Alice guided the Aegis‑V into the fissure. Inside the cavern, gravity was a suggestion rather than a rule; stones drifted like feathers. The Chrono‑Seed hovered, a heartbeat away from the ship’s hull.
“Full‑spectrum lock,” Alice said, initiating the extraction. The FSJ Core’s glow intensified, forming a lattice of light that wrapped around the seed. As the two energies intertwined, a temporal echo burst forth—a vision of the planet’s true history.
She saw Juno, a woman of the ancient Earth diaspora, stepping onto the surface of what would become Artemis III. Juno had been a Chrononaut, a traveler who sought to plant a seed that would allow humanity to rewind catastrophic events. She placed the seed deep beneath the crust, binding it to the planet’s tectonic rhythm. Every 85,000 years, the seed would pulse, granting a window for a civilization to correct its mistakes.
The echo faded. In its place, a choice presented itself: to extract the seed and bring it back to the Council, potentially weaponizing it; or to leave it untouched, allowing the planet’s natural cycle to continue.
Alice felt the weight of countless possible futures. In one, humanity used the seed to reverse the Great Collapse, ushering an era of peace. In another, the seed fell into the wrong hands, and time itself fractured, creating endless loops of war and ruin. alice 85jj full
She closed her eyes. The violet hue in her irises deepened as she accessed the full spectrum of her own consciousness—past, present, and potential futures. She remembered her mother’s lullaby, her brother’s sacrifice on the Rhea‑2 mission, the taste of rain on Eos‑7. She felt the pulse of every living thing she had ever saved, every life she had taken to protect the greater good.
When she opened her eyes, the decision was clear.
The briefing room of Aegis Command hummed with soft blue light. A holographic globe of the known multiverse rotated slowly above the table, its continents made of shimmering data streams.
“Captain Hartwell,” the commander said, “the Council has authorized a full‑spectrum extraction on Artemis III. The planet is a dead zone—no electromagnetic signatures, no life, nothing. Yet the ancient archives speak of a Chrono‑Seed hidden deep beneath its crust. If the rumors are true, it could rewrite our understanding of time.” Alice guided the Aegis‑V into the fissure
Alice stood at the head of the table, her silvered hair catching the light. Her eyes, a striking violet, flickered as the quantum overlay projected onto her retinas.
“Why a full‑spectrum jump?” she asked, voice calm but edged with curiosity.
“The seed is locked in a null‑field—a bubble where even our most advanced sensors go blind. A normal FSJ would bounce off the barrier. Only a full‑spectrum jump, one that threads through every possible layer of reality, can bypass it.”
Alice nodded. “And the code?”
“The Council has embedded the seed’s signature into your own call sign—85JJ. If you synchronize your neural lattice with the seed, you’ll open the gate. But be warned: the seed is a paradox. It can alter your perception of time, even your identity.”
A cold wind seemed to pass through the room as the hologram dimmed, leaving only the faint outline of Artemis III, a black marble in the sea of stars.
The "Grail" Status Upon release, the Alice 85JJ figure quickly became a sought-after item. In the figure community, items that push the envelope regarding scale and proportion often achieve "grail" status—items that are highly desired but may be difficult to obtain due to limited production runs or high aftermarket prices.
Controversy and Praise The figure sits squarely in the "erotic figure" category, which garners mixed reactions. Enthusiasts praise Orchid Seed for faithfully adapting z-ton’s art style without sanitization. They appreciate the high-quality paint application and the structural integrity required to support the top-heavy design. Critics, however, often cite the hyper-sexualization as gratuitous. The briefing room of Aegis Command hummed with
From a technical standpoint, the figure is frequently cited in hobbyist forums as a marvel of weight distribution. Many figures with similar proportions suffer from "leaning" over time (where the plastic warps under its own weight), but the Alice 85JJ is generally praised for its structural stability, provided it is displayed correctly.