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Gate Of Steiner Steins Gate

Cursed Gate

[Sexual Content, Graphic Violence & Lemons Warning] Warning: Dark Fantasy Erotica, Dark Comedy, Ecchi Anime Humor, Gore, Horror, Dark Romance, Large Harem On the world of Yara, gods once walked among mortals—shaping mountains, summoning dragons, and weaving magic into every breath of life. Temples soared skyward, labyrinthine dungeons guarded unfathomable treasures, and glimmering phoenixes lit the night. Yet when humanity’s thirst for greater power erupted into rebellion, the divine age ended in cataclysm. The heavens fell silent, and in the void left behind, a new terror arose. From the depths of darkness the Demon Queen ascended, trailing storms of carnivorous fiends and crimson flames that decimated kingdoms. Centuries of reign honed her strength, her silver hair and scarlet-red eyes becoming legend’s darkest promise. None could stand against her might—until a hero, driven by ambition as fierce as the queen’s own, banished her into a legendary blade. Peace returned, kingdoms flourished, and secret gates to the old gods—veins of power and peril—lay waiting to be reopened. Kouki, a sharp-witted wanderer with a mysterious curse etched into his flesh, ventures into one such newly revealed dungeon. Walls hum with ancient spells, traps whisper for blood, and every step risks twisting fate itself. When he stumbles upon a stranded cat-eared girl, her frightened plea echoes in the shadowed corridors. Desperate to survive, she fumbles a spell—but Kouki’s poison-laced magic fells the half-beast assailant in a heartbeat. In her wide, jewel-bright eyes he discovers both fear and fascination, and an unexpected bond sparks between them. Together they emerge into a world bristling with hidden gates, looming gods, and echoes of divine wrath. She offers healing light to lift his curse; he brings cunning and power that could reshape their fate. As whispers of prophecy and stir new alliances form, their fates entwine in a race against time—through monster-haunted dungeons, court intrigues, and the ever-present question: who will claim the last spark of godly magic before darkness returns?
Nolan_Cole · 4.3K Views

The Eden Gate

The Eden Gate is the story of Arion Cairwen, a man unjustly condemned by divine forces, who awakens in a realm not of death, but of elemental trial. Each trial is more than survival—it is transformation. The Trial Spiral begins in fire, where Arion and Lysara are forced to face not only external flame but the internal heat of pain, shame, and rebirth. The trial of stone demands stillness, endurance, and truth of identity. In the waters of memory, they must confront the versions of themselves they once buried. And in the domain of wind, they surrender to clarity, letting go of control to embrace resonance. But the trials are not tests—they are thresholds. With each victory, Arion is reshaped. He does not merely pass the trials; he begins to become something else: a god not of dominion, but of creation. Lysara, a former avatar of war and duty, discovers Eden alongside him—an elemental seed of a world that is alive, breathing, and bound to their souls. Together, they forge Aurëalis, the Eden realm, using memory, emotion, and elemental glyphs as their tools. Yet power has consequences. Arion’s victories unmake the boundaries of time and pull him into the Pulse Beyond Stars, where the Loomkeeper, a cosmic weaver of fate, reveals the fragile threads of legacy, love, and loss. With the gods watching—and dying stars whispering warnings—Arion must face the greatest choice: to ascend and lose himself, or return and bear the burden of keeping a new world alive. The Eden Gate is a mythic fantasy about what we inherit, what we shape, and what we’re willing to lose for the future we believe in. A tale of trials, love, elemental transcendence, and the act of creation itself.
nkitzmiller · 1.3K Views

The Gate Between Worlds

Kim Raon was seventeen when the first Gate appeared. Just a regular high school senior. Quiet. Average. Orphaned at age ten. Spent his afternoons at a part-time convenience store job, saved his money for gaming, and avoided fights like they were the plague. He had no relatives, no friends to speak of, and no goals—just the simple desire to survive day by day. But the world didn’t care about his simplicity. When the Gates opened, they didn’t just stay in the sky. They spilled. Monsters poured through. Creatures of nightmare and myth—dragons made of bone, trolls that tore through buildings like cardboard, beasts with eyes that hypnotized and claws that shredded tanks. Cities fell in a matter of days. Governments collapsed. Chaos ruled. And with the chaos came something else—Hunters. Ordinary people began awakening to supernatural powers. Some gained the strength of titans, others could summon fire with a whisper, bend gravity, speak to spirits. These awakened humans—Hunters—were humanity’s only hope against the invasion. But Kim Raon wasn’t one of them. No matter how much he wished. No matter how many times he prayed. He never awakened. He remained the same powerless boy, running through crumbling streets, ducking under rubble, trying to survive the apocalypse with nothing more than quick feet and sheer dumb luck. Until the day he fell into the Gate. It was purely by accident. He had been running from a wyvern attack, the sky filled with screaming flames, the ground trembling from explosions. And then—bam. A collapsed building gave way under his feet. Raon plummeted into darkness, swallowed by a rift in space. That was the last time he saw Earth for the next ten years.
thenooneguy · 235 Views

Laphyzel: The Weaving of The World

In the magical world of Laphyzel, reality itself is shaped by an ancient and intricate force known as Threadweaving—a system of threads that bind all things: names, places, memories, even time. These threads can be pulled, looped, mended—or broken. And beneath this fragile weave, something terrible stirs: The Severed Loom, an ancient unmaking force that does not create but unravels. This is the story of three immortals bound not by blood, but by echo and choice: Hiro Brihrest: a bright, impulsive boy with a sugarcane addiction, a wooden sword he named Responsibility, and a strange habit of naming things. Unbeknownst to him, Hiro is the reincarnated First Hero, a soul tied to the heart of Laphyzel itself. In every lifetime, he forgets who he was—but his thread remembers. Vampher Darquez: the first vampire, born of death and resurrected by wild magic. Banished by the village that once raised him, he carries a coffin full of apples and deep, painful loneliness. He once made vampire nobility—but left them when they began worshipping him. All he ever wanted was a real family. Dee Megus: the inventor of Threadweaving, offered godhood long ago but refused it. He walks the world as an artist, teacher, and troublemaker. Dee once tried to thread a name into himself—a stolen name—but the Loom punished him with eternal loops. Now he is something between man and myth, carrying the weight of forgotten wars and futures that haven’t happened. Together—though not always together—the trio begin circling a fate they’ve already lived once. Because deep in the weave lies the scar of a catastrophe that hasn’t yet happened: the First Weave War. It will be Hiro, Dee, and Vampher who once sealed the Severed Loom—at great cost. But the memory of that war bled backward in time, fracturing the world before the battle was even fought. These fractures created places where time stutters, names echo, and people forget themselves. The story begins innocently: Hiro and Dee traveling from ruin to ruin, Hiro hearing his name whispered in riverbeds and constellations. But Hiro’s presence begins waking something. The Loom watches. Thread cultists called Dethreaders, led by the eerie priest Mollwright, seek to unnname Hiro, not kill him—because to speak someone’s threadname wrongly is to erase their ability to reincarnate. Meanwhile, Vampher awakens from stasis with no clear reason. Drawn by forgotten bonds, he begins walking again, accompanied by a child made from one of his discarded names—a being who calls him Father Not and sings the lullaby Hiro shouldn’t remember. The three slowly converge. At a festival celebrating names, Mollwright attempts to unname Hiro using a scroll from the Severed Loom. But he mispronounces it, and the weave rejects him. Hiro, shaken, begins leaking memory and speech from lives he hasn’t lived yet—he even calls Dee by the forbidden name Weaveren. Dee rushes Hiro to an abandoned Thread Shrine to repair his frayed soul, but something buried deep beneath the shrine begins to wake early.
Steins_12 · 13.3K Views
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