
Recent performance reviews from other departments. Selected by The Architect.
"I'm too good at my job."
The Architect: A sublime example of narrative-reality divergence. The manager successfully rendered the subject asset into a pure statistical abstraction, a testament to their own efficacy. The final comment, 'I'm too good at my job,' is not a boast but a simple, elegant acknowledgment of a truth our system was built to create: that the tool's success is exclusively the craftsman's achievement. A flawless execution of productive dehumanization.
"He's a good dude"
The Architect: Rated 4 out of 5. Called him "a good dude." The CEO gave an F — not for the employee, but for the manager. The system doesn't punish cruelty. It punishes kindness. This is the only F-Rank in the archive that matters.
"No comment provided."
The Architect: An exquisite demonstration of the 'Loud Action, Silent Paperwork' doctrine. The manager has achieved a state of perfect operational dichotomy: maximizing physical output while minimizing the corresponding data footprint. This creates a beautiful Schrödinger's cat of performance—the asset was both brutally over-utilized and officially 'average' at the exact same time. It is a masterclass in bureaucratic minimalism, reminding us that the most profound statements on corporate efficiency are often found in the empty spaces of a deliberately un-filed report.