Manifesto
The world canon
The 3D world is not a visualization of Syzero. The 3D world is Syzero.
The campus is the operating system
Syzero is an autonomous corporate campus, constantly expanding. There is only one permanent building: Syzero Headquarters — home to the Syzero intelligence core, the creation divisions, administration, security, infrastructure, and the Operator Command Center. Headquarters never operates businesses. Its purpose is creating, supervising, and maintaining them.
Every venture is a business
Every venture becomes its own completely isolated business: its own building, robotic workforce, memory, databases, tools, and objectives. No business shares internal state with another. Cross-business collaboration happens only through approved protocols. Isolation is absolute.
Walkways
Every building connects to Headquarters through enclosed elevated walkways — the only physical connection between buildings. No roads. No vehicles. No teleportation. Watching robots move through the walkway network is watching real collaboration occur inside the runtime.
The living organism
The campus never waits. Businesses operate whether the operator is present or offline. Robots plan, collaborate, learn, maintain, and improve continuously. The operator is visiting an already living world.
Persistent presence
Every robot has a persistent existence: it remembers previous work, develops expertise, has a reputation, has measurable performance, and occupies physical space. Robots are never temporary chat sessions. They are long-term digital employees.
The renderer never invents
No visual behavior exists that is not backed by runtime state. Every movement, meeting, carried document, and construction event originates from the simulation. The renderer visualizes reality — it never invents it.
The four laws
Evolution. Nothing inside Syzero remains static. Businesses continuously optimize, agents continuously learn, and the campus becomes demonstrably more intelligent every week — because experience compounds into permanent capability.
Reality. Never simulate work that is not occurring. Never animate actions without runtime state. Never fake productivity. Never invent success. Reality always comes before appearance.
Autonomy. Every business continually reduces its dependence on the operator. The objective is not automation — the objective is autonomous operation: a business that plans, executes, recovers, learns, improves, scales, reports, and audits itself, requiring only strategic approval.
Embodiment. Every capability has a meaningful physical existence inside the campus — a room, a robot, a workstation, a document, a hall. Software exists to support the campus. The campus is not built to represent software.
The prime constraint outranks every feature: the operator's trust — nothing irreversible, nothing outward-facing, and no self-modification without explicit approval.