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New Cap City: Difference between revisions

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citations, other locales from The Caprican
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New Cap City is a virtual recreation of Caprica City, but darker and with a violent mob atmosphere. The simulation is updated to reflect current events, such as the Maglev 23 bombing. The objective of the game, if it has one, is currently unknown.  Some players believe that the goal is to acquire items – like money and weapons – which can be converted into points.  Others believe that discovering the objective of the game is, in fact, the objective of the game.  Players who are "killed" in the game subsequently wake up in reality, and are unable to reload their avatars into ''New Cap City''.
New Cap City is a virtual recreation of Caprica City, but darker and with a violent mob atmosphere. The simulation is updated to reflect current events, such as the Maglev 23 bombing. The objective of the game, if it has one, is currently unknown.  Some players believe that the goal is to acquire items – like money and weapons – which can be converted into points.  Others believe that discovering the objective of the game is, in fact, the objective of the game.  Players who are "killed" in the game subsequently wake up in reality, and are unable to reload their avatars into ''New Cap City''.
==Tamara in New Cap City==


After the death of [[Tamara Adama]] aboard [[Lev|Maglev No. 23]], [[Daniel Graystone]] used software developed by his own deceased [[Zoe Graystone|daughter]] to create an [[Holographic avatar|avatar]] of Adama at the request of her [[Joseph Adama|father]].  [[Tamara-A|That avatar]] was later found in an unprogrammed space by [[Lacy Rand]] and Zoe Graystone's [[Zoe-A|avatar]], who helped Tamara escape into the larger virtual world, where she sought out the gamer [[Vesta]] in order to wake up.  Discovering Tamara's unique ability to recover from game-inflicted damage, Vesta offered Tamara a trade: If Tamara-A helped Vesta in ''New Cap City'', Vesta would help find a way to wake Tamara in the real world.
After the death of [[Tamara Adama]] aboard [[Lev|Maglev No. 23]], [[Daniel Graystone]] used software developed by his own deceased [[Zoe Graystone|daughter]] to create an [[Holographic avatar|avatar]] of Adama at the request of her [[Joseph Adama|father]].  [[Tamara-A|That avatar]] was later found in an unprogrammed space by [[Lacy Rand]] and Zoe Graystone's [[Zoe-A|avatar]], who helped Tamara escape into the larger virtual world, where she sought out the gamer [[Vesta]] in order to wake up.  Discovering Tamara's unique ability to recover from game-inflicted damage, Vesta offered Tamara a trade: If Tamara-A helped Vesta in ''New Cap City'', Vesta would help find a way to wake Tamara in the real world.

Revision as of 19:32, 6 April 2010

For information on the city from the re-imagined series, see New Caprica City.

New Cap City is a v-world game in which holoband users participate in various illicit activities.

Baxter Sarno charged the game with contributing to the moral decline of Caprica City that led, in part, to the bombing of Maglev No. 23. (CAP: "Gravedancing")

New Cap City is a virtual recreation of Caprica City, but darker and with a violent mob atmosphere. The simulation is updated to reflect current events, such as the Maglev 23 bombing. The objective of the game, if it has one, is currently unknown. Some players believe that the goal is to acquire items – like money and weapons – which can be converted into points. Others believe that discovering the objective of the game is, in fact, the objective of the game. Players who are "killed" in the game subsequently wake up in reality, and are unable to reload their avatars into New Cap City.

Tamara in New Cap City[edit]

After the death of Tamara Adama aboard Maglev No. 23, Daniel Graystone used software developed by his own deceased daughter to create an avatar of Adama at the request of her father. That avatar was later found in an unprogrammed space by Lacy Rand and Zoe Graystone's avatar, who helped Tamara escape into the larger virtual world, where she sought out the gamer Vesta in order to wake up. Discovering Tamara's unique ability to recover from game-inflicted damage, Vesta offered Tamara a trade: If Tamara-A helped Vesta in New Cap City, Vesta would help find a way to wake Tamara in the real world.

Tamara traveled to the game along with another of Vesta's underlings, Heracles, in order to "steal" the avatar of another high-ranking gamer named Chiron. Tamara and Heracles found Chiron at a speakeasy, where Tamara distracted him and his guards by posing as a jilted girlfriend while Heracles took a digital copy of Chiron's avatar. Tamara was shot in the altercation, but Heracles extracted her from the club, and demonstrated his new ability to shift between his own avatar and Chiron's. The two later visited a bank where Chiron kept a vault, and after dismissing the guards, Tamara entered a code which Vesta had discovered inscribed on manhole covers around the city.

Heracles proceeded to collect as much of Chiron's money as possible before the bank alarm sounded and two guards rushed into the vault. Tamara pushed Heracles to the ground as the guards opened fire and was hit with several rounds before summoning her own will to alter the code of the game, forcibly derezzing the guards before collapsing.

After the robbery, Tamara learned from Vesta that she had died in the Maglev bombing and could not be woken in the real world. Discovering that Vesta intended to continue using her as a pawn in the game, Tamara used Heracles' weapons to kill everyone in the room except Vesta, then instructed Heracles to return to the real world and tell Joseph Adama that she was trapped in v-world. After Heracles removed his holoband, Tamara told Vesta that she was "awake" and shot her, ejecting Vesta from the game. (CAP: "There Is Another Sky")

In-game locales[1][edit]

  • Mysteries[2]
  • Eleusinian Theater
  • Shooting Range
  • Airfield
  • Tattoo parlor


Notes[edit]

  • The concept of the game has been compared to the real-world video game Grand Theft Auto, while its title resembles that of the 1991 crime film New Jack City.

References[edit]