Rinzler / Tron (
notglitching) wrote in
thisavrou_log2016-05-15 04:56 am
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
Entry tags:
You'll come back when they call you
Who: Alan, Rinzler, and mostly-open!
When: May 14-16
Where: From the planetary Ingress to the Grid and back
What: Rinzler gets stuck in his old life and people go to get him back.
Warnings: Rinzler things and Tron canon. Depression, violence, NPC-murder, and copious references to genocide, mindscrew, etc. All culminating in... BSOD by warm fuzzies?
When Rinzler had first left the Grid, getting back was all that mattered to him. More—it was all he was capable of caring about. Directive and function were locked in alignment, every line created by a thousand cycles of correction pulling him the same way. Rinzler was the Grid's enforcer. Clu's weapon. He was perfect, he was right, and he belonged at his administrator's side.
Since then, he's spent months trapped in a user shell. He's spilled blood and lost fights, flown through half a dozen different skies and learned what stars look like. He's spoken. He's been listened to. He's shattered to a thousand pieces on lost memories, and cut himself on the truth they left behind. He's killed users. He's met [his] [Tron's] creator, and disobeyed his will.
It's painfully fitting for that to be what brings him back to the beginning. Rinzler is home, Rinzler is back, and everything is how it should be except him. Directive is a frayed leash, function warped by too much time spent wanting. Clu's voice still locks every process to obedience, but even as he bows and follows, Rinzler can't stop the squirming twist of terror underneath. He'll kill Clu's enemies. He'll serve exactly, precisely as directed. But the enforcer has always been unstable, always in need of fixing (breaking) to keep him working as desired.
Sooner or later, Clu will open up his code to check. And then, it won't matter how well he's fit himself back to the mold. His programmer will correct each flaw and imperfection, remove those memories and reset him to automation.
It's nothing Rinzler can fight. Nothing he can run from here, and even if he tried, there's nowhere to go. The ship already feels much too distant, but Rinzler remembers enough to know his absence will only bring relief. He'd been a disruption. A threat. Tron was the one the users wanted, and even that had never been enough before.
No one is coming, and nothing will change.
[[ooc: this is open to anyone signing on for the rescue effort here! As below, prod freely with any questions. Alan's monitoring things from the Ingress-side, and will make sure people get where they're trying to go.]]
When: May 14-16
Where: From the planetary Ingress to the Grid and back
What: Rinzler gets stuck in his old life and people go to get him back.
Warnings: Rinzler things and Tron canon. Depression, violence, NPC-murder, and copious references to genocide, mindscrew, etc. All culminating in... BSOD by warm fuzzies?
When Rinzler had first left the Grid, getting back was all that mattered to him. More—it was all he was capable of caring about. Directive and function were locked in alignment, every line created by a thousand cycles of correction pulling him the same way. Rinzler was the Grid's enforcer. Clu's weapon. He was perfect, he was right, and he belonged at his administrator's side.
Since then, he's spent months trapped in a user shell. He's spilled blood and lost fights, flown through half a dozen different skies and learned what stars look like. He's spoken. He's been listened to. He's shattered to a thousand pieces on lost memories, and cut himself on the truth they left behind. He's killed users. He's met [
It's painfully fitting for that to be what brings him back to the beginning. Rinzler is home, Rinzler is back, and everything is how it should be except him. Directive is a frayed leash, function warped by too much time spent wanting. Clu's voice still locks every process to obedience, but even as he bows and follows, Rinzler can't stop the squirming twist of terror underneath. He'll kill Clu's enemies. He'll serve exactly, precisely as directed. But the enforcer has always been unstable, always in need of fixing (breaking) to keep him working as desired.
Sooner or later, Clu will open up his code to check. And then, it won't matter how well he's fit himself back to the mold. His programmer will correct each flaw and imperfection, remove those memories and reset him to automation.
It's nothing Rinzler can fight. Nothing he can run from here, and even if he tried, there's nowhere to go. The ship already feels much too distant, but Rinzler remembers enough to know his absence will only bring relief. He'd been a disruption. A threat. Tron was the one the users wanted, and even that had never been enough before.
No one is coming, and nothing will change.
[[ooc: this is open to anyone signing on for the rescue effort here! As below, prod freely with any questions. Alan's monitoring things from the Ingress-side, and will make sure people get where they're trying to go.]]
Final Bossfight and Escape: closed to Frisk, Asriel, and Tron to start; OTA later
Disk Wars!
[The person you came to the Grid to find is nowhere in sight, but certainly the screaming thousands in the stands seem grateful for your presence. Maybe you were caught on the streets without a disk. Maybe you were found somewhere more sensitive, or placed your trust in the wrong friends. Whatever your crime, the Grid only has two sentences—and is it really a surprise two programs as small and weak as yourselves were passed over for repurposing?
Asriel and Frisk have been separated from the others for a while. They've been processed through the Armory, equipped with disks and the basic conscript suit. They've stayed their turn in the cells. And now, their locked compartments hover upward through the air over the stadium, two cells out of sixteen that shift and hover as the anticipation swells. A gold-lit ship is docked above, but certainly the crowded stands are far too packed for any number of watchers to be spotted. Interfering, on the other hand, will prove difficult. Especially in time.]
All combatants prepare for Disk Wars.
[A cool, calm voice announces from above as the cells line up, releasing their passengers at either end of a set of long, translucent cages. Programs step forward, eying their opponents warily as they reach behind. The disks that come forward hum with ready, eager light, and if Asriel's and Frisk's appearances might gather some strange looks, it's nothing that will hold their fellow captives back. Not now.
Welcome to the Games, children.
It's kill or be killed.]
Initiate.
no subject
Frisk flips out of the way of that one, every nerve alight with the sense of danger. Dodging one bullet like this is hardly a challenge, even with the odd bounces, but no matter what they shout to the other nothing seems to make them stop. And with pieces of their side shattering away...they're getting nowhere with this. It's just like Undyne!
Part of the side shatters open, and when Frisk looks on reflex they see Asriel in a similar struggle. Their heart seizes and without any thought for the danger involved Frisk leaps for the hole to * Flee the battle and start climbing out. They have to find a way over to him, and quickly!
no subject
Everything happened so fast - their capture, him losing Frisk almost immediately, having his clothes removed and replaced with a strange glowing suit and a disk attached to his back. The crowd shouting earns a flinch as he stumbles out, disoriented and unsure of what he's supposed to do.
The answer comes quickly as his opponent aims a disk at him. Asriel stumbles back, hopelessly searching for an exit.
"Please, we don't have to do this...!"
The plea goes unheard, of course, as the disk is launched at him. Asriel scrambles to dodge, crouching down and covering his head as he slides to the end of the area. And when he glances down, he sees Frisk trying to climb out.
"Frisk!"
no subject
There's shouts, alarms going off somewhere nearly drowned out by the din of the crowds. They don't know if Asriel can even hear them.
"Stay alive! I'm coming!"
Scrambling onto the top of the cell, Frisk takes a moment to gain their footing and judge the distance between their cell and Asriel's...on that side, they can make a jump that far! Running over, Frisk makes a wide banking turn to keep their momentum before leaping across and (by the grace of sheer luck) landing heavily atop Asriel's cell.
no subject
The program on the other side seems completely unfazed by the interruption, instead using the distraction to try and take out Asriel now. Within seconds, the disk comes flying back and Asriel tries to roll out of the way.
It's kill or be killed here. The thought automatically enters his mind - but he can't, he won't. He doesn't want to kill anyone.
They have to escape somehow.
no subject
But wait, they were given one of those disks as well, weren't they? Frisk scrambles to pull it off the dock on their back, and it lights up with a hum as they lift it overhead.
"Asriel, move!"
The disk slams down, and a spider web of cracks appear. Frisk tries again, putting all their strength into it--the third hit destroys the section completely, voxels falling to the ground in chunks before dissolving away into data. Slipping the disc back into place, Frisk pauses only to make sure the attacker's disc isn't zipping around before leaning down as far as they can into the hole, reaching for Asriel. They can't reach nearly far enough, but if he could manage to climb up high enough...
"Grab my hand, hurry!"
no subject
"I can't-!" Another whizz comes from somewhere behind Asriel, and the young monster finds himself propelling forward towards the nearest wall and trying to scramble up towards the open hole and Frisk.
Unfortunately all he does is slide back down.
More unfortunately he's left wide open for another attack.
no subject
Frisk swings down into the cell, letting go of the lip and twisting around mid-air as they fall towards Asriel. Their flailing legs just barely manage to kick the disk off it's trajectory, but not without scoring a long cut along their calf. They land with a grunt, scrambling to their feet again despite the searing pain in order to put themself between Asriel and the program attacking their brother.
"Stoppit! We don't wanna fight!"
no subject
Hidden in the crowd, Tron waits for his moment, the security protocols tight in the Arena. The moving platforms aren't quite close enough for a normal program to reach, but Tron is no normal program. A quick run, a long, reaching leap, and there, now he has the edge of the cube holding the two little Users.
Pulling himself up with a flip, he takes up a defensive stance in front of the other two and draws his discs. "Stay behind me."
no subject
"Combatant Eight. Violation."
"Combatant Eight. Violation."
"Warning. Illegal combatant."
Now? The ground settles, narrow line of the arena cage expanded to a wider playing field. The hapless program Asriel had been matched against is gone. So are the rest of them, removed from a scenario they no longer play a use in. The Games are more than just an execution, after all. They're a stage. A demonstration. Proof of what happens to those who defy the System. And the three joining forces in the cage right now have already made themselves worthy subjects for a special show.
"System failure. Release Rinzler."
A low ticking rumble echoes across the platform, mechanical and even. It only takes a glance to spot the red-orange points of light. The crowd is already whispering, a ripple of unease spreading at the dark-masked shape that crashed into the Games... but as Rinzler steps forward, disk coming free from dock to split with a sharp hum, their cheering rises to a roar.
no subject
"Frisk, you're hurt..."
Before Asriel can say anything else, the area shifts. The other programs aside from the one defending them disappear, and the announcer blares out a familiar name. Asriel's head perks up, red-orange circuits that Asriel actually recognizes this time coming into view.
It's Rinzler. They found him. It's surprising, Asriel thought it would take a lot longer (and maybe involve him and Frisk sneaking into a heavily guarded prison fortress with laser traps or something).
As anti-climatic as the dramatic search and rescue Asriel had been imagining was, he was relieved that Rinzler seemed to be okay. Now they just gotta go home together, right?
"Rinzler?"
no subject
Before Frisk can even protest Asriel's worries the area shifts around them, and Frisk holds onto their brother all the tighter, looking around for any traps or puzzles...but there's nothing. Nothing but the very familiar figure walking toward the three rescuers with violent intent. When Rinzler's disks hum to life, Frisk's soul starts beating frantically within their chest. They have a very, very bad feeling about this.
"Rinzler!"
no subject
He has to finish this quickly.
The others have already called out to Rinzler, and he hopes he's heard them, but some part of him knows that Rinzler is already in fighting mode. "We're here to take you back, Rinzler," he calls out, voice slightly distorted by the helmet. "I don't want to fight you... come with us, and we can all get out of here together."
He still holds his discs at the ready, however, standing protectively in front of the small ones.
no subject
The other shape draws more attention, and Rinzler's noise picks up just slightly as he flags the matching circuit pattern and paired disks. A mirror? Those colors (mean Tron) mean user-loyalty, but Rinzler is Clu's, has always been Clu's, always been unique and singular. Some user-coded imitation? Or a test? (Can't fail, can't stop, can't give him a reason to look—)
....something is wrong, something is missing, and he can feel fragments of compulsion failing to string together (kill the source, forget—he'd tried before in the ship halls, broken himself on those chains until they snapped). Some sort of error. Rinzler puts it out of mind, tracking each small shift. Even with questions of identity aside, it was clear from its motion that this program was the real threat.
Clear too, where its priorities lay. Rinzler's first weapon flicks out in a blur, singing across the distance of the cage in a straight shot for the mirror. Easy to dodge or avoid, but it's not the only program on this line. Doing so will force the smaller programs in the line of fire. The next disk ricochets out on an angle, bouncing off the cage walls as it tries to take the leading program from the side.
no subject
-only to let out a yelp when one of Rinzler's discs goes flying past. Asriel moves on instinct, moving his body so that he's standing in front of Frisk.
"Rinzler, stop! It's us!"
Asriel waves at him frantically.
"We heard you were in danger, so we came here to get you!"
no subject
"Rinzler, stop it! You don't have to fight us, we're here to help you!" It's the hallway all over again, but so much more dangerous. Frisk's mind is racing, but they don't know what else to do. All they can do is call out. "Please!"
no subject
His second disc is flung even as he reaches out for the first, a curving arc meant to throw Rinzler off his aim, force him back and away from them to avoid the ricochet off the back wall.
He can't derez Rinzler, not here. Even when he fought in the arena, as Tron, he never fought to derez. But Rinzler is, and Tron has two others to defend... his only hope is to incapacitate him enough to drag him out.
Sorry for the slow!
Every motion is precise and fluid. Rinzler's showing off—more, playing with his prey, and if the duplicate across the cage concerns him, there's no obvious signs. The Grid might be strange and fearful to the visitors, but it's easy to see from a glance: this is Rinzler's home. His killing ground. He's in the only place he's ever belonged, doing exactly what he's made for.
If Frisk and Asriel's calls are having much effect, it doesn't show. The enforcer's mask angles just slightly to the side, but it's analysis, not hesitation. Certainly the faint tickle of familiarity at the back of his processing doesn't seem like something to pursue. Distant memories have faded even further over the past few millicycles, and Rinzler has another task to fulfill now. The concept of responding doesn't even occur to the enforcer, and if Frisk or Asriel glance to his wrist, they'll find the MID absent.
They won't have long to check. A deliberate step forward, and Rinzler drops into another flip, hands and feet spinning across the ground in a protracted blur as he slings out one weapon. Just as before, the blow could hit his mirror or the noncombatants it's trying to defend—but this time, there's just a little more force behind the strike. And a little more taunt in Rinzler's movements. A challenge. He's in no rush to close the gap, not yet. But he is coming, and if (Tron) the threat wants to stall his attacks on the rest, it will have to come to him.