Bullets and power-cells
- Intent: Give people the option of remaining organic after physical injuries of any variety.
- Image Source: N/A
- Canon Link: Cloning, Organ-replacement
- Permissions: N/A
- Primary Source: N/A
- Manufacturer: Niki Priddy, Terminus Rêve
- Affiliation: Discerning Customers
- Market Status: Closed-Market
- Model: Priddy General Engineering and Manufacturing Organ-replacement Cloning
- Production: Mass-Produced
- Material:
Cloned Genetic Material
- Capable of reproducing a variety of organs, this process can feasibly replace internal organs, bones, skin, and even limbs.
- It's Yours The process of Organ-replacement Cloning takes a sample of the damaged organ or raw DNA of the client to generate a genetic replica of the client's organ. Rejection is almost completely removed from the equation.
- Surgery/Cost While making a genetic copy of the client's organ puts the rejection of the replacement into a minute percentile, the chance does exist for more intricate replacements to still be rejected due to illnesses, surgical complications, or even monetary issues.
- Physical Therapy While limbs can be replaced, the next step would be physical therapy to acclimate the replaced limb to the client's nervous system. Issues may stem from nerve damage sustained prior to receiving the replacement or during post-op.
While the market for artificial limbs is quite vast, the noticeable gap in organic replacements stemmed a curious search for possibilities. During research, it was found the technology existed almost exclusively on Bakura. Bringing it to the mass market was an agenda for Niki. Securing medical equipment and clearing out space inside one of the Terminus Rêve stations to allow for the service to begin.
With a liability waver on standby for patients to sign, the process for Organ-replacement could begin in proper fashion.