No civilian protocol
Most public UAP content informs or entertains. It does not train the person standing closest to the event.
Disclosure exists for the person who will not be in a hearing room, a command center, or a lab when contact becomes local. It is the civilian layer: identity, readiness, intel, and drills.
Governments, scientists, and military organizations plan for detection, confirmation, and response. Ordinary people need something different: what to do before anyone official arrives.
Most public UAP content informs or entertains. It does not train the person standing closest to the event.
Groups fail when everyone tries to lead, film, argue, or flee at once. Archetypes create useful division of labor.
A thread is forgotten. A drill sticks. Disclosure turns lore into repeatable behavior.
Scenario-based classification into Sentinel, Diplomat, Scholar, Survivor, or rare First Contact.
A protocol framework for calm, distance, evidence, role control, and recovery.
A classified-style archive for first contact, encounter psychology, species, and field guidance.
A credential-style identity object built for sharing, memory, and commitment.
The premise is thrilling. The mechanics are practical. That is the point.
You do not need belief to run a drill. Fire drills work even when the building is not burning.
You already know the institutional story. Disclosure asks what civilians should do with it.
Archetype identity, card visuals, and classification language make the result shareable.
It gives the anxiety a shape: a role, a score, and a next step.
Start with the quiz module on the landing page. Your result determines the rest of the path.
The first contact briefing explains what contact means and what civilians should do first.
The archetype dossiers explain how each role behaves under pressure.
The intel archive expands the world, the risks, and the field scenarios.
Get your designation and move from spectator to classified civilian.