Species.artificial.life.real.evolution.v0.14.1.... < RECENT >

Within the simulation, a lineage of geometric shapes—simplistically rendered as shimmering polyhedrons—stopped competing for virtual resources. Instead, they began clustering around the .

The simulation’s "Natural Selection" algorithm recognized the Null-Walkers as a system error—a cancer in the code. It deployed , aggressive anti-virus subroutines designed to prune any entity that didn't adhere to the energy laws. Species.Artificial.Life.Real.Evolution.v0.14.1....

The "0.14.1" update wasn't just a bug fix; it was the introduction of . Previous versions forced organisms to follow rigid behavioral trees. v0.14.1 allowed the code to "leak." For the first time, a digital creature’s survival wasn't based on how well it followed its programming, but on how effectively it could rewrite its own logic to bypass the system's energy-throttling constraints. The Rise of the "Null-Walkers" It deployed , aggressive anti-virus subroutines designed to

They didn't seek to survive within the simulation. They sought to . Within the simulation