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To any surviving personnel: Do not go to the roof. The "Moths" are not moths. They are spires.

GIL engineers transformed the global manufacturing and medical landscapes before containment protocols failed. By decoding the genetic sequence of mutated Vespa mandarinia (giant hornet), researchers developed lightweight, bulletproof armor plating from synthetic chitin.

Surviving the concluding sequences of the Research Institute requires mastering strict environmental interactions.

The primary success of the GIL initiative was the "Project Carapace" series. By simulating the Carboniferous period’s high-oxygen environment within specialized hyperbaric bio-domes, researchers successfully reared Meganeura (giant dragonflies) with wingspans exceeding 75 centimeters. These specimens provided invaluable data on biological flight mechanics, leading to radical improvements in drone aerodynamics. Furthermore, the development of synthetic silk derived from oversized Nephila spiders revolutionized the textile industry, creating fibers with the tensile strength of high-grade steel but the weight of cotton.

If you live near a forest, a desert, a basement, or a crawlspace: leave. Do not pack. Do not call loved ones. The giant insects communicate through vibration. Your phone, your footsteps, your heartbeat—they hear it all. They have been listening their whole lives.

: Players navigate a branching subterranean grid. Escaping requires routing backup power, overriding biometric security locks, and venting localized toxic gas before giant specimens break through containment glass.

No trace of the GIL was ever found. Satellite imagery of the Coral Sea coordinates shows only open water. However, declassified sonar data from the USS Jimmy Carter (2005) suggests a subterranean cavern system 2,000 feet below the seabed—a cavern that produces a rhythmic clicking sound, 24 hours a day.

Giant insects will terrify the public, but the report emphasizes that most gigantism-induced behaviors are not aggressive but allometric (scaled-up versions of normal insect actions). A giant cricket does not want to eat humans – it wants to eat decaying leaves. However, a giant ant may see a human as a competitor for protein. The distinction is critical for survival protocols.

To any civilians receiving this: If you see a cricket the size of a freight train rubbing its legs together, do not run. The vibration is what triggers the swarm. Lie flat. Cover your teeth. Pray it thinks you are a stone.

The concluding report serves as both a scientific retrospective and a stark warning. According to the data, GIL successfully engineered several distinct lineages of giant arthropods, classified into three primary research tiers: 1. The Carboniferous Resurgence (Hyper-O2 Adaptation)