My Ultimate Sign-in System Made Me Invincible Chapter 530 The World Is In Anticipation
Previously on My Ultimate Sign-in System Made Me Invincible...
Just one month remains until the Medical Nanites clinical trial kicks off. Deadlines for staff and volunteer applications have now shut tight.
Selected staff applicants have already gotten their acceptance emails for the positions. Those messages detail the exact dates for heading to the base.
A handful of them started sharing those emails right on LucidNet.
Posts exploded on LucidNet mere minutes after the first batch landed.
One user shared a screenshot with trembling hands, captioned by themselves: "I need everyone to look at this. I need someone to confirm I'm reading this correctly. Because I have been staring at it for four minutes and my brain keeps telling me it's real and I keep not believing my brain."
The screenshot showed a short email: the individual was selected, position locked in. Travel info listed below. Head to the assigned airport on the given date. Nova Technologies team will handle coordination.
Replies flooded in quicker than the poster could scroll through them.
One said: Congratulations. You're going to the moon.
Another chimed in: I've been following this entire arc since Nova Night and I am not even slightly prepared for this moment.
A third begged: Please. Post everything. Post all of it. Whatever they let you post.
The lucky staffer answered that one: I will. I promise. Whatever I'm allowed to share, I'll share.
More posts surged within the hour.
A line cook out of São Paulo dropped his email with just one line: I applied to cook on the moon and they said yes.
That one racked up four hundred thousand likes by noon.
Reaction threads branched off instantly, echoing the familiar divides from weeks of Nova Technologies buzz, but carrying a fresh vibe.
Debates on cost and access had simmered down big time since the trial details dropped. In their place rose a buzzing group thrill—the electric vibe of masses witnessing a promised event finally unfolding for real.
One user declared: "The staff emails are dropping. This is no longer a future event. This is a present event. People are receiving confirmation that they are going to the moon next month. I need to lie down."
A reply fired back: "The timeline has been so carefully constructed that every step has felt abstract until the previous step became real. The announcement was abstract. The observer framework was abstract. The airport coordination was abstract. And now someone's phone is buzzing with an email that says they're going to the lunar surface in thirty days and it's the least abstract thing that has ever happened."
Another piled on: "Every Nova Technologies announcement has been a promise. The staff emails are the first thing that isn't a promise. It's a confirmation. There's a difference."
Talk about what selected staff could spill kicked off right away, running side-by-side with the congrats frenzy.
A thread that blew up fast came from one user: "Thinking about the information architecture here. Those agreements cover proprietary technology, operational infrastructure, intellectual property. They do not cover the general experience of being somewhere. Which means the staff who arrive at Lunar Base Sanctuary five days before trial commencement are going to come back with something nobody else has."
It went on: "What does the sky look like from the lunar surface with Earth visible? What does the food taste like? What's the common area like? Does it feel like a research station or something else? Does it feel finished or still in progress? Is there natural light simulation or something different? Those questions are not covered by any confidentiality agreement and the answers are going to travel faster than any official announcement."
Response: "The coordination notice said photography and recording are permitted in common areas and designated observation zones. Which means the staff can post images. Which means LucidNet is going to have photographs taken from the lunar surface posted by a line cook from São Paulo within thirty days and I am not emotionally prepared for that."
The São Paulo line cook, lurking in the thread, shot back: First thing I'm doing when I get there.
That reply outshone every other post in the thread for engagement.
A fresh chat sparked around the departure dates some staffers revealed in their shares.
Not just confirmations, but hard dates tied to real names—those turned the vague roster into stone-cold reality like nothing else had.
One forum member shared: "Confirmation has come in that they're heading off from Earth shortly. This aligns perfectly with the orientation schedule in the recruitment notice. They stated five days. It's exactly five days. All details in every document stay precise and uniform, yet it somehow shocks us each and every time."
A different user chimed in: "What keeps drawing me back is the unwavering consistency. Four months worth of announcements. Zero corrections. No retracted claims. Not a single contradicting fact. Now staff emails arrive bearing dates that sync exactly with the recruitment announcement. Eventually, such reliability shifts from remarkable to expected standard, and I believe we've arrived there."
Talks centering on the shuttle's real-life appearance sparked a prolonged separate thread.
A participant commented: "Volunteers and staff can openly snap photos and videos of the trip. The logistics announcement states it clearly. Thus, the initial real-world shots of a Nova Technologies shuttle — excluding livestreams, renders, or screenshots — will come from a nurse, therapist, or kitchen worker using their phone during boarding. And naturally, those pics will hit the web right away."
A response followed: "The shuttle materializing over the airport and dropping straight down to the landing area. During morning hours. Right before airport workers and nearby onlookers. I've pondered that scene for three weeks straight and still can't visualize it completely."
Yet another contributed: "Air traffic controllers at those airports will spot it first on radar. They've received briefings. They're aware it's approaching. Yet they'll stare at their displays and experience a sensation beyond what the prep materials covered. The world stands on the brink of transformation on an unprecedented level."
The publication racked up hundreds of thousands of likes.
Disease-focused groups and selection-tracking forums reacted uniquely to the staff email updates. Staff takeoff served as the prominent vanguard of an awaited milestone since the criteria reveal. Chosen staff leaving indicated the facility now welcomed their arrival.