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Changes_976 has a minion!

glub the Blob




Changes_976
Legacy Name: Changes_976


The Common Experiment #893
Owner: Merry

Age: 13 years, 11 months, 3 weeks

Born: May 7th, 2010

Adopted: 13 years, 2 months, 2 weeks ago

Adopted: February 13th, 2011

Statistics


  • Level: 1
     
  • Strength: 14
     
  • Defense: 10
     
  • Speed: 10
     
  • Health: 11
     
  • HP: 11/11
     
  • Intelligence: 1
     
  • Books Read: 1
  • Food Eaten: 0
  • Job: Unemployed


"Euclid aims the laser
at Changes and it fires!
Changes changes ..."


The lab rat



Patient's log filled out by current advising physician-scientist.
Name | Patient's real name unknown. Referred to by physician-scientists as "Patient", sometimes as "Changes". The latter is something of a nickname or joke.
Gender | ??? - subject to change. Usual convention is to refer to patient as "it" or "patient".
Personality | Volatile, unpredictable. Has lately been showing increasing signs of dissociative identity disorder; patient will not submit to psychological tests. Speaks rarely; when it does, its words are often incoherent or unfit for civilized ears.
Lab Treatment Log :
- Beginning = Female Dusk Paralix
- 2/13/11 = No change (item vaporized) | +1 Health
- 2/14 = Becomes male | Nothing happens
- 2/15 = isn't unhappy anymore
- 2/16 = Becomes female
- 2/17 = +2 Strength
- 2/18 = -1 Strength | isn't unhappy anymore
- 2/18 = nothing happens (treasure chest increased)
- 2/20 = nothing happens (treasure chest increased)
- 2/21 = transforms into a Dawn Warador
- 2/23 = nothing happens (treasure chest increased)
- 2/26 = transforms into an Experiment #893

Report by current advising physician-scientist.
[Feb. 1] The patient came to us as a volunteer. The company had lately been advertising for subjects for a dangerous medical study, with little hope of actually receiving any reply. In fact, the advertisements were all censored by the government just a few weeks after they were sent out; the study was, admittedly, morally ambiguous. But we had to try. And we were all surprised when the patient volunteered. We had managed to get a few subjects, perhaps not ethically, by smuggling them from various top-security prisons. They were sentenced to death anyway, we argued; this way, if they died, they would do so with the knowledge that they had furthered scientific advancement. The patient was the only volunteer. She managed to track us down and requested - no, demanded to be allowed to participate. It was highly unusual, and we warned her of the risks of the experiment, but she didn't seem to care. She agreed to the procedural psychological tests and a few background checks, which will begin in a few days.
[Feb. 12] The background checks turned up absolutely nothing. No birth certificate, employment records, education records, not even a parking ticket or wayward receipt. Whoever the volunteer is, she either instantly materialized on our doorstep or, more likely, has wiped out her own past. In light of this information, I recommended to my superior that we refuse the volunteer treatment. However, he reminded me that we do what must be done in the name of science. One unusual case could be the variable we were looking for. I know that I am a scientist, and I too thirst for knowledge, but I'm not sure I agree with what we're doing on this case. It's one thing to experiment on criminals who are about to die; it's another to experiment on a (supposedly) functioning member of society. Regardless, treatment begins tomorrow.
[Feb. 14] Yesterday, the first day of treatment, was unsuccessful: nothing happened - well, not to the subject. The ray was repaired recently and is apparently still suffering minor malfunctions. Instead of zapping the subject, it instead aimed for the operating table loaded with tools. The tools - this has never happened before, I can hardly believe it - were instantly vaporized. A solid chrome table and a large amount of medical tools and supplies, instantly turned to dust. If I was concerned about this experiment before, I now grow worried. The subject may be more at risk than we initially thought. Today, however, the ray functioned normally, and engaged the subject. The subject, previously female, is now male. She - he? - seems unaffected mentally, only physically, but more tests will follow. Treatment will continue tomorrow.
(Report unfinished.)

Pet Treasure


Plas-Tek Large Purple Morostide Syringe

Dusk Mahar Elixir

Field Endeavor Elixir

Field Telenine Elixir

Pet Friends