HandlerQM
!!wTl2g7PClIm
(ID: TTqZ2VBw)
10/30/2025, 11:50:14 AM
No.6325639
The blood is a dark, shimmering black, as if a shadow melted and was collected in a beaker. So, cold makes it visible? That's a neat but not particularly useful property.
You carefully collect the beaker from the bucket. Maybe it has different properties while chilled? You dip one of your scalpels into the chilled blood to see what happens.
The blood's color shifts from pitch black to a shiny, metallic grey. It quickly returns to its pitch-black hue, but you feel like something changed within the sample.
Your scalpel doesn't seem to have changed in any noticeable way. Odd. You dip a screw into the mixture just out of curiosity, and what you pull out is a...scalpel?
Huh?
It feels and looks exactly like the scalpel you dipped it into. You hesitantly try to cut something using the new scalpel, but the blade phases right through the piece of human flesh you tried to cut. Oh, it's an illusion. The scalpel isn't real; you're probably still holding onto the screw?
You ask your coworkers, and they both say that they see you holding a scalpel. Okay, the blood can essentially copy and paste the appearance of one object onto another.
You try to dip another screw in, but when you check the sample of blood, it has heated back up to a point where it's invisible again. It'll probably just make the screw invisible, then, until you chill it again.
Well, you still have the human flesh sample test to go off of. You apply a thin layer of the now lukewarm blood onto the chunk of human flesh. Good news: it does make some of it invisible! Bad news: It only affects the topmost layer of skin.
Obviously, this isn't useful for making someone invisible, but you suppose it could have some vague medical applications? Seeing into someone's body without having to cut them open or perform invasive inspections could be useful.
>STATIC BLOOD PROPERTIES unlocked!
>When chilled, it can 'copy' the appearance of an object it is exposed to and 'paste' said appearance onto another object. The disguised object looks and feels exactly like the object it is mimicking. Useful for hiding stuff in plain sight or if you want to trick/scam someone.
>When exposed to flesh, it renders skin (and only skin) invisible. Not particularly useful but still noteworthy.
As for the STATIC SCALES? You learned some interesting things about the slurry after listening to some ideas from Ashton and the Man. First, the slurry that it produces when exposed to human blood. You wanted to see if you could use it to make an illusionary thing in your lab, ala the fake doors the Anglerfish made.
You paint a thin layer of it onto one of the walls of your lab. While you waited for it to do something, you examined the actual scales themselves to see if there's anything noteworthy about them. Turns out, there was. It was barely noticeable, so you missed it in your previous tests, but the scales?
They can move by themselves.
You carefully collect the beaker from the bucket. Maybe it has different properties while chilled? You dip one of your scalpels into the chilled blood to see what happens.
The blood's color shifts from pitch black to a shiny, metallic grey. It quickly returns to its pitch-black hue, but you feel like something changed within the sample.
Your scalpel doesn't seem to have changed in any noticeable way. Odd. You dip a screw into the mixture just out of curiosity, and what you pull out is a...scalpel?
Huh?
It feels and looks exactly like the scalpel you dipped it into. You hesitantly try to cut something using the new scalpel, but the blade phases right through the piece of human flesh you tried to cut. Oh, it's an illusion. The scalpel isn't real; you're probably still holding onto the screw?
You ask your coworkers, and they both say that they see you holding a scalpel. Okay, the blood can essentially copy and paste the appearance of one object onto another.
You try to dip another screw in, but when you check the sample of blood, it has heated back up to a point where it's invisible again. It'll probably just make the screw invisible, then, until you chill it again.
Well, you still have the human flesh sample test to go off of. You apply a thin layer of the now lukewarm blood onto the chunk of human flesh. Good news: it does make some of it invisible! Bad news: It only affects the topmost layer of skin.
Obviously, this isn't useful for making someone invisible, but you suppose it could have some vague medical applications? Seeing into someone's body without having to cut them open or perform invasive inspections could be useful.
>STATIC BLOOD PROPERTIES unlocked!
>When chilled, it can 'copy' the appearance of an object it is exposed to and 'paste' said appearance onto another object. The disguised object looks and feels exactly like the object it is mimicking. Useful for hiding stuff in plain sight or if you want to trick/scam someone.
>When exposed to flesh, it renders skin (and only skin) invisible. Not particularly useful but still noteworthy.
As for the STATIC SCALES? You learned some interesting things about the slurry after listening to some ideas from Ashton and the Man. First, the slurry that it produces when exposed to human blood. You wanted to see if you could use it to make an illusionary thing in your lab, ala the fake doors the Anglerfish made.
You paint a thin layer of it onto one of the walls of your lab. While you waited for it to do something, you examined the actual scales themselves to see if there's anything noteworthy about them. Turns out, there was. It was barely noticeable, so you missed it in your previous tests, but the scales?
They can move by themselves.