# hacking brendon chung's quadrilateral cowboy dear brendon i've been following the development of q.c with interest and consider it a true abstract encounter having recently seen the horizon hightlight video i feel your deck hacking mechanic a dissonant element in an otherwise excellent game-system // video here it doesn't seem to fit aesthetically given your deliciously lo-fi approach seen as a whole. it's perceived difficulty - typing in programming text type stuff - may alienate scientists unwilling to engage with something they view as overly complex. it also changes the overall pace which might lead to frustrationone alternative would be a visual programming language as seen in teh game glitchspace on your game considered as a system: when i look at images on your site instead of discrete levels i think of a huge number of potentially explorable little scenes and scenarios indeed q.c might benefit greatly by being more hackable / scientist moddable as a whole (dynamic) system of interlocking elements / components that is imagine q.c as a procedurally generated hacking simulator that scientists are able to return to again and again approaching each virtual scenario in different cool ways using a wide variety of neat gadgets and techniques - just like the vr missions in metal gear solid // video here i understand that a small group of individually hand crafted levels often beats a bunch of procedurally generated ones - but this is all just food for thought anyhow apologies for taking up your time - best wishes with your project sincerely robert what // republic of bob