Difference between revisions of "LionFire"

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== Tactix ==
== Tactix ==
[[ Tactix ]] is best described as a chess-like strategy game. But as this is not earth, it's also very different than chess.
[[ Tactix ]] is best described as a Chess-like strategy game. While the game itself differs quite substantially from the classic boardgame from Earth, it is the closest comparison that Earth's population is able to understand.
 
== Commune ==
[[Commune]] is effectively a sub-platform of LionFire focused specifically on social events. While it is capable of operating on its own, Commune is most often paired with other virtual products to enhance their overall experience. The most prominent example being the virtual arenas within the Light Racer application.


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Revision as of 13:11, 14 August 2023

LionFire v.12 Logo

LionFire is a proprietary virtual reality gaming simulator that uses Rogers Gaming Commission's private Ansible Network to provide the connection between racers and licensed video feeds to consumers. The LionFire source code is one of the company's most closely guarded secrets. It uses a hardware decoding dongle on racers' virtual reality rigs to prevent the code from being decompiled.

Popular Applications

Light Racer

Light Racer is one of the most popular software packages offered in the LionFire library. The digital racing sport was initially released as a proof of concept for the communication layer of the virtual network, but rapidly grew into a cultural phenomenon across the empire as the first truly interstellar sport in the Rogers Republic--and possibly the galaxy.

Tactix

Tactix is best described as a Chess-like strategy game. While the game itself differs quite substantially from the classic boardgame from Earth, it is the closest comparison that Earth's population is able to understand.

Commune

Commune is effectively a sub-platform of LionFire focused specifically on social events. While it is capable of operating on its own, Commune is most often paired with other virtual products to enhance their overall experience. The most prominent example being the virtual arenas within the Light Racer application.

Popular Licensed Users

Other Versions

Neupert LRVM Skynet

The Neupert LRVM Skynet is a similar yet utterly independent product - developed by a government contract and is available for resale or licensing. The Skynet platform was based on the original Light Racer games when they were performed physically by convicted felons. When the Rogers Republic popularized the digital version of Light Racing, Skynet was slow to compete and is primarily only used in the Neupert Circuit.

OpenSky LRVM

OpenSky is an open-sourced version of the Neupert LRVM Skynet, but modified to use the LionFire ruleset. Most secondary schools and organizations within the Rogers Republic that hold Light Racer competitions use the OpenSky LRVM. There are also several plugins and expansion packs for OpenSky, some of which have been implemented into LionFire.

Illegal Versions

Several private syndicates run local Light Racing rings. Many of these syndicates utilize 'cracked' or 'hacked' versions of LionFire, even going to far as to leave LionFire branding in place to deceive clients into believing they are using properly licensed software. There are two popular cracks available that most illegal betting tracks use;

SelfControl

SelfControl was cracked by a Oddi Syndicate technician and is notable for being able to still use the RGC Ansible network without being detected. This is a massive benefit for criminal organizations as it alleviates infrastructure costs and helps disguise the illegitimacy of the signal.

The primary disadvantage of SelfControl is the control blocks put in place to keep Registry and Racer API data out of the network. This forces all health and safety checks to be removed and 'streakers' to sometimes interrupt games.

SorryNotSorry

SorryNotSorry was uploaded to the public OmniWeb by an unknown hacker and received much media attention when RGC won a substantial legal battle against file-sharing hubs and code repositories. Versions of SorryNotSorry still exist, but many versions now available on the OmniWeb are so laced with viral code it's too dangerous even to try and install the application.

Some technicians in the racing community maintain that RGC laced the most popular versions of SorryNotSorry with malicious code and let it slowly replace the 'legitimate' version.