Formula 1: Infinite Simulation Mode

Chapter 25: Ghost Grid Race X

Formula 1: Infinite Simulation Mode

Chapter 25: Ghost Grid Race X

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Chapter 25: Ghost Grid Race X

[SIMEX BROADCAST, LAP 14 of 30 (84) START:]

[LEO KAITO continues to hold the lead. The human driver’s strategy of ’Pattern Denial’ appears to be successfully manipulating the adaptive behavior of GD-03. By refusing to provide a consistent dataset, the driver has forced the AI into a secondary mirroring loop.]

[Result: GD-02 is now under sustained pressure from a driver that anticipates its every move because it is programmed to copy them.]

[Total points gap between LEO KAITO and GD-02: 68 points.]

[Laps remaining: 17.]

Sixty-eight points. It was still a huge number. He needed to win every lap, and he needed GD-02 to keep failing.

"I can’t just hope they fail," Leo thought. He watched the lights on the gantry. "I have to make them fail."

He thought about the next phase of the plan. If mirroring caused GD-02 to slow down, what would happen if he forced the pack even closer together? What if he turned the entire grid into a tangled mess of dirty air and conflicting logic?

He thought about the "Iron Cell" around him. He thought about the garage, wondering if he had finally lost his mind. He thought about the million laps.

He wasn’t a technician anymore. He wasn’t just a guy who fixed simulators. He was the ghost in the machine. He was the variable that the math couldn’t solve.

The lights went out.

Lap eighty-four began. Leo didn’t pull away this time. He did the opposite.

He braked slightly earlier for Sainte Dévote. Not enough to lose the lead, but enough to bring GD-02 and GD-03 right onto his gearbox. He wanted them close. He wanted to feel their breath on his neck.

He was the conductor of a very fast, very dangerous orchestra.

As they climbed the hill, the three cars were separated by less than a second. The spray was a solid wall. Leo could hear the other engines, a dissonant chord of high-revving machinery.

"Come on," he muttered. "Follow me."

He led them through Massenet. He took a line that was intentionally awkward, not slow, but difficult to follow. He moved the car around on the road, hunting for grip in places where there shouldn’t be any.

He saw GD-02 twitch in his peripheral vision. The AI was struggling. Its "optimal" line was being disrupted by Leo’s erratic movements and GD-03’s constant mirroring. It was like trying to walk a tightrope while someone was shaking the cable.

They reached the Casino Square. Leo took the corner with a violent flick of the wheel, the car rotating on a dime. He saw GD-02 try to follow, but the AI was too cautious. It braked a meter too early.

GD-03, locked onto GD-02, also braked.

But GD-01, the aggressive profile, saw the gap. It didn’t care about optimal lines. It only cared about the win. It lunged down the inside of GD-03, the two cars nearly touching as they rounded the fountain.

The pack was descending into chaos.

"Perfect," Leo said.

He accelerated down the hill toward the Mirabeau. He was no longer just driving a car; he was playing a game of chess at two hundred miles per hour. Every move he made was designed to provoke a reaction from the machines behind him.

He was the only human in a world of logic, and he was using his humanity as a weapon. He was inconsistent. He was emotional. He was unpredictable.

And the AI was terrified of him.

He came through the tunnel, the orange lights a blur. He felt the car’s suspension groaning under the load. The "Perfect Braking" was the only thing keeping him from locking up and sliding into the harbor.

He crossed the line for lap eighty-four.

[LAP VALIDATED. POSITION: P1.]

[Points this lap: 10.]

[Total points: 45.]

[GRID RANKINGS, LAP 14 of 30 (84):]

[1st: GD-02, 106 points (+3)]

[2nd: GD-01, 85 points (+7)]

[3rd: GD-03, 78 points (+5)]

[7th: LEO KAITO, 45 points (+10)]

The gap was closing. GD-02 had finished fourth. It was bleeding points. The Professor was being dismantled, one lap at a time.

Leo looked at the counter. Eighty-four laps done. Sixteen to go until he reached the hundredth lap. Sixteen laps until he earned his "Freedom Units."

He felt a sudden, sharp pain in his temples. The "Mental Stability" warning was pulsing red. He had been in the pod too long. His brain was starting to fuse with the telemetry. He wasn’t seeing the track anymore; he was seeing vectors, heat maps, and probability curves.

"Just sixteen more," he told himself. "Don’t break yet."

He looked at the starting grid for lap eighty-five. The Ghost Drivers were repositioning and they looked different now. They looked less like machines and more like predators. The simulation was adapting. It was realizing that its "Average Specialist" profiles weren’t enough to stop the monster it had created.

[SIMEX SYSTEM UPDATE:]

[Warning: Subject LEO KAITO is exhibiting ’Inhuman’ driving characteristics.]

[Difficulty scaling... RECALIBRATING.] 𝙛𝓻𝒆𝒆𝒘𝙚𝓫𝙣𝙤𝒗𝙚𝓵.𝙘𝙤𝙢

[Ghost Driver aggression... INCREASING.]

Leo didn’t care. He welcomed it.

"Bring it on," he whispered.

He gripped the wheel. His knuckles were white inside the haptic gloves. He could feel the heartbeat of the machine. He could feel the hunger of the million laps.

He was the ghost in the machine, and he was about to haunt the world.

The lights began their sequence. One. Two. Three. Four. Five.

Leo didn’t wait for the lights to go out. He felt the exact moment the system would release the grid. He was already moving before the light hit the sensor.

The glitch was in control now. And the glitch was very, very fast.

He shot into Sainte Dévote, a matte-black streak in the rain. He didn’t look back. He didn’t look at the standings. He only looked at the apex.

The hundredth lap was waiting. And beyond that, the world.

But for now, there was only the rain, the roar, and the mirror. And Leo Kaito was the only one who knew how to break it.

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