What is the device taken from Alex Trusks at the end of Hypercube?

What is the device taken from Alex Trusks at the end of Hypercube? - A Hand Filling Up the Form Beside the Laptop

The Cube series is a really complicated movie series.

At the end of the Hypercube, Kate gives a device to some serious guys (military guys maybe). This device was taken from Alex Trusks' neck.

What is the purpose of this device?

Closeup of the device



Best Answer

The only information in the original version of the film is the last line spoken by an unknown African American in a suit, who presumably works for Izon or the military:

We'll take that to Darcy and see if anything recorded on it

The fact he said "recorded on it" implies it's some kind of sensor device, such as a camera, microphone or other more high-tech information gathering system rather than a storage device, as usually you'd say "saved on it" or "stored on it" in that case.

There's more information given in the alternate ending which I can't seem to find, though Wikipedia says:

The longer alternate ending included in the special features on the DVD reveals the "owners" to be the government; in the shorter version it is unclear who they are, but it is assumed they are Izon. Kate is executed in both versions, but she is praised for being the first operative to make it out alive. In the alternate ending it is revealed to Kate that she was in the Hypercube for just six minutes and fifty-nine seconds. It was an experiment used for quantum teleportation.

The fact that this was an experiment would seem to back up the idea that it was a sensor as the scientists working on the project would need a way to get data back from the experiment and there was no other machinery shown in the "real world" which could be monitoring what happened inside:

Outside the cube




Pictures about "What is the device taken from Alex Trusks at the end of Hypercube?"

What is the device taken from Alex Trusks at the end of Hypercube? - From below of delighted aged male entrepreneur in classy outfit standing on street and speaking on cellphone while laughing and looking away
What is the device taken from Alex Trusks at the end of Hypercube? - Free stock photo of adolescent, casual, child
What is the device taken from Alex Trusks at the end of Hypercube? - Photo of Women at the Meeting



What happened at the end of cube 2?

Kate is executed in both versions, but she is praised for being the first operative to make it out alive. In the alternate ending it is revealed to Kate that she was in the Hypercube for just six minutes and fifty-nine seconds. It was an experiment used for quantum teleportation.

What happens at the end of cube?

In the end, Kazan is the only person to escape. He will not be able to describe everything that happened inside the Cube, which means that the entire machine will keep churning along. No one will be given the knowledge of how they plotted their location with numbers, or how they figured out which rooms had traps.

Who is Alex trusk?

Alex Trusk, also known as Sasha, was an important character in Cube2: Hypercube. She was a blind girl who, in spite of her apparent helplessness, was a master computer hacker of some notoriety in the computer industry. She was portrayed by Grace Lynn Kung.

What is the point of cube 2?

\u201cCube 2: Hypercube\u201d is a time based puzzle that closes in on itself (implodes) based on a quantum (parallel) reality. Alex Trusk is the hacker genius who first designed it for Izon thinking it was only to be used for a game and not in reality. The cube's purpose in this case was to test teleportation.



Cube²: Hypercube | Alternate/Extended Ending




More answers regarding what is the device taken from Alex Trusks at the end of Hypercube?

Answer 2

It was some sort of storage device with confidential information on it. I don't remember many other details though as to why she was looking for it or who had it initially.

Answer 3

It may be much more than a simple recording device. As shown, time moves differently inside, yet all of Jerry's watches are perfectly synchronized. We know they were taken from different versions of Jerry at different times, so if they were functioning as normal watches, you'd have wildly different times on each watch, as well as much more time having passed.

The fact that they all line up to the "6:06:59" reading with Kate suggests that Alex Trusk's necklace was some kind of stabilizing device. The watches (and time) stabilized and ran normally when in proximity to the device. This is also supported by the fact that at the end, when the room is disintegrating, the only one that remains is Kate, who took the device from Alex's neck after her death.

This would explain why Simon ran into multiple versions of Jerry and the others and experienced more time, but Kate did not.

Of course, that doesn't explain how what seems like hours passed for Kate after she met up with Alex (and was in proximity to the device), yet the watches still only show 6 minutes and 59 seconds have actually passed.

I suppose it's possible that the device had SOME stabilizing effect, but not completely. And as the cube imploded, normal time from the outside universe began leaking in.

Or, it could just be that Jerry's watch only counts time for the outside universe. Modern watches count time using the oscillation frequency of quartz when exposed to an electric charge, so if somehow that were unaffected by the weird time frame of the cube, it would explain it. In effect, the watches would only tick when exposed to time from the outside universe. If normal time seeped through to the cube at predictable intervals (and they were increasing), you could probably use that to calculate when the cube would implode. Hence, the scientist making that "6:06:59" calculation.

In fact, it could be both of those explanations together. If so, and Alex Trusk were hiding in the tesseract, it would make sense that they would send in an operative to retrieve it. She developed a way to stabilize (and ultimately control) the tesseract, and based on her hiding, I doubt she sent the government instructions. They'd need to retrieve it to figure out how it worked.

Or it could be just weird, timey-wimey stuff. In the end, WHO KNOWS. :-P

Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Images: Karolina Grabowska, Andrea Piacquadio, ANTONI SHKRABA production, RF._.studio