you can still find them, in their own myriad of niches.

production engines are known in many spaces for their reliability, resilience, and portability. working behind the scenes, these machines contribute to the gentle hum of a workplace, office, or medical institute; a regular ticking for some, functioning continuously for months on end; or a rapid flurry, as medication is dispensed at a moment's notice, with next to no chance of contamination or mistakes.

while tesselation engines stand to threaten their mass-produced prominence in modern times, i don't believe they'll ever truly disappear - nothing can beat a machine you can carry, and they're so much easier to tinker with. still, making them *fast* under all these constraints is hard; working with some known-good formulae will be good practice, lest my own experiments take days to produce results.

- alchemist luna's blog