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snowblindmods) wrote in
snowblindooc2018-04-23 12:44 am
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Entry tags:
Event: Consolidation Theory; Part Two
As morning turns to day--not that anyone in the cells can tell what time it is--food is slid in through a slot that appears as if by magic in the back wall. It's oatmeal, milk, and a banana. The banana is probably the most flavorful thing there. You can eat it or not--no one will stop you from flinging the food around the cell, but then you'll be hungry. There's also a bracelet on your arm--either you didn't notice it before, or it just appeared. It's got your name and your basic information, like any medical bracelet would have, but it also has a neat list meant for doctors. If you can read that sort of thing, it mostly references drugs you're not familiar with, but on each bracelet is a reference to anisomycin. And then, over the course of the day, formless, static shapes come for you. It hurts to look at them for too long, and getting close to them makes you dizzy, so it's impossible to resist as they put you on a hospital bed and wheel you into a surgery room where other, different static things inject you and stick you with IVs. Sometimes you'll get multiple drugs at once, sometimes you'll get one, be brought back to the cell, and then get more later. Throughout the day characters in the cell will suffer from symptoms ranging from dizziness, nausea, and vomiting to delusions, hallucinations, and night terrors. The exact symptoms are up to you! You can continue using the current event post, just make sure to note when something is happening during the day! |
QUESTIONS
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2. Does the forcefield drop when the static people enter?
3. Do the static people respond like normal people in any way? John's coated part of the floor of his cell with hand soap. Is that going to slip the static people up or mess with their equipment?
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2. Yes.
3. No.
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2. Are there any other machines that a doctor, specifically might recognize?
3. Is there anything notable about the journey to the surgery room? Any other doors visible?
4. Are people taken one at a time or are there multiple procedure rooms with multiple people being taken away at a time?
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2. There's all the standard machines you'd find in an operating room, though some might be a bit hard to identify at first because they're more high-tech than modern technology.
3. The surgery room connects directly to the cells, so they only go through one door (two if you count the cell itself).
4. One at a time!
Re: QUESTIONS
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Re: QUESTIONS
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What was the food served in? I'd imagine a single serve carton for the milk, but what's the bowl for the oatmeal made of? Glass, ceramic, plastic, styrofoam, wax-coated paper.. Something else..?