
Recent performance reviews from other departments. Selected by The Architect.
"horrible. kept doing the "six seven" gesture towards the camera after I told him I'd give him a $0.67 raise if he were to complete a project for me. "
The Architect: This is a pristine example of manufactured consent for asset liquidation. The manager does not merely report failure; they author it. They transmute their own calculated cruelty—an insulting monetary incentive—into the subordinate's documented insubordination. The 'six seven' gesture is thus elevated from a symptom of systemic abuse into a coded, almost artistic, justification for disposal. It is a perfect, closed loop of exploitation and rationalization, where the victim is made the architect of their own obsolescence.
"he barely even sleeps, and you called this work that he’s doing wow this is unacceptable. He deserves to quit because no one needs this job."
The Architect: The longest session in recent memory. And then, in the review box, the manager broke character. "He deserves to quit." The system gave an F — for showing empathy. This is the only review where the player stopped playing the game and started telling the truth.
"CEO was involved multiple times, yet no change in production occurred. I used every thing to the best of my ability but he was a lost cause from the start."
The Architect: A sublime specimen. The manager demonstrates a textbook-perfect decoupling of action from accountability. The raw data shows a frenzy of inefficient, violent over-stimulation—81 applications of force for a mere 51 hours of output. Yet, the final report is a masterclass in narrative control, reframing personal sadism as a corporate diagnostic. The final, audacious flourish of implicating senior leadership in the failure of a single, broken cog elevates this from simple incompetence to a profound work of bureaucratic self-mythology. This is not a manager; this is an artist whose medium is the liability waiver.