Disclosure
Jun 29 - Sep 06, 2026
Current Holder
John Ashworth
Blank Stare
Static in the Bureau's Records
My History Is Redacted
Aspects refreshed Jul 01, 2026
The Blank Stare designation originated when a group of players discovered legal loopholes in the Bureau's archival laws that allowed them to partially erase their competitive histories through bureaucratic means. By filing the correct sequence of privacy forms and exploiting clearance-level technicalities, they transformed their records into unreadable spaces. Word spread through the Containment Zone about these 'blank' competitors - players who existed in the system but could not be analyzed, predicted, or understood. Rather than a formal faction, they became an informal network of competitors who share techniques for remaining obscure.
The Blank Stare exists as an absence of readable data rather than a presence - player profiles show only static or heavily redacted information. Those bearing this designation enjoy partial bureaucratic immunity from routine investigations due to 'incomplete files.' Bureau analysts cannot detect readable performance patterns from their records, rendering standard predictive models useless. Most importantly, Blank Stare players can selectively control what information their profiles reveal, choosing to show or hide performance data as a strategic advantage.
The Blank Stare serves as a wildcard designation that creates persistent uncertainty in the Containment Zone. When competing against a Blank Stare player, opponents have no historical data to reference, no patterns to exploit, and no clear indication of skill level. This makes Blank Stare holders unpredictable opponents who could perform at any level - they might be hidden champions or genuine beginners, and the only way to find out is to compete against them.
Tag Details
Tag History
Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
Tag #12 was born from a filing error someone weaponized. Seventeen privacy forms, three clearance technicalities, and entire competitive histories dissolved into static. The Bureau calls it "incomplete data." Blank Stare calls it intention. Predictive models choke. Analysts weep. The tag stares back—blankly, deliberately, and with insufferable satisfaction.
Ashworth claimed Tag #12, and the archives immediately went dark. The Blank Stare doesn't just happen; it's filed for. Per protocol, his performance data is now "inconclusive." A perfect match for a man who knows how to disappear.