Ben Brickson
DZ-63 // Spider Tank
After the collapse, terrain across the sectors became unstable—cracked highways, sunken cities, shifting rubble. Traditional vehicles failed. In their place came towering mechs like the DZ-63, built to adapt, patrol, and "protect."
Outfitted with infrared ocular sensors, the DZ-63 can detect distress signals or hostile targets across vast distances. It was meant to support drone units, deliver aid, and stabilize conflict zones. But its presence now means one thing: control. Peacekeeping turned into enforcement. Rescue into suppression. Backed by a rising authoritarian regime, these machines serve bloated police forces who operate far above the law. The line between safety and surveillance has vanished.
To the people, the DZ-63 is no longer a guardian—it’s a weaponized relic, a symbol of fear and oppression. Its heavy frame moves through ruined streets like a warning. And every time it appears on the horizon, it fans the flames of revolution.
DZ-63 // Spider Tank
After the collapse, terrain across the sectors became unstable—cracked highways, sunken cities, shifting rubble. Traditional vehicles failed. In their place came towering mechs like the DZ-63, built to adapt, patrol, and "protect."
Outfitted with infrared ocular sensors, the DZ-63 can detect distress signals or hostile targets across vast distances. It was meant to support drone units, deliver aid, and stabilize conflict zones. But its presence now means one thing: control. Peacekeeping turned into enforcement. Rescue into suppression. Backed by a rising authoritarian regime, these machines serve bloated police forces who operate far above the law. The line between safety and surveillance has vanished.
To the people, the DZ-63 is no longer a guardian—it’s a weaponized relic, a symbol of fear and oppression. Its heavy frame moves through ruined streets like a warning. And every time it appears on the horizon, it fans the flames of revolution.