Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 430: The Brainiacs (II) from Interdimensional Scientist, Starting from Cyberpunk, a Action novel by Tchao707.

The images showed n and won tied up like cargo.

There was a reason this neighborhood was deserted — the space ant for residents had been turned into storage for people.

As the NCPD and the Mox took over the upper floors, one horrifying picture after another appeared in the database.

Like the Maelstrom, the Brainiacs were heavy chrors — and uncontrolled chrors would do anything.

The old Maelstrom crew, for instance, used to hack off the limbs of random passersby to replace them with junk-grade cyberware. The resulting neural inflammation drove people insane, and mismatched limbs made life worse than death.

Cyber-mod signals would misfire — raising an arm might trigger a spin, gripping beca release, walking turned into crouching.

Such absurd errors rewired the brain over ti, causing subtle but irreversible ntal and neurological damage.

Skill chips — digital implants that control the human body through code — were no different. They required precision.

The Brainiacs needed test subjects — lots of them — to check which black-market, dumpster-dived, or scavenged skill chips were fatal and which weren't.

River pushed open a door. A wave of stench rolled out.

Inside, a neat pile of corpses was stacked like garbage — rotting, bloated, and foul.

Most of them had twisted limbs, displaced muscles, warped skeletons. Skin charred and blistered like it had been torched. Faces locked in agony — nightmare fuel.

They had to be alive when the experints began. It was hard to imagine what they'd endured.

Beside the testing area stood several deep-dive imrsion pods.

But these weren't normal Net-access pods.

The data inside a cyberpsycho's body was chaos.

These "bridgers" — the ones inside the pods — were human data miners, forced to synchronize with the target's pain, both physical and ntal. The pods were their "mining rigs."

Victims implanted with bad skill chips usually went cyberpsycho, making their data unreadable.

By using a living person as a neural bridge to read indirectly, the pain could be dampened, and the data beca more ordered, more coherent.

Mining this kind of dirty data was as dangerous as corporate divers crossing the Blackwall — except here the damage ca from replicating the physiology of a cyberpsycho, not rogue AIs frying you from the other side.

Both thods were cruel — but efficient, cheap, and ensured data integrity.

When there were no experints, the Brainiacs used virtual illusions to trick people into simple computational tasks, turning them into human servers.

Of course, their processing speed couldn't match trained Netrunners or real servers — but they were cheap. And idle bodies were still useful.

Still…

Two buildings yielded nearly two hundred victims.

n, won, old, young — all used for processing power. That was no small resource.

And the underground base hadn't even been cleared yet.

[Suzy: These animals!]

[River: This is the sickest cri scene I've ever seen.]

V and Jackie frowned deeply, faces twisted with disgust.

Scavs sold people as rchandise.

The Brainiacs used people as tools.

Sa rot, different stench.

"This is straight-up deranged," Joestar muttered.

V shot him a look. "And you, a Maelstrom punk, get to say that?"

"We only experint on ourselves! We don't pull weak-ass crap like this! That's called dangerous ascension!"

Leo glanced at him — the kid really didn't know.

Maelstrom's victims weren't fewer back in the day. Brick might not have organized this kind of horror, but he sure didn't stop his crew either.

[River: We took down Jotaro the Woodman, and now — right next to the Ho-Oh Club — another Brainiac nest pops up.]

[River: Sotis I wonder if Night City's just cursed. A place that'll never get better.]

[River: You wipe out one monster, and another crawls out of the sa corpse.]

Leo's expression didn't change much, but his disgust ran deeper than any of them knew.

[Leo: There's still change.]

He glanced at Joestar, who was still red-faced from arguing.

[Leo: At least the new Maelstrom thinks only self-mod experints count.]

[River: So basically… we're comparing "bad" to "less bad"?]

After the bickering died down, Joestar mumbled, "Guess my old lady's still alive after all."

Jackie chuckled. "Honestly, I don't get why you've got such beef with your mom. She raised you, didn't she?"

"Well…" Joestar scratched his head, rembering all her missed calls. "I dunno."

Sotis when a teenager runs away, it's not even the parents' fault.

In Joestar's case, he just couldn't handle learning what his mom did for a living — and that he'd walked in on it at the worst possible mont.

Looking back, it wasn't even that big a deal.

First off, the "bitch" didn't care anymore — he had his precious cyberware now.

Second, the bastard who stole her away better pray they never t, or he'd end up shredded by Leo's shotgun and Joestar's favorite chro arms.

Say what you will — running with gangs changes your worldview fast.

[Little Octopus: Boss, I've got a question.]

[Little Octopus: Why are we raising hell here but playing it safe on the other side?]

Leo sighed.

[Leo: We don't choose when or where we're born. Sotis it's the good era, sotis it's the bad.]

[Leo: Adapting to the environnt is a core class. A world of killers and a world preaching peace and unity — they're not the sa.]

[Leo: I just hope that wherever I am, I'm soone who makes things a little better.]

Here, where life ant nothing and killing was routine, minimizing losses was already above average morality.

The whole city ran on high-intensity hostility. Every player was willing to sacrifice anything for profit. You could bla an individual, sure — but deep down, you knew killing a few suspects wouldn't stop the cycle.

In the Marvel world, whenever a big fight broke out, collateral damage — innocent deaths, destruction — always followed.

That's low morality, plain and simple. You could call it villainy and be right.

Leo's always believed in walking among the people — learning from them.

If everyone treats life cheaply, don't bla him for doing the sa.

But he wanted to rise above it — not wallow in moral rot and excuse himself with "everyone else does it."

He wouldn't drag this city's filth into the next world.

That's the mindset of soone who threatens people online and starts doing it for real.

[Little Octopus: Got it. Flexible morals.]

"Let's move," Leo said. "Let's see what other tricks the Brainiacs are hiding."

He checked his gear and stared at the passage leading down to the basent.

A lot of people wanted him to block the Eurocorps from entering Night City.

He would —

but not because of politics.

Because he didn't want this barely-improving pile of shit to start rotting again.

In the shadows, a hidden cara tracked the four as they descended.

[Mainfra Log:]

[Surgical augntations complete.]

[Subjects modified: 14.]

[These techniques are incredible. Everyone loves them.]

[You'll love them too.]

[Sophie: Can it handle the big one?]

[Mainfra: You'll love them too.]

[Sophie: Damn thing's looping again.]

[Elio: Better than before. Stop complaining and help out.]

You are reading Interdimensional Scientist, Starting from Cyberpunk Chapter 430: The Brainiacs (II) on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

The Innkeeper cover
Same genre

The Innkeeper

lifesketcher ·Action

Inthedepthsofanewbornuniverse,acultivatortakesadvantageoftheabundantenergytorefinehimselfatreasure.Butafter14billionyearsofrefiningandquiteafewmore...

Lord of the Truth cover
Trending now

Lord of the Truth

TruthTeller ·Action

RobinBurtonisayoungmanwhogrowwitheverythinganyonecanhopefor,immensetalentforcultivation,sharpmind,awealthyfamilythatwillstopatnothingtoprotectandnu...

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.