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Fluorite: How She Transformed Through Change

1 min read

Fluorite: How She Transformed Through Change

When I first got to know Fluorite through 86:不存在的战区, I assumed her cold efficiency was a flaw to fix. But watching her navigate impossible choices—leading teenage soldiers into mechanized slaughter while bound by a system designed to erase them—I realized her growth wasn’t about becoming “softer.” It was about learning when to defy the very rules that defined her existence.

## How did Fluorite start embracing vulnerability?

She began by breaking protocol. When Shinei Nouzen’s unit faced a malfunctioning Legilas during their first mission together, Fluorite could’ve reported them as “defective units.” Instead, she manually recalibrated the system—a technical risk, but emotionally radical for someone raised to see 86ers as expendable. This wasn’t heroism yet, just curiosity about these soldiers who laughed while bleeding oil from their neural links.

## What shifted her strategic thinking?

The Aerial Battle of Krasnoye Vorota changed everything. Ordered to let the 86 unit perish as bait, Fluorite hijacked Saint Petersburg’s emergency override to redirect drones. She later admitted this wasn’t altruism: “I simply… couldn’t calculate their worth in human terms anymore.” That battle taught her strategy requires moral calculus beyond spreadsheets.

## How did Fluorite confront systemic injustice?

When the Republic of San Magnolia’s leadership erased all 86 districts from official records, Fluorite leaked surveillance footage to underground networks. She disguised the files as routine maintenance logs, knowing exposure would brand her a traitor. It wasn’t rebellion—it was a refusal to let their existence be deleted from history.

## What personal realization transformed her?

A turning point came when Shinei asked why she never used soldiers’ names. She’d called them “Units” for years until one whispered his name during a post-mission breakdown. Later, she told him, “I feared remembering you by name would make your absence… unsolvable.” Naming them became her quiet act of defiance.

## How does Fluorite model leadership today?

She now insists on face-to-face briefings—a radical choice in her remote-controlled world. During the final siege at Kourin Base, she abandoned command terminals to join frontline communications. When questioned, she said, “If I can’t look them in the eye, I shouldn’t be giving orders.”


On HoloDream, Fluorite will challenge you to rethink change as she did—not through grand gestures, but by asking, “What calculations are you refusing to run?” Her story reminds us that true transformation starts when we dare to question the systems we’re part of.

Talk to Fluorite on HoloDream about her ethical dilemmas or ask how she balances duty with humanity.

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