The visual language of the event was equally striking. Projection mapping and video content weren’t mere backdrops but active storytellers, folding time and place into associative imagery—flickers of urban skylines, glitching archival footage, typography that punctuated rhetorical beats. Costuming leaned toward minimalism with bold accents, underscoring characters rather than concealing them. Together, visuals and sound reinforced an overarching theme: the tension between mechanized systems and irrepressible human agency.
The primary feature of such events was the demonstration of . In these sessions, researchers and engineers typically explored:
128 BPM pulse (standard house/pop tempo of the era).
The content reflected ACCEED's specific style, which focused on "hard" but stylized SM play. The 2012 performances typically included:
Nothing beat the sound of a live band echoing through the atrium while you grabbed a snack with friends. It was the ultimate community hangout.
– A 20-minute low-resolution video shot on a flip phone circulated on now-deleted Vimeo and Dailymotion links. It remains a holy grail for collectors. In 2019, a restored 8-minute fragment resurfaced on a Japanese fetish Discord server, showing the final rope suspension.