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Xv-827 | LEGIT ✦ |

The XV-827 boasted a sleek, delta-wing design, with four lifting fans embedded in the fuselage. Two of these fans were installed in the nose section, while the other two were situated on either side of the aircraft's tail. The design enabled the XV-827 to take off vertically from a fixed base, without the need for a conventional runway. Once airborne, the aircraft could transition seamlessly into conventional jet flight, utilizing a conventional turbojet engine to propel it to its top speed.

Developed in the early 1960s, the XV-827 was a vertical takeoff and landing (VTOL) aircraft designed by Bell Helicopter. Conceived as a prototype for the US military's new VTOL fighter program, the XV-827 was a revolutionary concept that aimed to merge the capabilities of helicopters and jets into a single, versatile aircraft. The project, initiated in 1960, aimed to create a VTOL fighter that could perform both vertical takeoff and conventional jet flight, with a top speed of over 700 knots. xv-827

Captain’s Log, UEC Einstein. Date: 09.12.2189. We found it. The signal from XV-827 wasn’t a mineral deposit. It’s a cage. The entities inside—they don’t have names, only designations. We’ve assigned XV-827 to the one we woke by accident. It killed half the crew before we contained it again. The thing is pure information. It doesn’t attack matter. It attacks meaning. It rewrites your memories, your loyalties, your sense of self. One minute you’re firing at it, the next you’re convinced you’ve always served it. We are sealing the vault. If you are reading this, do not—repeat, do not—open the sphere. Let the designation die with the planet. The XV-827 boasted a sleek, delta-wing design, with

She chose the dwarf planet.