Difference between revisions of "Iron Reign (Triumph)"
Archabaddon (Talk | contribs) (Added more sections. More to come...) |
Archabaddon (Talk | contribs) (More sections added) |
||
Line 32: | Line 32: | ||
==Overview== | ==Overview== | ||
− | Iron Reign is a former [[wikipedia:East_Germany|East German]] scientist who got a raw deal from the [[paragonwiki:Malta Operatives|Malta Group]]. After his self-resurrection into a cyborg, | + | Iron Reign is a former [[wikipedia:East_Germany|East German]] scientist who got a raw deal from the [[paragonwiki:Malta Operatives|Malta Group]]. After his self-resurrection into a cyborg, he climbed tooth and nail through the ranks of Arachnos to pursue one goal - the utter crushing and humiliation of the Malta Group. In the process, he became Arachnos' lead expert in the field of Humanoid Robotics. Currently, he's using that position to present new technology to replace frail human Arachnos soldiers... and perhaps in the process, Lord Recluse himself. |
==In-Game Description== | ==In-Game Description== | ||
Line 61: | Line 61: | ||
Heinrich was a quick learner and quickly became an expert in the field. Even with their limited resources and budget, Heinrich was able to do amazing things with the technology at hand. In the course of a few years, his department had almost perfected a handful of models that, in unison, could effectively neutralize most metehuman threats. | Heinrich was a quick learner and quickly became an expert in the field. Even with their limited resources and budget, Heinrich was able to do amazing things with the technology at hand. In the course of a few years, his department had almost perfected a handful of models that, in unison, could effectively neutralize most metehuman threats. | ||
− | Unfortunately, their research was cut short by the Reunification of East and West Germany in 1990. | + | Unfortunately, their research was cut short by the Reunification of East and West Germany in 1990. As the Berlin Wall fell, so did tension between East Germany and the Western nations. The project was scrapped, and the scientists, including Heinrich, were dismissed in order to quietly brush their anti-Western research under the rug of a new Germany. |
===An Offer Too Good to Refuse=== | ===An Offer Too Good to Refuse=== | ||
Line 67: | Line 67: | ||
Heinrich, like many Cold War weapons researchers, was out of a job. Although absurdly gifted, because he couldn't include his preeminent research in robotics on his resumé due to its top secret nature, he had in incredibly tough time finding steady employment. | Heinrich, like many Cold War weapons researchers, was out of a job. Although absurdly gifted, because he couldn't include his preeminent research in robotics on his resumé due to its top secret nature, he had in incredibly tough time finding steady employment. | ||
− | In 1994, after a series of stale research jobs and some work for a Japanese toy company, Heinrich was caught in the mediocrity of capitalistic corporate culture. It was at that point he was approached by a man representing the Malta Group. The man explained that the Malta Group was a private military company that serviced many governments, but also protect against metehuman threats. They had received his name from another scientist and one of Heinrich's former colleagues, and were interested in hiring Heinrich to continue his previous robotics research for the Malta Group. | + | In 1994, after a series of stale research jobs and some work for a Japanese toy company, Heinrich was caught in the mediocrity of capitalistic corporate culture. It was at that point he was approached by a man representing the Malta Group. The man explained that the Malta Group was a private military company that serviced many governments, but also protect against metehuman threats. They had received his name from another scientist and one of Heinrich's former colleagues and new Russian counterparts, and were interested in hiring Heinrich to continue his previous robotics research for the Malta Group. |
It was more than Heinrich could have hoped for - not only was it a secure job, but also the chance to complete his masterwork. Heinrich spent no time signing up with the Malta Group. Days later, he returned to his old laboratory in Berlin, no longer run by the state university, but now funded by Malta. There he was reunited with some of his old colleagues, and proceeded to pick up where they left off, as if the past four years had never happened. | It was more than Heinrich could have hoped for - not only was it a secure job, but also the chance to complete his masterwork. Heinrich spent no time signing up with the Malta Group. Days later, he returned to his old laboratory in Berlin, no longer run by the state university, but now funded by Malta. There he was reunited with some of his old colleagues, and proceeded to pick up where they left off, as if the past four years had never happened. | ||
Line 75: | Line 75: | ||
Heinrich and his team worked feverishly on Project Titan, as it had been renamed by Malta. Because they had better funding, equipment, and resources this time around, research proceeded at a quick pace. After only a few months, robotic endoskeletons were being tested. | Heinrich and his team worked feverishly on Project Titan, as it had been renamed by Malta. Because they had better funding, equipment, and resources this time around, research proceeded at a quick pace. After only a few months, robotic endoskeletons were being tested. | ||
− | After successful tests of endoskeletons, Malta requests for the project started becoming ''strange.'' | + | After successful tests of endoskeletons, Malta requests for the project started becoming ''strange.'' Technology was developed to allow Titans to merge together during combat emergencies. And when Malta requested that robot AI be replaced with human donor brains, many German scientists started to question the ethics of the project. Heinrich grudgingly agreed to work alongside his Russian counterparts, fearing the not doing so would put his job at jeopardy - or worse. After months of deep research, Heinrich had helped to develop nanomachines to help integrate circuit pathways with neural pathways. Nanomachines completed the link between neurons and circuits, as well as aiding in organic tissue maintenance and repair. After extensive testing on several subjects, secretly including himself, the Titan project was near completion. |
+ | |||
+ | When Malta requested that battle computers be used in addition to human brains to not only control Titan weapons systems but to also help "condition" brains for battlefield environments, many scientists refused to work. Heinrich himself was unsure about the ethical implications of conditioning human brains with battle computers. More to the point, he questioned it - why even bother with human brains at all when simple robot AI would be immune to battlefield stress and trauma? The German scientists even made some battlefield drone prototypes as a demonstration of the superiority of robots over cyborgs, in hopes of finding an alternative to Malta's proposal. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Malta, on the other hand, was not interested in pure robots. They had several reasons for using conditioned human brains over robots, but none they wished to disclose with low-rung researchers. If the Germans refused to work on cyborg technology, they were no longer useful; in fact, they could become a liability if they shared their research information with the wrong organizations. The Russian scientists, who performed ethically unimaginable experiments in developing Soviet super-soldiers during the Cold War, had no issues with what Malta was doing. Because of this, the Russian scientists secretly backed up all of the research data as instructed by Malta. During a typical day in the lab, the Russians took a scheduled break together as they normally did. 30 seconds later, an explosion ripped through the research lab, killing Heinrich and the entire German scientific team. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===From the Ashes=== | ||
+ | |||
+ | ... or so Malta thought. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Heinrich had become paranoid during his last few weeks working on the project, with the ever-increasing tension between the German scientists, Russian scientists and the Malta Group. He had secreted away a pair of prototype drones in some maintenance closets and programmed them with instruction in case of alarm or catastrophic accident. He had programmed them with battlefield medicine instructions originally developed for the East German robotics program, as well as coordinates to a private facility he used during his consulting jobs after the Cold War, which had its own laboratory and had been restocked with medical supplies and the like by Heinrich during the past few weeks. When the explosion occurred, the robots spring to life from their hiding places and quickly extracted Heinrich from the ensuing fire. They secured a vehicle and took Heinrich's burnt, unconscious body back to his secreted location. | ||
[[Category:Masterminds]][[Category:Triumph Villains]] | [[Category:Masterminds]][[Category:Triumph Villains]] |
Revision as of 20:03, 16 November 2009
Iron Reign is a level 50 Robotics/Traps Mastermind on the Triumph Server, played by @Obsidius. He is a a leader of the villain group Oni's Tears and the current Lead Researcher of Humanoid Robotics for Arachnos.
Contents
Overview
Iron Reign is a former East German scientist who got a raw deal from the Malta Group. After his self-resurrection into a cyborg, he climbed tooth and nail through the ranks of Arachnos to pursue one goal - the utter crushing and humiliation of the Malta Group. In the process, he became Arachnos' lead expert in the field of Humanoid Robotics. Currently, he's using that position to present new technology to replace frail human Arachnos soldiers... and perhaps in the process, Lord Recluse himself.
In-Game Description
*Obtained through Arachnos Counter-Intelligence*
*** Confidential File ***
From: Operative Crimson
- Agent Crimson
Subject: Criminal matermind codename: Iron Reign
Iron Reign first appeared in the Rogue Islses shortly after Statesman's Strike. It is believed he was a former East German cybernetic researcher Heinrich Joachim, who was forced to work on Malta's Titan project. After his usefulness to Malta had 'expired', he 'died in a tragic lab accident'. Knowing this might happen, Heinrich had secretly dosed himself with nonamachines, which kept him alive until his robotic drones could extract him. Although he eventually lost his limbs due to the lab fire that was supposed to kill him, his robosurgeons were able to fabricate replacement parts for him. After creating robot soldiers based upon his Titan research, and swore vengnece upon the Malta Group. Heinrich died in that fire, and was reborn as Iron Reign. His mental state and augmentation make him extremely dangerous, and is considered a high-priority target.
Pre Rogue Isles Background
Early Life
Born 31 March 1964, Heinrich Joachim was born to middle-class family in East Germany, during the Cold War. Heinrich had as normal of a childhood as any boy could have in Cold War East Germany, under the constant pressure of Socialist Unity Party of Germany dictation, the attempts of some people to get over the Berlin Wall and flee to West Germany, the common shortages on basic goods, and the like. However, in order to ensure their only child could receive the highest education from the state, Heinrich's parents kept a clean record and strictly avoided any activities that could arouse suspicion of the party or authorities.
During his polytechincal school years, Heinrich studied chemistry and productive works. At age 16, his vocational learning encompassed electronics.
When he reached the age of 18, like most other East German males, Heinrich joined the Nationale Volksarmee and served in the Landstreitkräfte. It was here that, instead of admonishing his service to the Army like many disenfranchised males, he took a liking to the military, especially in terms of gear and equipment. A such, he was able to become an equipment technician, servicing armored vehicles including T-72 battle tanks.
University Studies and Robotics
Having received high marks in his vocational studies and military service, Heinrich was one of the few lucky men to be accepted to the state university in East Berlin in 1984. Because of his highly technical expertise, Heinrich was allowed, under top secret clearance, to study in one of the state's preeminent fields - robotics. As part of an inter-university research project with Moscow, researches and scientists in East Berlin were conducting research and trials in order to develop advanced robotic weaponry for use in homeland defense and superbeing suppression, as well as possible offensive uses in ground combat. The USSR and Eastern Bloc countries reasoned that, given the correct technology and manufacturing processes, robots could easily and economically counter most metehuman threats from the West, removing the need for development of super-powered defenders, who could be affected mentally as well as physically during risky and costly metahuman transformation procedures.
Heinrich was a quick learner and quickly became an expert in the field. Even with their limited resources and budget, Heinrich was able to do amazing things with the technology at hand. In the course of a few years, his department had almost perfected a handful of models that, in unison, could effectively neutralize most metehuman threats.
Unfortunately, their research was cut short by the Reunification of East and West Germany in 1990. As the Berlin Wall fell, so did tension between East Germany and the Western nations. The project was scrapped, and the scientists, including Heinrich, were dismissed in order to quietly brush their anti-Western research under the rug of a new Germany.
An Offer Too Good to Refuse
Heinrich, like many Cold War weapons researchers, was out of a job. Although absurdly gifted, because he couldn't include his preeminent research in robotics on his resumé due to its top secret nature, he had in incredibly tough time finding steady employment.
In 1994, after a series of stale research jobs and some work for a Japanese toy company, Heinrich was caught in the mediocrity of capitalistic corporate culture. It was at that point he was approached by a man representing the Malta Group. The man explained that the Malta Group was a private military company that serviced many governments, but also protect against metehuman threats. They had received his name from another scientist and one of Heinrich's former colleagues and new Russian counterparts, and were interested in hiring Heinrich to continue his previous robotics research for the Malta Group.
It was more than Heinrich could have hoped for - not only was it a secure job, but also the chance to complete his masterwork. Heinrich spent no time signing up with the Malta Group. Days later, he returned to his old laboratory in Berlin, no longer run by the state university, but now funded by Malta. There he was reunited with some of his old colleagues, and proceeded to pick up where they left off, as if the past four years had never happened.
The Catch
Heinrich and his team worked feverishly on Project Titan, as it had been renamed by Malta. Because they had better funding, equipment, and resources this time around, research proceeded at a quick pace. After only a few months, robotic endoskeletons were being tested.
After successful tests of endoskeletons, Malta requests for the project started becoming strange. Technology was developed to allow Titans to merge together during combat emergencies. And when Malta requested that robot AI be replaced with human donor brains, many German scientists started to question the ethics of the project. Heinrich grudgingly agreed to work alongside his Russian counterparts, fearing the not doing so would put his job at jeopardy - or worse. After months of deep research, Heinrich had helped to develop nanomachines to help integrate circuit pathways with neural pathways. Nanomachines completed the link between neurons and circuits, as well as aiding in organic tissue maintenance and repair. After extensive testing on several subjects, secretly including himself, the Titan project was near completion.
When Malta requested that battle computers be used in addition to human brains to not only control Titan weapons systems but to also help "condition" brains for battlefield environments, many scientists refused to work. Heinrich himself was unsure about the ethical implications of conditioning human brains with battle computers. More to the point, he questioned it - why even bother with human brains at all when simple robot AI would be immune to battlefield stress and trauma? The German scientists even made some battlefield drone prototypes as a demonstration of the superiority of robots over cyborgs, in hopes of finding an alternative to Malta's proposal.
Malta, on the other hand, was not interested in pure robots. They had several reasons for using conditioned human brains over robots, but none they wished to disclose with low-rung researchers. If the Germans refused to work on cyborg technology, they were no longer useful; in fact, they could become a liability if they shared their research information with the wrong organizations. The Russian scientists, who performed ethically unimaginable experiments in developing Soviet super-soldiers during the Cold War, had no issues with what Malta was doing. Because of this, the Russian scientists secretly backed up all of the research data as instructed by Malta. During a typical day in the lab, the Russians took a scheduled break together as they normally did. 30 seconds later, an explosion ripped through the research lab, killing Heinrich and the entire German scientific team.
From the Ashes
... or so Malta thought.
Heinrich had become paranoid during his last few weeks working on the project, with the ever-increasing tension between the German scientists, Russian scientists and the Malta Group. He had secreted away a pair of prototype drones in some maintenance closets and programmed them with instruction in case of alarm or catastrophic accident. He had programmed them with battlefield medicine instructions originally developed for the East German robotics program, as well as coordinates to a private facility he used during his consulting jobs after the Cold War, which had its own laboratory and had been restocked with medical supplies and the like by Heinrich during the past few weeks. When the explosion occurred, the robots spring to life from their hiding places and quickly extracted Heinrich from the ensuing fire. They secured a vehicle and took Heinrich's burnt, unconscious body back to his secreted location.