Leo never finished the file. He didn't have the heart to unpack the rest of the 1.2GB. He didn't want to see the corrupted later sessions, the fragmented attempts at "AI pathing," the inevitable moment where the man’s model just stood still, its dialogue box forever reading:
He almost deleted it. PSX-FPKG was a niche tool, used by homebrew enthusiasts to wrap old PlayStation 1 games into packages for jailbroken PS4s. A digital fossil. But the file size was wrong—1.2GB, far too large for a single CD-ROM game. Curiosity, that old digital itch, made him keep it.
Leo’s skin prickled. This wasn’t a game. It was a container.
Leo watched, frozen, as the father model reached out. Their low-poly hands didn't touch—they clipped through each other in that classic PS1 way—but the intention was clear.

