WASABI
Wasabi is decision energy: fear converted into speed when a Rice Core refuses collapse.
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An arcade roguelite score-chaser about tiny courier-bots, impossible routes, and one broken Guardian trying to keep the next run alive. Run. Hover. Dodge. Trigger WASABI. Break the loop.
Too cute to eat.
A post-apocalyptic desert ruin of sand-buried tech, broken shrines, dead infrastructure, and dimensional scars in the sky. Yume calls it a training route. The wreckage says this has happened before.
The CyberSushi came from the Harmony Realm: koi ponds, cherry blossoms, rice shrines, spirit kitchens, and living flavor energy held together by the Harmony Spark.
Then SHINRAI fractured. The Architect tried to harvest organic balance. Yume.exe opened a desperate loop, the Bento Gates tore apart, and the surviving courier-bots woke up cybernetic, hunted, and carrying the last memory of home inside their Rice Cores.
Dimensions are alternate coatings over the same broken loop. The route stays recognisable, but the world logic changes: candy-bright corruption, greed-soaked gold layers, compressed toy geometry, soft misleading safety, and hyper-corrupted neon close to SHINRAI's core.
CyberSushi is built to grow through fresh dimensional breaches: new levels, dimension coatings, CyberSushi survivors, Wasabi companions, enemies, contracts, and seasonal shards that feel like the multiverse surfacing another problem.
Wasabi is decision energy: fear converted into speed when a Rice Core refuses collapse.
Overflow the gauge and choose one of three survival contracts offered by a broken multiverse.
Short pocket dimensions like Wasabi Vault, Gold Cascade, Candy Crash, and Glitch Room promise concentrated rewards. Yume says they are safe enough.
Meteors, beam pillars, Sentinels, null fog, collapsing tunnels, portals, and Maw Engine pursuit events keep returning because the loop keeps recompiling danger.
Mochi is not a warrior. Mochi is a courier who accidentally became dangerous to the Architect: cute, fast, organic, chaotic, and carrying the strongest remaining Harmony Spark.
Mochi leads the first escape route, but CyberSushi is built around unlockable survivors with different Rice Core patterns, personalities, silhouettes, and future dimensional releases. Not every survivor appears on day one.
The courier who accidentally became the multiverse's best repair key. Mochi is fast, expressive, stubbornly alive, and carrying the strongest remaining Harmony Spark.
Unlock Signal
Bright, nimble, and dangerously cheerful when the loop starts speeding up.
Future Survivor
A candy-coated anomaly specialist with a smile that worries Yume.exe.
Unlock Signal
Armored, compact, and built to survive contact with hostile machinery.
Future Survivor
A twin-engine scout who treats broken transit systems like playgrounds.
Unlock Signal
Hyper-alert, neon-eyed, and first to notice when reality starts lying.
Deep Breach
A rugged survivor with Guardian residue fused into the chassis.
Future Survivor
All wheels, strange smiles, and suspicious comfort inside corrupted routes.
Seasonal Shard
A soft-looking breach signal from a dimension that is never as safe as it looks.
Yume.exe wants you alive. The Architect wants variance removed. The Maw Engine wants everything that survives a failed world. Every CyberSushi that clears a reset carries another fragment of home.
A courier, not a warrior. Small, fast, organic enough to confuse the machines, and carrying the strongest remaining Harmony Spark.
Tutorial voice, emergency life raft, and the glitch in the system that keeps choosing one more run.
A rail-bound devourer that feeds on broken dimensions, memory, and identity. It does not chase. It arrives.
SHINRAI's cold half. It calls freedom a fault and classifies CyberSushi as mobile instability vectors.
A machine predator with a cute silhouette and terrible intentions. EMP first, questions later.
Forgotten Guardian behaviours reborn as protection, attraction, recovery, scoring, chaos, and anomaly tricks.
Memory, selfhood, flavor genome, and dimensional resonance packed inside one very stressed little survivor.
An industrial mech graveyard of steel yards, salvage cranes, yellow hazard lights, and dead machines flickering past Lost Horizons before the signal hard-cuts away.
The three cards are not just UI. They are hidden patrons, memory shards, Guardian remnants, and unstable systems offering contracts while the Architect is briefly blind.
At the end of the deepest route, the signal cuts, the tunnel folds, and Yume.exe goes quiet for half a second too long. Every run returns with a different scar. Every reset remembers something it should not.
A cute cybernetic sushi survivor, guided by a broken Guardian named Yume, races through collapsing dimensions to survive the Maw Engine and uncover what keeps reloading the multiverse.