[There's still a layer of separation between Add and Mizuki, so what should be a red flag is merely an interesting blur in the distance... Dynamo, meanwhile, is trying to translate all the data coming through. They're used to handling thoughts and feelings, but seaborn brain signals and human brain signals are apparently very different. The machines on the outside beep inquisitively, relaying the "message" back to Add.
... something about it seems off, but that's probably because the chip needs calibrating, right? Add hums quietly to himself, hand to his chin.
He shoots a message back, as per testing protocols. This time, the human influence is unmistakable—emotions and thought stripped down to a basic message, but there's roughness around the edges, tiny imprecisions, like uneven lines in paper cut by hand, filtered down through Dynamo. It sounds like Add, but only because he wants it to. It's not really words, not really sound, but instructions on how to replicate his words exactly.
Different in what way? I'm detecting some interference, so it may be from that.
There's another layer to it, stripped down even further to the most basic information and mixed with a touch of machine code: explain; confirm interference? A quicker form of communication that removes the need for actual words. A habit.]
no subject
... something about it seems off, but that's probably because the chip needs calibrating, right? Add hums quietly to himself, hand to his chin.
He shoots a message back, as per testing protocols. This time, the human influence is unmistakable—emotions and thought stripped down to a basic message, but there's roughness around the edges, tiny imprecisions, like uneven lines in paper cut by hand, filtered down through Dynamo. It sounds like Add, but only because he wants it to. It's not really words, not really sound, but instructions on how to replicate his words exactly.
Different in what way? I'm detecting some interference, so it may be from that.
There's another layer to it, stripped down even further to the most basic information and mixed with a touch of machine code: explain; confirm interference? A quicker form of communication that removes the need for actual words. A habit.]