Chapter 1100: Must Conduct MORE RESEARCH!
<span style="font-weight:400">It didn’t take me long to reach the research institute where Chelsea and her team worked. When I arrived, I was immediately able to notice that quite a few things had changed. For instance, there was now a reception area, and what appeared to be a transit hub outside of the main facility, with signs of frequent foot traffic.
<span style="font-weight:400">When I entered the lobby, a lycan woman in a blue jacket smiled at me. “Greetings, sir Keeper. Chelsea said to tell you that she will be here momentarily.” She said, before typing a message at her terminal.
<span style="font-weight:400">A few momentster, the door leading into the facility opened up, and Chelsea emerged with a grin. “There you are. Follow me, and I’ll give you the full update.” She gestured for me to follow her, and I did so with a small nod.
<span style="font-weight:400">“You’ve expanded your staff?” I asked, ncing back towards the reception area.
<span style="font-weight:400">“Yeah. We didn’t have enough people for all of the work that we needed to do, so we started hiring. The service staff like that receptionist are all from the ninjas, but our researchers themselves were handpicked from various different worlds. The senior team is just how you remember it, but now we have subordinates that help out with our projects.”
<span style="font-weight:400">“Ninjas, huh?” That reminded me of the fact that Chelsea had taken in the ninjas and given them a home in this universe. “Did you have anything to do with the kitsune that appeared at Olympus?”
<span style="font-weight:400">Chelsea blinked for a moment, having to recall. “Ah, Golden Shadow.” She nodded her head. “Well, that was her codename, at least. Does she have a proper name now?”
<span style="font-weight:400">“She’s Lena. I figured you would have been responsible somehow…”
<span style="font-weight:400">Chelsea simply chuckled at that. “I thought that you could use a dedicated spymaster. Terra’s more busy with the Heroic Spirit program, so she can’t keep an eye on absolutely everything like she used to. With Lena, you’ll be able to get information in real time from organizations that might be looking to cause trouble.”
<span style="font-weight:400">“Right… Anyways, back to your report?” I asked, and she nodded her head in agreement.
<span style="font-weight:400">“So, we have sessfully managed to clone two worlds currently, being Lorek and Deckan. To be safe, we have made a second copy of Deckan, and it is this copy that the Metong’s Network has been moved to.”
<span style="font-weight:400">“What’s wrong with the first one?” I asked curiously, and Chelsea paused to gather her thoughts.
<span style="font-weight:400">“Nothing wrong, per se. Rather, we are working on a merger experiment. You should be familiar with howw mergers work in the system by now. ording to our research, the mortal realm phenomena that apanies this is that the energy cores of two or more worlds begin to resonate with one another, leading to theirws bleeding over. We are working on an experiment to see what would happen if Lorek and Deckan’sws were merged in this manner.”
<span style="font-weight:400">As we spoke, Chelsea led me down the halls, and asionally we would pass by another researcher, who offered a nod of greeting to us. “You see, your system would normally ensure that the result is controlled, preventing theplete destruction of both worlds during the merger. Our goal with this experiment is to see if there is a way to safely do this without relying on the system’s guidance.”
<span style="font-weight:400">“I think I understand. Is it fine to be talking about the Keeper system with an audience, though?” I asked, and Chelsea grinned up at me.
<span style="font-weight:400">“Everyone here is already in the loop. A big part of the research here is deciphering the Keeper Code, so we needed to inform those working on it about what they would be doing.”
<span style="font-weight:400">“Got it. I noticed that we haven’t increased in rank, yet. Are those new worlds properly up to the system standards?”
<span style="font-weight:400">When I asked this, Chelsea gave a firm nod. “Our first cloned world had to be scrapped, because we didn’t add a time adjustment feature. Every world, upon first being created, is elerated to the point wheres and gxies have formed, to give a chance for life to take root.”
<span style="font-weight:400">“However, the bigger reason for this eleration is the stabilization of information. Once the information has fully stabilized, the world barrier bes thicker and more solid. ording to all observable data, the worlds that we have cloned are functionally no different from their base world.”
<span style="font-weight:400">“The reason that we haven’t ranked up should be because of the fact that we are only copy-pasting, rather than creating our own world. You can’t be considered a proper programmer if you are only ever copying someone else’s work, right? Our team is working together to try to engineer a new world, without simply copying the base parameters. This merger experiment will help with that, as it will give us the chance to see the changes to the different cores.”
<span style="font-weight:400">“Right…” I nodded my head, before pausing. “However… if you do this, and it fails, aren’t you worried about a karmic bacsh? We saw what happened before when universes were destroyed, and it led to James having to iste himself for years. If something simr happens to your team…”
<span style="font-weight:400">Chelsea’s grin grew wider at that. “We’ve already taken this into ount. During all tests, the team will be observing from a Null System zone. This zone is created to not only remove the game system of the world, but all special systems, including primal energies, divinity, and even karma. While in the Null zone, everyone only has the strength of their own bodies and minds to observe the world.”
<span style="font-weight:400">Now <i><span style="font-weight:400">that</i><span style="font-weight:400"> caused me to pause, remembering the Reset Protocol that Dana had made. “If you have something like that, can’t you use it in prisons to contain powerful inmates?”
<span style="font-weight:400">“I mean, theoretically.” Chelsea shrugged her shoulders. “However, the cost to create just one of these zones is… frankly ludicrous. Nullifying the game system is easy, we’ve had tech to do that for ages. Nullifying all forms of supernatural phenomena, on the other hand…”
<span style="font-weight:400">“To put it inparison, I had to get Lifre and Lena to hunt down monsters from the void, and work together with Tubrock’s new golem race to get the information strands I needed. After converting that into a memetic script, I had to create an independent, nested world inside of theb where that script could safely be applied as a worldw, and modify the internal structure of that world to create the facilities that we would need to conduct our tests.”
<span style="font-weight:400">“Granted, this nested world is still fragile, and it wouldn’te close to meeting the system’s standards. But we didn’t need that much, only enough for our people to enter it and be safe within a null zone. Using nested worlds like that for prisoners is too extravagant, when the Reset Protocol is cheaper and doesn’t carry the same risks.”
<span style="font-weight:400">“I suppose.” I nodded my head in understanding. “You mentioned the new golem race? How are theying along?” I had briefly heard before that Tubrock had created a new race of golems that resided in the void, and I was worried that they might turn out the same way that Leowynn’s Guardian had, going on a violent rampage and even supporting other void beasts.
<span style="font-weight:400">“No problems so far. Though… there was one interesting development among them.” Chelsea began to exin. “Tubrock created them with enough awareness and problem-solving capabilities to be able to selectively choose what information to absorb from other void monsters toplete themselves.”
<span style="font-weight:400">“At the same time, they have the understanding that choosing harmful rules will lead to their eradication, either at the hands of Tubrock or someone else. Thus, they only acquire rules that will benefit themselves and others. These rules, and the information that they contain, gradually help to fully awaken a void golem to true sentience, at which point they gain the ability to reproduce, creating more temte golems.”
<span style="font-weight:400">“When these golems gain sentience, there is a null-point-one percent chance of them awakening as what we have identified as a Void God. These golems are able to freely establish their own rules.”
<span style="font-weight:400">My eyes widened at this revtion, remembering just how much trouble the ‘Void God’ had caused. “That seems… like a rather high chance for something so dangerous, doesn’t it?” I asked, but Chelsea surprisingly shook her head.
<span style="font-weight:400">“It might seem that way at first, but the reproduction time of the void golems is actually fairly slow. Given that they have to not only awaken themselves, but also gather the information necessary to create the new temte, there have only been three Void Gods that have awakened during thest twenty years.”
<span style="font-weight:400">“Currently, Tubrock and Leowynn have reached an agreement to have these golems serve as a defense force in the void, protecting against any particrly nasty enemies.”
<span style="font-weight:400">That sounded good, at least. Chelsea turned a corner, holding her hand up against a panel next to a door, opening it and inviting me inside. “Right now, our biggest concerns are the merger experiment and deciphering more of the Keeper Code.”
<span style="font-weight:400">Beyond the door, I could see a viewing room, overlooking more than fifty researchers sitting at their own terminals. Inside the viewing room was Treisha, who smiled and nodded at me as I entered. “Nothing new to report yet.” She said to Chelsea, who shrugged her shoulders.
<span style="font-weight:400">“Just showing him around.” She said, before looking at me again. “This is where the main research happens. Here, the researchers are using the uncovered code to try to reverse engineer its meaning. To date, we have realized that the code itself uses a tier system, simr to magic and various other items found within the system.”
<span style="font-weight:400">“The mutation of the code doesn’t simply ur randomly when new code is introduced, but rather is a result of the increase inplexity forcing the code to advance from one tier to the next. Before we understood this process, the change looked random, and we weren’t able to predict what would cause it. Unfortunately, the increase in codeplexity can lead to unexpected problems when it interferes with other code, so we have to n even more carefully to take this into ount.”
<span style="font-weight:400">“That’s right.” Treisha said with a long sigh. “In other words, we’re having to learn multiple programmingnguages on a universal scale, simply by reverse engineering what already exists. We should have the first tier cracked soon, and at that point we will be able to create a mundane world without any special characteristics. As for anything past that… we’re still trying out best to understand the higher levels.”
<span style="font-weight:400">Hearing the code exined to me like this, I could understand why their progress had been so slow over the course of twenty years. Until now, the only code that Ashley or Chelsea had concerned themselves with were the codes found within the game system aspect of the world. Now, they had to look into codes which essentially represented thews of physics, determining how to apply gravity, or simply defining what light was.
<span style="font-weight:400">I definitely did not envy them for this work, and realized why they needed to hire so many extra personnel in order to get their work done. “How do you test to see if the code that they reverse-engineer is correct? Surely you can’t do it all at once, because you wouldn’t be able to understand which part of the code was faulty.”
<span style="font-weight:400">Chelsea groaned, giving a small nod. “That’s right. We have a lifeless testing world that I got with the allowance you gave me. Whenever a new chunk of code is deciphered, we implement it there with Ashley’s help and measure the results. If the world is destroyed… well, that’s a few points down the drain and the knowledge that the code was wrong. If we get the desired effects, we save it in our database. Speaking of which, I’ll be needing a bit more for research funds before too long. I’m down to myst thousand.”