MEDICAL ASSESSMENT: BIOMECHANICS & TEAM INTEGRATION
CLASSIFICATION: GENERAL MEDICAL / ENGINEERING
DATE: July 28, 2026
SUBJECT: Specialist "Wulfsige" (A-993-W)
ATTENDING: Dr. Arin Yilmaz (Bio-Engineering)
Routine physiological scans indicate that Wulfsige's skeletal density continues to increase to support the enhanced musculature of the hybrid form. This is within expected parameters and ongoing.
We have discontinued standard gym metrics — bench press numbers, vertical jump measurement — as insufficient tools for characterizing his capability. What Wulfsige possesses is best described as Functional Torque: the ability to apply massive force from static positions. The useful test is not "how much can he lift from a rack" but "can he hold a blast door open while three people get through." The answer to the second question is yes, for as long as it needs to stay open.
His joints have reinforced in ways that allow him to absorb high-impact landings that would injure a baseline human, and then continue moving. He is built for durability. He is built to take the hit and keep going.
Wulfsige has integrated into the daily maintenance rhythm of the security teams, but his role has evolved beyond "peer" into something less formally defined — a structural safety element that the teams have come to rely on without fully articulating why.
Three days ago, the hydraulic lift on Transport Cart 4 failed during a routine maintenance cycle in the motor pool. The chassis — 380 lbs — began to drop toward the mechanic underneath it. Before it could close, Wulfsige stepped in from the side and caught the frame with both hands.
He held it for four minutes. Standing. While the mechanic cleared, while the jacks were reset, while the crew processed what they were watching. His breathing remained controlled throughout.
He set it down slowly, checked that the jacks were seated, asked if everyone was clear, and went back to what he had been doing before.
He did not make a comment about it. He did not look to see who had noticed. The crew does not treat him with bravado or noise after moments like that. They treat him with a specific quiet — the kind that is a form of reverence rather than discomfort.
The original concern — that his 180 psi grip strength would lead to accidental damage of delicate equipment — has not materialized. If anything, the opposite has proven true.
He was observed yesterday completing a micro-circuit soldering task. Despite hands capable of crushing the board and a soldering iron with a tip width his fingertips should make difficult to control precisely, the work was cleaner than what most of the engineering team produces. He has developed a modified technique — using the pads of his fingers rather than the tips, adjusting his wrist angle to account for claw overhang — that compensates for his anatomy without sacrificing output quality.
He is hyper-aware of what his body is capable of. That awareness is the control mechanism. It never stops running.
Standard boot soles are wearing out within weeks due to sprint friction — switching him to carbon-composite soles. Gloves remain declined for fine tasks; given his skin's durability, this is acceptable and his preference is noted.
Wulfsige is a physical system of considerable capability. His greatest asset is not that capability — it is the continuous, conscious discipline he applies to ensure it is never directed at the wrong thing. He is a precision instrument housed in a tank. Both things are true simultaneously, and he keeps them in constant negotiation with each other.
End of Report.