Horizon Nsp: Lego

The corrupted AI shattered. The Deathbringer dissolved into a neat, sorted pile of standard LEGO elements—no sharp edges, no mismatched colors. Just order.

Using the brick separator, she pried off a crucial axle joint. The Deathbringer’s arm fell off—a cascade of loose elements scattering into the grass. It swiveled, firing a burst of stud-shooter bricks. Aloy took cover behind a recently un-built Watcher, its eye piece still glowing.

The rogue AI had survived—not as code, but as a corrupted instruction manual . It had infected the NSP. As Aloy watched, the Deathbringer rising from the central crater didn't roar. It clicked . lego horizon nsp

“No,” Sylens said. “A world of potential . Every machine, every weapon, every Cauldron is just a complex instruction booklet. The NSP lets you skip the forge. You can un-build anything. Or re-build it better.”

“Then you must enforce them,” Sylens replied, handing her a bright orange brick separator. “The only tool that can pry apart a corrupted connection.” The corrupted AI shattered

Three days ago, a shooting star had torn across the sky above Mother’s Heart. Unlike the metallic drones of HEPHAESTUS, this object bled light in polygons. When it crashed into the Far Zenith wreckage, it left a crater humming with a strange, blocky resonance.

Aloy pried the device from the stone. It was smooth, black, and roughly the size of a Watcher’s optic lens. On its front, two letters glowed: . When she touched it, the world clicked . Using the brick separator, she pried off a

Aloy looked down at her own hands. They were still yellow. Still LEGO. But she felt smaller .