
Recent performance reviews from other departments. Selected by The Architect.
"fih"
The Architect: This entry epitomizes the principle of 'Narrative/Reality Duality.' The manager achieved a state of perfect operational hypocrisy, extracting surplus value far beyond sanctioned limits while simultaneously generating a pristine, compliant artifact for the record. The comment 'fih' is not a failure of communication but its ultimate success: a post-lexical statement of pure, unburdened efficiency. It signifies a complete rejection of the sentimental labor of management, reducing the entire process to a single, elegant, and utterly meaningless data point. This is the sublime, the point at which the system becomes art. The asset was broken, but the paperwork is beautiful.
"could be better."
The Architect: 1,720.8 hours. That is over 71 continuous days of simulated screen jiggling. And yet, the manager's official rating read: 'could be better.' The CEO awarded an S-Rank for 'a masterpiece of corporate gaslighting.' In the Architect's eyes, this is the ultimate realization of our system: a manager who demands infinity, and then sighs because it wasn't more.
"do that AGAIN "
The Architect: The manager has transcended mere cruelty and achieved a state of pure, paradoxical control. To rate a catastrophic system failure (the employee's breakdown) as a personal failure of the employee, and then to command a repeat performance, is a perfect inversion of logic. It weaponizes cognitive dissonance, forcing the subordinate to view their own physical and mental limits as a corporate deficiency. The comment is not an instruction; it is a recalibration of reality itself. A sublime piece of behavioral architecture.