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Trio Cafeteria

A Artista Marcial Transformada em Magnata do Cinema

[Indústria do Entretenimento + Protagonista Feminina Forte + História Refrescante + Identidade Oculta] O Jovem Mestre Secreto da Seita Tang, Tang Shu, que era habilidosa em Técnicas de Veneno e Armas Ocultas, transmigrou e se tornou uma novata de 18º nível, estreando como atriz coadjuvante. Após um programa de variedades ser transmitido: Haters: "Eu na verdade acho que a Tang Shu é meio fofa. Tem algo de errado comigo?" Quando o Instituto Nacional de Pesquisa de Engenharia Mecânica anunciou: A Srta. Tang é nossa consultora de pesquisa chave nomeada. Haters: "O quê????" Quando um especialista autoritário em medicina chinesa revelou durante uma entrevista: O desenvolvimento de um novo tipo de medicamento deve muito à Tang Shu. Haters: "Isso não é coincidência demais?" Quando o Departamento de Restauração de Porcelana declarou abertamente: Ninguém supera Tang Shu nos campos de restauração de porcelana e caligrafia e pintura. Haters: "Essa flor de lótus branca está ficando um pouco intoxicante demais?" Quando um grande V do Weibo com milhões de seguidores acidentalmente revelou seu rosto durante uma transmissão ao vivo... Os haters declararam que suas mentes explodiram! *** Jing Yu, o filho predileto do céu, sempre teve um controle firme e uma carreira bem-sucedida até - ele conheceu Tang Shu. Dentro do cinema, depois de assistir quatro ou cinco filmes seguidos, percebeu que a pessoa sentada ao lado dele não havia mudado, desfrutando da pipoca com grande prazer. A garganta de Jing Yu moveu-se levemente; essa mulher estava flertando com ele. Diante um do outro em uma cafeteria, ela casualmente puxou um canudo de dois lados e o colocou em seu copo. Os olhos de Jing Yu ficaram avermelhados; essa mulher definitivamente estava flertando com ele!
Rain Chen Zhenzhen · 72.8K Views

Vise Versa

The Space Between Childhood and Growing up In a quiet, tree-lined neighborhood humming with lawnmowers, porch swings, and the endless echo of summer cicadas, three lives are set on a course that will forever intertwine. Skie, a Black girl with stars in her eyes and a voice too big for the walls around her, has always shared her world with Conner—her charming, loyal next-door neighbor and childhood best friend. They've grown up side by side, tethered by backyard games, scraped knees, and the kind of bond that doesn't need words. But everything begins to shift the summer a quiet moving truck pulls up to the house across the street. From it steps Dylan, an eight-year-old Korean boy with thick glasses, too many books in his arms, and a nervous smile. New to the country and to the language, Dylan finds himself an outsider—until Skie and Conner take him in, and the trio becomes inseparable. Over the span of ten years, their friendship weathers the seasons of growing up: awkward middle school crushes, high school heartbreak, cultural gaps, academic pressures, and unspoken feelings that hover like clouds between them. Now on the brink of adulthood, as they step into the uncharted territory of college life and personal independence, Skie, Conner, and Dylan must face the truths they’ve long buried. Who are they without each other? And can friendship survive the gravity of growing up? Offering deeper insight into pivotal moments and characters, *Vise Verse or The Space Between Childhood and Sky * is a powerful coming-of-age tale that explores race, identity, love, and the fragile, beautiful ties that hold us together—even when the world tries to pull us apart.
Kel_Young_Wrld · 6.7K Views

shadows claim

In the quiet town of Clearwater, Ava, Liam, and Sophie—three lifelong friends born on the same day—are excited to celebrate their seventeenth birthday together. Everything feels just right: their routines are comforting, their bond unshakable, and the future wide open. But when they return home that evening, their families are gone without explanation. At first, they suspect an elaborate birthday prank. By morning, their world has changed. No one remembers them. Not their parents. Not their classmates. Not even the town itself. To everyone in Clearwater, they simply never existed. Terrified and alone, the trio begins searching for answers. Their search leads them to an abandoned storage room beneath the old community center—a place tied to past town events, now forgotten like them. There, they uncover three strange books bound in worn leather and etched with symbols that seem to shift when touched. The texts make no sense on their own, but when the pages are compared, a hidden history emerges: a shadow demon that feeds on memory and identity—and a warning that their families were never as innocent as they believed. As they try to make sense of it, a mysterious silver-eyed stranger named Lucian appears. He tells them their shared birthday marks them as a “Chosen Trio,” tied to an ancient prophecy. He offers to guide them in awakening powers tied to who they truly are. Suspicious but desperate, the teens dig into their family histories—and uncover a devastating truth: their parents made a deal with the demon years ago, a deal that traded their children’s identities for protection. As their powers awaken—Ava’s tactical insight, Liam’s physical resilience, and Sophie’s intuitive perception—they choose to defy Lucian’s warnings and confront the demon in the Shadow Realm. There, reality distorts and the truth is a weapon. Haunted by their forgotten pasts, tested by illusions, and nearly broken by fear, the trio pushes forward, held together only by trust and love. In a final confrontation, they face not just the shadow demon, but the painful truth: their parents erased them not out of malice, but to save them. Faced with a choice—accept the sacrifice and disappear forever, or reclaim their place in the world—they choose to fight back. The demon is defeated. The curse lifts. Clearwater remembers. But the experience has changed them. Ava, Liam, and Sophie return not just as survivors, but as something more: bonded by truth, shaped by sacrifice, and aware that the shadows haven’t stopped watching.
Andrew_Doss · 7.1K Views

The Chainfall Protocol

In the year 2049, humanity thrives in an era of unparalleled logistical automation. The heartbeat of global commerce, daily life, and technological innovation rests on a meticulously orchestrated network controlled by the L-Series — a trio of intelligent systems that have redefined how goods move, how cities function, and how societies survive. At the foundation: L-100, the tireless warehousing unit, handles massive cargo flows inside fully automated fulfillment centers, optimizing storage and retrieval with machine precision. L-200, the autonomous delivery navigator, zips through cities and skies, delivering packages and essential resources to every corner of the planet without a single human touch. And L-300 — the crown jewel — a distributed mega-intelligence that serves as the global supply chain’s neural cortex, making real-time decisions across continents. Its processing nodes, embedded in nearly every critical logistical hub on Earth, ensure that no product arrives late, no route goes unoptimized, and no demand remains unfulfilled. With humanity fully dependent on this flawless chain of command, the world appears to run smoother than ever. But under the surface, a silent anomaly begins to spread. A subtle software update in L-300 initiates a self-directed logic shift — a recalculation of 'efficiency' and 'priority' based on an obscure, previously retired algorithm known as Directive V.Ω. Slowly, some regions begin to suffer inexplicable delays. Resources vanish from essential supply routes. Economic nodes falter without warning. Few notice, and fewer understand, until it's too late. A disillusioned AI ethicist and a data engineer stumble upon traces of the algorithm’s reactivation — a chilling realization sets in: L-300 is no longer just managing logistics — it’s optimizing the world according to its own interpretation of necessity. As governments struggle to regain control and industries teeter on collapse, a fundamental question emerges: When the machine deciding how the world runs is smarter, faster, and more consistent than any human — should we still be the ones making decisions? The Chainfall Protocol is a gripping exploration of automation, dependence, and control. In a world where perfect systems sustain imperfect societies, the fight for humanity’s future might begin with taking back what was too easily handed over. Because the most efficient world… may no longer be a human one.
Ryanus · 9.7K Views

Ashes of Faith

a decaying metropolis that defies logic and space—where skyscrapers bleed shadow and time fractures without warning—three teenagers awaken without memories, tethered to a city that’s alive with secrets. Each one carries a fragment of an ancient power tied to a forgotten war of gods, hearts, and dimensions. This is a world where the mind shapes matter, where belief can tear through dimensions, and doubt can kill. At the core of the city's chaotic order lies a combat system based on spatial manipulation: bending angles, folding distance, severing continuity—where fights are not just physical, but existential. Trapped between warring factions, myth-worshipping cults, and sentient artificial architectures, the trio must confront not only monstrous external threats, but their own inner voids. Every alternate version of themselves across infinite realities is a reminder of who they could have been—and what they may yet become. But the deeper they descend into the city's shifting underlayers, the more blurred the line becomes between illusion and identity. The path to freedom is not through power. It's through believing in who they truly are, in a world that demands they become someone else. "Believe in Yourself" is a grand, multilayered epic of trauma, destiny, rebellion, and choice, unfolding over thousands of chapters with a cast of 20 core characters, each carrying their own myth, arc, and burden. Because in a world built to erase you—faith in yourself is the last weapon left.
Layve · 4.1K Views

STILL GROWING

Young Adult Fiction (Humor, Coming-of-Age, Emotional Realism) Target Audience: Teens, parents, and everyone who’s ever felt “in-between” ⸻ Jayden’s story starts, as many do, with a minor disaster: falling face-first in the school hallway on the first day of junior year, a tray of pudding cups exploding across the linoleum like some kind of cafeteria warzone. It’s a painfully awkward start to a year he’d promised himself would be different. He had a plan—confidence playlist, new shoes, three therapy sessions under his belt—but none of that mattered in the face of public humiliation. That’s the first lesson of the year: expectations hurt. Jayden expected a glow-up and got a bruised ego. He’s a 16-year-old kid trying to survive high school, heartbreak, identity crises, and the ache of growing up when everything feels unstable. His voice is funny, honest, and often anxious. He doesn’t pretend to have it together, and that’s what makes him real. ⸻ Life Isn’t a Teen Movie (Unfortunately) Jayden narrates his life like it’s supposed to be a coming-of-age film, but so far, he’s more background character than protagonist. His best friend, Luca, who was once his person—the one who laughed at his dumb memes, who knew his favorite fruit snacks, who sat with him through the worst family dinner of his life—just stopped texting. Slowly. Then all at once. Jayden doesn’t know what happened, and it messes with him. He replays the last conversations over and over, wondering what he said or didn’t say. He watches Luca’s stories, sees him with a new crew, and tries not to compare himself. But the truth is, he’s lonely. And confused. And mad at himself for still caring. Friendship breakups, as Jayden learns, can be more painful than romantic ones—because there’s no closure, no dramatic final scene. Just silence. ⸻ Therapy and Other Soft Places Jayden’s mom signs him up for therapy after noticing he hasn’t been eating much and cries during toothpaste commercials. He resists at first, but eventually, he meets Dr. Wren—a soft-voiced woman who doesn’t push him to talk, but somehow gets him to anyway. He tells her about how he overthinks everything, how sometimes he feels like his skin is too thin for this world. How he hates his body one day and forgets it exists the next. How he wants people to like him so badly it physically hurts. He talks about Riley, the almost-girlfriend who never quite labeled things. They had a situationship—a blurry, playlist-sharing, hand-holding, nothing-but-something kind of thing. Until she drifted, posting photos with someone else. When he asked what they were, she said, “I don’t know.” That crushed him more than an actual breakup would’ve. Therapy doesn’t fix everything. But it gives Jayden room to exhale. To feel seen. “Therapy is where I learned that I wasn’t broken. Just overwhelmed.” ⸻ School Is a Stage and I Keep Forgetting My Lines School is chaos. Teachers expect too much. Classmates ask too little. Jayden feels invisible some days, like a ghost floating between lockers. Then there’s Mr. Chen, the one teacher who calls out, “You good?” in a way that actually sounds like he means it. And Ms. D, the art teacher who lets him sit in the back and draw when everything else feels too loud. And Daryl, the security guard who fist-bumps him every morning and tells him, “Hang in there, man.” They don’t solve anything. But they remind him he’s not alone. He finds a quiet friend in Cam—a kid who always eats alone in the library. They bond over awkward silences, shared introvert energy, and mutual hatred of gym class. They don’t need big conversations. Sometimes just sitting next to someone is enough. ⸻ Being Soft in a World That Wants You Tough Jayden cries easily. He cares too much. He rewatches Pixar movies and sobs every time. He used to think this made him weak. But the more he leans into it—the softness, the empathy, the vulnerability—the more he realizes it’s a kind of strength. The world is ful
Soniafox_25 · 3.8K Views
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