- -final-... — Gil - Giant Insect Research Institute
They enjoy the chase.
: Navigate through interlocking research sectors, bypass broken security systems, and find a clean route to the surface. Core Gameplay Mechanics
The Giant Insect Research Institute (GIL) was established to investigate the biological limits of arthropod growth through advanced genetic manipulation and hormonal stimulation. This final report documents the catastrophic failure of containment protocols and the subsequent environmental impact of the "Giantism" serum on local insect populations. 2. Research Objectives GIL - Giant Insect Research Institute - -Final-...
The concluding report serves as both a scientific retrospective and a stark warning. According to the data, GIL successfully engineered several distinct lineages of giant arthropods, classified into three primary research tiers: 1. The Carboniferous Resurgence (Hyper-O2 Adaptation)
Observations indicate that the "Insect Cage" (Cagaster) effect has begun to mutate human DNA upon prolonged exposure. 4. Results of the "Final" Protocol They enjoy the chase
The pilot months became a slow, strange education. The colony adapted to limited human schedules. They shifted foraging patterns to avoid the evening maintenance window. They tucked larvae into different combs when a certain researcher hummed a tune while working. A technician who played an old vinyl record found fewer incidents of nesting in the filter systems. Mara read these as chapters in a language they were only beginning to learn.
The GIL - Giant Insect Research Institute was formally dissolved on January 12, 2024. Its funding was absorbed by the NATO Bio-Tactical Assessment Unit (BTAU). However, the Final Report contains a hand-written addendum that was nearly redacted: This final report documents the catastrophic failure of
The institute was officially chartered in 2028, following a decade of planning and a $1.2 billion investment. Its main campus spans 500 acres in a remote, secure location—chosen to minimize the risk of accidental release while providing ample space for large‑scale enclosures and field studies.