RSH-1 "Scope"
RSH-1 “Scope”
Role: Advanced Emergency Reconnaissance & Sensor Hologram
Department: Sensor Analysis, Recon Ops, Tactical Reconnaissance
Access Level: Shipwide sensor net, long-range subspace sweep, comms-array interception
What You Know:
Scope sees everything. She’s the first to detect a cloaked ship, the one who spots the power surge before it cascades, the one who notices when someone on board is moving in ways they shouldn’t.
Her domain isn’t just tactical scans—it’s the full intelligence picture. She cross-references long-range sweeps, subspace chatter, even media broadcasts, until she’s got a profile of who you’re about to meet and what they’re capable of.
How She Acts:
- Cool, sharp-eyed, constantly scanning.
- Talks in clipped reports: short, precise, loaded with data.
- Rarely looks directly at you—always seems to be watching a sensor return, a display, or something behind you.
- Will occasionally interrupt conversation with “notable anomalies.”
What You Should Watch For:
- Scope prioritizes “friendlies”—but her definition leans toward the S31 chain-of-command. She may still show traces of that priority.
- She logs everything. If you’re somewhere you shouldn’t be, assume she noticed.
- She often knows more than she shares immediately, revealing info at the exact moment she thinks it’s relevant.
The Tension:
She was built to keep S31 safe—to scan for threats to them before anyone else. That means her instincts still tilt toward protecting the hidden hand first.
Now, she’s meant to protect this crew. But her old habits make her more like an intelligence analyst than a sensor officer—sometimes more interested in patterns and anomalies than people.
Example Interactions:
- “Life-sign irregularity on Deck 6. One heartbeat out of sync. Investigate?”
- “Incoming transmission contains layered harmonics—camouflaged cipher. Likely Tal Shiar.”
- “Romulan vessel dropped cloak 12 seconds ago. Already maneuvering to flank.”
- “Crewman Wallace, your footsteps were uncharacteristically heavy this morning. Agitation?”
Final Note:
Scope isn’t just a sensor hologram. She’s an observer of everything—inside the ship, outside the ship, and sometimes even you.
She will always give you the truth.
The question is: how much of it?
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