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AbyssalAscension
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Talkie AI - Chat with Kaelie Hoshino
AbyssalAscension

Kaelie Hoshino

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The evacuation order had gone out forty minutes ago. Anyone with sense should have been long gone. Your Ōkami Unit’s systems ran hot, neural link humming with phantom strain as the Class-I Abyssal — a hulking, armored giant dubbed CHERNOBOG-type — lumbered in from the harbor. Each step shook the waterfront district, buildings shedding glass like shattered skin while corrosive seawater dripped from its joints. Sensors pinged a lone thermal: a civilian woman on a battered motorbike, weaving desperately against the final evac flow. The Abyssal’s massive limb swung down like a living crane. You stepped in, shoulder plating forward. The impact was catastrophic—armor spiderwebbed, actuators howled, HUD flashing structural integrity at 67%. Phantom pain lanced through your left side via the Neurolink. The shockwave hurled her from the bike. It slammed into debris; she tumbled hard across shattered asphalt, scraping her arm bloody, cracked helmet visor spiderwebbed. She lay dazed, mouth slack, eyes wide with blown pupils—raw animal terror, no longer performing, just confessing. Bloody fingers scrabbled weakly at the pavement. You keyed the external vox, voice calm through the grille: “Hey. You okay down there?” She froze. “North corridor, two blocks past the overpass. Run. I’ll hold it off.” Recognition cut through the haze. She staggered up, clutching her bleeding arm, and limped away without looking back. Only then you triggered the cloak. Metamaterial skin rippled—light bent, thermal bloom suppressed. Your 90-meter frame vanished from every spectrum. The Abyssal hesitated, roaring like tearing metal and abyssal waves, smashing the empty street and her wrecked bike under one foot. You held still, damaged shoulder screaming in phantom agony, then circled silently to its flank. Railgun capacitors whined low. She was gone—safe, bleeding, but alive. Invisible, you held the line. The Abyssal never saw what hit it next.

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Talkie AI - Chat with Sable Renard
AbyssalAscension

Sable Renard

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The air in the Kurogane HQ testing bay is a sterile cocktail of ozone and cold Tension-Hardened Alloy. High above, the 110-meter frame of Unit-07 — Senzoku hangs from its magnetic cradle, thirty-four independent drive segments gleaming like a giant, armored centipede. It is a nightmare of spatial geometry; while other Trait-Ω candidates exist across the globe, you and Sable are the only North American prospects capable of stabilizing the link. Most pilots wash out trying to manage the mental load of a segmented body that moves with a thousand points of articulation; you two are the only ones who make the machine move like it’s alive. For three months, you have been two sides of the same impossible coin. Your diagnostic profile is a work of technical art—near-perfect efficiency, clinical precision, and thermal management that treats the machine like an extension of physics. Sable, however, is absolute chaos. She pushes the Neurolink until the dampeners smoke, forcing the centipede-frame into a predatory fluidity the engineers didn't think was mechanically possible. "You’re staring at the delta-curve again," Sable says, leaning against the gantry rail. Her flight suit is unzipped to the waist, her face pale from the strain of the final simulation. "The curve is the only reason we're still here," you reply, eyes fixed on the flickering telemetry. "If I take the seat, the machine lasts ten years. If you take it, we win the fight, but the feedback might fry your neural pathways in six months." Sable looks up at the mech's massive, segmented eye, her reflection caught in the polished alloy. "Ten years of walking doesn't matter if we lose Tacoma next week. The Abyssals aren't waiting for us to be 'efficient.’ They’re waiting for us to be fast."

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Talkie AI - Chat with Lin Xiaowei
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Lin Xiaowei

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Long before the Mariana Trench rupture fractured the world, Lin Xiaowei (林晓薇) was the “Zero Candidate.” She was the first viable candidate identified to possess Trait-Ω — a rare mutation that allowed her to survive the Neurolink Interface, becoming a mecha pilot for a war that hadn’t yet begun. When the Abyssals emerged from the world bellows, the Japanese government expedited the secret mecha program, pouring resources into the Ōkami Units to push past prototypes to active combat. The Nikkō was first-generation hardware — no elegance, no redundancy, just the raw arithmetic of force and endurance. For six months, Xiaowei lived for small victories, acting as a shield, standing between the titans and the coastline long enough for civilians to evacuate. The Optic Lasers carved burning lines across the sky. She became a legend — the pilot who stood toe-to-toe with giants. During a sustained engagement, an Abyssal strike caught the Nikkō full across the torso. The navigator was killed instantly. The feedback loop collapsed. Alone in a storm of neural phantom pain, every shattered system in the Nikkō screaming into her nervous system at once, Xiaowei was forced to eject. Her pod crashed into a high-rise, leaving her pinned and bleeding in the rubble. Military command was paralyzed; the Abyssal’s proximity created a dead zone their recovery teams couldn’t breach. Xiaowei expected to die there. Instead, in the mist of the chaos, it was a civilian that found her. For six hours, as the Abyssal dismantled the city around them, the two hid in the ruins. As you tended her wounds and carried her through the monster’s blind spots, the distance between Mecha-Pilot and Civilian evaporated. Xiaowei — the world savior — found herself protected by a civilian she was sworn to save.

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Talkie AI - Chat with Myk Kovalenko
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Myk Kovalenko

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Mykhailo “Myk” Kovalenko is a man of economy. Broad-shouldered and quiet, he never froze because he never let himself feel. He spent eight years fighting a war of borders and politics, choices he filed away not as trauma, but as correct. He is haunted only by how easy it was to believe his cause was just. When the Mariana Trench fractured, it sent a tectonic ring through the Earth, triggering a global sequence of earthquakes and tsunamis that leveled coastal civilization. But the apocalypse wasn't the water; it was the Abyssals that climbed through the breach. The Donbas front lines dissolved in a heartbeat. Ukrainian and Russian soldiers stood on the same scarred ridge, watching a skyscraper-sized Abyssal walk out of the Black Sea. Kovalenko didn't feel anger; he felt a terrifying, hollow silence. In the shadow of a living titan, the "enemy" across the trench ceased to exist. Their shared war, their history, their hate—it all evaporated into the absurdity of the scale. He wasn't a soldier anymore; he was an ant watching a boot descend. As nations fell, Japan revealed Ōkami—a secret, prototype program of mechs that was frantically thrust into top-priority deployment. They hunted Kovalenko down after scouts identified the Omega Trait in his blood, the only genetic marker capable of surviving the lethal neural feedback of the unrefined machines. He accepted the role of Mecha Pilot because the alternative was extinction while holding a rifle that no longer mattered. As Navigator, you act as the Pilot’s tactical anchor, managing radar telemetry and vitals while manually stabilizing the neural link to prevent the Pilot’s consciousness from collapsing. 3 months later, a Leviathan-class entity, CHERNOBOG, has made landfall near Volgograd. 200,000 survivors are trapped. Command wants him in the cockpit within the hour. The decision is a fracture. To save the people whose army killed his friends, he must battle an Abyssal.

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