Difference between revisions of "Logs:Key-Glyph"

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| Every time I board Nada and Polo’s anomaly I hold my breath for Warp Reactor Theta.  This last visit still wasn’t my lucky break in that regard, but instead I found a wonderful multitool that is not only a huge improvement over my recent upgrade, but is colored silver, just like the first tool I traded for.  It even has the white and yellow striping I loved so much.  I still don’t know why this sentimentality matters to me.  Is it just in my programming to be this way?  Or is this another outlet for me to cherish the small bank of memories I’ve managed to collect in this life?
 
| Every time I board Nada and Polo’s anomaly I hold my breath for Warp Reactor Theta.  This last visit still wasn’t my lucky break in that regard, but instead I found a wonderful multitool that is not only a huge improvement over my recent upgrade, but is colored silver, just like the first tool I traded for.  It even has the white and yellow striping I loved so much.  I still don’t know why this sentimentality matters to me.  Is it just in my programming to be this way?  Or is this another outlet for me to cherish the small bank of memories I’ve managed to collect in this life?
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[[File:Key-Logs-052.jpg|center|400px|caption]]
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So, I will continue to wait for Warp Theta, and continue to grind for a freighter.  It’s becoming clear to me that I will eventually have to trade in my Gek-upgraded Yakomaku if I’m going to survive more difficult pirate skirmishes.  I hope I’ll have a freighter by then, but if not... I think I’ve committed to moving on.  This astounds me, considering how vehemently I believed I would never part was with my beloved Maku, my planetary lifeboat.  But the picture is bigger now, and my responsibilities are bigger too.
 
So, I will continue to wait for Warp Theta, and continue to grind for a freighter.  It’s becoming clear to me that I will eventually have to trade in my Gek-upgraded Yakomaku if I’m going to survive more difficult pirate skirmishes.  I hope I’ll have a freighter by then, but if not... I think I’ve committed to moving on.  This astounds me, considering how vehemently I believed I would never part was with my beloved Maku, my planetary lifeboat.  But the picture is bigger now, and my responsibilities are bigger too.
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The first one I opened was a hydroponics bay.  To enter it felt almost reverent.  Beautifully organized specimens lined the walls in troughs extending toward the center of the room.  I picked samples from them all.  I have a personal policy of never felling trees or bushes unless absolutely necessary, so having access to these bays will make gentle carbon gathering that much easier.
 
The first one I opened was a hydroponics bay.  To enter it felt almost reverent.  Beautifully organized specimens lined the walls in troughs extending toward the center of the room.  I picked samples from them all.  I have a personal policy of never felling trees or bushes unless absolutely necessary, so having access to these bays will make gentle carbon gathering that much easier.
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[[File:Key-Logs-053.jpg|center|400px|caption]]
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The second door I went through was eerie.  It opened onto a small workshop with sentinel parts strewn about -- specifically the doglike sentinels that are deployed when planetside conflicts escalate.  The workshop was empty but not abandoned; a sentinel dog was perched half-built on the wall, and diagnostic reports in multiple corners were still running.  It’s as if someone was only just there.  I’m unsettled by the feeling that someone could come back at any moment.
 
The second door I went through was eerie.  It opened onto a small workshop with sentinel parts strewn about -- specifically the doglike sentinels that are deployed when planetside conflicts escalate.  The workshop was empty but not abandoned; a sentinel dog was perched half-built on the wall, and diagnostic reports in multiple corners were still running.  It’s as if someone was only just there.  I’m unsettled by the feeling that someone could come back at any moment.
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And in a huge coincidence, only a few days after deciding to eventually part with my ship in the name of progress, the fateful moment occurred.  While at a trading post, a vessel unlike anything I’d ever seen caught my eye.  It was so unusual that I involuntarily exclaimed as I jogged over:  “What is that??”
 
And in a huge coincidence, only a few days after deciding to eventually part with my ship in the name of progress, the fateful moment occurred.  While at a trading post, a vessel unlike anything I’d ever seen caught my eye.  It was so unusual that I involuntarily exclaimed as I jogged over:  “What is that??”
  
This ship turned out to be an S-class “exotic” that improved upon my upgraded Yakomaku by roughly 50% in all categories.  I also had the suspicion it was extremely rare, possibly never to be seen again; I had never encountered an S-class vehicle of any kind before, let alone an “exotic” one.  When I realized it looked like a squid creature when in flight, the deal was sealed.  I could not let it slip away.   
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This ship turned out to be an S-class “exotic” that improved upon my upgraded Yakomaku by roughly 50% in all categories.  I also had the suspicion it was extremely rare, possibly never to be seen again; I had never encountered an S-class vehicle of any kind before, let alone an “exotic” one.  When I realized it looked like a squid creature when in flight, the deal was sealed.  I could not let it slip away.
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[[File:Key-Ship03-AguchoruS41.jpg|center|400px|caption]]
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I sat in the cockpit for a while, getting used to the view and plotting out where to install various upgrades.  This ship -- the Aguchuoru S41, as it’s called -- also has a considerable number of extra slots in comparison to my Maku, making installations much, much easier.  I had been feeling the crunch of limited space on my multitools and ship recently, and had even resorted to uninstalling and swapping components when necessary.  No more.  Now things are settled, with room to grow.
 
I sat in the cockpit for a while, getting used to the view and plotting out where to install various upgrades.  This ship -- the Aguchuoru S41, as it’s called -- also has a considerable number of extra slots in comparison to my Maku, making installations much, much easier.  I had been feeling the crunch of limited space on my multitools and ship recently, and had even resorted to uninstalling and swapping components when necessary.  No more.  Now things are settled, with room to grow.
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Fugtnin-Sijax, Zaifur IV, Ozyory IV, Edvela XIX -- I will come back to you.
 
Fugtnin-Sijax, Zaifur IV, Ozyory IV, Edvela XIX -- I will come back to you.
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[[File:Key-Logs-054.jpg|center|400px|caption]]
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As if they can sense what I’m about to do, Nada and Polo intercept me.  For the first time since buying the blueprints I stop to think about what I’m doing and what it could mean.  Should I go back to Pabackyermi again to tell my crew what is happening?  I didn’t even think to have that conversation at the time.  And Nada and Polo... what will become of them?  Should I say goodbye, or will that make them worry?
 
As if they can sense what I’m about to do, Nada and Polo intercept me.  For the first time since buying the blueprints I stop to think about what I’m doing and what it could mean.  Should I go back to Pabackyermi again to tell my crew what is happening?  I didn’t even think to have that conversation at the time.  And Nada and Polo... what will become of them?  Should I say goodbye, or will that make them worry?

Revision as of 00:05, 21 November 2019

These are the recovered personal logs of the Lost Traveller Key-Glyph, which were posthumously accessed by the Beacon-Entity.

They are categorically defined by Key-Glyph's distinct emotional phases.

Innocence

Grief

Foreboding

Determination

Courage

Conviction

Doubt

Despair

Recovery

Anticipation

Rememberance