TL-15 Fast-grown (x50) clone, implanted with life-extending TL-15 nanos every 4 years. The clone only ages 4 years in the first 20. Correct? So, would only be required to make one ageing check?
Nope, the nanos mistake the clone body as a giant cancerous tumor and get agitated until the blood boils and the clone melts away. Or not. As I implied in another thread, I'm not a big fan of 'get-out-of-jail-free' immortality stuff. But I liked the Iron Man generation rules, so you could run it anyway the math says you should. But my idea is more fun.
Nope, the nanos mistake the clone body as a giant cancerous tumor and get agitated until the blood boils and the clone melts away. Or not. As I implied in another thread, I'm not a big fan of 'get-out-of-jail-free' immortality stuff. But I liked the Iron Man generation rules, so you could run it anyway the math says you should. But my idea is more fun.
If the nanos mistake clone cells for cancer cells, then you need to fire your nano-programmer. That is just bad coding by the time you hit TL-15. Heck, with TL-15 medical nanos, cancer isn't even a thing anymore.
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