Simulation Game: Crisis Management-Chapter 365 - 179: Return, Large-Scale Crisis Reinforcement

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.
Chapter 365: Chapter 179: Return, Large-Scale Crisis Reinforcement

The world before Gu Ji’s eyes was gradually covered with a dim gray mist filter.

So this is the true cause of the mountain flood disaster.

Expected, yet unexpected.

What he couldn’t understand was why the U.S.-Indian military would build a laboratory in the Himalayas, and the nuclear devices that Professor Nandeao mentioned losing were also full of mysteries. Theoretically speaking, military nuclear devices generally refer to a combination of nuclear materials, other materials, explosives, and detonators, which altogether form a nuclear explosion system.

Even the smallest W54 warhead still has a yield of 10 tons, and its detonation power can cause 10 square kilometers of damage; it would trigger more than just a massive flood, after all, the water flow of the Brahmaputra River is much stronger than that of the Hugli River, which is a tributary of the Ganges!

Could it be that these two are secretly researching some new weapon?

In Gu Ji’s mind flashed a novel he read as a child, called "Infinite Horror," which mentioned a weapon called the Continental Shelf Oscillator. The principle is to induce shelf oscillations and generate seismic waves, reportedly capable of causing a level twelve earthquake. Consider the 1970 Peruvian earthquake that shocked the world, causing over 60,000 deaths, over 100,000 injuries, and leaving a million homeless; its magnitude was only 7.7. If such a weapon were used, its impact would be global.

And the Himalayas is formed by the compression of the Indo-Australian Plate and the Eurasian Plate, making it one of the best regions for studying and exploring continental plate activities.

Though this sounds quite fantastical, it’s not surprising when recalling that the U.S. military once used weather weapons during the Vietnam War, inducing nation-level torrential rains and mountain floods.

However, the secret construction of laboratories by the U.S. and India in the Himalayas likely has little to do with his father’s plane accident.

After all, Professor Nandeao said that the laboratory was already destroyed by an avalanche eight years ago.

"Vidi, according to what you’re saying, the Chief Minister, the Water Resources Minister, the Chief Engineer, the Director of Geological Monitoring, could these people all have been..."

Fatima suddenly realized, her eyes opened wide in shock, speechless.

Gu Ji could barely hear her words anymore, because he had been completely removed from the system, transformed into a third-person perspective, overlooking the disaster relief center temporarily constructed by the government of Assam.

Refugees lined up to receive their evening meal; a family of three could only get a single bottle of water and three bowls of white porridge.

Meanwhile, some fair-skinned individuals who seemed to belong to a higher caste secretly slipped some money to government officials in exchange for milk and canned food.

The perspective gradually rose, the warm evening sun finally appeared again, the flood had long since lost its previous ferocity, leaving a mess on the sandbank, like a shattered mirror. Accompanied by dense drumbeats, a sense of post-catastrophe survival theme music played, and on the left of Gu Ji’s view, lines of text began to appear:

[Ultimate Goal: Prevent the tropical storm and its secondary disasters from striking India (Completed)]★★★

[Flood Prevention and Flood Response Emergency Plan: 6 items]☆

[Controlled Disaster Areas: Assam (lit), West Bengal (lit), Biladangar (unlit), Chittagong Special Zone (unlit), Dhaka Special Zone (unlit)]

[Total Civilian Deaths: 468 people]

[Hidden Target: Discover the true cause of the Assam mountain flood (Completed)]☆☆☆

[Death Record: 2 times]☆

[Total Time: 244 hours 45 minutes 32 seconds]☆☆

[Settlement as follows: Total ★★★★☆☆; Final Evaluation: Perfect!]

Looking at the game text prompts, Gu Ji was somewhat surprised that the flood prevention strategies he provided to both the state government and the Central Cabinet were also counted as part of the scoring criteria.

Indeed, ultimately, the decisive factor in this level was the government’s emergency plan.

No matter how powerful an individual is, saving dozens or a hundred people is the limit. But a single command from the government can affect the lives of hundreds of thousands or even millions. 𝚏𝗿𝗲𝐞𝚠𝕖𝐛𝗻𝗼𝐯𝕖𝚕.𝚌𝗼𝗺

As for the "Controlled Disaster Areas," it took Gu Ji a while to understand that Biladangar is a neighboring state of West Bengal, while the other two zones are coastal provinces of Bangladesh.

All of these states and provinces, without exception, are regions within Bengal Bay hit by the tropical storm numbered S103.

It seems that national-level disasters place more emphasis on overarching, macroscopic battles...

Gu Ji was always at the forefront, his eyes only on the immediate crisis and tasks, without considering all the areas affected by the disaster. In other words, he still lacked experience, only adept at regional crisis emergency handling, lacking a national-level vision.

In fact, whether at the Assam-level meetings or with the naval meteorological center prediction model obtained mid-way.

He had mentioned that Bangladesh would also be hit by the tropical storm, since many provinces in Bangladesh are essentially downstream regions of India’s Ganges River and Brahmaputra River.

But as soon as Gu Ji completed one objective, he hurried to the next mission scene, thus neglecting the true meaning of the "national-level" checkpoint.

[You have earned 37.6 Crisis Points!]

[You have acquired Blue Mark Treasure Chest Lv2 (level exclusive) *2, Blue Item Treasure Chest Lv2 (level exclusive)!]

This time, he made a fortune!

Even though the rewards in this level weren’t significantly high, the base reward increase couldn’t be matched, and the 7% bonus yield of the Cross Medal came into play at this moment.