-v0.6- -enno- - Family Legacy

Every legacy starts with a foundational figure—often an immigrant ancestor or a patriarch/matriarch who established the family's current roots.

| Engine | Function | Failure Mode | -ENNO- Response | |--------|----------|--------------|------------------| | | Stores documents, DNA, photos, recipes | Rigidity: becomes a mausoleum | Boredom triggers selective arson (literal or symbolic) | | The Ritual | Enacts repeatable events (holidays, initiations) | Empty repetition: becomes cargo cult | Ennui triggers improvisation → new rituals | | The Ghost | Embodies absent ancestors’ perceived will | Haunting: prevents living choices | Gnosis: recognize the ghost as a hypothesis, not a command | Family Legacy -v0.6- -ENNO-

"You look like you've seen a ghost," Elena said, leaning against the doorframe. Her silhouette was sharp against the hallway light, a reminder that in this house, even the family members felt like intruders. Every legacy starts with a foundational figure—often an

Most family legacies die during the third generation (shirtsleeves to shirtsleeves). mandates a Decennial Reset . Every ten years, the ENNO convenes a "Legacy Sprint." All rules—investment policy, family council voting rights, even the family surname's branding—are up for a 51% vote. Most family legacies die during the third generation

The story typically follows a young male protagonist who finds himself at a crossroads following a major family event—often the death of a patriarch or a sudden change in living circumstances.

Drawing from simulation theory and narrative psychology, we identify three interacting engines: