The pursuit was noble, but the end is nothing except solitary nonexistence. It isn't the Hexcore's fault. The arcane doesn't understand individuality, ethics. There was a problem, and it found the simplistic solution.
[He glances idly around the shop, shifting through a few of the comics.]
Their minds are secure, but the world is vacant. I misjudged.
There is safety in uniformity. It's true, the violence was gone. The suffering, the sorrow. But so was everything else. Uniformity means no humanity.
[Love mistakes. Love making mistakes out of nobility.]
It was... missing something. A piece of the puzzle. Through every timeline, I give Jayce one as a boy: a crystal with a glyph. Failure. But in one, Jayce will succeed. That probability is there. One glyph will work.
You were right. There is no way to bypass humanity.
[ oh he loves old man viktor for finally getting his point, actually. ]
... it took my partner 117,649 years to get it right. A world where everything was perfect. The probability was low, but it wasn't zero. And as long as it isn't zero, it has to happen.
[ all because of humanity. ]
Greatness is other people. It's a fact that can't be changed.
As long as it isn't zero, it's possible. It may take Jayce a similar amount of time. Who knows? The me who finally doesn't meet him ever again perhaps.
[If time works that way at all, in every chaotic twist of it. Then he'll know.]
Greatness is the life you experience with other people.
The you twisted up in the arcane doesn't seem to agree. So the question is, where is that life where you accomplish creating Hextech without giving up that piece of yourself?
A battle between who I am and the linear path the Hexcore needs to follow. It's why getting rid of my emotions was an acceptable process. You understand better than anyone, I'm sure. What being a machine means in terms of solving problems with straightforward solutions.
[He glances up.]
That life doesn't exist. At least, only exists for a short while. [He doesn't know about Sprace Viktor.] Without the Hexcore, I succumb to my illness in every timeline. There is no cure for us for a failing body outside of darker, riskier science.
Unless Jayce finally succeeds, then perhaps I have a life all my own again past my illness.
I do. [ of course he does. of course he understands what a machine can do, but at the same time... ] But even straightforward answers need a bit of humanity attached to them. Other people have an impact no matter how much you think otherwise. There are some things you can't achieve without them, even if you're skilled.
[ kiraman, thinking of his girlfriend beating it into his skull that other people actually matter. ]
There has to be an answer that doesn't involve the merge. [ the answer is jayce in this instance, and it all goes back to other people. ] ...in every timeline except that one? Then... isn't the answer finding a timeline to set Jayce on an earlier path?
[He does not disagree. Now, that is. Before too, probably, when he was just a man.]
It is a delicate process. Dimensional time.
You see, Jayce needs me as much as I need him. His dream of magic wouldn't exist without me showing him its wonders. This is a simplification; we are not accounting for the weave of everyone else, those "other people" you mentioned.
They have their own timelines, and any minute divergence of them can vibrate the web. All I can do as I am is go back and offer Jayce another rune to use in the grand puzzle of our design, to give him a warning later about its dangers.
Perhaps he will, perhaps he has held the correct rune to create a perfect world with our Hextech dream. I won't ever see it, but a version of me will. Just like the version of me you've met here has reached the end of the path. Jayce has stopped him.
A self-contained loop. [ this feels familiar in ways he isn't entirely on the up and up about, but enough that he can grasp the concept. a universe where the actions were foreseen and the potential was seen, but actions were taken to push the other actions into fruition. ]
You're talking about chaos theory. Even with minute changes, there are patterns interwoven to each universe where the outcome will always, eventually, end the same way. Until you break the pattern. In that case, then what will this version of you do next? What if this wasn't really the end of the path?
[Caspian just squinting into the mirror with Viktor.]
That is up to him. So long as he does not make the same mistakes I did. It was always up to Jayce to show me that. He will have to see it, hear it from himself.
[ and here, kiraman goes quiet and seems to be thinking. things have worked out enough for him, but this is now just his own curiosity driving the questions. ]
Does that scare you? Leaving your work up to someone else in the end.
I didn't have another option. [ this does not answer if he was scared or not. ] A lonely existence shouldn't be a dead end. But for now, trust is all you have. For now.
[ kiraman going "what if upload but slightly left?" ]
[ this isn't wrong, even if it goes deeper than that. maybe viktor doesn't need to know the whole story though. ]
... the process of uploading allows a person to leave their body behind. Their mind, or a digital copy of their subconscious, is uploaded into the cloud without any restraints. The number of embodied humans left is very, very small.
Perhaps your version and my version are not as different as we think then. Everyone's minds were gathered into a single collective inside the space the Hexcore gave with the arcane. Their bodies became mechanical tethers instead.
The difference is they retained their individuality and their humanity. All of their thoughts and their emotions are their own. The cloud isn't a collective. Not like yours.
The space was interwoven. Their lives were interwoven. Thoughts and feelings were shared indiscriminately. But their minds were all connected to the conduit of the source: me.
Depends. Will he try to become the source in the center of what's meant to be an open world? The UIs already fought for their right to exist among the embodied. They don't need a conduit when they are meant to live freely.
no subject
[He glances idly around the shop, shifting through a few of the comics.]
Their minds are secure, but the world is vacant. I misjudged.
no subject
It values uniformity. [ hm... ] What... would you have done differently then?
no subject
[Love mistakes. Love making mistakes out of nobility.]
It was... missing something. A piece of the puzzle. Through every timeline, I give Jayce one as a boy: a crystal with a glyph. Failure. But in one, Jayce will succeed. That probability is there. One glyph will work.
You were right. There is no way to bypass humanity.
no subject
... it took my partner 117,649 years to get it right. A world where everything was perfect. The probability was low, but it wasn't zero. And as long as it isn't zero, it has to happen.
[ all because of humanity. ]
Greatness is other people. It's a fact that can't be changed.
no subject
[If time works that way at all, in every chaotic twist of it. Then he'll know.]
Greatness is the life you experience with other people.
no subject
no subject
[He glances up.]
That life doesn't exist. At least, only exists for a short while. [He doesn't know about Sprace Viktor.] Without the Hexcore, I succumb to my illness in every timeline. There is no cure for us for a failing body outside of darker, riskier science.
Unless Jayce finally succeeds, then perhaps I have a life all my own again past my illness.
no subject
[ kiraman, thinking of his girlfriend beating it into his skull that other people actually matter. ]
There has to be an answer that doesn't involve the merge. [ the answer is jayce in this instance, and it all goes back to other people. ] ...in every timeline except that one? Then... isn't the answer finding a timeline to set Jayce on an earlier path?
no subject
It is a delicate process. Dimensional time.
You see, Jayce needs me as much as I need him. His dream of magic wouldn't exist without me showing him its wonders. This is a simplification; we are not accounting for the weave of everyone else, those "other people" you mentioned.
They have their own timelines, and any minute divergence of them can vibrate the web. All I can do as I am is go back and offer Jayce another rune to use in the grand puzzle of our design, to give him a warning later about its dangers.
Perhaps he will, perhaps he has held the correct rune to create a perfect world with our Hextech dream. I won't ever see it, but a version of me will. Just like the version of me you've met here has reached the end of the path. Jayce has stopped him.
no subject
You're talking about chaos theory. Even with minute changes, there are patterns interwoven to each universe where the outcome will always, eventually, end the same way. Until you break the pattern. In that case, then what will this version of you do next? What if this wasn't really the end of the path?
no subject
That is up to him. So long as he does not make the same mistakes I did. It was always up to Jayce to show me that. He will have to see it, hear it from himself.
no subject
Isn't there a way to send back some sort of message to make sure those mistakes aren't made? If Jayce is that influenced, maybe he'd listen.
no subject
I already have. He has visited me in the world I destroyed. The rest is in Jayce's hands now.
no subject
Does that scare you? Leaving your work up to someone else in the end.
no subject
There is nothing left except myself and mechanical skeletons. I am more afraid of the understanding I will exist in lonely solitude.
I trust that Jayce can do it in at least one timeline.
no subject
I didn't have another option. [ this does not answer if he was scared or not. ] A lonely existence shouldn't be a dead end. But for now, trust is all you have. For now.
[ kiraman going "what if upload but slightly left?" ]
no subject
Neither did I.
[Kiraman was probably scared. He doesn't hold it against the guy.]
Your plans are to interfere. What are you going to try, to help a dead and controlled man?
no subject
anyway kiraman frowns to that. ]
... you asked me before if I was human. What were you assuming?
no subject
]
Your technology differs from what is available in Piltover and Zaun, perhaps even Runeterra.
[The true digital part.]
The way you spoke about yourself or your past, it simply gave the impression you had transcended the confines of mortality, humanity.
no subject
... the process of uploading allows a person to leave their body behind. Their mind, or a digital copy of their subconscious, is uploaded into the cloud without any restraints. The number of embodied humans left is very, very small.
no subject
Perhaps your version and my version are not as different as we think then. Everyone's minds were gathered into a single collective inside the space the Hexcore gave with the arcane. Their bodies became mechanical tethers instead.
No one is left anymore.
no subject
no subject
[Similar.]
You plan to accept him into your flock?
no subject
no subject
[The goal is good, the execution is atrocious.]
If your oasis is as stable as you say, then there would likely be no need to become sovereign within it.
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)