After three consecutive days of emergency intensive training and simulated exercises, the T2 Special Attack Team officially set off.
Under the cover of hundreds of mobile battlecruisers, Harrison Clark and his team quietly approached the asteroid belt frontline.
Thirty billion unmanned combat units had already been brought to the front in batches by different transport ships, waiting for the team to arrive and decisively deploy them in large numbers.
On the way, Harrison Clark checked the detector's parameters and couldn't help but sigh.
Due to the likelihood of gamma-ray bursts interfering with the instruments and damaging test samples, the new test instruments have been equipped with multiple anti-interference devices.
This put tremendous pressure on the manufacturing process and the demand for special materials, and so far, only two of the highest-precision test instruments have been produced.
One was with Harrison Clark, and the other with Daniel Thompson.