Three teen guerrillas, bursting with testosterone, buckle up
their stun suits in a dimly lit equipment bunker. They rack their
futuristic, automatic weapons in preparation for war. But their
battlefield is a virtual reality game, where they are pitted against
imaginary gunmen. Game controllers Ivan and Phoebe monitor the
players' vital statistics from an outside console. One of the
players is "shot" and another waits as Retro moves farther into the
depths of the virtual environment to encounter a beautiful female
warrior in leather and stilettos. "I am Maitreya," she tells him,
slinking closer. "This is my game." She brandishes an antique
flintlock pistol and aims it at him. Retro can only watch as sparks
flash from the powder-pan when she pulls the trigger.
Later that night, Mulder and Scully enter the FPS corporate
building amid stringent security. They are met by the Lone Gunmen,
who are uncharacteristically enthusiastic about the company. The
trio explains that they serve as consultants to the game, but that
Retro's death has put a damper on the company's upcoming initial
public stock offering.
Scully checks Retro's body and notes that the man was obviously
shot. Ivan vehemently refutes the visual proof, saying there is no
way a real gun could have gotten into the highly-secured complex.
The entire scenario, Phoebe explains, is digital. Nothing exists
outside the game space. Mulder reviews the videotape of the game
that shows nothing out of the ordinary. Yet when they switch the
game environment to wire mode and all the textures and surfaces are
stripped, the tape reveals a female pointing a gun at Retro. Mulder
and the Lone Gunmen are shocked, but Phoebe's face shows a spark of
recognition. After the men leave the room, she stares at the
cyber-vixen on the monitor. "Goddess," she whispers in disbelief.
Mulder gives a detective the printout of Maitreya as the suspect,
but Scully remains skeptical that a fictional female character could
commit a real murder. Their ensuing discussion is cut short by the
entrance of Darryl Musashi, a revered virtual programmer and
game-playing legend. Like fan-crazed little boys, Mulder and the
Lone Gunmen leave to watch Musashi take on the game and its
unexpected female challenger. They are shocked when Musashi meets a
gruesome end in a matter of minutes, decapitated by the Samurai
sword-wielding Maitreya.
Completing her preliminary examination of Retro, Scully is
confused about how his wound left no trace of evidence. She and
Mulder argue lightly about the merits of computer games, questioning
whether they add to a culture of violence or provide a necessary
outlet. As the remains of Darryl Musashi are brought into the
autopsy bay, Mulder receives a call from the Sheriff's Department
that their female suspect is in custody at the station house. At the
station, Mulder and Scully must maneuver around the many male
officers hovering over the sexy suspect, an exotic dancer who goes
by the name Jade Blue Afterglow. Confronted by the printed image of
her likeness, she tells them that she was paid for allowing a
medical imaging company make a computer scan of her body. The agents
release the woman.
Back in the offices of FPS, the Lone Gunmen prepare to enter the
game space to implement a patch program that will override the
software problem. Before they are ready, the game begins on its own
and the Gunmen are shot at. Mulder rushes to enter the game space in
order to rescue the trio, but he is unable to follow them out before
the module closes. He is trapped inside the game. Phoebe and Scully
watch as Mulder's image disappears from their monitor. His vitals
are still registering on the console, and they realize that even
though Mulder isn't physically in the game space, he is lost
somewhere inside the game.
Scully angrily confronts Ivan about putting the female figure
into the game, but it's Phoebe who runs out of the room with a
guilty sob. As Scully follows her into the hall, the young woman
admits that she created Maitreya to be her own game character in an
attempt to make her mark as a woman in the gaming world. Yet, she
maintains, she has no idea how the character moved from her computer
to the game mainframe.
Inside the game, Mulder and Maitreya square off. She is able to
move and disappear at will, but Mulder manages to survive against
her. Maitreya multiplies herself and continues to fire at him. Her
electronic advantage takes its toll on Mulder, and he quickly loses
ammunition. Finally, in desperation, Scully suits up and enters the
game space herself, brandishing her own high-powered weapon. Round
after round, she overpowers Maitreya, but the confrontations
continue to grow difficult. Maitreya comes after them with a tank.
Phoebe finally decides that she must enact the game's kill
switch. Ivan tries to stop her, because the kill switch will erase
the whole game, but she succeeds. With the push of a few buttons,
the game completely evaporates. For a brief moment, it appears that
Mulder and Scully have been erased with the game, but when the
module opens, the two agents are safely inside, battle-worn and
weary.
Later, while Ivan sits working at his computer, a new female
figure suddenly appears that resembles a warrior who once mastered
the game -- Special Agent Dana Scully.
................... CREDITS .....................
"FIRST PERSON SHOOTER"
#7ABX13
Original Air Date:
02/27/00
Written by William Gibson & Tom
Maddox
Directed by Chris Carter
Starring:
DAVID
DUCHOVNY as Special Agent Fox Mulder
GILLIAN ANDERSON as Special
Agent Dana Scully
Also Starring:
Krista Allen as
Maitreya
Jamie Marsh as Ivan Martinez
Constance Zimmer as
Phoebe
Billy Ray Gallion as Retro
Tom Braidwood as
Frohike
Dean Haglund as Langly
Bruce Harwood as
Byers
Michael Ray Bower as Lo-Fat
Ryan Todd as Moxie
James
Geraldne as Detective Lacoeur
John Marrott as Security
Guard
Christopher Ng as Darryl Musashi