emailconfirmed, Administrators
15,041
edits
NateBumber (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
NateBumber (talk | contribs) mNo edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
During the [[War in Heaven]], the '''Army of One''' technique was a way to replicate soldiers' [[biodata]] used by the [[House Military]] to create the [[Cwejen]] and by [[Michael Brookhaven]] to create his [[House of Seven Gables]]. | During the [[War in Heaven]], the '''Army of One''' technique was a way to replicate soldiers' [[biodata]] used by the [[House Military]] to create the [[Cwejen]] and by [[Michael Brookhaven]] to create his [[House of the Seven Gables]]. | ||
During the War, mass-production of soldiers through regular [[clone|cloning]] was insufficient, since they were created with blank [[biodata]] profiles and were therefore left vulnerable to mass erasure by [[the enemy]]. To circumvent this problem, the House Military developed a plan to diffract the [[timeline]] of a single individual into a full strikeforce. They chose as their subject agent [[Christopher Rodonanté Cwej]], re-engineering his relationship to [[history]] so that an army of [[Cwejen]] could be stably created in the 29th year of the War. Despite this being an unmitigated success, the House Military's later replication attempts were met with grisly failure. | During the War, mass-production of soldiers through regular [[clone|cloning]] was insufficient, since they were created with blank [[biodata]] profiles and were therefore left vulnerable to mass erasure by [[the enemy]]. To circumvent this problem, the House Military developed a plan to diffract the [[timeline]] of a single individual into a full strikeforce. They chose as their subject agent [[Christopher Rodonanté Cwej]], re-engineering his relationship to [[history]] so that an army of [[Cwejen]] could be stably created in the 29th year of the War. Despite this being an unmitigated success, the House Military's later replication attempts were met with grisly failure. | ||
The only other successful application of the Army of One concept was [[Michael Brookhaven]]'s [[House of Seven Gables]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Book of the War (novel)|The Book of the War]]'') | The only other successful application of the Army of One concept was [[Michael Brookhaven]]'s [[House of the Seven Gables]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Book of the War (novel)|The Book of the War]]'') | ||
[[Category:Technology in the War]] | [[Category:Technology in the War]] |