I'm not sure if it was the second or third day, but here is my feedback. In CWU, we were continuously barraged with inherently unknowable fires and hazards for 2 hours (probably exaggerating, but it felt that way) and half the player base was nowhere to be of any use. It appears that everyone had been on their hind legs to avoid becoming exhausted by the many plot-inducing events.
I also had seen several CWU uniforms being spawned and I reasonably believe they have all been handed out like candy initially, yet considering that food is seen as limited and compensation is measured in chips, I just see illogical reasoning everywhere to spawn anything of the sort, despite the effort that had little to no intention of being fully enforced, gave the impression of being exceedingly desperate.
Based solely on that above, I'm going to assume that either everyone who first joined CWU ran off or really died on the first day of an event that was meant to go until the 30th because they were feeling a little script-hungry. However, considering how unbelievably unstable the workforce was at the time, it seemed as though there were almost no expectations for any given attempt to be competently accomplished because everything was lacking and in my opinion, there was a general neglect of GMs and players to engage to make the experience enjoyable in a way.
Aside from the fires, you were given too much despite the reality that the attempts to make it all a positive experience were just not there in my opinion, and it seemed like too much had been shoved simultaneously by the staff seeing how we went through a forced hiatus of imagining items and RPing out hypothetical equipment to suit so-called needs. I really enjoyed the restaurant fire, though. When we engaged and cleared our way through the structure from the top, I honestly got burned out by the randomness and the ceiling collapsing in the Nexus, plus it was unnecessarily challenging and uncomfortable to deal with a lot of things that weren't there physically, and it felt rushed. I might be wrong, but this is how I felt. And, given that the event is only for a limited period, I believe individuals are too protective of their original investment in it.