The Art of Decoding

guinea_pig 2

Kit had just finished downing another diesel when she saw it. This brilliant, blinding light lay before her. She reached out and grasped it. A perfect fit. She could feel its warmth coursing throughout her entire rig as she installed it. Her small cyber-cypher program had gotten her far enough, having broken a puny Ice Wall and prevented Weyland's bid for the Government Contracts from succeeding, but this was what she really needed for her rig; a torch to guide her to victory.

She wielded it like a master - scorching through even the thickest knots of data. No single piece of ICE could stop her.

She felt her confidence soaring as she ran straight towards Weyland's newest project; great advancements were being made on whatever it was, and she had to put a stop to it. She readied her torch, cutting through a shadow for the cost of two measly credits. No problem.

Suddenly, a new piece of ICE reared its ugly head - er, rather, heads. It looked like something out of mythology - a lion, with the head of a goat rising from its back, and a vigilant, hungry serpent in place of its tail. It was truly something to be feared. She looked to her torch only to see its glow fading. Not even her winged Pegasus could save her from this beast. The lion head roared at her, throwing her back and jacking her out of the server. She could only watch in horror as the Project Atlas went through, not only achieving but actually surpassing its goals, and Weyland's victory came that much closer to becoming reality.

She couldn't let this happen again, and she needed a plan. She traveled to Levy University to visit her colleague and associate - the man known only as "The Professor." He gave her the names of a few of his own contacts - people who helped his projects go through.

Kit went through the list he gave her, gaining the funding she needed so she could focus on designing new projects without having to worry about credits. Finally, she came upon an idea for something that could put an end to her problems. It wasn't even that complex of a program - it just took up a huge amount of memory. She modeled it after one of her peers, an artist who loved to tinker. She called it "The Paintbrush."

Her new weapon was ready - and just in time. Weyland had just started some new project in the same heavily-protected remote server. Kit knew that now was her time to strike. Her new weapon only had one flaw - the ICE she was going to "paint" needed to be rezzed already. She had options - she knew that Mr. Santiago still owed her a favor, and he was great at causing havoc inside of corporations, forcing them to prematurely rez their ICE. But in this case, she had a more direct route - plow straight into the ICE.

She ran the server, swiftly dissipating Weyland's Shadow with the light of her Torch. She knew what was coming next. Like it was Déjà Vu, the lion's head gave out a mighty roar, sending Kit sprawling out of the server again, but this time she was ready. She saw how weak the creature truly was, and she struck it with her paintbrush. It couldn't hide from the light of her torch now.

Once again she set off for the remote server. Her torch flickered to life yet again, and burned its way straight through the shadow. The "mighty" chimera was next. It cowered in fear, knowing what lay ahead in its future. She lit up her torch. Flames roared in front of her. Suddenly, the creature was gone.

All that remained was to reach the core of the server. The data seemed so close, and she could feel the power emanating from it. It must have been something important, maybe even worth as much as the government contracts bid she had stopped earlier. A blurry image flickered in front of her for a moment, and then it suddenly came into focus. All she saw was what appeared to be a woman's face. A second later Kit realized just what she was accessing, but it was too late.

The warmth of the torch faded from her grip, and her pegasus left her side. She was then alone, holding only her new Paintbrush. Darkness, like a shadow, surrounded her.

TLDR: Essentially, this deck is about getting a torch set up as soon as possible and painting all the ICE to make it breakable. Crypsis is mostly there for face-checking support. Paintbrush to make rezzed ICE able to be broken by torch, and in order to rez ICE so it can be "Painted", FAO lends support. Most everything else is economy or helps set up a rig. I've found that this deck does very poorly against program trashing.

Alternatives:

-Swap Omega for Crypsis

-Swap Snitch for FAO

-Use Dinosaurus instead of Desperado (alternatives for the 6 open influence?)

-Remove both Magnum Opus and CyberSolutions Mem Chip for other economy choices (because the extra memory is mostly needed for Magnum Opus)

-Quality Time vs. Diesel?

-Any Room for Yog.0?

-Any other suggestions would be greatly appreciated!

2 comments
4 Apr 2014 Arameas

Firs off. Love the fluff writing :) I think the Dinosaurus would work better than deperado, and you could use the influence for a third Forged activation orders to get their Ice rezzed and ready for painting. Maybe do one of each.

Personally I find diesel to be better unless you are expecting a big net/meat hit and want some safety in your hand. 5 cards tends to mean dumping stuff and there isn't much to pull it back.

4 Apr 2014 guinea_pig

Thanks for the comment! Great ideas. Per your suggestions, I changed the deck to include:

+1 diesel; +1 FAO; +1 Scavenge (for dino); -2 Quality Time; -2 CyberSolutions Mem Chip; -2 Desperado; +3 Dinosaurus; -1 Professional Contacts; +2 Mr. Li

After a few test runs (get it? :D) of this deck, I decided desperado really wasn't necessary for my econ. Not only was it unneccessary, but actually wasted valuable time late-game installing (b/c I usually don't draw one early).

So I put in dino instead. Using the leftover influence, I decided Mr. Li would be pretty cool to put in. Haven't tried it yet, but I've found that if something gets trashed (like torch), and I really need a crypsis or a replacement, I can't find it quickly enough. I think Mr. Li could remedy that.

As I said though, I haven't tested its newest version yet. I'll have to try it out, and hopefully get some good results with this deck. Thanks for the tips!

(Also - do you know how to edit a published deck, if its possible? I had to publish the changes as a separate deck, and just wanted to know if I could change this deck directly.)