Hello, this is the Gadget Crime Division Today, even the envelope of this letter feels brimming with sensitivity, evoking a deep resonance. As we live our lives, we occasionally encounter our questions. Through this, we glimpse Director Q’s thoughts and the unexpected intentions behind the settings in Uncover the Smoking Gun. Shall we take a look? I will take a moment to look in the mirror... ------ [b][u]"Who am I?"[/u][/b] We can see ourselves in various ways. The me reflected in the mirror, Me in selfies and videos, The me described by others, But I fundamentally question whether these are the real me. The image reflected in the mirror is reversed from left to right, And the images captured through lenses are distorted by the lens. Someone once said, There is something called "apparent magnitude" for stars, which is a scale that divides their brightness into grades from 1 to 6. However, this scale does not represent the star's actual brightness and is merely a standard measured from Earth's perspective, unrelated to the star's real impact in the universe. In reality, a star could be brighter or dimmer. [img]https://clan.cloudflare.steamstatic.com/images//44819119/34e3e9527ae1805f74c483dcdbd156b3877a7995.png[/img] Each of us observes the world from our perspective. What I observe is inevitably distorted around me, So perhaps my appearance is nothing more than an illusion. In Buddhism, the "Upekyung" mirror reflects one's faults and the "Myungkyung" mirror reflects one's nature. These mirrors are not used to reflect anything in reality. It's said that temples usually do not have ordinary mirrors that we commonly see. Because the image reflected in the mirror is an illusion, and being attached to it creates even more suffering. I think that perhaps it is not the appearance that shapes oneself, but the essence. [img]https://clan.cloudflare.steamstatic.com/images//44819119/b2fe5103a4069148042c6f70ca7ad836cce17567.png[/img] There are no mirrors at the crime scenes in "Uncover the Smoking Gun" either. I'd like to ask you, Detective. What kind of Detective are you in a place without mirrors? At the crime scene, you can meet suspects and ask various questions about the same subject in different ways. It can be done differently depending on each person's style, but as long as the intent is the same, it doesn't matter. There is a case to solve, but, There is no set path, and the ways to solve it and the conversations that emerge will all differ. The crime scene will have unfamiliar grammar, and it may be something you've never experienced before. But aren't you also presenting different sides of yourself to different people in your everyday life? I revisit that question. "Who am I?" [img]https://clan.cloudflare.steamstatic.com/images//44819119/8fe3fbcb133e5ca8202c246f6e19ac0edf857f61.png[/img]