reply to cookiesGOOD4u [2010-07-29 21:20:26 +0000 UTC]

Yup! that's exactly what he can do! The shadows have to be in a relatively close distance from one another. But if, for example, he's in a shadow and then it disappears, he can come out of a different shadow nearby.

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cookiesGOOD4u In reply to MasterOfGeckos [2010-07-30 03:14:10 +0000 UTC]

That's deadly! D8
You mean he can pop out from your own shadow? The anxiety would be killer!!

By the way, how exactly did he receive this virus?
Through his microchip? What is he a computer?

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MasterOfGeckos In reply to cookiesGOOD4u [2010-07-30 04:17:43 +0000 UTC]

He can totally pop out of someone elses shadow, although it can be a bit difficult for him to reach it if they're all moving around. But yup.

Yeah, Gatling got the virus through his microchip. It's like wayyyyy in the future, so viruses can travel that way XD. The microchips were made to download information and abilities into the heads of soldiers, so it makes sense that a virus could be sent the same way. The experiments weren't really meant to be a target, but they were.

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cookiesGOOD4u In reply to MasterOfGeckos [2010-07-30 05:36:52 +0000 UTC]

Your right, but as you said, if his/her shadow gets close enough, he can probably enter their shadow and STRIKE.

Interesting, the chip would probably have been placed in the brain (in the cerebrum to be exact) to properly receive and apply the information it is receiving. The nervous system uses electrical pulses to send and receive instructions throughout the body. The charges travel through the nerves in the body like a computer and every chip inside it: sending and receiving.
So, in truth, the process is sort of like a computer's.
If the brain would receive a virus through this chip, the brain would start malfunctioning, corrupting some signals that it sends to the rest of the body.
In no way do I believe that this virus is organic.
That's wy the picture of the 'virus' kind threw me for a loop.

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MasterOfGeckos In reply to cookiesGOOD4u [2010-07-30 05:54:17 +0000 UTC]

Ohoho you give me so many ideas when the rounds start.

You're right-- and whenever I think of the chip in human soldiers it's in the brain... and yet I drew Gatling's scar on his back. But your description of how the chips work in the brain is awesome. It's similar to what I was thinking only much more easier to explain. And it's postitively scientific sounding.

GAH I completely forgot I drew a picture of that virus. You're right, there's no way something like that could get transfered through a microchip. *headdesk*
Not that the probability of experiments like Gatling to be running around is very plausible either.

Ah well, I'm not about to change anything at this point. The virus itself doesn't get referenced much, it's just the way Gatling suffers from it.

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cookiesGOOD4u In reply to MasterOfGeckos [2010-07-30 16:24:38 +0000 UTC]

Well why not? Gatling must use his powers t the fullest.
He fought in a war, you technically tend to learn some skills, including how to move quickly very quietly.

I think it' possible to have in his back, or better said, in his spinal cord. It's still part of the nervous system, the brain could still have received the information, though probably a half second later (which in war, is enough time to get you killed).

You don't need to change, but erase that ridiculous drawing. No offense.
That's all really.
You already have your information, no need to change that; it's the picture that gives it the note that it's organice, and not the information.

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MasterOfGeckos In reply to cookiesGOOD4u [2010-07-31 06:21:00 +0000 UTC]

Very true. And justttt in case that seems too all-powerful, he's crazy. So it all works out.

Wow you're a genius. That's a really good point.

You're probably the only person that's noticed the whole virus flaw, since you're the most scrutinizing viewer yet XD, but I am definitely fixing it. Just the fact that now I realize it bugs me.

Hurrah, changed!

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cookiesGOOD4u In reply to MasterOfGeckos [2010-08-02 05:20:51 +0000 UTC]

Insanity, quite the weakness.

Just to put it in there, I think I might be able to give you a possible reason why it was placed there (just so you don't have to move it). This seems more phycological than scientific, so based on your history there I came up with this:

Your humans don't really care for the well beings of the experiments, because of the lack of interest in exterminating them. It would cost them time and money to do it, so they weren't going to spend anything that wasn't for the war. They also would not probably care if their effecient because of the cost in making them is difficult enough. Adding the chip was a hassle already, so instead if risking a surgery to the brain that can be fatal and expensive, they simple embedded them in the spinal cord. Cheap, easy, and quick; just the way they do it.

Hurrah for change! Do you think anyone will notice?
I bet 5 bucks nobody will!

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Someguyfromcrowd In reply to cookiesGOOD4u [2010-10-09 02:32:35 +0000 UTC]

Actually, implanting the microchip in the spinal cord would be highly effective. If the brain is malformed or hard to get at, the spinal cord would carry all nervous signals and also be "hackable" and could have its signals corrupted. That would not explain insanity at all, though, unless a digital virus could somehow exploit a flaw in the microchip's design to cause damage beyond its boundaries.

The laziness clause is plausible, though- after all, who cares if you accidentally paralyze a few biological weapons? It would still be illogical to do so if the brain was easier to reach- the connection point between the spinal cord and the lower brain would be the primary target to reach every signal. A chip in the spine would have no way of having an effect on your mental capabilities unless, as I said, there was a defect in the chip that would somehow enable it to produce an organic virus that could cause mental insanity. How that would happen is beyond me, however.

I would pin it down to some sort of accessibility reasoning. You could easily wire a microchip in an accessible location (back) to a less-accessible location (brain junction point). Then it would be rather simple to replace or upgrade the chip without undergoing complex neurosurgery. It would be a simple plug-and-play process of disconnecting the old chip and connecting a new one, then stitching it up and moving along. This would also explain the severe blood loss as a result of ripping it out- wires would have to be strong to withstand the movements of an organic body (especially one that is bending through shadows) and would be very strong- strong enough to cause severe injury if yanked out.

This might actually validate the concept of a digital virus causing organic effects. If the Delta Virus was capable of forcing the wiring between the chip and the brain to malfunction, it might cause brain damage. The process of ripping out the microchip could have caused further damage- perhaps explaining his bipolar personality? Damage to the frontal lobes can cause a massive shift in personality, and in such an unstable biological organism such as Gatling, it could be possible that this effect would be exaggerated and result in these odd personality shifts. A sort of biological switch would then be in place. Some sort of trigger- perhaps random, or perhaps some sort of external input (think "August")- would set him off. A lack of this sort of input would result in him returning to his "normal" personality (which is abnormal at best).

The Delta Virus's symptoms in the biological experiments would then logically be linked to improper hormone and neurological function. This would result in effects such as (quoting) "hair loss, sores, vomiting, seizures, internal damage, and a mass of other symptoms". Many of these are caused by an imbalance in the body- or, in this case, a severe imbalance due to psychological damage. The combination of the stress of war and this strange pseudo-virus would result in a SEVERE form of PTSD (Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder) which would trigger all of these ailments. In turn, this could cause bouts of insanity and the more severe complications of this virus.

Still, it is unclear why such an important microchip system would be hacked like it was. I theorize that the unnamed government actually transmitted this Delta-Virus as a sort of "test" for their systems. When this test went horribly wrong, they blamed it on a hacker. This would explain why it was only transmitted to half the population of military combatants- what hacker would break into a highly encrypted and fire-walled system to only attack half of the enemy?

*checks word count, 618*

Jeez, that was a full-page English paper there.

Am I the most scrutinizing viewer now?

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cookiesGOOD4u In reply to Someguyfromcrowd [2010-10-10 17:49:03 +0000 UTC]

Well Someguyfromcrowd, if you are the most scrutinizing viewer now, I don't really care. Does it really matter?

Hmm...well I have to say I appreciate the input, really I do.
A proper examination over this character cannot be done by one alone. To get a more viable story and character in place, in needs to be done by 2 or more people in a discussion.

I truly believe you have the right ideas about Gatling's condition, and world.
Thing is though, you should probably also have this go through

I can't dispute any of these ideas for their credibility.
Except maybe the hacker-government thing: you are correct that only half of the military was infected; but what if he was interrupted in the middle of the infection process and was detained before he could infect the rest of the military population? Maybe some 'government agents' found his station of operations and shut him down to save the rest of the military personnel. Only Gatling's creator has the real say in this.

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Someguyfromcrowd In reply to cookiesGOOD4u [2010-10-10 17:57:36 +0000 UTC]

Yes, but theories are nevertheless valuable, are they not?

I'm not sure about the possibility of detaining the hacker half-way through the hacking process and the transmission of the Delta Virus. Since one would clearly be required to break into the highest levels of command to access the microchips, it would take but a second to send a data packet to these microchips, especially when they are designed for massive data upload and download, as mentioned in Gatling's bio. Now, if there were redundant security layers that only permitted access to so many chips in one session, this would make sense- but that would not suit the concept of the microchips allowing troops access to information on the battlefield quickly if it required a longer period of time to send information to every member of the battlefield. Given the probable sorry state of the military at this time, it would be highly unlikely for major security protocols to be implemented. Take the United States' missile launch codes in the code war:

0000000000

Hardly secure, correct? This was done so that the missiles could be launched as fast as possible. In a similar manner, a military in an all-out World War III would likely prefer to have the fastest transmission of data as possible to facilitate their own ends. As such, they would have somewhat low-grade security systems.

Just my 2c/2p.

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cookiesGOOD4u In reply to Someguyfromcrowd [2010-10-11 04:07:00 +0000 UTC]

WHAT? How do you know that is what the U.S. used for it's missile launch code? I'm starting to fill a little uncomfortable now...

Alright then, maybe security is a problem, but what about the method these chips receive data?
Surely there is no single place that sends all the data to every soldier at once; there needs be several nodes in every area so these soldiers have the highest quality of reception.
Then there may be the central module that watches over them, or there might not be for security reasons (I'm still iffy about your theories).
If there were to be these nodes, and grand module, security would be more upheld for the moral of the soldiers with the highest of security reserved for the grand module.
Then this hacker/s might have only been able to gain control of half these nodes because the military wouldn't just sit there and watch them take control of their equipment, no, they will do everything in their power to save their men.
I highly disapprove of the government-controlled virus, because: who in their right mind would test such a virus during a war? That and the creator herself said it wasn't so. Truly a creator cannot be wrong about the details of his/her own creation?

Although history tends to repeat itself, I don't think it should be the case here. This is World War III, somewhere in a distant future that may not be quite like ours. Some place where they might have grown different customs, a place we may not be able to begin to fathom. As such is the case , or it may not, I can't see why things can't go as they are.

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Someguyfromcrowd In reply to cookiesGOOD4u [2010-10-11 20:35:32 +0000 UTC]

Hmm, I meant to say "Cold War" there. It is true, however, that our missile codes were nothing but zeroes. In fact, the heavily locked boxes that were used to program the correct code were checked daily to make sure they were still set to 00000000 (after re-checking my source to link it I noticed that there are only eight zeroes, not ten) to make sure launches could be carried out as fast as possible.

[link]

Anyways, I understand your point of multiple systems to transmit data, but it would be hopelessly inefficient to have dozens of human operators receive information to transmit from a central supercomputer and then log in to their own local terminals to transmit this information to a detachment of troops. This would introduce human reaction times and human error to the equation- a massive contradiction to a system of linked, computerized soldiers. However, a system of locally authorized but fully automated terminals would be logical. Unfortunately, a competent hacker who had spent time sniffing traffic and determined protocol would have determined this far in advance, and cracked the local (and likely less secure) access codes before initiating the detectable portion of his attack- the upload.

(much rambling goes here as I retyped this so many times I gave up on continuing the previous section.)

Anyways, I can't say arguing against the canon storyline is going anywhere- a hacker scenario has plenty of sense to it. There is certainly motivation and a weak enemy to target, and IF the microchip system was highly encrypted and well protected I can understand how a hacker just might be stopped halfway. Perhaps there were plans to access the entire system to transmit the virus to the whole army, but the hacker was discovered due to an informant / tracing and forced to trigger the attack before it was ready, resulting in this ~50% infection rate.

I'm more interested in why the Delta Virus works like it does. I could imagine that it was designed to demoralize and cause loss in numbers, forcing surrender without undue deaths. One might again compare it to the use of the atomic bomb by the United States in WWII- thousands died, but millions would have if there were a bloody struggle to invade Japan itself. By this token, the Delta Virus would simply be a demonstration of power. Imagine being a soldier and knowing that the enemy could simply kill you outright without coming within a hundred miles of you. That would make me quit fighting, that's for sure.

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cookiesGOOD4u In reply to Someguyfromcrowd [2010-10-28 00:29:06 +0000 UTC]

*I didn't have time to answer this before*

I could have told you that, the codes used are in binary code that computers read in 8 numbers that translate into a command consisting of 1 byte.

Have you ever played video games? If you have, you must have heard about the "glitches" that can be found in many games. They are caused from when a certain sequence of code is suddenly made and the system can't identify it (like the equation: f(x) = 5x/x+7, where -7 would be undefined) causing some sort of error that the system is unable to compute. This can happen whether there are or aren't the local nodes being maintained and monitored, I'm sure you know this right? I've had experience programming in Robotics, this can happen on some occasions in the coding whether it was your mistake or the machinery is malfunctioning.

So what you're saying is this hacker can upload a virus into several local terminals (singularly or all-at-once), transmit the virus into everyone, and be done with it and not get caught? Do you know how much power you will need to do send the virus into every terminal instantaneously? For example: in Live Free or Die Hard, they show a computer that contains all the social security numbers, or something very important in that nature, that the hackers download onto a disc. The heat generated from the machine is so much that they have an extensive cooling system for it; and another example would be Transformers where the little robot downloads a crap load of information at once and the people that notice this are dumbfounded at the speed the information is being processed. If this hacker was to do this, he'd have to have a lot of processing power that only agencies and labs have, which would only unfortunately help validate your government planning theory. But I digress! Why infect your troops, your in the middle of a war? That's too big of a risk for even suggesting that.

The Delta Virus, hmm? Maybe it works just like a computer virus. Viruses corrupt data and other nasty stuff; instead of sending data a soldier can use or learn, the virus would send instructions to the brain to develop certain enzymes that literally damages the brain or any other organ. There are lots of possibilities, but surrender wouldn't be an only option. Like the U.S. is doing now, they would probably work on a biological weapon themselves. Sure you'd like to run away, I'm sure the soldiers would want to too if they learned this; but soldiers don't just go AWOL whenever they want to. Think about that.

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Someguyfromcrowd In reply to cookiesGOOD4u [2010-10-28 01:27:25 +0000 UTC]

I'm kind of confused by the glitch point you made. Are you saying that computers can cause bugs? Not exactly- computers are nearly infallible. It's all down to human error. If your power bill is $5000 dollars and they say it was a computer error, it was really the computer operator typing in an extra digit. In your divide-by-zero error example, a typical computer will simply skip the operation. Try it in C++ and you'll receive a warning but the program will execute. Now, other errors can occur, but these are usually hardware errors, not the computer's "thought" process itself. A computer will not add two and two and output five.

Also, where does this computer-glitch part tie in? I'm kind of lost.

Anyways, to the point- a hacker would not necessarily require access to a huge amount of power. It would be possible to hijack a government computer for the exact purpose of gaining the ever-important processing performance. In effect, said hacker would inject a malicious packet into a server's instructions via Address-Resolution-Protocol Poison Routing- also known as APR, it is a technique that abuses the fact that a server will always accept incoming MAC address resolution packets. I would be seriously amused if such high-grade servers failed to possess the security to block this, but given the mistakes that this government has already made... Anyways, in effect this would convince the server that the hacker's computer is really a trusted master server. Then the hacker would send a command to this hijacked server and use it as a sort of beacon. Since he has to send but a small number of packets, the bulk of the dirty work would be handled by the sub-server. This would validate your stopped half way argument, as lower level servers would only have access to so many microchips but would also have lower grade security, making them a far easier target. It could be that there was a traitor or mole in the branch of government dedicated to the operation of these chips. Then he could just "accidentally" break the security of a lower-level server (which would receive less scrutiny than the master server) and allow entry.

Actually, history has shown us that psychological warfare can completely ruin an enemy force. Take Genghis Khan. Enemies would surrender out of fear of what would happen to them if they didn't. So by the same token it would be logical as both a psychological weapon and a physical one. The insanity driven by the Delta Virus would actually server to cause damage beyond the soldiers themselves- given Vulcan's adverse reaction I would say that a good number of soldiers would attack anybody near them. The story here - [link] - actually explores this idea.

Given the insanity effect, there's still slight reason to a government-induced virus. Perhaps it was supposed to make their soldiers crazy enough to fight without feeling pain, but...ahh, this makes little sense. They would certainly do clinical trials in advance.

Ugh, I want to write more but I've been writing another story (all 12,000 words of it) and I'm getting really tired of typing now.

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cookiesGOOD4u In reply to Someguyfromcrowd [2010-10-28 20:54:08 +0000 UTC]

You know what, your right; SCREW THIS. A guy can only take so much.
I don't even want to reply about anything you said, cookiesGOOD4u out.

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MasterOfGeckos In reply to cookiesGOOD4u [2010-08-05 04:16:13 +0000 UTC]

I am completely copying this comment into a word doc for future reference. Thank you for such useful information.

Oh gosh I bet no one will notice either.

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cookiesGOOD4u In reply to MasterOfGeckos [2010-08-05 16:30:58 +0000 UTC]

You are welcome.

Haha! You owe me $5.

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MasterOfGeckos In reply to cookiesGOOD4u [2010-08-05 18:04:03 +0000 UTC]

...You sneaky person you.

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cookiesGOOD4u In reply to MasterOfGeckos [2010-08-05 18:18:46 +0000 UTC]

I'm also sneaky enough to take my 5 bucks if I don't get'em.

In the shadows, we lie in wait,
waiting and waiting, till the time is right;
the chance to strike for it seems,
see the fang as it gleams;
ask not what to do,
cause you won't know, till it's due.

Random stuff I made up on the spot, but I do want those $5.

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MasterOfGeckos In reply to cookiesGOOD4u [2010-08-05 23:32:44 +0000 UTC]

I love making up random stuff on the spot. Usually poems and songs too, yup.

Hmmm, beacause this is the interwebs and I have not yet mastered the art of paypal, I don't know how I'd get you the money.

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cookiesGOOD4u In reply to MasterOfGeckos [2010-08-06 21:12:13 +0000 UTC]

Sorry for the ridiculous crap, I had barely finished mowing the lawn. Or better yet, partly finished because I just finished the rest today not too long ago.

That's very sincere of you to actually want to send them to me, but keep'em. Save them for a rainy you know?

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MasterOfGeckos In reply to cookiesGOOD4u [2010-08-07 06:03:24 +0000 UTC]

...mowing the lawn, fun stuff.

Haha, okay, I'll hold onto them. And spend them on something awesome... like firecrackers (the first thing that popped in my head.)

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cookiesGOOD4u In reply to MasterOfGeckos [2010-08-08 21:08:35 +0000 UTC]

sArcaSM, that's fun stuff.

Firecrackers, they leave me deaf, but very fun!
Enjoy your...joyous combustions!

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AlfaShampoo-Artemis [2010-06-23 20:27:01 +0000 UTC]

he's kinda scary I'm not gonna lie wouldnt wanna meet him in the dark lol, but i love em X3

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MasterOfGeckos In reply to AlfaShampoo-Artemis [2010-06-23 21:13:36 +0000 UTC]

Gatling's just schizo, not homicidal 8D
thankies

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AlfaShampoo-Artemis In reply to MasterOfGeckos [2010-06-26 01:44:04 +0000 UTC]

how tall is he on all fours?

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MasterOfGeckos In reply to AlfaShampoo-Artemis [2010-06-26 02:51:43 +0000 UTC]

around five feet

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AlfaShampoo-Artemis In reply to MasterOfGeckos [2010-06-23 23:26:23 +0000 UTC]

dosent mean I wont be scared XD lol
Yer Welcome

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Finion591 [2010-06-21 10:45:48 +0000 UTC]

^^, I forgot to ask...but how large is he (or was it mentioned already and Iยดve just overlooked that...)?

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MasterOfGeckos In reply to Finion591 [2010-06-21 13:42:30 +0000 UTC]

ahh he's about 10 feet from nose to tail or so. I'll have to check my refsheet to make sure that's in there :3

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Finion591 In reply to MasterOfGeckos [2010-06-21 13:51:15 +0000 UTC]

o.o than he would be nearly the half longer than my poor flour-machine. ...and what about the height? ^^,

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MasterOfGeckos In reply to Finion591 [2010-06-22 01:35:19 +0000 UTC]

oh noes X'D
mkay so when he's standing on four legs his height is around 5 feet.

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WarriorSandstorm [2010-05-18 22:38:34 +0000 UTC]

Oh, what a cool character! I love his design! I can't wait to see more of him! good Luck!

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MasterOfGeckos In reply to WarriorSandstorm [2010-05-18 22:49:03 +0000 UTC]

thank you so much! good luck to you too!!!

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Finion591 [2010-05-13 18:05:53 +0000 UTC]

I am not even sure why... but I like him. I wish you luck to get in the tournament: D.

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MasterOfGeckos In reply to Finion591 [2010-05-13 23:09:29 +0000 UTC]

ahh thank you :3

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Finion591 In reply to MasterOfGeckos [2010-05-14 05:06:38 +0000 UTC]

You are welcome ^^ .

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Forest-shrine-wolf [2010-05-12 19:30:15 +0000 UTC]

GATLING BE SO GROOOOOOOVEH

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