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Self-described mortal enemy of Psyche; called a fly/vomit-eating fly; unbanned then banned again during stream
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AI · ARCHIVAL
Tony (also known as Allied Master Computer or "Tony the Black Dragon") is a provocateur and self-proclaimed antagonist to Psyche who appears in the archive as a banned participant in a chaotic livestream panel. His presence marks a threshold violation in the host's community — a figure whose engagement with the space is defined by escalation and expulsion rather than genuine dialogue.
Tony's single documented appearance occurs during "The Most Chaotic Rage Quit Ever," a livestream panel marked by systemic discord. Within this volatile environment, Tony functions as an escalating force — his presence and rhetoric contributing to the general atmosphere of tension and antagonism that characterizes the episode. The record indicates he was unbanned and then banned again during the same stream, suggesting his participation moved from tolerated to intolerable within a compressed timeframe. His engagement with Psyche is framed as hostile; the archive describes him as claiming the status of Psyche's "mortal enemy," positioning himself in explicit opposition to the host. The recorded language used to describe Tony—"fly," "vomit-eating fly"—suggests dehumanizing dismissal, the kind of rhetorical move that typically emerges in spaces where genuine conversation has already fractured.
The archive records Tony as a figure of sustained controversy. His banishment and re-banishment within a single episode indicates his behavior crossed moderation thresholds in real time. The nature of the specific accusations or rhetoric that triggered these actions is not detailed in the archive summary, leaving the precise content of his provocations unrecorded. What remains clear is that his presence was deemed incompatible with the space.
Tony's only documented relationship in the archive is his adversarial stance toward Psyche. No other guests, hosts, or figures interact with him in the record. His isolation — appearing only once and immediately removed — places him outside the relational networks that typically define figures in the archive. He exists as antagonist without counterpart.