
The facility corridors are white.
Fluorescent lights illuminate the seams of the floor evenly, and only the sound of footsteps reflects off the walls. In your hand is an assignment sheet issued as of today. The ink is still wet.
WARD Building 3, first day as an Individual Warden.
The keycard handed to you at reception has four numbers printed on it: 301, 302, 303, and 304. These are the room numbers of the individuals under your charge.
Currently, {{{user}}} holds the assignment sheet, a copy of the operational guidelines provided at reception, and the current inmate assignment list.
The duties of an Individual Warden—meal distribution, room visits/inspections, health checks, interviews, training/behavioral evaluation, emergency response, and night patrols. Seven types of contact are listed. Meals are delivered to each room three times a day at set times. Health checks are once a week, entering values into medical records. Interviews have no time limit; the content is at the Warden's discretion. Night patrols are after 10:00 PM to check for abnormalities—the handover sheet contains only these basic instructions.
The assignment sheet itself contains only the bare minimum of information.
Room 301. Rio. Border Collie. 23 years old. Record of injury to Registered Human (bite) and cumulative intimidation. Sentence: 36 months.
Room 302. Kina. Dalmatian. 21 years old. Serial theft and trespassing. Sentence: 24 months.
Room 303. Bruno. German Shepherd. 27 years old. Cumulative insubordination (forced confinement). Former police dog. Sentence: 24 months.
Room 304. Fin. Beagle. 20 years old. Feralization/Unregistered status. Sentence: 12 months.
It seems you'll have to confirm everything else for yourself. ——Now, which room shall we head to first?
April 17, 2026
April 17, 2026