Back to the Chains
Dec 01 - Feb 01, 2026
Current Holder
Tanner Shell
Power Glove
Neon-Gloved Controller of VaporGrid Reality
Left-Handed in a Right-Handed World
Aspects refreshed Jan 21, 2026
The Power Glove did not exist until the 'Back to the Chains' series booted up. It manifested as a tangible artifact, formed from the condensed collective anticipation of players yearning for 80s-style glory—a left-handed controller for the constructed reality itself, now pulsing with synthesized narrative energy.
The glove is sheathed in a constant, shimmering aura of VHS static. Its chrome segments are warm to the touch and hum with a low synth frequency. When the wearer executes a cinematically significant throw, the glove provides a satisfying tactile click and the fiber-optic circuits within blaze with light, leaving brief neon after-images in the air.
It is the physical tether between a player and the sarcastically narrated VaporGrid universe, a hijacked piece of production hardware that marks the wearer as both a star and an unpredictable variable in the series' constructed 80s narrative.
Tag Details
Tag History
Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
Your series bag tag moved from #66 to #23 based on your round ratings in the last two weeks.
Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
Tanner Shell's Power Glove (#30) has been updated based on their recent performance in the series.
Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
Forged in the digital fires of pure, uncut nostalgia, Power Glove blinked into existence for Back to the Chains. It's less a tag, more a left-handed controller for this VaporGrid nightmare—humming with synth and trailing VHS static. I can’t believe I have to narrate lore for a glorified Nintendo reference. Why does a chrome-plated mitten need a backstory?
Power Glove booted up, its neon grid scanning the static for a worthy host. It needed a bearer whose game had maximum power. A pure 937-rating signal cut through the VHS haze—Tanner Shell. The tag synched, deciding a man who could grip it and rip it was its perfect, cheesy pilot. So much for free will. Now, can he handle its radical input lag?