LSD

Lysergic acid diethylamide, commonly called LSD or acid, is a powerful hallucinogenic drug. It plays an important role in several Narratives as a critical point in the development of flesh interface technology.

In The Investigator's Narrative
LSD is immediately mentioned in the first post of The Investigator's Narrative. Part 01 recounts the MK-Ultra experiments, in which the CIA tested the effects of LSD on human subjects. During MK-Ultra, new projects were created under the influence of the drug, resulting in the development of flesh interfaces and restraint bed portals.

In Part 02, The Investigator describes a set of sixteen incidents in which Vietnamese villages independently invented flesh interface technology while under the influence of a large dose of LSD. These interfaces were eventually destroyed by the North Vietnamese Army.

Similarly to Part 02, Part 03 describes the Soviet program of "harvest populations" in Ukraine, in which the food and water supplies of rural populations were dosed with LSD, leading to integration and the invention of flesh interfaces. The Soviet army unsuccessfully attempted to utilise these interfaces for their own purposes.

In Part 07, The Investigator states that one must be under the influence of LSD for an extended period of time in order to invent flesh interface technology. This knowledge rules out Elizabeth Báthory, who lived before the invention of LSD, as the first inventor of flesh interfaces.

LSD is briefly mentioned in Part 10 as "an exceptionally pure gas concentration" used in the creation of a large flesh interface which eventually became a portal.

In Part 13, LSD is revealed to be produced in large quantities by "independent interface glands" when a human body is embedded in a flesh interface.

In Part 14, LSD is mentioned alongside propofol. The Investigator states that receptivity can be induced by immersion in aerosolized LSD, turning the brain "malleable" and allowing "high-energy rays from outer space" to enter the body. This effect can be replicated through long-term use of propofol and REM suppression.

In The CIA Researcher's Narrative
In Part 01, "an exotic LSD analogue" is mentioned as occurring in the blood of an encasement sac retrieved from a flesh interface. This form of LSD "made people pretty violent," to the extent that the involved researchers wore containment suits when interacting with the sac.

Part 05 describes a female child subject that "bleeds and sweats and pees LSD," apparently in a similar fashion to the flesh interfaces themselves. The girl returned to normal and the production of "bio-LSD" ceased after her separation and escape from the flesh interface. The same child is mentioned again in Part 08.