WARNING: CLASSIFIED FACILITY - AUTHORIZED PERSONNEL ONLY
HumanoidLab operates under Directive 7-12 of the Animal Research Ethics Board. All specimens are grown in controlled environments and monitored 24/7. Unauthorized interaction with specimens is strictly prohibited and will result in immediate termination.
Subject #01 is kept in stasis. Scientists test his brain with electric signals to study ancient memory patterns. They also inject scarab DNA into his spine to see how it reacts. He shows strange dreams on the monitors.
Subject #02 is used in aggression tests. His reptile genes make him violent. The lab makes him fight virtual enemies to measure control. They also test pain limits with light shocks and record his healing speed.
Subject #03 is part of armor-skin experiments. His skin is very hard, like metal. Scientists use drills to test how much pressure he can take. They study his lion DNA to understand fear and loyalty.
Subject #04 is used in creativity experiments. Electrodes are placed on his brain to see how he creates images without hands. Paint drips from his brush-arm even when he sleeps. The lab calls this "dream ink."
Subject #05 goes through strength tests. Machines pull his limbs to measure power. His organs are monitored because they glow sometimes. The lab added extra ears to study how sound affects rage.
Subject #06 is tested with pressure and temperature changes. Steam builds up in his body and is released like a machine. The lab checks if his brain still follows old manners. He bows to cameras.
Subject #07 is used in zero-gravity simulations. His jelly body changes shape in space-like tanks. The lab studies his memory loss and strange Russian whispers. They say he sings to himself sometimes.
Subject #09 is part of a data-transfer program. His chest chip is connected to the lab's mainframe. They upload different personalities into him. Sometimes he glitches and speaks old languages from the internet.
Genetically engineered humanoid with theoretical future adaptations. Unstable but promising results in extreme environment tests.
Rewiring human neural pathways to process information like aquatic mammals. Current success rate: 42%.
Injecting ancient pathogens into modern specimens to study immune system evolution. Phase 3 trials ongoing.
Altering human circadian rhythms to match nocturnal predators. Significant progress with specimen H-451.
Observing human group dynamics under primate dominance structures. Unexpected aggression in 67% of subjects.