Motoko Kusanagi (
prostheticbody) wrote in
maskormenace2015-03-12 02:06 pm
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Entry tags:
- † garfield logan | beast boy,
- † hub hikari | megaman.exe,
- † kasumi goto | n/a,
- † kotetsu t. kaburagi | wild tiger,
- † loki laufeyson | n/a,
- † magicman | n/a,
- † matthew lin | abduxel,
- † mitchell hundred | the great machine,
- † motoko kusanagi | the major,
- † nikita mears | wildflower,
- † nysrog | n/a,
- † riku | darkeater,
- † samara | the justicar,
- † tempo | quake woman,
- † winry rockbell | n/a
[video]
[The woman staring into the camera is (quite literally) well-built, and it's hard not to take note of her purple hair and red eyes. She's wearing a leather jacket over a low-cut gray bodysuit. Keen observers familiar with lifelike robots or prosthetics might notice something subtly artificial about her appearance, but she otherwise appears perfectly normal. Besides the hair, eyes, and questionable fashion choices, of course.]
I've been researching the history of this place on the net and there seem to be two major diversions from my own world's history: the Soviet Union's continued existence and Japan's relative unimportance on the world stage. The former is interesting because back home, I'd be standing in the Russo-American Alliance right now. And I guess we have the latter to thank for this monstrosity. [She holds up a cell phone that looks more like a brick than a high-tech communication device.] America always thinks that bigger is better.
I also seem to be the only person with a cyber-brain that I've encountered. There are hovering cars and nanotechnology, but true cyberization still hasn't taken place. I suppose that means I don't have to worry about being hacked.
I've been researching the history of this place on the net and there seem to be two major diversions from my own world's history: the Soviet Union's continued existence and Japan's relative unimportance on the world stage. The former is interesting because back home, I'd be standing in the Russo-American Alliance right now. And I guess we have the latter to thank for this monstrosity. [She holds up a cell phone that looks more like a brick than a high-tech communication device.] America always thinks that bigger is better.
I also seem to be the only person with a cyber-brain that I've encountered. There are hovering cars and nanotechnology, but true cyberization still hasn't taken place. I suppose that means I don't have to worry about being hacked.