Remote viewing lore
From declassified files to sealed case folders
A source-aware lore page: the story is strange, the practice method is concrete, and the evidence is kept separate from the myth.
1970s
SRI turns psychic lore into lab protocol
Ingo Swann, Pat Price, Russell Targ, and Hal Puthoff are central names in modern remote-viewing history. GRV treats that lore as a reason to practice clean protocol: blind tasking, timestamped submissions, hidden targets, and feedback after lock.
1978-1995
Government programs become Star Gate
GRILL FLAME, CENTER LANE, SUN STREAK, and Star Gate are the lore spine. Users should be invited to open the archives while the app makes clear that archive inclusion is not proof of operational reliability.
1995
The AIR/CIA review creates the honest debate
Jessica Utts and Ray Hyman reached sharply different interpretations of the evidence. That debate is useful: it justifies public score ledgers, critical-source pages, and separate target-hit, market-hit, calibration, and paper-PnL metrics.
Now
The arcade lab makes the lore playable
Every public case is a sealed folder with a generated target already committed before anyone guesses. When the timer ends, the folder reveals, scores post, and users can brag about close and perfect solves.
