Corruption -final- -mr.c- Jun 2026

The "Final" tag on this project represents the culmination of years of iterative development. Starting as a humble Ren'Py project, grew to include:

Mr. C would leak the exact scoring rubric to one shell company 72 hours before the RFP (Request for Proposals) closed. The shell’s bid would be technically perfect, but priced 8-12% above market—high enough to seem premium, low enough not to raise flags.

(for international/US-linked cases) or local equivalents offer hotlines for reporting bribery, extortion, or "pay-to-play" environments [23]. Corruption -Final- -Mr.C-

Within 72 hours, a multi-agency task force was assembled under seal. The investigation had begun in earnest.

Corruption is often described as the "invisible tax"—one that does not appear on any receipt but stifles economies, erodes trust, and undermines justice. For the purpose of this final piece, corruption is defined not merely as bribery, but as the abuse of entrusted power for private gain. Whether it manifests as embezzlement, nepotism, or police extortion, the core mechanism remains the same: the distortion of public good into private wealth. The "Final" tag on this project represents the

: Characters have specific corruption levels that unlock new events and interactions as they increase.

Every downfall requires a fulcrum. For Mr. C, it was a disgruntled accountant at one of the shell companies—let’s call her “Source Delta.” In March 2024, Delta was passed over for a promised bonus. Embittered, she walked into the FBI field office with a USB drive containing three things: The shell’s bid would be technically perfect, but

For investigators, the keyword is now a monument to a job completed. For reformers, it is a checklist of unfinished work. For the public, it is a reminder: corruption ends not when one man is caged, but when the architecture that enabled him is demolished.

Mr. C maintained a rotating roster of seven front companies, all owned by a single holding entity in a non-extradition treaty country. The companies bore names like Axiom Technical Solutions and Vector Compliance Group —names designed to inspire trust. Each was pre-qualified to bid on DIL contracts.

: Unlike linear visual novels, this "Final" version offers a sandbox environment where players can choose which characters to interact with and how to drive the narrative.