Recent Changes - Search:

[b]Site Section[/b]

Home?

Recent updates to this section.

[b]Site[/b]

The Wushu Index now displays the latest Wushu? threads from RPGnet.

[b]Quick Links[/b]

Wushu?

Good & Evil, Incorporated

IntegritySolutions

Integrity Solutions

[comment author="Russell"]This needs more work. More gadgets, and more fleshing out.[/comment]

Ah, competitors. What [i]would[/i] the world of occult contracting be without them?

Well, among other things, the Company would have a lot more work, they'd be able to charge the Clients more, and things would, in general, be a lot peachier.

Ultimately, however, we need to face that the players' Specialists are not the only game in town.

"Values, Technology, Affordability"

Associates from Integrity Solutions are mostly notable for two things: they've got better gadgets than G&E, and they're stingy.

Technology

From what the Company knows, Integrity is a lot smaller than G&E, and they're a much more recently founded organization. They simply don't have access to the volumes of occult research that G&E does.

On the other hand, they've got it all over G&E when it comes to equipment. While Specialists have access to all sorts of high-end materiel off the shelf, Integrity has a variety of custom software and equipment for demon hunting.

Examples

  • [b]Contained Pyrotechnics[/b]: Historically speaking, demon hunters like to light things on fire. Repairing, salvaging, or covering up the situtation gets expensive, though. Integrity Solutions has developed a full line of short-term combustibles, letting them incinerate a target with little damage to the surrounding area.
  • [b]Suspicious Activity Mining Systems (SAMS)[/b]: G&E relies on highly-trained and overly dedicated researchers, hackers, and Operators to pick out likely sorcerer activity. Supporting these efforts are hundreds of custom software packages.

    Integrity, trying to establish a better, cheaper operation in a shorter period of time, has leveraged commercial (and possibly government) data miners to produce a single monitoring and search application. Sound boring? It is. It's [i]really[/i] boring. But SAMS is also staggeringly useful, and has recently been allowing Integrity to complete operations on spec before G&E's contract office has even found their rubber stamp.
Edit - History - Print - Recent Changes - Search
Page last modified on August 27, 2005, at 03:19 PM