The Architecture of Phantom-Phase
I don’t see the world in simple narratives; I see it in systems, variables, and data streams. My brain runs fast—what some might classify as neurodivergent (ADHD 2e), I utilize as a highly sensitive processor. I am Mx. Daniell Delonge, and I build instruments to measure the unseen. But to truly understand the hardware, you first have to understand the operating system that designed it.
Most paranormal equipment on the market is built by hobbyists guessing at the dark. My foundation, however, is built on two distinct, yet deeply parallel diagnostic fields. I began my career as an automotive technician, learning how to pull raw telemetry from complex physical machines to isolate the fault in a system. Later, I became a Mental Health Clinician, learning how to hold space for the human mind, identifying the core truth hidden beneath layers of trauma, defense mechanisms, and environmental noise.
When my co-investigator, Steve, and I founded the Ghost Series project, I immediately saw the flaw in standard investigation tech. The industry is saturated with gear designed to aggressively "hunt" or provoke an environment. These devices flash, alarm, and spit out random data. They generate chaos instead of measuring it. I realized that to genuinely map an anomaly, you don't shout into the dark. You sit with it. You provide a structured, intelligent framework for it to communicate.
Because those tools didn’t exist, I used my background to engineer them. While Ghost Series is the vehicle for my fieldwork, Phantom-Phase is the laboratory.
This drive for authentic communication isn't just a professional methodology; it is a deeply personal architecture. For years, my own life ran on a failing operating system. I was buried under a constant stream of chaotic, reactive interference, trying to navigate a world I didn't seamlessly fit into. In the beginning, creating Phantom-Phase wasn't just research and development—it was a sanctuary. I used to view "Phase" as a completely separate entity. It was a secure partition, a quiet hiding place where I could reverse-engineer my own life without the world watching.
But the years spent building these tools inadvertently built something else. I realized that Phase wasn't a separate entity at all. It was the blueprint for the person I could be.
Transitioning into my authentic identity as a non-binary individual wasn't just a superficial software update—it was a fundamental system rewrite. The psychological framework I developed, The Ghost in the Code, defines this exact process. I am still learning this New OS. It isn't flawlessly clean code yet; it is constantly evolving, patching, and adapting in real-time. The challenge I face now is no longer using Phantom-Phase to hide from the world, but learning to exist seamlessly as one with it.
This exact philosophy is physically engineered into my technology. I utilize advanced microcontrollers, custom sensor arrays, and low-level programming not to create random spikes, but to run sophisticated mathematical models. This is the foundation of the SCORE framework, relying on geomagnetic demodulation and fractal analysis to map environmental changes.
I design devices like the pm3 with a very specific concept in mind: if you open your eyes and try to process all the raw visual data on the screen at once, it can be completely overwhelming. But if you close your eyes and trust the audio feedback, the data translates into something beautiful, clear, and perfectly logical.
I am not here to sell a belief system or force a perspective. I am here to offer a different, evidence-based lens through which to view the unknown.
When you hold a Phantom-Phase device, you aren't just holding a piece of electronics. You are holding the physical manifestation of an evolving mind. It is about stripping away the nonsense, isolating the truth, and creating a clearer, more authentic way to communicate.
Respectfully,
Daniell Delonge