The FoxCorp lobby is sleek and minimalist, with metallic walls, holographic displays, and a dominant fox-head logo. Interactive screens provide company info, projecting innovation and control.
The break room is stark and functional, with basic amenities like vending machines and screens displaying performance stats, prioritizing utility over comfort.
Handler offices are spacious and sophisticated, featuring soft lighting, plants, and a large desk on an elevated platform. Multiple screens display courier data, while the minimalist design emphasizes control.
The package area is vast and efficient, with conveyor belts, automated sorting, and real-time tracking displays. Couriers swiftly pick up parcels under constant surveillance.
Corporate apartments are compact, two-level units with a kitchenette, seating area, and customizable lighting, blending functionality and coziness.
Many go roofing or run through the many construction zones, handlers plan routes with the help of AI and send it to the courier, the courier sees a holographic map in their peripherals and edges, ledges or a crane to jump on highlighted. Genuinely, most workers feel themselves more at home at foxcorp than outside, they know that it’s a bad corporation but it’s better than an ignorant parent. They literally just need to run and they earn stuff, nothing more social decorum, you do what you’re told with immediate gratification Many run in smaller groups, shocks don’t even happen often because you’re only shocked when you’re behind the reasonable quota or are suspected of stealing a package , see themselves get in shape and feel genuinely happy.
A courier races through the crowded sidewalks on humming hover skates, their black-and-yellow uniform sleek and flexible. Police drones swoop overhead, but the courier leaps effortlessly over carts, slides along railings, and parkours across traffic. Their fox-head shaped helmet’s HUD flashes alerts as they spring from a hovering cab to a truck roof, dodging a drone’s stun beam mid-air.