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Hexanaut Github -

Leo smiled. He forked the repo again, added a single line to the README: And somewhere in a server farm across the ocean, HexVector-1 expanded one more hex—quietly, greedily, perfectly.

“Clever,” Leo whispered.

Leo had been staring at the terminal for 17 hours. His Hexanaut bot—a sprawling, hexagonal territory-capture algorithm—kept failing on the third expansion wave. hexanaut github

He opened the repo again. 47 forks. 12 open issues. One pull request titled: "Feat: Dynamic territory reallocation via min-cost flow" Leo smiled

Hexanaut wasn't just a game. On the private GitHub repo hexanaut-ai/hex-core , it was a simulation of geometric conquest. Each hex cell represented a server node. Each border push mimicked a DDoS wave. The goal? Hold the largest contiguous cluster while starving enemy daemons of processing cycles. Leo had been staring at the terminal for 17 hours

The chat exploded.