The Test (VR simulation)

Brief description

The citizenship test turns out to be a virtual reality simulation, an elaborate scheme to test candidates' responses in a hostage situation. 

Pull Quotes

Deep goes through the next steps in his head. He has to supervise the last two kills, handle the awakening—what they call the transition period when the subjects are told they were part of a simulation—and conduct the exit interview. The awakening is almost a formality. Some people don’t take kindly to the whole experience, but it takes them a few days to develop serious anger or resentment. The medication takes care of that, if taken properly. The awakening itself usually goes well. Waking up in the same room they had their physical in makes it easier to accept that nothing they saw was real. They have something to be happy about: they’ve passed the test. They’re also under the effects of about a dozen drugs designed to make people accept the reality they’re given. During the BVA, those drugs make everything seem real. After the test, they help the subject accept whatever the person handling the awakening is telling them. You should be happy, sir! I am! I am! It’s even quicker if the subject fails. Those who fail don’t go through the awakening. They wake up on an aeroplane with their whole family, mild to severe memory loss, and the headache of the century. They never learn what happened. Kill number four, the last one, is also easy from an operator’s

Neuvel, Sylvain. The Test (pp. 63-64). Tom Doherty Associates. Kindle Edition. 

It’s easy to forgive something that didn’t happen. But it did. I was there. I was there, and I told someone to shoot her in the head. Virtual or not, it was my reality. What I did, the choices I made . . . I did what I did and I chose what I chose. I did not pretend. The world around me might have been a fairy tale, but I was . . . me. Always me. They could not simulate that.

Neuvel, Sylvain. The Test (p. 102). Tom Doherty Associates. Kindle Edition. 

Even in a world without consequence, this was not—is not—something I could ever share with her. She wouldn’t understand. Or she would. That is the problem. She would say she doesn’t blame me, that she’d have made the same choice if she were in my place. She would call me courageous, and she would mean all those things because it was all a simulation and none of it was real. It’s easy to forgive something that didn’t happen. But it did. I was there. I was there, and I told someone to shoot her in the head. Virtual or not, it was my reality. What I did, the choices I made . . . I did what I did and I chose what I chose. I did not pretend. The world around me might have been a fairy tale, but I was . . . me. Always me. They could not simulate that. Every day I try to get better at living with myself. The pills they give me make the guilt bearable, and I take them religiously. If I am alone and absorbed in a book or a movie, I sometimes forget about it all. Tidir understands. She knows I keep something dark from her, but she did the same for us in Teheran and that makes it my right to return the favour.

Neuvel, Sylvain. The Test (pp. 102-103). Tom Doherty Associates. Kindle Edition. 

Work that the situation appears in

Title Publication Type Year Creator
The Test Narrative, Novel Sylvain Neuvel
Who does what?
This technology
This character
Machine P.O.V
Not machine P.O.V.
Notes
I feel like these verbs are completely inadequate to the situation - but the intense emotional pain is not directly caused by the VR but by the evil people who designed and run the test and by the terrorist avatar.

Authored by

UUID
25408727-4a00-48f7-b0e6-3a4f6fa249dd