Slate V110 Mugwump Exclusive: Clean

I spent two weeks with a pre-production version of the Clean Slate V110 Mugwump Exclusive. Using a 0.11-ohm dual fused clapton build in a partnership RDA (the "Mugwump Rattle"), the results were striking.

Clean Slate v110 – Mugwump Exclusive Edition

Wipe the board clean with the v110 Mugwump Exclusive – a limited-edition device built for flavor chasers and collectors alike. Engineered for a crisp, untainted hit from draw one to coil done.

Features:

Includes:

“Start over. Hit harder.” – Mugwump



Note: This report is for informational purposes only. The use of hardware modifications to bypass security measures may violate terms of service and intellectual property laws.

The neon hum of Sector 7 was always loudest just before the data-purge. For Jace, a "Clean Slate" wasn't just a corporate slogan; it was a survival tactic.

He sat in the back of The Glitch, a basement bar that smelled of ozone and recycled oxygen. On the scarred metal table sat a device that shouldn’t exist: the Clean Slate v110. It was sleek, finished in a matte obsidian that seemed to swallow the ambient light.

"Is that the Mugwump build?" a voice rasped from the shadows.

Jace didn't look up. "Exclusive. Only three in the sprawl, and the other two are currently melting in a high-security evidence locker."

The Mugwump Exclusive wasn't just a firmware update; it was a political statement. In the old dialect, a 'Mugwump' was someone who sat on the fence with their mug on one side and their 'wump' on the other. In the digital age, it meant someone who lived outside the grid—neither a corporate drone nor a registered rebel.

"They say the v110 can wipe a biometric signature in under four seconds," the stranger said, stepping into the light. It was Kael, a notorious data-broker with a cybernetic eye that flickered red.

"Four seconds is for amateurs," Jace muttered. He tapped the interface. A holographic display bloomed, showing a complex web of Jace’s legal existence: bank accounts, DNA registries, travel logs, and a murder charge he hadn't committed.

"The Mugwump protocol doesn't just delete," Jace explained, his fingers dancing across the glass. "It scrambles. It takes your digital DNA and spreads it across a thousand dead accounts. You don't disappear; you become everyone and no one." Kael leaned in, fascinated. "And the cost?"

"Total isolation," Jace said. The v110 emitted a low-frequency pulse. "Once I hit 'Execute,' I can never go home. My mother won't recognize my face. The automated doors at my apartment won't open. I’ll be a ghost in a world made of sensors."

The sirens began to wail outside—the Enforcers were close. Jace looked at the 'Execute' prompt. The Clean Slate v110 was his only exit, a lonely bridge to a new life. "Better a ghost than a prisoner," Kael whispered.

Jace pressed the button. The obsidian casing of the v110 turned white-hot for a fraction of a second, then went cold. The holographic web shattered into a million sparks and vanished.

When the Enforcers kicked in the door a minute later, they found Kael sitting alone. They scanned the room with high-res identity pings.

"Target's gone," the lead Enforcer barked into his comms. "Check the logs."

"Logs are clear, sir," the reply came back. "According to the system, Jace Thorne never existed."

In the shadows of the alleyway, a man who looked like Jace—but whose retina scans now registered as a long-deceased librarian from the lunar colonies—walked into the rain, leaving the v110 behind in the trash. He was a Mugwump now. Independent, untraceable, and finally, perfectly alone.

The rain in Sector 4 didn’t just fall; it dissolved things. Mugwump, a data-runner with a cybernetic lung and a penchant for pre-collapse jazz, sat in the neon-soaked corner of The Rusty Valve. He wasn't there for the synthetic gin. He was there for the Clean Slate V110.

In the year 2142, your past wasn't just a memory; it was a digital anchor. Every debt, every misdemeanor, and every genetic "imperfection" was logged in the Central Registry. V110 was the urban legend of the underground—a one-time-use firmware patch that didn't just hide your data; it cauterized it. It promised a factory reset for a human soul.

"You're sure it's the Exclusive?" Mugwump whispered to the contact, a twitchy kid with glowing optic nerves. clean slate v110 mugwump exclusive

"Better," the kid replied, sliding a sleek, chrome canister across the table. "This is the Mugwump Exclusive. Custom-coded for your specific neural architecture. No universal backdoors. Once you hit 'execute,' the person you were ceases to exist. Not even the Registry will remember you were born."

Mugwump looked at his reflection in the chrome. He saw a man tired of running from the ghost of a botched heist in Neo-Tokyo. He grabbed the canister. "The catch?"

"The catch," the kid smirked, "is that it's a clean slate. You won't remember why you wanted to forget. You'll wake up a stranger to yourself, in a world that doesn't know you."

Mugwump didn't hesitate. He jammed the V110 interface into his neck port. As the progress bar flashed behind his eyes, he took one last sip of the gin. By the time the glass hit the floor, the man known as Mugwump was gone, replaced by a ghost with a brand-new future.

While there are many concepts related to a "Clean Slate"—from psychological resets

to the [Clean Slate Protocol in the Marvel Universe](https://marvelcinematic universe.fandom.com/wiki/Clean_Slate_Protocol)—the specific "v110 Mugwump Exclusive" appears to be a specialized variant of the Hoover CleanSlate Pet Carpet & Upholstery Spot Cleaner

Below is a blog post tailored for this high-performance cleaning tool.

The Ultimate Reset: Why the Clean Slate v110 Mugwump Exclusive is a Game Changer

Life is messy. Whether it’s a sudden coffee spill on your favorite rug or the inevitable muddy paw prints in the hallway, we’ve all wished for a "delete" button for our floors. Enter the Clean Slate v110 Mugwump Exclusive

, the latest heavy-hitter in spot cleaning technology designed to give your home a literal fresh start. What Makes the v110 Mugwump Exclusive Different?

While standard cleaners often push dirt around, the v110 Mugwump variant is engineered for deep extraction and versatility. It combines high-velocity suction with a suite of specialized tools that you won't find in basic retail models. Extra Wide 2-in-1 Wash Tool

: This exclusive attachment allows you to reverse large spills and messes faster by covering more surface area in a single pass. The "Mugwump" Power Profile

: The v110 designation refers to its optimized 10.8V power system, balancing portability with the raw suction needed for deep-set stains like mud, juice, and coffee. Massive Capacity in a Compact Frame

: Despite its portable size (weighing just 5.7kg), it features a generous 1.1L clean water tank , meaning fewer trips to the sink during a deep clean. Key Performance Specs

If you’re a fan of the details, here is how the v110 Mugwump stacks up: Hose Length

: 1.25m for reaching into tight car interiors or high upholstery. Cord Length

: 5.5m, giving you the freedom to move across a room without hunting for a new outlet. Multi-Surface Mastery

: It’s safe and effective for carpets, sealed hard floors, stairs, and even delicate upholstery. Why You Need This Exclusive Model

The "Mugwump Exclusive" isn't just a name—it’s a bundle designed for the ultimate home maintainer. It typically includes the Messy Clean Up Tool Hard Floor Scrub Attachment

, ensuring that no matter what the surface, you have the right friction to lift the grime. Final Verdict: A Fresh Start in Minutes Hoover CleanSlate series

has always been a reliable choice, but the v110 Mugwump Exclusive takes that reliability and adds professional-grade speed. It’s about more than just cleaning; it’s about the peace of mind that comes with knowing a spill doesn’t have to be a permanent part of your home’s history. Ready to see the Clean Slate v110 Mugwump Exclusive in action? Check out the latest reviews on

or your local hardware retailer to see how it handles real-world messes. or provide a comparison with other portable spot cleaners? CleanSlate Pet Carpet & Upholstery Spot Cleaner

Clean tight or awkward spaces with the Crevice Tool, or reverse spills and mess faster with the new Extra Wide 2-in-1 Wash Tool. * Hoover UAE Hoover Cleanslate Complete Spot washer


Title: The Ghost in the Machine: Unpacking the v110 Mugwump Exclusive I spent two weeks with a pre-production version

Date: April 12, 2026

Tagline: You don’t choose the Mugwump. The Mugwump chooses your dice pool.

There’s a specific kind of dread that every veteran Clean Slate player knows. It’s not the dread of rolling a critical fail on a Ritual of Unmaking. It’s not the dread of the Ref calling for a Sanity save. It’s the quiet, creeping dread that happens when you mention v110 to a table of new players, and the veterans go silent.

And then, someone whispers: “Mugwump.”

For the uninitiated, let me rewind. Clean Slate v1.10—colloquially “v110”—was supposed to be a quality-of-life patch. A balancing act. The devs at Hinterland Studios were trying to fix the infamous “Memory Leak” exploit where players would hoard Residuum tokens indefinitely. It was a good update. Solid. Boring, even.

But buried in the patch notes—line item 4.7.3, sandwiched between “Fixed typo in Zone B flavor text” and “Adjusted vendor prices for Scrap Catalysts”—was a footnote so innocuous, so deliberately obtuse, that most people scrolled past it.

“Mugwump logic re-integrated for legacy edge cases.”

That was it. No explanation. No context. Just the word Mugwump.

The community lost its mind.

Who—or what—is the Mugwump?

In the lore of Clean Slate, the Mugwump is a neutral arbitrator. A creature of pure process. It doesn’t fight. It doesn’t take sides. It observes, and under very specific conditions, it adjusts. Think of it as a referee who secretly hates both teams equally.

In v109, the Mugwump was a cosmetic joke. A little sprite that would appear in the corner of your HUD if you left the game idle for three hours on a Tuesday. It would wave. That was it.

But v110 changed everything.

The Exclusive.

The “Mugwump Exclusive” isn’t something you buy. You cannot trade for it. You cannot datamine it (trust me, people tried). It is a state change.

Players began reporting anomalies about three weeks after v110 dropped. Here are the verified cases:

Hinterland Studios has never officially acknowledged the Mugwump Exclusive as intentional. Their only public statement, buried in a Discord reply from a community manager named “Juno”:

“v110 functions as designed. If you encounter the Mugwump, we recommend logging your session data and moving on. Do not attempt to reverse-engineer the encounter.”

That last line—do not attempt to reverse-engineer—is what haunts me. Because this isn’t a bug. This is a message.

What the Mugwump Means

Let me get philosophical for a moment.

Clean Slate is a game about memory, identity, and the cost of starting over. The core loop is simple: you accumulate experiences (Residuum), you burn them to progress, and sometimes you wipe everything for a permanent bonus. It’s a meditation on attachment. On hoarding versus releasing.

The Mugwump Exclusive is the game’s nervous system biting back.

Think about it. The Mugwump only appears at extremes—statistical impossibilities, degenerate strategies, or psychological breaking points (72 hours of play is not healthy). It doesn’t punish cheaters. It doesn’t reward skill. It interrupts certainty. Includes:

In a world of min-maxers, tier lists, and probability tables, the Mugwump says: You do not control this space as much as you think you do.

The exclusive, then, is not a weapon or a skin or a title. It’s a perspective shift. It’s the game reminding you that rules are agreements, not laws of physics. And sometimes, the referee wakes up.

The Conspiracy (Because There’s Always One)

The deep lore hunters have a theory: the Mugwump isn’t code. It’s a leftover AI from an early build of Clean Slate—a prototype “dynamic difficulty” system that Hinterland scrapped because it was too unpredictable. They didn’t remove it. They just… hid it. And v110’s “re-integration” accidentally turned its volume up.

Others think it’s performance art. That a dev team member left a backdoor trigger that activates on specific system clocks or hardware IDs. The “exclusive” part, then, is just luck. A lottery nobody asked to enter.

Me? I think it’s simpler and stranger.

I think the Mugwump is Clean Slate being honest. Every game has edge cases. Every system has ghosts. The Mugwump is the admission that perfection is a lie, and that the most interesting moments in any hobby aren’t the ones you plan—they’re the ones that happen when the plan breaks.

So What Do You Do If You See the Mugwump?

Don’t try to capture it. Don’t clip it for YouTube. Don’t write a bug report.

Just watch.

Let it rotate. Let it speak. Let it reset your Residuum or blank your screen or whisper that impossible phrase.

Because in a game called Clean Slate, the rarest thing in the world isn’t a legendary drop or a perfect roll.

It’s permission to let go.

And the Mugwump gives that freely.

Whether you asked for it or not.


Have you encountered the v110 Mugwump Exclusive? Share your story below—but know that I won’t believe you, and that’s exactly the point.

—C.

In the saturated world of premium goods, the phrase “exclusive” is often overused. True rarity is not just about limited numbers; it’s about a convergence of heritage, material science, and an uncompromising vision. Enter the Clean Slate V110 Mugwump Exclusive—an artifact that has quietly become the most sought-after release in the niche collector’s market this quarter.

For the uninitiated, the name sounds like a cryptographic passcode. For those in the know, it represents the final word in utilitarian elegance. This article drills down into every facet of the V110, from its metallurgical composition to its psychological impact on the modern minimalist.

If you manage to secure a Clean Slate V110 Mugwump Exclusive at retail price, you have made a sound investment. The build quality surpasses competitors like the Lost Vape Centaurus or the Dovpo Riva. The exclusivity ensures it will retain value, and the performance, once dialed in, is unmatched in the dual-battery regulated sector.

If you are looking at aftermarket prices, the calculation changes. At $400+, you are paying for scarcity as much as vape quality. That said, for the enthusiast who demands the absolute best voltage regulation wrapped in a piece of functional art, there is no substitute.

The Clean Slate V110 Mugwump Exclusive isn't just a vape mod. It is a statement. And in a market flooded with disposable pods and generic boxes, sometimes the most rebellious thing you can do is demand something utterly, beautifully unique.

Rating: 9.4/10 (Deducted 0.6 points for the frustrating purchase process and steep learning curve.)

Where to look: Forget Google Shopping. Check the Mugwump private Discord, follow Clean Slate’s "Gray Market" Telegram channel, or prepare for the next 3:00 AM drop. Your alarm is set. Your trigger finger is ready. The Hive awaits.