On the surface, it seemed no different from the Quark synthesizer, but when Harrison Clark used it to replicate the special parts of mutated animals in his isolation storage, it succeeded.
The snake gallbladder batteries, which used to decrease in number with each use, started to grow rapidly in number again.
Although the reserve energy was only half of the original snake gallbladder battery, some core genetic features of the ZS Bacteria could still be preserved.
Harrison Clark already had light wings to store energy and had gradually picked up some biological batteries with surplus electricity produced by the third, fourth, and fifth-generation Dyson membranes. However, the snake gallbladder battery had a different significance.
It was an important biological sample, containing secrets that Harrison Clark and humanity had to decode.