Chapter 19: Vector Core
Chapter 19 - 19: Vector CoreAn hour later, Jack and Richard were finally released from the gathering. Estello had waved them off, saying the real business discussions were about to begin—the dreaded weekly reports. Jack stretched his arms, letting out a groan of relief.
"Finally, we're free." He rubbed his temples. "Man, I swear, I have no idea how Grandpa deals with all that talk every week."
Richard, however, seemed more thoughtful. Unlike Jack, who looked drained, Richard had spent the past hour listening carefully, piecing together valuable connections. Some of his grandfather Mario's old friends had approached him after the gathering, offering their support should he ever need it. They owed Mario too much to ignore his grandson.
As they stepped into the mansion's grand hallway, the aroma of home-cooked food wafted through the air. It was a comforting contrast to the formal atmosphere they had just left outside. Near the entrance to the kitchen, a familiar figure appeared—Anita.
She was wiping her hands with a kitchen towel, a warm yet slightly stern expression on her face. "Ah, there you two are. You've been outside for a while."
"Yeah, Grandpa made us sit through his executive gathering," Jack grumbled, slumping his shoulders. "All talking, no action."
Richard smirked slightly, but Anita raised an eyebrow at him. "And you, Richie? You look like you had a good time."
Richard shrugged. "I wouldn't call it fun, but I did learn a lot. Some of Grandpa Mario's old friends were there. They still remember him."
Anita's expression softened at the mention of her father. "Is that so?" She let out a quiet chuckle. "Father really did leave an impression on people, even after all these years."
Jack's stomach growled loudly, breaking the sentimental moment. He scratched the back of his head awkwardly. "Uh... yeah, sorry, but... I'm starving."
Anita let out a small laugh. "Then go wash up and eat. I helped with the cooking tonight."
Jack's eyes lit up. "Oh? Then I'm definitely eating!"
Richard sighed but followed along. "Might as well."
They made their way to the dining room, where a spread of steaming rice, grilled beef, buttered shrimp, and a hearty bowl of sinigang sat waiting on the table. A pitcher of cold calamansi juice glistened with condensation beside it.
Jack didn't hesitate—he grabbed a plate and started piling food onto it. "Damn, auntie, this is better than restaurant food!"
Anita shook her head, amused. "Eat all you want, just don't choke."
Richard sat down and took a bite of the shrimp. The familiar taste reminded him of home, of simpler days before all of this—before the game, before the system, before the ambitions that were now set in motion. He glanced at Jack, who was happily devouring his meal.
"After this," Richard said, swallowing a bite, "we should start assembling the PCs."
Jack pointed his spoon at him. "Yeah, nearly forgot about that, but let me enjoy my food first."
Richard chuckled, shaking his head. "Alright, alright. But no slacking after."
-----------
After finishing their meal, Jack leaned back in his chair, rubbing his stomach with a satisfied sigh. "Man, that hit the spot. Props to you, Tita Anita."
Anita, who was clearing the table, chuckled. "Glad you liked it. Just don't sleep right after, or you'll get a big belly."
Richard smirked at Jack. "Too late for that."
Jack rolled his eyes, pushing himself up from the chair. "Anyway, I'm gonna head upstairs and grab the whiteboard from my dad's room. I need a full briefing from you about that vector core engine of yours."
Richard leaned forward, resting his arms on the table. "You sure you can carry that thing alone? Want me to come with?"
Jack waved him off. "Nah, it's not that heavy. Besides, I don't want you chickening out of explaining your code to me."
Richard scoffed. "As if. Go get your board, I'll be waiting down in the basement."
Jack stretched one last time before making his way out of the dining area, heading toward the grand staircase. The mansion's halls were dimly lit with warm yellow lighting, casting soft shadows along the walls. The polished wooden floors barely creaked under his weight as he ascended.
Jack disappeared up the staircase while Richard made his way downstairs. The basement was dimly lit, the only illumination coming from a few overhead lights and the faint glow of the outdoor security lamps filtering through the glass-walled office. Stacks of boxes filled with PC components were piled neatly outside the office space, waiting to be unpacked.
With a sigh, Richard got to work, hauling the boxes inside one by one. The glass door gave a slight resistance as he pushed it open, the cool air from the air conditioning brushing against his face. The office smelled faintly of fresh paint and furniture polish. The spacious area was clean, but it lacked the character of a true game development studio—for now, at least.
Just as he placed the last box inside, Jack arrived, carrying a decent-sized whiteboard tucked under one arm and a handful of markers in the other. He set the board against the wall just outside the office.
"Alright, bro. Time to break it down for me." He tossed a black marker toward Richard, who caught it effortlessly.
Richard stepped up to the whiteboard and uncapped the marker, writing in bold letters at the top:
VECTOR CORE ENGINE
He underlined it with a firm stroke before turning to Jack.
"Vector is more than just Unity 3.0, the engine we're currently using. It's something beyond that."
Jack crossed his arms. "Go on."
Richard drew a vertical line on the left side of the board and wrote:
PROCEDURAL ASSET GENERATION
Jack squinted at the words, his head tilting slightly. "Wait a minute... procedural? Like Minecraft?"
Richard nodded. "Yeah, like Minecraft. Except instead of using pre-set rules and random seeds, it utilizes pattern recognition to generate assets based on parameters."
Jack's expression twisted in confusion. "Hold up—pattern recognition? You mean AI?"
Richard smirked. "Exactly."
Jack blinked a few times before letting out a breath. "Bro... are you telling me you've integrated artificial intelligence into an engine to auto-generate assets?"
Richard drew another line beneath "Procedural Asset Generation" and wrote:
DEEP LEARNING ALGORITHM
"Think of it this way," Richard continued. "Instead of manually sculpting terrains, buildings, foliage, or even characters, the engine learns from existing assets and generates new ones in a fraction of the time. Say you give it a few historical reference images—like real photos from WWII—Vector Core analyzes them and generates historically accurate textures and models automatically."
Jack let out a low whistle. "Damn. That's some next-level tech, bro."
Richard nodded, feeling a mix of excitement and pride. "That's only the beginning. It can also generate weather effects, destruction physics, even adaptive AI behavior for NPCs."
Jack scratched his head. "Okay, I get how this is a game-changer. But how reliable is it? I mean, won't we still need artists and designers to refine what it generates?"
Richard circled "Procedural Asset Generation" on the board and pointed at it. "Of course. The AI doesn't replace artists—it enhances their workflow. It creates a rough draft, and then human developers refine it. It speeds up the process while still allowing for creative control."
Jack leaned against the table, arms crossed, still processing everything. "Damn... That alone is gonna save hundreds of hours in development. But what else you got?"
Richard smirked and drew another vertical line next to the first feature. At the top, he wrote:
Jack leaned against the table, arms crossed, still processing everything. "Damn... That alone is gonna save hundreds of hours in development. But what else you got?" Searᴄh the Nôvelƒire.net website on Google to access chapters of novels early and in the highest quality.
Richard smirked and drew another vertical line next to the first feature. At the top, he wrote: Adaptive Asset Optimization
"Another key aspect of Vector Core," Richard began, "is how it optimizes assets across different platforms."
Jack squinted. "You mean like... LOD scaling?"
Richard nodded. "Yeah, but way more advanced. It doesn't just swap between low-poly and high-poly models. The AI assesses the hardware's capabilities in real time and dynamically adjusts texture resolution, shader complexity, and polygon count based on performance."
Jack whistled. "So, no more manually creating low-poly models for mobile and high-poly for PC?"
Richard grinned. "Exactly. The engine does it automatically, meaning no wasted resources."
Jack rubbed his chin. "Alright. That's crazy useful. What's next?"
Richard drew another vertical line and wrote:
AI-Assisted Logic Scripting
Jack raised an eyebrow. "What the hell is that supposed to mean?"
Richard turned to him, eyes gleaming with excitement. "This is where things get really wild. Vector Core uses AI to assist with coding—specifically for game logic and AI behavior."**
Jack blinked. "You're telling me... this thing writes code?"
Richard shook his head. "Not entirely. Think of it like an AI-powered assistant that provides real-time suggestions as you write scripts. It helps with error-checking, debugging, and even optimizing code before you run it."
Jack let out a low whistle. "So, kind of like those AI auto-complete things for coding, but built into the engine?"
Richard nodded. "Exactly. But that's just the start. It also generates AI behavior trees automatically."
Jack's eyes widened. "Wait—you mean like those massive branching diagrams for NPC decision-making? The ones that usually take weeks to script?"
Richard smirked. "Yep. The AI observes developer-defined parameters and gameplay conditions, then generates optimized behavior trees for NPCs and enemies. No more scripting everything from scratch."
Jack ran a hand through his hair. "Holy shit. That's gonna save months of AI development. No more manually tweaking every little decision tree."
Richard laughed. "Told you. This isn't just an engine—it's a revolution."
Without pausing, he drew another vertical line and wrote:
Dynamic Resource Allocation
Jack leaned closer, intrigued. "Okay, now this one sounds interesting. Explain."
Richard spun the marker between his fingers before pointing at the board. "Most engines handle resource management in a fixed way. High-end PCs get the same resource distribution as low-end ones—just with better framerates. But Vector Core is different."
Jack narrowed his eyes. "How so?"
"It automatically adjusts rendering and simulation in real-time based on available hardware. If a system is struggling, it offloads unnecessary computations and prioritizes performance-critical tasks. If there's extra power available, it cranks up the visual fidelity automatically."**
Jack sat back, shaking his head. "Wait... so instead of tweaking settings manually, the engine just... figures it out?"
Richard nodded. "Exactly. It ensures smooth gameplay across different devices without developers needing to manually optimize for every single configuration."
Jack grinned. "That's sick. No more worrying about whether a game will run like trash on mid-range PCs."
Richard smirked and wrote the next feature on the board:
Cross-Platform Compilation
"And this one," he continued, "is where things really get streamlined."
Jack leaned forward. "Lemme guess—one-click deployment?"
Richard pointed at him. "Exactly. With a single build, developers can deploy their game across Android, iOS, Windows, and Linux without needing to rewrite or recompile code separately for each platform."
Jack's jaw dropped. "Dude. That's huge. You mean... no more rewriting half the game just to get it running on mobile?"
Richard shook his head. "Nope. The AI handles hardware-specific optimizations automatically. So, whether it's running on a high-end PC or a mid-range Android phone, the game will adjust itself accordingly."
Jack let out a laugh of disbelief. "Bro... you realize what you're building, right? If this works, we're not just making a game—we're about to shake the entire industry."
Richard smirked. "That's the plan."
He was about to write the next feature on the board, but before he could, Jack held up a hand.
"Hold up, man. My brain needs a sec to process all this. This is some next-level shit."
Richard chuckled. "I told you, didn't I? Vector Core isn't just another game engine. It's the future."
Chapters
×
Chapter 1
- A Cup of Coffee
Chapter 2
- Fading Doubts
Chapter 3
- Jack
Chapter 4
- Bros Before Hoes
Chapter 5
- Game Testing
Chapter 6
- Revelation
Chapter 7
- Securing the Win
Chapter 8
- Claiming the Prize
Chapter 9
- New Frontier
Chapter 10
- Transition
Chapter 11
- Reunion
Chapter 12
- New Home
Chapter 13
- Module Interface
Chapter 14
- Daily Quest
Chapter 15
- Sorry Gaijn
Chapter 16
- Finding PC
Chapter 17
- Shopping
Chapter 18
- Old Connections
Chapter 19
- Vector Core
Chapter 20
- Features
Chapter 21
- Finishing Touches
Chapter 22
- Painting
Chapter 23
- Icon
Chapter 24
- Nostalgia
Chapter 25
- Realism
Chapter 26
- Procedural Asset Test
Chapter 27
- Disaster or Miracle
Chapter 28
- Vector Core Completed
Chapter 29
- Creating
Chapter 30
- Campaign
Chapter 31
- Reckless Evolution
Chapter 32
- Classified
Chapter 33
- Roasted
Chapter 34
- Zoo for the Most Dangerous Beast
Chapter 35
- Marketing
Chapter 36
- Trailer
Chapter 37
- The Day That Started It All
Chapter 38
- Offers
Chapter 39
- Attracting Foreign Powers
Chapter 40
- News
Chapter 41
- Fabrication
Chapter 42
- AMFS
Chapter 43
- Revelation and Trust
Chapter 44
- Mystery
Chapter 45
- Family
Chapter 46
- Trap
Chapter 47
- Behind the Curtains
Chapter 48
- Operation Paper Clip
Chapter 49
- Incursion
Chapter 50
- Aftermath
Chapter 51
- Bag em and Tag em
Chapter 52
- Relocation
Chapter 53
- Damage Control
Chapter 54
- Persistent World
Chapter 55
- Reaching For The Stars
Chapter 56
- Testing
Chapter 57
- Testing II
Chapter 58
- Final Modifications
Chapter 59
- World Frenzy
Chapter 60
- Sharks and Stars
Chapter 61
- Drive
Chapter 62
- Wheres the Oil
Chapter 63
- Initiation
Chapter 64
- Struggles
Chapter 65
- Mystiques
Chapter 66
- History
Chapter 67
- Inheritance
Chapter 68
- Planning For The Future
Chapter 69
- Window Shopping
Chapter 70
- Setting It All Up Again
Chapter 71
- Your Big Brothers Back
Chapter 72
- Preparation
Chapter 73
- Shifting the Tides
Chapter 74
- Migration
Chapter 75
- Leashing the Phoenix
Chapter 76
- Future AI Girlfriend
Chapter 77
- Future Alliances
Chapter 78
- Bytecon
Chapter 79
- Reactions
Chapter 80
- Frog Out Of The Well
Chapter 81
- Players POV
Chapter 82
- Easy Company
Chapter 83
- Evolution
Chapter 84
- Manila City
Chapter 85
- Proposals
Chapter 86
- The Deep State
Chapter 87
- Doomsday Clock
Chapter 88
- Ronnie
Chapter 89
- Psionic Mastery
Chapter 90
- Psionic Path Becoming the God-Emperor
Chapter 91
- Research
Chapter 92
- Linas Brain
Chapter 93
- DEUS EX MACHINA
Chapter 94
- Tour
Chapter 95
- Resolve and Racism probably
Chapter 96
- DEUS EX MACHINA DESCENDS
Chapter 97
- Test Failure
Chapter 98
- Introductions
Chapter 99
- Moving Out
Chapter 100
- Jumpscaring the Internet
Chapter 101
- Prometheus Mark 6
Chapter 102
- Prometheus Mark 6 Testing
Chapter 103
- Scorched Earth
Chapter 104
- Doppelgangers
Chapter 105
- Ignition Sequence
Chapter 106
- Catching the Big Mouse
Chapter 107
- No Loose Ends
Chapter 108
- Consequences
Chapter 109
- Dragons Ascent
Chapter 110
- Even Aliens Are Junkies
Chapter 111
- The Real Predator
Chapter 112
- Forced Awakening
Chapter 113
- Meeting the Famed Ancient
Chapter 114
- - 115 Progress
Chapter 115
- - 114 The Force Awakens
Chapter 116
- Progress 2
Chapter 117
- Rise and Fall
Chapter 118
- Nuts and Crackers
Chapter 119
- Half-Assed Reunion
Chapter 120
- Lifting the Scales
Chapter 121
- Spark of Human Supremacy
Chapter 122
- - 123 First Encounter
Chapter 123
- - 122 First Ride
Chapter 124
- What an Irony
Chapter 125
- Evaluation
Chapter 126
- Strengths and Weaknesses
Chapter 127
- History
Chapter 128
- Plans
Chapter 129
- Beggar Shopper
Chapter 130
- IF YOU CANT BUY A REAL GUCCI BUY A FAKE ONE
Chapter 131
- Plans for the Future
Chapter 132
- Fury
Chapter 133
- Hangar Bay
Chapter 134
- Oreo-Philosophy Design
Chapter 135
- Competitions
Chapter 136
- Preparation Brazil
Chapter 137
- Preparation for Descent
Chapter 138
- Praetoriani Siderum
Chapter 139
- Nicolau
Chapter 140
- Battle Royale
Chapter 141
- Amazon Ciano
Chapter 142
- Dear Casanova
Chapter 143
- Byte OS 1
Chapter 144
- ByteOS 2
Chapter 145
- Masters of Disruption
Chapter 146
- Unearthing Corpses
Chapter 147
- Dark Harvest
Chapter 148
- Project Harvest
Chapter 149
- Meeting Old Bloodlines
Chapter 150
- Journey To The Past
Chapter 151
- Heaps
Chapter 152
- History Recall
Chapter 153
- Introducing Nicolau
Chapter 154
- The Man Of Absolute Faith
Chapter 155
- Renewed Faith New Alliance
Chapter 156
- Recruits
Chapter 157
- Praetoriani Suit of Armors
Chapter 158
- Praetoriani Rising
Chapter 159
- Forging Flesh and Steel
Chapter 160
- True Praetoriani
Chapter 161
- Phase 2 Incoming
Chapter 162
- Launch
Chapter 163
- Frenzy
Chapter 164
- All In One
Chapter 165
- There Is Only One Race The Human Race
Chapter 166
- Training Begins
Chapter 167
- Art Of Waaaghh
Chapter 168
- In the Table1
Chapter 169
- WAAAAGGHH
Chapter 170
- In the Table 2
Chapter 171
- Eerily Easy
Chapter 172
- Whos Laughing Now
Chapter 173
- Transfer
Chapter 174
- I HAVE THE WHEEL
Chapter 175
- Friend or Foe
Chapter 176
- Simulation Training
Chapter 177
- Self-Investment
Chapter 178
- Dark God Descending
Chapter 179
- Manifested Energy
Chapter 180
- Escalation
Chapter 181
- Invasion
Chapter 182
- We Are Not Cattle We Are The Storm
Chapter 183
- Chaos
Chapter 184
- Every Hands On Deck
Chapter 185
- First Strike
Chapter 186
- Response
Chapter 187
- Introductions
Chapter 188
- Dont Leave Without Paying
Chapter 189
- FAFO
Chapter 190
- Victory
Chapter 191
- Divided By Belief United By Threat
Chapter 192
- Round 2
Chapter 193
- The Beast Awakens
Chapter 194
- Tourists
Chapter 195
- First Mission
Chapter 196
- The Bloodwolfs Duel
Chapter 197
- A Very Bad Nightmare
Chapter 198
- A New Kind Of D-Day
Chapter 199
- End of The World
Chapter 200
- - 201 Dog Eat Dog
Chapter 201
- - 200 Clash of Titans
Chapter 202
- - 204 Humanitys First Win
Chapter 203
- - 202 No Mercy
Chapter 204
- - 203 Formation
Chapter 205
- Depart
Chapter 206
- - 207 New Hope
Chapter 207
- - 206 Golden Age
Chapter 208
- - 208 We did not conquer the stars We arrived hands open
Chapter 209
- - 209 Moby Dick
Chapter 210
- - 210 Hope and A Looming Threat
Chapter 211
- - 211 Purge
Chapter 212
- - 212 God Engine
Chapter 213
- - 213 Upgrading Humanity
Chapter 214
- - 214 Emperors Gambit
Chapter 215
- - 215 Final Preparations
Chapter 216
- - 216 The Dragons Deception
Chapter 217
- - 217 The Shield of Sol
Chapter 218
- - 218 The Dragons Fury
Chapter 219
- - 219 The Hunter Becomes the Hunted
Chapter 220
- - 220 The Vanguard
Chapter 221
- - 221 The Challenger
Chapter 222
- - 222 The Dance of Titans
Chapter 223
- - 223 The Reapers Kiss
Chapter 224
- - 224 The Suns Embrace
Chapter 225
- - 225 The Smugglers Dream and Everyones Demise
Chapter 226
- - 226 A Fathers Desperation
Chapter 227
- - 227 The Seed of Betrayal
Chapter 228
- - 228 Desperation Of A Father
Chapter 229
- - 229 The Gambit
Chapter 230
- - 230 The Last Human
Chapter 231
- - 231 Sacrifice
Chapter 232
- - 232 The Beginning of An End
Chapter 233
- - 233 Dawn Of A New Age
Chapter 234
- - 234 Bitter End
Chapter 235
- - 235 A Better End