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7/17/2025, 2:25:23 PM
>Spend time investigating this room. It’s an archive, there could be valuable data in here. See if you can find anything to fill the server backpacks you have on.
"Let's take it easy for a bit." You declare.
"Yeah, I could use a rest..."
You assign the three Digimon to the door, in case any more Commandramon come in. Meanwhile, you head towards the walls of file directories.
"What do you think these are?" Bella asks.
Liza is already pulling one off the shelf to examine it.
"Requisition logs! These are past records of search requests. Look-"
She lifts up a file that's been freshly decrypted using one of Squid's algorithms. All of these files are locked, but they can't hold up to the quick-acting tool that she's passed to the team. It displays the location it was sent from, the Digimon it required, and the reason why. This is a file chosen at random, so it's old and irrelevant. This bot needed a 'Meramon' deployed to a bricked partition in order to unfreeze it by incinerating data. There's a linked response file resolving the incident, stating that one had been located and obtained from 'Conservation Zone X'.
Just like you suspected, the exterior wedge of the city map is being used to house Digimon. It's a largely unbreachable zone, unfortunately, but that's where they get rarer creatures from. You look through a few of the adjacent files. Many of them are repeated routines, and the bulk involves regular scan reports for baby Digimon. You assume that they're collecting fresh younglings to grow new Espimon and Commandramon.
"Where's the DNA?" Liza asks impatiently.
"It might not be in here at all." You conclude. "This is a pretty accessible room. I think they'd be guarding key information elsewhere."
"What can we do here, then?" Bella asks.
You shrug and shove a few files into your backpack.
"We just collect whatever we can. If you don't want to browse, just stuff it inside at random. We can jettison it later to save space if we need to. Maybe there'll be some locations in here that could come in handy."
These logs have 2 sets of mapdata. The first is the origin point of the message, brought by the mail tubes. The second is the location that the scanner has returned. The rest is all about incident resolution, written in binaric shorthand. If you don't get the scanner, Squid might still be able to pinpoint specific Digimon by observing the trends in these logs, and comparing similar requests. This is the lowest-priority for data, but it's better than nothing.
"Let's take it easy for a bit." You declare.
"Yeah, I could use a rest..."
You assign the three Digimon to the door, in case any more Commandramon come in. Meanwhile, you head towards the walls of file directories.
"What do you think these are?" Bella asks.
Liza is already pulling one off the shelf to examine it.
"Requisition logs! These are past records of search requests. Look-"
She lifts up a file that's been freshly decrypted using one of Squid's algorithms. All of these files are locked, but they can't hold up to the quick-acting tool that she's passed to the team. It displays the location it was sent from, the Digimon it required, and the reason why. This is a file chosen at random, so it's old and irrelevant. This bot needed a 'Meramon' deployed to a bricked partition in order to unfreeze it by incinerating data. There's a linked response file resolving the incident, stating that one had been located and obtained from 'Conservation Zone X'.
Just like you suspected, the exterior wedge of the city map is being used to house Digimon. It's a largely unbreachable zone, unfortunately, but that's where they get rarer creatures from. You look through a few of the adjacent files. Many of them are repeated routines, and the bulk involves regular scan reports for baby Digimon. You assume that they're collecting fresh younglings to grow new Espimon and Commandramon.
"Where's the DNA?" Liza asks impatiently.
"It might not be in here at all." You conclude. "This is a pretty accessible room. I think they'd be guarding key information elsewhere."
"What can we do here, then?" Bella asks.
You shrug and shove a few files into your backpack.
"We just collect whatever we can. If you don't want to browse, just stuff it inside at random. We can jettison it later to save space if we need to. Maybe there'll be some locations in here that could come in handy."
These logs have 2 sets of mapdata. The first is the origin point of the message, brought by the mail tubes. The second is the location that the scanner has returned. The rest is all about incident resolution, written in binaric shorthand. If you don't get the scanner, Squid might still be able to pinpoint specific Digimon by observing the trends in these logs, and comparing similar requests. This is the lowest-priority for data, but it's better than nothing.
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