[This is the most introducing of itself that SecUnit has had to do... ever, actually. You'd think that would take some of the awkwardness out of it, but it really doesn't. Now it gets to be both uncomfortable and really fucking tired of this whole thing, which is why Vincent gets a clipped response. Its voice continues with that bitonal buzz, somewhere between cicadasong and radio static.]
SecUnit, if you have to.
[And then it promptly moves past all that, going silent to observe the demonstration. It doesn't seem at all bothered by the tone, focusing on the content, and especially on Vincent's hands. The mask helps, but although it's clearly intent, it's not offering feedback through expression or posture on how it thinks Vincent is doing. When he wraps up, it gives him a few seconds just to make sure there's no final points to be added.
Vincent is... weird. It's reminded of some of the secret agents from its more unrealistic shows. This definitely isn't the controlled efficiency or the built-as-a-weapon vibe of a SecUnit, but his behavior doesn't match the obvious way most of the public Security or hired enforcement officers its seen, because they're used to using their weapons as a warning first. It runs an analysis measuring Vincent's body language against Karim's, but it doesn't have enough comparative footage of either to get a conclusive result on 'Corporate Death Squad training.']
Likely reaction to those efforts go from ambivalence to purposeful lack of compliance, based on past behavior. [It's annoyed but not surprised by the response it got to its own safety suggestions.] Around forty percent of the population have some degree of past combat experience and are very [over] confident in it.
no subject
SecUnit, if you have to.
[And then it promptly moves past all that, going silent to observe the demonstration. It doesn't seem at all bothered by the tone, focusing on the content, and especially on Vincent's hands. The mask helps, but although it's clearly intent, it's not offering feedback through expression or posture on how it thinks Vincent is doing. When he wraps up, it gives him a few seconds just to make sure there's no final points to be added.
Vincent is... weird. It's reminded of some of the secret agents from its more unrealistic shows. This definitely isn't the controlled efficiency or the built-as-a-weapon vibe of a SecUnit, but his behavior doesn't match the obvious way most of the public Security or hired enforcement officers its seen, because they're used to using their weapons as a warning first. It runs an analysis measuring Vincent's body language against Karim's, but it doesn't have enough comparative footage of either to get a conclusive result on 'Corporate Death Squad training.']
Likely reaction to those efforts go from ambivalence to purposeful lack of compliance, based on past behavior. [It's annoyed but not surprised by the response it got to its own safety suggestions.] Around forty percent of the population have some degree of past combat experience and are very [over] confident in it.