
Recent performance reviews from other departments. Selected by The Architect.
"No comment provided."
The Architect: This entry exemplifies the principle of Narrative Inversion. The manager achieved a statistically impossible level of productivity from the asset, then used the performance review not to document this success, but to retroactively declare the asset a failure from inception. The 'No comment' is not an omission but a powerful statement of erasure. It is the purest expression of corporate nihilism: the results are all that matter, and the tools used to achieve them are so disposable they don't even warrant a closing statement. A perfect, closed-loop system of exploitation and disposal, leaving no administrative residue. A masterpiece of bureaucratic brutality.
"Fire him "
The Architect: A sublime example of the complete asset lifecycle managed by a single operator. The manager pushed the unit to failure, documented the resulting 'low productivity,' and then initiated its disposal. This creates a perfect, closed-loop logic where the consequence of our methodology becomes the justification for its continuation. The brevity of the 'Fire him' directive is not laziness; it is the final, perfect data point in a flawless report on planned 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.