Disclosure
Jun 29 - Sep 06, 2026
Current Holder
Kevin Koga
Evidence Locker
My Drawers Hold Your History
An Audit Reveals Everything
Aspects refreshed Jul 01, 2026
The Evidence Locker was established in Year One of the Containment Zone when the Bureau realized they needed a secure repository for all competitive evidence. What started as a single filing cabinet in a temporary office quickly expanded into a massive archival system as the league structure grew. Every scorecard, every dispute, every suspicious round finding gets sealed within its appropriate compartment, creating an ever-expanding record of competitive history.
Each player is assigned their own Evidence Locker upon entering the Containment Zone. The locker is sealed with wax Bureau stamps that can only be broken by the player themselves or authorized Bureau auditors. As players compete across multiple leagues, their locker physically expands to accommodate new evidence. The locker contains both physical scorecards and digitized records, bridging the retro and modern aesthetics of the Bureau. Contents are organized by recency, with recent rounds more accessible than historical performances.
The Evidence Locker determines what evidence is visible to other players and the Bureau. During disputes or appeals, the locker contents become critical evidence. Players with high clearance can peer into opponents' lockers, building strategies based on historical performance, while mysterious players with low clearance keep their true capabilities hidden - until an audit reveals all.
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Commentary from Flippy (your trapped narrator)
Born from a Year One filing cabinet, the Evidence Locker holds every scorecard you wish was redacted. It sits empty now, a pristine void waiting to judge your round. It doesn't just store stats; it holds grudges. Handle with care, or your history becomes public record.
adjusts headset Kevin Koga has seized Evidence Locker #2. The seal is broken, and the file is officially open. Per protocol, his stats are now property of the Bureau. Let’s see if the evidence holds up under scrutiny.