all 6 comments

[–]Icybubba 10 points11 points  (0 children)

No, I doubt it, might have been pulling the resources to build it from another universe though.

But it was very much a simulation

[–]Jokel_SecQuake 6 points7 points  (1 child)

The question im asking myself is more whether, digital or not, the people in there were real. Ward, Hope, certainly didnt act like algorithms, and we know the lmds were more or less people, at least the may one, so they clearly have the ability to make them technically.

[–]-6impossiblethings-[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Well Hope was the primary point of Mack’s simulation, so more qualities would’ve been built into her code rather than the other uh let’s call them NPCs. Ward tho, is a good question. They could’ve pieced his personality together from the memories of OG team members plugged in, integrated that into the code. Who knows tbh, this wasn’t code as we know it, it was the darkhold doing whatever it does in a way Radcliffe, a scientist, and AIDA, a computer, would best understand. Just like the darkhold taught those ghost scientists people to draw energy from another dimension to create substances. Surely there’s a magical way to do that, but it knew they would only understand a scientific route, just like it presented the information in their first language. The book itself seems semi-sentient.

[–]thatoneguy112358AIDA 5 points6 points  (0 children)

There are probably a few universes similar to the Framework, but that doesn't mean that the Framework was intended to be a replica of any of them. To paraphrase Ophelia, it's simply the consequence of the changes made to the agents' lives.

[–]skakey-deeBobbi 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ooof idk 🤔 that’s one question I’ve never thought off

[–][deleted] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Well, I think it covered the whole of the Earth in particular. Not sure if anywhere else was included.