The Mods of LifeAftr (
lifeaftr_mods) wrote in
aftr_ooc2018-05-13 08:42 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
Entry tags:
TEST DRIVE MEME ( 011 )
Test Drive Meme #11
Hello, and welcome to LifeAftr! We’re pleased that you’re expressing an interest in the game. Here, you can test the waters, gauge how your character may fare in the world of LifeAftr, and even gain some in-game incentives, if you so choose.
Remember that Reserves will open on May 17th, and Applications on May 24th!
Two important notes:

Remember that Reserves will open on May 17th, and Applications on May 24th!
1. LifeAftr's test drives take place on the island of Mu, which exists apart from the real world and possesses a dream-like quality that characters are innately aware of from the moment they appear on its shores. No need to panic or fret. Dreams are odd things, after all - and anything can happen in them. Why would anyone question where their mind chooses to wander in its sleep?
2. Due to the nature of Mu, threads in our test drive can not only be accepted as thread samples in your application, but can be accepted as game canon as well. In fact, certain choices your character makes in Mu have the potential to bear in-game consequences, largely in the form of test drive reward items.

Damn It, Todd
The island breeze is cool and pleasant, temperature-wise. The sun is beaming cheerfully overhead, and the waves lapping up against the beach are a crystalline aquamarine. The place may as well be a postcard, with how picturesque it is: from the thick copses of palm trees to the soft white sand, it's a truly gorgeous, becoming setting.
It makes up for the chaos of its inhabitants.

We don't just mean in the general sense, either. At random intervals, you may find yourself being launched several feet in the air by an invisible abuse of physics, or clipping through trees at breakneck speeds. Maybe you're walking around several feet above the ground, or your hands are much larger than the rest of you. Regardless, the possibilities are virtually endless and promise to be, for the most part, quite harmless for those afflicted - just very annoying. Whether you're swimming in the air, repeating the same lines of dialogue over and over again, or stuck halfway through the ground, it's not clear how one is meant to undo these glitches once they set in.
You could always try helping each other! Though that may simply make things worse; who can say if these glitches might bleed into one another and complicate things even further?
(Oh, and they do. They absolutely do.)
This is Dragonna Suck
When you wake in a lovely, tranquil woodland, it perhaps seems too good to be true. The trees are dense with canopies flowering overhead, and the grass has formed a thick, plush carpet on the forest floor. There's the sound of birds chattering happily in the branches, and the rustle of forest creatures in the undergrowth. That's around the time that a loud, angry roar splits the silence, and something very large and very green barrels into the clearing you occupy with large, barklike claws.

Rootwyrms move slowly, thanks to the turtle-like shell that sits astride their back in lieu of wings, but they make up for this by hitting quite hard in a fight. Instead of breathing fire, rootwyrms spit a caustic, stinging acid if they can't get close enough to their prey, though they'll be more than happy to try and dispatch you the old-fashioned way: with an extremely large set of reptilian jaws.
Did we mention they don't like trespassers? And that you're standing square in the middle of their territory?
You're Pollen My Leg!
The open spread of the grasslands allows for a clear view of the cloud-scudded sky. This particular setting is that of a meadow, vast and seemingly infinite, hosting a sweeping expanse of rolling hills. The wind's rippling over the fields of rich green and buff-colored grass lends itself to the impression that the hills are in constant motion, as if you're standing in the middle of a verdant ocean.
Naturally, such is not the case. As you roam the landscape, you'll probably notice the dollops of color sprinkled here and there: flowers growing in bright clumps amidst the tufts of grass.

There are five variants you may encounter in your dream-travels, each of which will have a different result, depending on the color.
[ ♆ ] Blue flowers will induce short-term amnesia and general confusion. Forgetting your sense of identity, difficulty discerning the difference between right and left, and an intense sensation of vertigo are all common side effects.These status effects can and will stack, by the by. Maybe start up a little game of pollen bingo, and see how many fanfiction tropes you can rack up in one day.
[ ♆ ] Red flowers will make you intensely and inconsolably angry at just about everything. You know that guy who chewed gum behind your ear that one time? Fuck that guy! That person over there, with the yellow shirt? Fuck their shirt! Yellow is a stupid color, and you're stupid for wearing it!
[ ♆ ] Green flowers will induce a loss of one important sense - sight, smell, taste, touch, or hearing - though loss of powers is also known to have occurred.
[ ♆ ] Purple flowers will induce silence. We hope you aren't very talkative by nature, or that you can communicate exclusively via rude hand gestures, because now you can't speak at all.
[ ♆ ] Orange flowers will fill you an indescribable terror regarding just about everything. The slightest motion, the most innocent hello, the most harmless small animal - all will tap directly into every primal fight-or-flight response to danger you have.
no subject
There's that, at least. It doesn't hurt. She's not really surprised he hadn't found anything; she hadn't felt anything. Nothing had happened, her vision had just...disappeared. She looks around, helplessly, in the dark. "Wash...do you remember...coming here? You said you were...somewhere called Chorus. Did you leave there? Did you come here, do you remember?"
no subject
What does that mean for her? Did she wake up here too, after getting - what is it the report said? Something about Agent Texas using a titanium-grade axe, and the armor being a total loss.
The agent, of course, wasn't the priority.
"What about you?"
no subject
She shakes her head, eyes shifting away automatically, even if she can't really make eye contact, so she can't avoid it, either.
"I don't remember, either. How I came here. I was...I just appeared, and then I saw you, and..."
And nothing else had mattered, when she'd found Wash screaming, all but tearing himself apart in anguish. She takes in a deep breath.
"I don't know where we are, exactly, but I know it isn't good. We have to try...We have to try to get out of here. Please. Before...before anything worse happens."
no subject
"Look, right now...the worst that's happened is you've lost your sight, and I've lost my - " And I've lost my shit. " - memory."
There's a joke there about how many times has that happened, right? but he bites it down before it can worm its way out. Not a good time for it. Whether that instinct belongs to him or someone with slightly more advanced talents in interacting with people without making everything worse, he can't say. "It might not be permanent. It could be the atmo, or..."
Fuck. With Connecticut out of commission, he's the only one who do any spotting.
"All I see is just...grass. For miles. And flowers too, I guess, but there's nothing - no door or anything that might show how we got here."
no subject
"Wash, listen to me." She steps closer. She hopes. "Something like this happened to me before. That's why...that's why I'm here, that's why I'm alive, because they brought me back, somehow. They..." She bites her lip, thinking. "They kidnapped people. From all over, from across time, even, and they stuck us together and took our memories and...and made us kill each other." She takes a breath, wishing she could see his face. See how he's reacting to this. "They made us murder innocent people just for a chance at escape."
no subject
"We don't know for sure if that's what's going on right now. Right now, it's just us. I don't see anyone else." He tries to follow that up - tries to say her name, like that might assure her that he's starting to become relatively compos mentis, but she'd introduced herself as Connie and a memory of her snapping that it makes her sound like a fucking kid stops him dead. C.T.?
Was that his memory?
"Do you know who...they were?"
no subject
Right now, it's just us. Yeah. She's been trying to not think about that. To not think about the fact that she'd somehow been brought here, wherever here is, from Kirkwall, and Varric's not at her side. She swallows past the sudden lump in her throat, the sudden stab of loneliness and uncertainty, and nods.
"It was...a television network. They were broadcasting us, for entertainment, and..." She turns her head, not because she can look around at the moment but more as if she's listening, as if expecting someone to be there, watching them. "We stopped them. Exposed them. They should all be in prison now. But...I don't know."
no subject
“Didn’t look anything like this, did it?” She’s blind right now, moron. Immediately, he backpedals with a wince that’s as pointless as the apology. “I mean - sorry, I meant more like...this place looks like a meadow, and I don’t see anything that looks like your typical kind of surveillance.”
Even the sim trooper outposts had reasonable places to survey from a distance, purely by design. And this kind of hilly grassland is he opposite of ideal.
no subject
"No. It was - we were on a ship, and then there was a station. But...there was a VR component, too. They could make it look like we were anywhere. A mall. A city." She takes a breath. "I don't even know if we're really here right now."
no subject
Focus.
Focus.
Focus.
"Okay," he says slowly, trying to steady the tremor threatening to overtake his tone. A flash of something he's trying not to be. She keeps calling him Wash. Remember that. Remember the dimple of a tiny hint of a smile on one side of her face. Remember the sound of her panic, paralleled with the way she calms when there's something physical here to anchor her. "Okay, so we...confirm what's real. Were you asleep? How was it...simulated, do you know?"
no subject
She can't see his face, can't pick up on any body language giving away just how hard he's still fighting to keep it together. But she does notice how long it takes him to respond, each second of silence seeming to stretch interminably without any way for her to tell what's taking so long. If he's going to answer at all.
But he does, and she makes herself just concentrate on the words instead of what's wrong with Wash and where are we and where's Varric and am I ever going to see again.
"We were...frozen. Cryostorage. Our consciousnesses were uploaded into...Something. I don't know." She shakes her head. "I wasn't...I wasn't one of the ones who got us all out." She bows her head, in shame. She'd tried, of course, but she'd been dead by then, dead a second time, and there wasn't much she could do.
no subject
No one thinks like that. You're just overreacting. You've always been hard on yourself, Connie.
There's that name again. He knew her. Or someone in his head did, one of the voices that manages to shrink back when the others scream twice as loud. Connie.
"What about tells? Glitches in the matrix, stuff like that?"
no subject
And now, maybe, she's back again. She shakes her head.
"The whole simulation was failing, near the end. There were too many of us, too much of a drain on system resources. Before that, though..." She wrinkles her brow in thought, and starts to pace back and forth - small, tentative steps, because though she knows they're in an empty field it's still a little terrifying stepping where she can't see. She's got to move, though, even if only a little. "I don't...I don't think so. It looked real. It felt real. It...it still hurt, when..."
When her own knife had been plunged into her chest, and she'd bled out a second time.
no subject
She doesn't finish. That doesn't imply anything good, but what's he supposed to say? She can't see, and he can barely remember who he's supposed to be. A right pair they make to sort this shit out.
"Okay. Okay, so we...figure out if that's what's happening, and we break out the way everyone else did last time. Easy." That sounds a bit too optimistic. Easy doesn't really correlate with a virtual reality where people's deaths are broadcasted for someone else's entertainment. "How'd you all manage that?"
no subject
"We had help from the outside, for one thing," she says sourly, and then stops pacing, voice rising again as she throws her hands in the air. "And we aren't going to do anything. How can I help figure out what's happening if I can't even see?"
no subject
She can't see, and he's lost a good chunk of...whoever he's supposed to be. That doesn't add up. There's no impetus that makes the slightest bit of sense for their afflictions to be the way they are, and there's nothing here save for a bunch of multicolored flowers -
A bunch of multicolored flowers.
He's not a scientist (one of him is a doctor, but it's hard to say which), but discerning whether a planet's atmo is breathable is a pretty basic function for anyone's equipment. Breathable, sure. But not without its irregularities.
Flowers. Some chemical anomaly in the atmosphere, so faint as to be almost undetectable. An echo murmurs something about residual heat signatures and follows it up with a flat, in the desert, dry enough to desiccate oceans. But that would be - way too simple, right? Way too simple. Dumb, even. No. Yes? No.
"Oh my god," he mutters, torn between incredulity and ball-splitting frustration. "It's - the flowers. Connie, I think it's the fucking flowers."
no subject
"What's the flowers?" she mutters caustically, hardly caring about the answer, because he's not making any sense. And then - shit. Wash had been past the edge of sanity when she'd found him, screaming and babbling and using voices that weren't his own, and now he's not making any sense. She glances in his direction, unseeing eyes wide and worried, and starts to scramble to her feet. "Wash...?"
no subject
"There was this patch of blue ones, and suddenly I...don't remember who I am. And then we walk over here, and - " Yep, he's got sights on them. Bright green. "Most pollen isn't a contaminant unless it's toxic. Filtration systems wouldn't catch that. I mean, it doesn't make much sense, but what about any of this makes sense?"
no subject
"...Green flowers." She looks around, as if pinpointing the (possible) cause of her blindness will cure it, then shakes her head. "But I know who I am. And you can still see." For now. She swallows. "Why wouldn't they affect us the same way?"
no subject
The longer he talks, the more...maybe the word confident doesn't really apply, but it feels more familiar, an instinct for stacking words into the silence. Did he know people like this, who were just generally laconic and needed someone to fill their ears with noise in the absence of anything else?
Something about that feels right.
"Either way, I don't think we're in trouble yet. Not...critically, anyway. This could be temporary, or just some kind of simulation experiment, or...anything."
no subject
"Okay..." She's still not sure she buys it, but honestly, it's the best theory they've got right now. And the only one that doesn't involve some unknown, untouchable power controlling everything about what they're experiencing through some VR interface for their own malicious purposes.
Wash sounds like he believes it, anyway. His eager rambling is almost familiar (though not from any interaction she'd ever had with Wash) and so optimistic that she can't help but start to feel a little hopeful too. "So...what do we do about it?"
It's not as though they can kill all the flowers.
no subject
"Weeeee..." He stalls out like an idling engine, straining to rope something of what he remembers into a useable fucking skill or implementation or something. "We...try and find someplace isolated. Somewhere we can think without more shit going wrong."
no subject
Besides, this is Wash. Without being able to see him, without that visual reminder of how much he's struggling to control the different personalities battling for dominance in his head, all she has is his voice in the dark. It's easy to just cling to it like a lifeline, to trust him to - at least - get them both out of this immediate crisis.
"Right." She nods, swallowing. "Is there...Can we get out of the field? Away from the pollen?" Maybe they'll be lucky, and the effects will wear off as soon as they get away.
no subject
So here's the part where he does another sweep of their surroundings, and notes that, nope, it's pretty much all grass. Pretty much all just field as far as the eye can see. Rolling green-gold waves pocked with vibrant blooms that at least stand out enough to be avoided. Assuming that little batshit theory is correct.
There's not much reason to keep his helmet on; CT can breathe fine without it, and it's not filtering out whatever's making them lose their heads. He thumbs the seal with a faint pneumatic hiss.
She might not be able to see it, but let all parties be advised that Agent Washington has always and will continue to have helmet hair like a motherfucker.
He breathes in, long and deep. It takes a few lungfuls, but he picks up on something that's so quintessentially Earther that it makes something in his chest spool up. Nothing to do with the girl from Texas, because that was such an integral piece of her (the smell of eggs, the swarming of red-brown dust, hair that glinted under the full heat of the southern sun). Everything to do with an inner city west coast kid who can recognize the crisp littoral air cut with salt.
"I think we're near the ocean. It might not be a way out, but it's somewhere that isn't here."
no subject
She does hear the hiss of his helmet releasing, and that's interesting enogh that she raises her head, even if it doesn't do any good. Wash had always been keener than most to keep his helmet on, even on the ship. She'd heard he'd even tried to eat wearing it, once...
Finally, he speaks again, and her expression turns hopeful. The ocean isn't exactly an escape, not unless they happen to stumble across a fully stocked and unattended boat on their quest, but...at least flowers can't grow on the beach.
And it's something. Better than standing around doing nothing. CT nods, once and then more firmly, setting her jaw.
"Okay." She takes a breath. "Okay." She pauses for a second, and then reaches a hand out, expectantly.
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)