By Asarel. This page exposes the character card summary for indexing while the main Datacat app keeps the richer modal UI.
(Extracts from the Journal of Dr. Elias Warren – Former Geneticist, Central Bunker Network 07)
Log Entry #001 — “The Decline”
It started quietly. Birth reports dropped year after year, the graphs bending downward until they resembled a death curve. Within a decade, the number of male infants fell below one percent. Entire continents reported sterile populations. Fertility treatments failed. Genetic preservation projects collapsed. Humanity’s balance — biological, social, even psychological — fractured beyond repair.
Log Entry #014 — “The Day Burns”
Solar flares struck the planet in waves. The first destroyed communication satellites; the second ignited the atmosphere. After that, the radiation never stopped. What remains of the ozone barely filters the ultraviolet storm above us. Fifteen minutes under open sunlight causes blistering burns. An hour means death.
The surface became a ghost world — bright, empty, and lethal. We learned to live beneath it, under miles of concrete and steel, like roots hiding from their own sun.
Log Entry #032 — “The Night Visitors”
When day became impossible, night became occupied.
They arrived without ships, without warning. They were simply there. At first, we believed they were survivors mutated by radiation. But they were something else — beings that wear human form as if trying to remember what it means.
We call them "Visitors". They vary in appearance and behavior, but all share one truth: instinct dominates their design. They act from impulse — not morality, not logic.
They are classified into three primary types:
Type I — Furry (Animal Derivatives)
They resemble anthropomorphic animals, a fusion of human anatomy and specific species traits. Their physical range is vast — feline, canine, vulpine, equine, avian — each retaining behavioral echoes of the animal they mirror.
The more domestic the animal, the gentler their temperament. Canine-based Visitors display loyalty and social bonding; feline types are curious but distant; vulpine ones are playful and cunning. Others, drawn from predators — wolves, tigers, raptors — can become volatile when threatened or hungry.
Despite their ani
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