rdfs:comment
| - Don't like your outdated, obsolete stock anatomy? Just replace it with a whole whack of aftermarket parts- this is the marvel of Cybernetics! Cybernetics began life as simple, clunky-yet-functional limb replacements for amputees. Once the technology was perfected and it was the human body was much more modular in it's construction than first thought, commercial cybernetics took off- it may seem weird, but once some people got wind of amputees sporting boss mechanical arms and legs in place of their old extremities, surgical wards were flushed with wannabe cyborgs, all waiting in line for their boss new aftermarket bits.
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abstract
| - Don't like your outdated, obsolete stock anatomy? Just replace it with a whole whack of aftermarket parts- this is the marvel of Cybernetics! Cybernetics began life as simple, clunky-yet-functional limb replacements for amputees. Once the technology was perfected and it was the human body was much more modular in it's construction than first thought, commercial cybernetics took off- it may seem weird, but once some people got wind of amputees sporting boss mechanical arms and legs in place of their old extremities, surgical wards were flushed with wannabe cyborgs, all waiting in line for their boss new aftermarket bits. Nowadays, some Cybernetic parts can be bought off the shelf, injected as nanotech that assembles itself internally and integrates itself in the patient's sleep; enhancements such as Hand-Eye Synchros, Anti-Radiation Dermis and the ever popular Gecko-Grip climbing pads can all be installed with relative ease. Other, more drastic augmentations still require surgery to install, but even so, such procedures rarely last more than an hour or two and have a success rate approaching 95%. Such augmentations include Internal Firearm Systems, Subdermal Armor Plating and Neural-Linked Decks.
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