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Locker temperature bug
#1
So I noticed that if you put a heating chem (CFL3, phlog, etc) in a monkey and put them in a locker, the reagents in their body don't actually heat up. If they're out in the open, the reagents heat up just fine, but they'll begin cooling down if inside a locker.

Now I understand that lockers are kind of meant to shield you from the outside environment, but these are chemicals heating up internally. I've yet to test this on a human, but I'm sure the results will be the same.
#2
Fastest way to find out would be to inject yourself and jump into a locker.

But yeah, if I had to guess, it assumes that the temperature change occurs from an outside source, despite coming from your insides, probably because the amount of times this matters are minimal.


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