
THE WORLD HAS ENDED, LONG LIVE THE NEW WORLD.
THE WORLD HAS ENDED, LONG LIVE THE NEW WORLD.
tales from a time yet to come.
In the silent, decaying Arks of a dead empire, a final war for the soul of life has begun.
Three fugitives, forcibly evolved with forbidden technology, become living proof that humanity must adapt to survive. But they are hunted. From the shadows, a charismatic prophet rises, preaching that adaptation is corruption and seeking to awaken an ancient power that will enforce a terrifying genetic purity.
Caught between a dying world and a fanatic's crusade, these transformed survivors must confront the ghosts of their creators and answer their final question: Does the future lie in messy, resilient change, or in the cold, absolute perfection of a forgotten age?
“Survival reshapes the boundaries of good and evil. Delve into a collection that unravels this delicate balance in every tale.”
MELTDOWN
Echoes of Earth: Tales Beyond Time
SYNOPSIS.
On a dead world forgotten by its makers, a strange rain has begun to fall. It is a technological plague and a miracle, causing the poisoned soil to stir with unnatural life and ancient machinery to dream of purpose once more. Watching over this unsettling rebirth are the last, lonely guardians—tragic sentinels bound to a duty whose meaning has been lost to time.
This strange awakening is but an echo of a larger conflict, born in the silent, decaying Arks of a dead empire adrift between the stars. Here, a zealous orthodoxy guards against the perceived sins of their ancestors, believing that true salvation lies not in messy adaptation, but in restoring a perfect, unforgiving past. They seek to reawaken a power that was locked away for a reason, convinced it will enforce their vision of purity.
But their dogma is challenged by the arrival of three accidental trespassers, inheritors of a power they don't understand. Touched by a forbidden legacy, they become living proof that life finds a way, even through imperfection. Now hunted as heresy, they must unravel the mystery of their own unwanted transformation before it consumes them.
When a civilization falls, is salvation found by restoring its perfect, unchanging past, or by embracing the messy, often painful, evolution of an imperfect future?








