A collection of magazine covers, visual experiments, recovered exhibits, archive fragments, and printed artifacts gathered from across the Identity Panic Toolkit project. Some pieces began as standalone concepts, others as field notes, visual studies, or one-off publications that eventually found a home on the magazine floor.
This archive remains under active construction. Exhibits may expand, relocate, be reclassified, or disappear entirely as the collection continues to evolve. Visitors are encouraged to return periodically as new issues, recovered materials, and unexpected additions emerge from the stacks.
The first major AI-assisted IPT document, Globalization, Fear, and the Misuse of TMT, emerged in the turbulence of mid-to-late September 2025. What began as scattered signal tracing gradually expanded into a full archive system, experimental framework, and public-access perception project. Now, in May 2026, the launch of the IPT website marks a new phase: the construction site has opened to the public, the filing cabinets are unlocked, and the signal is officially live.
A perception-survival experience where players navigate emotional spikes, tribal signaling, false urgency, and narrative pressure without losing clarity. Instead of defeating enemies, the objective is to recognize fear-driven loops before they lock into identity and reaction. Progress is internal, resets are unlimited, and the strongest upgrades are humility, curiosity, humor, and time. Some levels feel strangely personal. Multiplayer arguments remain optional. There is no ending sequence. The moment you begin noticing the system, gameplay has already started.
A roaming city-service vehicle reportedly seen moving between districts of the archive after midnight. Witness accounts describe flickering dashboard lights, philosophical radio broadcasts, overflowing filing cabinets in the trunk, and a driver who responds to most questions with, โDepends what layer youโre looking from.โ Exact routes remain unknown. Estimated fare: one uncomfortable realization per mile.
Planting seeds in the mindscape of perception, cultivating new perspectives, and harvesting insights from the fertile soil of curiosity. These images rock a bit to simulate crinkling of the pages.
If you visit on a desktop computer, you can see the grid layout and card styles in action. On smaller screens, the layout will adjust to fit the space.
A lost philosophical game cartridge recovered from the deep archive shelves of the ancient world. On the Nature of Things arrives disguised as retro entertainment, but beneath the plastic shell lies a sprawling exploration of fear, mortality, atoms, superstition, and the machinery of perception itself. Part educational artifact, part forbidden dungeon crawler, the cartridge invites players to confront cosmic scale without panic and navigate existence without relying on comforting illusions. Estimated completion time: one lifetime.