://game.plot/ooc

You wake up resting on what amounts to a level surface, groggy as hell. You don't quite feel drugged, more like you're just waking up from the deepest sleep of your life.
"Hello."
The robotic voice comes out of nowhere once you've opened your eyes to see vegetation and some sort of ventilation shaft above you. The air is a mixture of stale and fresh here and there that confuses your senses and doesn't feel familiar, and breathing it in creates a rush of smells and the taste of dandelions and copper on your tongue. It leaves you thirsty and a little nauseous, but you know you have to move, if only because you can't stay lying down forever.
Sitting up, you ascertain that you are unharmed, but your coordination doesn't seem totally intact - you can't seem to keep straight how long your limbs are or where they should be? Who knows why, because there's nothing wrong with any of them, as far as you can tell.
There are a few medical carts here and there, with the sort of vague medical supplies you would expect to find sitting upon them. Otherwise the area is sparse or downright empty, depending on how lucky you are. There's definitely no people around, or anything moving at all.
"I need your help to save life."
The voice is back, reverberating slightly, and it waits for your acknowledgement, in whatever form that comes, whether it is a cower from the volume before straightening once again, or looking around for the source, or a verbal refirmation, etc.
"Yours, and any that may follow."
Any request therein will be met with the same response.
"My name is Barney."
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Kernelsite is a panfandom survival game set in an alternate universe where an AI has assumed total control. Player characters are imported into a small area where they will be asked to produce anything they might need to survive while operating under a relatively big brother type computer program who will notice certain patterns.
Horror and psychological issues are likely to transpire, and the goal of the game is to force characters to work together to achieve favourable outcomes. Of course, this isn't a necessity, but that, like many other decisions, is up to you.
You can be the answer. It's up to you what that means in the end.
