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Wheatley is one of several personality cores created for GLaDOS; specifically, he was designed by the Aperture scientists as an "Intelligence Dampening Sphere" (or, as GLaDOS puts it, "the dumbest moron who ever lived") as a means to hamper GLaDOS's decision-making processes by injecting poor judgment into her routines.
Caroline would ultimately become the personality core of GLaDOS. In the conclusion of Portal 2, GLaDOS, trapped in her potato form, comes to recall the Caroline persona, and accepts this to form a truce with Chell to defeat Wheatley. After their victory, GLaDOS thanks the Caroline persona for her insights, and then promptly deletes the personality.
She manages to escape from the trap right before its activation. The game's final levels are spent escaping from Wheatley's numerous attempts to kill them. [33] In the game's boss fight and ending, Chell confronts Wheatley and attaches corrupted personality cores (Nolan North) [34] to force another core exchange and restore GLaDOS to authority ...
Portal is a series of first-person puzzle-platform video games developed by Valve.Set in the Half-Life universe, the two main games in the series, Portal (2007) and Portal 2 (2011), center on a woman, Chell, forced to undergo a series of tests within the Aperture Science Enrichment Center by a malicious artificial intelligence, GLaDOS, that controls the facility.
In Portal 2, GLaDOS initially resumes her role as test monitor in a now-ruined facility after Chell and Wheatley inadvertently reactivate her. This time, she makes no attempt to hide her contempt and hatred for Chell; partly because Chell destroyed her, and partly because her quicksave system has forced her to relive her death over and over since her deactivation.
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Aperture Hand Lab is a 2019 virtual reality (VR) game developed by Cloudhead Games and published by Valve.Set in the Portal universe, the player controls a character that has to complete several tests involving hand and finger gestures while being guided by personality cores.
Later, both personality cores are shown floating freely in space, implying that they; a) attained lunar escape velocity or, b) attained orbital velocity or, c) were launched fast enough that they will remain in the "air" (not in physical contact with the Moon's surface) for an extended period (let's say at least 1 hour).