>glorious white cells fighting agaisnt the constant, nevernding amount of varied and constantly-mutating viruses from the outside. Once a strategy to defeat them is created its too late since they mutated and now a completely different strategy must be used.
>White cells often become traitors and begin fighting between each other to destroy a non-thread, dwindling their resources and causing possible damage to their world.
>The outside is absolute chaos as anything from fractures to infections and damages can cause the situation to become even worse.
>Dozens of different factions all trying to achieve their own goals and none of them is helping each other.
>No matter how much effort or reinforcements they use the world will eventually die after hundreds of thousands of generations and all that brutal fighting will be for nothing with them only becoming weaker as they further approach their demise.
>every single cell is completely expendable.
>>51484405
Checks out.
>>>/sci/
>>>/trash/7482003
I wanted to say that I like this thread, although I have no idea how to developer the idea further.
>>51484405
I loved this show as a kid.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5qPhmps1nWc
>>51488315
It was extremely well done
>>51484405
>>51488315
America series was better.
>>51488346
History was the best.
>>51484405
>that little girl red blood cell
CUTE!!!
>>51484405
>Once Upon a Time... Life rpg
I would pay money for this.
It would be educative, range from carebears-like (healthy young adult with the flu) to completely hellish (terminal cancer + autoimmune disease and so on)
A lot of opportunities for interesting mechanisms, like creating clones via mitosis.
Players would probably be white blood cells, with various classes(Eosinophils, Lymphocytes, Macrophages,...), since the action of the other elements was pretty limited in the series.
>>51488358
>>51488346
Man had the best opening
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FoC-sV1KmXA
>>51488630
Also white blood cells are the cells most likely to get into fights and travel around the body. There's even the equivalent of "hive worlds" for white blood cells too now that i think about it.