At first, the thought had been harmless. Just an idea—one among many. But it lingered. It thrilled him, in a way the others hadn't. The neurogen bomb, the mind-fracture loop, the whisper virus. Tools of unimaginable precision, each more elegant than the last. He began refining them, replaying the blueprints in his mind over and over, perfecting every mechanism, every cruel detail. Not for war. Not for defense. For the simple joy of invention. For the question. What would a human do—feel—in the last milliseconds before their mind collapsed inward?
"Hmm, What happens if I fuse a gravity core into the portal system… then invert the polarity on one axis?"
"Entry creates collapse. Exit creates force. Suck them in… spit them out… over and over. A perfect loop."
"No ground. No escape. Just momentum and bone."
"I wonder… how long before the body liquefies? Or does the mind go first?"
" A shame I don't have a subject to test it on…"
He paused.
"Since no one is here… "
He chuckled. Or he thought he did. The sound didn't exist, but the shape of it coiled in his thoughts like a grin. He was thinking faster now, skipping between concepts, forgetting to care about things like reason or restraint. And deep within, something whispered:
"Let's see what happens when the soul overheats."
And then, he laughed.
It started as a thought. A tremble in his mind. But it grew—wild, broken, unchained. Laughter echoed inside him, though nothing could carry sound. He laughed at the brilliance, the violence, the perfection of his ideas. He laughed because there was no one to stop him. No rules. No weight. No death.
He laughed for a second.
Or a thousand years.
Or both.
Madness bloomed like fire in a vacuum—consuming everything, even itself. But without time to feed it, even madness grew stale. The manic joy thinned, cracked, and finally… crumbled. He got bored of it too.
And so he stopped.
No reason. No regret. Just silence again. Thought returned—clear, sharp, and terrifyingly calm.
He had become mad once,but became bored of it too.
And now, he was sane again.
"Hmm... what should I do now?"
His thoughts echoed, but they didn't race.
They wandered.
"I'm done with technology for now."
He had built weapons in his mind that could erase planets. And yet, it wasn't enough.
"Oh, yeah... I used to read comics, manga... webnovels."
He didn't remember the titles, just the feeling. Power. Wonder. The thrill of impossible worlds.
"Let's think about that."
"Aside from technology, it's also a vast topic to cover..."
And with that, his mind shifted again—away from circuits and cold systems, into forces beyond physics.
Magic, martial arts, cursed bloodlines, holy relics, forbidden spells,
authority, stigma, aura, mana, prana, qi, divine energy, corrupted flesh, mutation, ancestral memory, sin-born evolution, dna mutation based super powers.
He cracked open the vault of human myth and fiction and began to rebuild it, piece by piece—purely from thought.
He didn't stop at imagining.
He explored. Defined. Understood.
In his mind, he walked the burning steps of cultivation.
He traced the flow of mana through ancient veins.
He felt the weight of authority—divine mandates carved into the soul.
He tasted the corruption of demonic power.
Understood the hunger in cursed bloodlines.
The purity in sacred lineage.
He mapped mutation down to the spiral of DNA.
Imagined genes that awakened with trauma.
Bloodlines twisted by radiation.
Serums that rewrote identity.
Evolution forced forward by will alone.
Mutation. Evolution. Spiritual resonance. Aura pressure. Domain control. Conceptual embodiment.
He studied them all.
Not to use them. Not yet.
But simply because he could.
In the absence of time, he dissected power itself.
Until every fictional force, every impossible system, became known to him.
He was the library.The god of daydreams.
And he kept going,
because there was no one to stop him—
and no reason to stop himself.
And then came the gods.
Not just beings of power,
but entire hierarchies—systems of reverence, authority, and ascension.
He imagined thrones carved from laws,
where gods ruled not by strength,
but by concept.
There were High Deities of Time, Death, Creation, and Thought—
untouchable, unknowable.
Beneath them, Archons and Celestials
who enforced divine will across fractured realms.
Saints chosen by fate.
Avatars forged from devotion.
Pantheons at war over belief.
He built religions in his head.
Sacred texts. Rituals.
Forbidden names.
Martyrdom by divine flame.
He saw how divinity fractured reality into layers—
heavens, lower realms, limbo planes
where half-broken souls wandered.
Every step of the hierarchy,
from forgotten demigods to omnipotent architects,unfolded before him like blueprints of fiction made real.
He didn't believe in them.He didn't worship them.He just understood them.
Power was only the beginning.
Now he remembered the stories.
Not the exact words. Not perfect plots.
But the feelings. The arcs. The echoes.
Heroes rising from nothing.
Villains born from pain.
Betrayals that cut deeper than any blade.
He imagined worlds ruled by emperors of fire.Academies hidden in the clouds.
Lone swordsmen walking ruined lands.
He thought of the quiet ones too.
Friendships. Heartbreaks.
The moments between battles.He saw characters breaking.
Growing. Falling. Redeeming.
Entire sagas unfolded in his mind.
Shaped by tropes. Twisted by imagination.
Comedy. Tragedy. Glory. Loss.
All of it passed through him like a million lives
he never lived but somehow understood.
They weren't just fantasies anymore.
They were frameworks—maps of human meaning.
And in this place without time,
he wandered through all of them.
A million billion years later—
or maybe just a moment—
While lost in thought, he did something unimaginable—he gave form to the formless.