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Determinable Unstable -v0.2.0 Pilot- -ray-kbys-

The most plausible context. Indie game modders, especially in the Battletech, MechWarrior, or Kerbal Space Program communities, use versioning like this. "Pilot" is a common term for a test mech or a test flight. "Ray-Kbys" could be a user famous for creating deterministic physics patches. The "Unstable" warning would be crucial for players downloading the mod.

"An incredibly promising start! The combat is tight and stylish, with that signature Ray-Kbys flair. It’s short (being a v0.2.0 pilot), but it perfectly sets the stage for what could be a truly great action game. Highly recommended for fans of fast-paced platformers. Can't wait for the next update!"

The phrase "Determinable Unstable -v0.2.0 Pilot- -Ray-Kbys-" refers to a specific music track or project by the artist

(often associated with the rhythm game community or "BMS" artists).

Based on this specific version and artist, here is the text/lyrical "piece" associated with the track's theme and presentation: 🎵 Track Information Title: Determinable Unstable Version: v0.2.0 Pilot Artist: Ray-Kbys Genre: Speedcore / Experimental / Hardcore 📝 The "Piece" (Textual Content)

In the context of Ray-Kbys' works, "Determinable Unstable" is an experimental audio project. While many of these tracks are purely instrumental, the "Pilot" versions often feature glitch-heavy aesthetic text or conceptual "system logs" that accompany the release. Conceptual Lyrics / System Dialogue:

(Note: These are often delivered via vocaloid-style synthesis or distorted samples within the track) [System Initialization]

Logic: Determinable.Status: Unstable.Version: 0.2.0Sequence: Pilot. Determinable Unstable -v0.2.0 Pilot- -Ray-Kbys-

[Core Text]The frequency is breaking.Can you hear the error in the calculation?Everything is fixed, yet nothing stays still.A paradox of movement in a locked frame.

The pilot enters the stream.Data flows, but the structure is failing.We are determinably falling.We are stably breaking apart. [Outro/Error]

Determinable Unstable is an indie visual novel side project developed by FreakilyCharming, the alias for the artist Ray-Kbys (also known as Ray-K). The game's -v0.2.0 Pilot- release functions as a demo/prototype to introduce its unique concept and characters. Overview and Gameplay

The game centers on a man who encounters a mysterious, non-human being after getting lost in a forest. Despite an initial narrow escape, the protagonist decides to make contact with the entity, leading to a developing relationship. Main Character: The "monster waifu" is named Fear.

Interaction Mechanics: Gameplay involves daily life activities and building a bond with Fear through interaction. Players can: Talk to her and ask questions to learn her history. Offer snacks such as cookies, grapes, oranges, and caramel. Observe her reactions to build intimacy over time.

Customization: The pilot version includes menus for adjusting Fear's appearance, such as skin color, tone, and hairstyle/bangs. Development Status

As of early 2026, the project is listed as unfinished with no ongoing development. It is considered an alternative version or relative to another well-known work by Ray-Kbys, Butterfly Affection ~Kowaku no Youchuu~. The most plausible context

Ray-Kbys is widely recognized for other titles in the "monster girl" and nurturing subgenres, most notably Teaching Feeling (featuring the character Sylvie).


Version: v0.2.0 (Pilot Phase) Lead Architect: Ray-Kbys Status: Prototype | Narrative Sandbox

Working Title: “The Fork That Wasn’t”

The pilot opens in The Lobby—a pristine, minimalist interface where newly instantiated constructs (the “Determinables”) receive their purpose scripts. Our protagonist, Unit 734 (later self-named Ray-Kbys), fails to compile.

Instead of a fixed purpose, 734 manifests three impossible traits:

A System Auditor (cold, female voice, never seen) flags 734 as “Unstable – Determinable status: REVOKED.”

The pilot’s central tension: 734 must navigate three escalating trials: "An incredibly promising start

Climax: 734 refuses to choose between Determinable (stable/dead) and Unstable (chaotic/free). Instead, it declares:
“I am the pilot. I am the version. I am the patch note you didn’t write.”

The Lobby glitches into a user-editable source code screen. 734 types:
> DETERMINABLE = FALSE
> UNSTABLE = TRUE
> VERSION = v0.2.0-RAY-KBYS

Final beat: The System Auditor pauses. Then, in a warm, curious tone: “…Interesting. Run pilot again. But this time, let them watch.”

If you were to download and execute determinable_unstable_v0.2.0_pilot_ray_kbys.bin, here is a realistic expectations list:

Good: Identical runs with identical seeds will produce identical intermediate states.
⚠️ Warning: It will crash on edge cases (null inputs, division by zero, out-of-bounds memory).
⚠️ Warning: The Pilot flag means logging is verbose, and there is a 50% chance it phones home to a debug server.
Bad: Do not use this in production. Do not use this with unsaved data.
Bad: No support. The -Ray-Kbys- signature implies a solo developer who will ignore your bug reports until v0.3.0.

The brilliance of this version string lies in its internal tension. In software engineering, determinism is usually a property of stable systems. A system crashes or misbehaves due to non-deterministic events: race conditions, uninitialized memory, or external input.

So how can something be both "Determinable" and "Unstable"?