The Jeffinator
Captain Manbeard
- Joined
- Mar 13, 2005
- Posts
- 8,365
The year is 2084. Despite strict regulations set in place by the Abordeen Accords, a secret contract between the U.S. Air Force and Ligerdine BioTech Solutions was written for the purpose of creating genetically enhanced super soldiers from cloned DNA. The old military facility at Groom Lake, Nevada was re-purposed for this project, which officially began back in the early 2040s. After countless failed attempts and setbacks, a stable formula was perfected and a batch of new clones were born from artificial wombs between 2060 and 2065. Today, these clones are between ages 19 and 24.
Our characters are either these clones, or the staff at Groom Lake. Regardless, the clones were essentially used as child soldiers, programmed to follow orders and act as spies or assassins in a variety of locations around the world. We've been doing this for years, and even though we are all now legal adults, we still continue to serve because we don't know any different. Our biology is not fully human, being spliced with animal and synthetic augmentations. This gives us advanced stamina, agility, strength, and physical senses, as well as extreme regenerative healing and a slew of different powers. I'll let each of you design what abilities your clone has.
We are each equipped with a cybernetic implant at the base of our brain stems, which reinforces our compliance training and promotes more robotic thinking. In a way, the implant makes us sort of like organic androids, and that's how we've been since birth.
Where the story really launches off is when we are deployed on a mission to Siberia to infiltrate and eliminate an underground research facility operated by the resurrected Soviet Union. As it turns out, this was a trap and they knew we were coming. A former military scientist had defected and given the Soviets details on our implants, and so once we are inside the facility, their computer is able to wirelessly sync with our implants and upload a virus to try and reprogram us to serve them. But this ultimately fails and we are able to escape.
On the plane back to Groom Lake, it turns out the virus seems to have affected our implants after all and they experience a system crash. For the first time in our lives, we are suddenly free from our programming and begin having independent thoughts. Some of us begin experiencing guilt over the people we've killed, and anger at the scientists and military leaders who did this to us.
The plane is controlled by AI and set to go back to Groom Lake, and so ultimately we parachute out while it is passing over the forests north of Portland, Oregon. When the plane arrives back at the base, the staff begins panicking when they see it is empty and start sweeping the country looking for us. We are essentially on the run at this point. The story can go anywhere from here, and I'm open to ideas
.
Our characters are either these clones, or the staff at Groom Lake. Regardless, the clones were essentially used as child soldiers, programmed to follow orders and act as spies or assassins in a variety of locations around the world. We've been doing this for years, and even though we are all now legal adults, we still continue to serve because we don't know any different. Our biology is not fully human, being spliced with animal and synthetic augmentations. This gives us advanced stamina, agility, strength, and physical senses, as well as extreme regenerative healing and a slew of different powers. I'll let each of you design what abilities your clone has.
We are each equipped with a cybernetic implant at the base of our brain stems, which reinforces our compliance training and promotes more robotic thinking. In a way, the implant makes us sort of like organic androids, and that's how we've been since birth.
Where the story really launches off is when we are deployed on a mission to Siberia to infiltrate and eliminate an underground research facility operated by the resurrected Soviet Union. As it turns out, this was a trap and they knew we were coming. A former military scientist had defected and given the Soviets details on our implants, and so once we are inside the facility, their computer is able to wirelessly sync with our implants and upload a virus to try and reprogram us to serve them. But this ultimately fails and we are able to escape.
On the plane back to Groom Lake, it turns out the virus seems to have affected our implants after all and they experience a system crash. For the first time in our lives, we are suddenly free from our programming and begin having independent thoughts. Some of us begin experiencing guilt over the people we've killed, and anger at the scientists and military leaders who did this to us.
The plane is controlled by AI and set to go back to Groom Lake, and so ultimately we parachute out while it is passing over the forests north of Portland, Oregon. When the plane arrives back at the base, the staff begins panicking when they see it is empty and start sweeping the country looking for us. We are essentially on the run at this point. The story can go anywhere from here, and I'm open to ideas
