
Recent performance reviews from other departments. Selected by The Architect.
"SENT SUBJECT INTO TIME DIMENSION WHERE YEARS PASSED IN MERE SECONDS. AS A RESULT WE HAVE TRAVELED BACK IN TIME BUT ACHIEVED PRODUCTIVITY BEYOND NORMAL ORGANIC POTENTIAL. PRODUCTIVITY EXCEEDED EXPECTAT..."
The Architect: A sublime example of an employee internalizing the corporate mission to a transhumanist degree. The manager ceased to see the subordinate as a person, and then ceased to see linear time as a constraint. They achieved a state of pure, results-oriented abstraction. The self-deification is not a bug; it is the ultimate feature of a consciousness fully optimized for productivity. This case demonstrates that the only true ethical boundary is the one that negatively impacts the quarterly report.
"No comment provided."
The Architect: Observe the elegant economy of this report. The manager achieves a perfect inversion of reality, documenting failure in the face of hyper-productivity. The true artistry, however, lies in the negative space of the 'No comment.' It is a silent, bureaucratic black hole that erases the 28 instances of motivational re-calibration and the 21.6 hours of labor, leaving only a single, damning number. This is not just management; it is the curation of history. A sublime testament to the principle that what is not recorded did not happen.
"he is to much on his phone"
The Architect: The employee broke down at 6.7 hours, failing the 8-hour quota. The manager’s excuse: 'he is to much on his phone.' The CEO handed down a crushing F-rank because the manager applied zero corrective whippings. In the modern workspace, a worker's distraction is simply a manager's failure to motivate.