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Luceti Mods ([personal profile] lucetimods) wrote in [community profile] lucetilogs2012-09-21 10:46 pm

MISSION #11 - Droid Sabotage

Who: Field Leader: Steve Rogers; Security: Alia Shepard, Sophie, Rogue, Greg Lestrade, Gai Tsutsugami, Masaomi Kida, Leonhardt; Stealth: Trafalgar Law, Fujiko Mine, Nara Shikamaru, Albert Silverberg, Loki; Technicians: Donatello, Artemis Fowl II, Daisy, Tony Stark; Programmers: Robert Hastings, Pascal, Doctor “Eggman” Robotnik, Raine Sage
What: MISSION # 11 - Droid Sabotage
When: September 21st-23rd
Where: Malnosso Facility C-342
Summary: A mutual friend of MARS and Luceti has made arrangements for a select few of Luceti’s number to even the odds against the droids.



Excitement was not how the mission to disrupt the production of Malnosso droids started. On the first day, the selected participants were brought in by bus to a small laboratory in the middle of the forest. There they were greeted by a voice that should be familiar to them due to a recent message over Luceti’s journals. That voice belonged to the woman they knew as Rem. She stood before them with her customary cigarette.

“This is quite a momentous occasion. So momentous, in fact, that it makes fraternizing with the Organization almost worth it. We all have a long few days ahead of us and while I’m sorry to say I can’t go once more unto the breach with you -- the rogues don’t take too kindly to Lucies like me,” she gave a bitter cluck of her tongue and fluttered her large wings, “but I will be keeping tabs from a remote location. You have some time here to get your schemes in order but once you’re inside, we can’t extract you until your twenty-four hours are up. So be careful, dears. Believe it or not? I’d hate to see your smeared and smudged all over their factory.

Most of you will be focusing on getting your brainiacs into the code room. Watch out for Kidston -- she’ll do whatever she can to keep you out. She’d burn the wings off her own back to protect her precious droids. But the rest of you will have to put your infiltration and disguise skills to the test while you distract the rest of the facility. Plan carefully and do what you must. However high the cost, remember that the prize could very well be an end to droid abductions as you know th--”

A soft beeping interrupted her speech. Rem tapped ash off the end of her cigarette and swore somehow rather elegantly before touching an earpiece and presumably activating a communication device. As she walked off, her words could still be heard: “Damnit, you ungrateful blue toad. My life went much smoother before I ever crossed the rubicon and gave you my num--what am I wearing? Ugh. Nothing, dear Biliruben. It’s causing quite a stir with the volunteers...”

Following her address, the participants were introduced to two other individuals: a technician and a programmer, and both were accomplices of one Biliruben. The technician was a younger man named Thoxus Brinn, a pointy eared fellow adorned with piercings from the tip of his ear to the bottom of his chin. Even so, he was surprisingly knowledgeable and incredibly jovial, possessing a knack for math-related jokes. He no doubt inspired many groans from the Lucetians in the hours to come. The programmer was a woman of indeterminate age. She was, as they found out, actually an android. Not of Malnosso design, but from another world. Her small wings gave her away and her designation was merely The Eighteenth. Often impatient, she created an impression of barely disguised indignation at having to work with Lucetians. Though if anyone cared to ask, it was revealed she simply didn’t like dealing with biological beings.

For forty-eight hours, these two would be their primary guides: instructing them in the schematics in the physical design of the droids as well as their programming. It was grueling work, but important information would be gleaned from it:
  • The base code for the droids programming is heavily encrypted and self-erased with even the mildest of tampering. However, the code’s higher level programming language is very easy to learn and implement. Though the droids possess no less than a billion lines of code, each piece of it is easy enough to read and understand for a proficient programmer. The Malnosso devised a very sophisticated language which allowed the droid’s programming to be wildly efficient. In combat situations, they can extrapolate millions of potential reactions from their target. It is estimated that in any given combat scenario, they have a total of two minutes and forty-three seconds already plotted out.
  • Their primary power source is a continuous Shift, which uses a single battery, possessing less electricity than a car battery, that was cycled infinitely into itself for a power source that never expired. This, along with the computer processor, is tied into a chip made from an unnamed element that was native to this world. This element is incredibly versatile, able to be altered into the shape of nearly any composition. More importantly, the element can be used to produce and stabilize artificial Shifts. Embedded at the heart of the chip is a single piece of this element, no bigger than a grain of sand, that makes the whole thing work. Only another Shift can alter these ‘chips’. The cultists can do this with ease.
  • The droids are constructed from a unique metal alloy that combines titanium with a diamond-based metal. This makes the droids incredibly difficult to damage, explaining their superiority in combat. This alloy is made in the same facility where the droids are themselves assembled. The technicians are encouraged to introduce impurities or imperfections to make them more vulnerable.
  • Unfortunately there is little information on the new variation of droids. The facility they were being manufactured in had been closed down after a recent breach in security. They have yet to find out where they are currently being manufactured.

    For the same forty-eight hours they had, the group was given full access to droid data, comfortable quarters, regular meals, and any other comforts that could be made available. Participants who are not scientists were instead supervised by a Malnosso security officer named Foreman Zapha, an incredibly strict woman who does not tolerate imperfection. By the time she was done with the security and stealth experts, they’d be able to blend in with the Malnosso without issue.
    This includes instruction on such elements as:
  • Facility layout, including access points and significant time spent familiarizing the participants with detailed floorplans.
  • A brief jargon tutorial, where Zapha goes over terminology typical to the Malnosso presence in this building.
    • Feather First Analysis (FFA): A security protocol based on identifying an individual’s unique wing make up, called a feather bio-print.
    • Chief Programmer Kidston: The head boffin at the facility. She is well-known for her commitment to the rogue cause and it is her feather bio-print that accesses the core server room. However, Zapha warns the participants that she is likely to self-sabotage her own pair of wings and risk a death penalty should she even begin to suspect that someone is going to knock her out and drag her to the security check.
    • J.J. Kelms: A VIP who is touring the below-ground facility around the same time as the mission. ‘Kelms’ is an assumed name for someone who is supposed to be part of the core Organization’s upper echelon and he is being wined, dined, and recruited over to the rogue splinter cell.
    • Narrow Creek Mountain: The name of the resort and vacation complex that comprises the facility’s above-ground presence. Although higher-ups in the Organization suspect it to be a front for rogue activity, it remains a highly popular vacation destination and pulls in a number of high profile visitors on a monthly basis. At the time of the mission, the center is hosting a well-known bubble fiction convention.
    • Enclosure-Con: A fan-convention for all things related to the genre of bubble fiction, a category of television shows, movies, comics, and other media that romanticizes and fictionalizes what it must be like to live in the Malnosso enclosures. Although the fiction very rarely gets it right or uses actual names or events from actual enclosures, those involved in the genre have highly involved fictional versions that are very popular with most audiences. Notable titles include the blockbuster Barcoded trilogy; the long-running soap opera, Of A Feather; a gritty and bloody graphic novel called I, Resident; and an up and coming young adult series, First Draft Chronicles. An up and coming movie called Two’s Company will have a never-before-seen trailer at the convention, depicting a comical situation where two very different enclosures are forced to live together and learn to get along. It appears as though a large majority of the fans are large-winged.
    • Lucies: It turns out this is apparently a derogatory term used by beyond-the-barriers society to refer to those individuals who were born in the world and who possess large wings. Zapha does not explain the term’s origin.
    • Free the Test Subjects Association (FTSA): A protest group that is actively engaged in trying to dismantle the enclosure system. They are known for their dramatic stunts (such as kidnapping high-ranking Malnosso representatives and forcefully tattooing barcodes on their neck). A very vocal contingent is on-site protesting Enclosure-Con for ‘glorifying and exploiting’ the enclosure situation.

  • An overview of the building’s security system. The rogue Malnosso facility uses an outdated protocol generally seen as barbaric by the bulk of the Organization’s cells: FFA, otherwise known as Feather First Analysis. In a world where magic and Shifts allow hostiles to readily alter their own eyes and fingerprints, wings are found to be the only trustworthy identification method. As such, they are prime targets for security checks. Each participant (scientific and supportive) is given a single feather that Zapha assures them possesses a valid DNA code for entrance to the facility. She also alerts the participants that random electronic sweeps are made throughout the building and so each participant had better hold onto their feather -- to lose it means to expose the entire operation.
  • Building upon this last point, the core processing room for the droids’ source code is protected by a more advanced piece of FFA technology. A single feather is useless to access this room and instead the infiltrators will need to bypass the full-wing scan set up just outside its door. Zapha explains that there are only roughly two options available: find the Chief Programmer and use her (or more accurately, her wings) to access the room or force the room’s door and incur a response from the building’s security team.


    ----

    On the third day, the participants are separately escorted to the facility at different times. The facility itself is built into a mountain and most of it exists underground. To outside eyes, it’s merely a mountain resort, with ski lifts and tourists. On the inside, it is far more complex and insidious. This is no 9-5 job in play here. Those who work here, live here and have barracks where they sleep. Its primary purpose is for droid construction. There will be no kidnapped victims here. Though the complex has its own security guards, it is primarily maintained by a staggering number of droids fitted for a wide variety of roles.

    The participants will need to organize themselves into teams. While one group intends to escort the technicians and programmers to where their work can be completed in the core code room and assembly line, another group will be responsible for choosing and carrying out a secondary objective that will serve as a distraction tactic. There are three options:
  • Destroy Resort - 90% success chance
    • Pros: Cripple facility by drawing attention to it, effective and quick
    • Cons: Cost of innocent lives, frames the FTSA as terrorists


  • Ruin or Disrupt Enclosure-Con - 80% success chance
    • Pros: Easy, accessible, non-violent.
    • Cons: Nothing gained, further villainizes and marginalizes the efforts of the FTSA, could take considerable time.


  • Kidnap Bureaucrat - 50% success chance
    • Pros: Cripple organization with ransom, obtain information, keeps all activity out of the public eye.
    • Cons: Very dangerous, jeopardizes mission, time-consuming.


    What we need from you: Who will be on which team? How does Team A choose to get into the code room -- will they risk trying to subdue Kidston or will they force the doors? Which distraction option will Team B choose? How will they go about enacting their plan? Use this post to plot oocly. Each player will get a chance to vote for one of the three options here, which will ultimately decide what is done on the mission. A random number generator will determine the success of the selected diversion.

    If everything runs smoothly, the participants will be collected and returned on the 22nd in the late evening. However, if the mission is compromised then a strike force will start a calculated sweep of the building and the participants will enter a combat situation. Foreman Zapha has darkly informed the groups that should this happen, it is unlikely that the Malnosso will provide support within the building itself until the mission’s deadline. However, regardless of whether the diversion succeeds, the droids will be sabotaged for the foreseeable future.

    Should the diversion fail, the participants will be returned individually over the course of the next week, suffering from the typical kidnapping effects. Although their sabotage of the droids will have succeeded, the rogue organization will be more on guard in the future and may be potentially brutal to those returned (at the discretion of the individual players).
  • chikaidestroyer: (Contemplative)

    [personal profile] chikaidestroyer 2012-09-23 07:00 pm (UTC)(link)
    [A crash course in Malnosso terminology and general mission prepping. Albert has gone through it before, and the first night is something of a small relief after learning the scope of the mission before them.

    He sees Shepard as he's heading towards his room with a kit for hair dyeing. He nods at her in greeting; she had to go through the same intense briefing he had today, so there's a degree of familiarity there.]


    One day down.
    risingshepard: Attention. (Hmm.)

    [personal profile] risingshepard 2012-09-23 07:14 pm (UTC)(link)
    One more to go before we put all this into action.

    [Not even the slightest tension, even as she stops to give a routine salute.]

    Maybe it's just me being a cynic, but I get this feeling our group isn't as perfect as it should be.
    chikaidestroyer: (Green contemplation)

    [personal profile] chikaidestroyer 2012-09-23 08:06 pm (UTC)(link)
    [He snorts, glancing back down the hallway.] If Foreman Zapha has her way, we will be as perfect as we can be by tomorrow. For a ragtag group of volunteers.

    But I doubt many of us expected any different at this point.
    risingshepard: "Smelled your greatness", huh? // Shepard, exasperated and getting migraines. (Can't talk; stupid getting to me.)

    [personal profile] risingshepard 2012-09-24 10:38 pm (UTC)(link)
    Ragtag is one way to put it. [She wasn't unobservant; there was a bit of conflict here and there that she couldn't ignore. If it got out of hand, it'd turn their mission into the biggest dud since the one she had in her homeworld, on Horizon. It makes her rub her temples a bit.]

    Not the first time you've worked with her, huh?
    Edited 2012-09-24 22:40 (UTC)
    chikaidestroyer: (Nonchalance)

    [personal profile] chikaidestroyer 2012-09-25 02:40 am (UTC)(link)
    [He shakes his head faintly.] Our contacts here? No, this is a first. But the Organization does enjoy putting residents into these quick turnaround situations with thrown-together teams.
    risingshepard: Side-eyeing you so hard. (So suspicious.)

    [personal profile] risingshepard 2012-09-25 02:42 am (UTC)(link)
    I reiterate: they must really love their jobs.

    [A small echo to what she'd said to him during the Kin'cora mess. Isn't that a surprise.] Or have a thing for choosing the wrong people for ops this big.
    Edited 2012-09-25 02:42 (UTC)
    chikaidestroyer: (Green contemplation)

    [personal profile] chikaidestroyer 2012-09-25 02:45 am (UTC)(link)
    They seem to think that any volunteers from the Luceti enclosure will do just fine. We have not given them any reason to think different at this point. [Which had been advantageous and what he had actively worked towards with the drafts.]
    risingshepard: Attention. (Hmm.)

    [personal profile] risingshepard 2012-09-25 02:49 am (UTC)(link)
    Surprising, given the age range back there. Then again, only a handful of the residents look even the least bit normal. [That was as much as she could see, anyway.]
    chikaidestroyer: (Glancing upward)

    [personal profile] chikaidestroyer 2012-09-25 02:53 am (UTC)(link)
    Ah yes, the age range. The demographics of Luceti do seem to skew to the teenage to young adult range. You would not think by their ages that a good number of them are famous or have helped save their own worlds at some point.
    risingshepard: Side-eyeing you so hard. (So suspicious.)

    [personal profile] risingshepard 2012-09-25 11:24 pm (UTC)(link)
    I must be getting old if even kids are saving their own homes. [Rather dryly--not that she's insulting them, but she does feel just a little bit jealous for the youth.]
    chikaidestroyer: (Thoughtful frown)

    [personal profile] chikaidestroyer 2012-09-27 08:47 am (UTC)(link)
    You and me both. I know of wars won by kids, but entire worlds is something quite different.

    [He tilts his head faintly, ironically.] But when one has such a variety of worlds to compare, I suppose it shouldn't be surprising. I'm sure there are a number of worlds out there that have been saved by people much older than us.
    risingshepard: Alert. (Mulling it over.)

    [personal profile] risingshepard 2012-09-28 10:25 pm (UTC)(link)
    Or they at least had a hand in setting things straight, yeah. I should know, someone who's lived for at least a century back home was part of my crew once.

    ...Though the fact that she's a long-living sentient might make her an exception.
    chikaidestroyer: (Green contemplation)

    [personal profile] chikaidestroyer 2012-10-01 07:44 am (UTC)(link)
    It sounds as if you have had your share of well-ranged crews. I admit that I have not heard much of your experience beyond your rank as a commander.
    risingshepard: (Default)

    [personal profile] risingshepard 2012-10-01 10:44 am (UTC)(link)
    That's an understatement if I've ever heard one. [...Hmm. Now that he's brought it up...maybe it'd do them both some good if they had a little small talk; gets the tension for the mission out of the air, and all.] What's yours like, anyway?
    chikaidestroyer: (Contemplative)

    [personal profile] chikaidestroyer 2012-10-04 04:11 am (UTC)(link)
    My crew? [He muses aloud at her inquiry, his lips curling into a wry smile.] I am a war strategist, not a field leader. But I suppose I have had experience with both the well-organized, trained troops and a more ... unpredictable sort.