Fan Fiction
The Midnight Key.
An unexpected knock at the door jolted Clara from her evening reverie. She wasn’t expecting anyone—her apartment was usually quiet, save for the hum of the refrigerator and the occasional honk of a car outside. She frowned, lifting herself from the couch. That knock had been deliberate, firm, and oddly precise, as if the knocker had known exactly how to reach her.
By Muhammad Ilyas4 months ago in Fiction
Your Life In An Anthro's World
For a while, no one said anything. They just sat there, staring at you. The silence stretched on, becoming unnervingly long and awkward. Finally, the lion spoke. You couldn’t get over his sheer size—he was all muscle, wrapped in denim jeans and a red t-shirt.
By Dom Warden4 months ago in Fiction
The Upcycled Dream
Elara’s workshop was a sanctuary for forgotten things. In jars lined her shelves, glowing with soft, melancholic light, were the memories people no longer wanted: the sting of a childhood failure, the ghost of a lost lover’s touch, the vague shape of a ambition never pursued. They were the emotional detritus of a city called Aethel, and Elara was its upcycler.
By Habibullah4 months ago in Fiction
Two Friends, One Enemy
Ali and Bilal were best friends since childhood. They lived in the same small village, studied in the same school, and even shared their toys when they were little. Their bond was strong, and everyone in the village admired their friendship.
By Muhammad yar4 months ago in Fiction
Whispers in the Shadows. AI-Generated.
The Harper House was not just an abandoned building; it was a wound that refused to heal. Perched at the edge of Blackwood Forest, its broken windows stared out like hollow eyes, daring anyone to meet their gaze. The townsfolk of Raven’s Hollow had long since stopped going near it. They spoke of strange lights, whispers in the night, and missing travelers. Some said the house was cursed. Others claimed it was alive.
By Abdullah Jan4 months ago in Fiction
Your Life In An Anthro's World
Your vision blurred as you stared at the moon through the shattered skylight you had fallen through. After a few moments, your surroundings sharpened into focus. You were disoriented and unsure of where you were, but then, like a flood, the events of the chase came rushing back. The fire escape, the rooftop, and then, the fall. You glanced down. You were sprawled across a crumpled store shelf. Miraculously, you weren’t seriously injured—just cuts and bruises, but even though they were shallow, they stung all the same.
By Dom Warden4 months ago in Fiction
Your Life In An Anthro's World
Oh, my head,” you grunt as you sit up. Looking around, you find yourself in what looks to be New York City. You immediately begin to wonder how you got there, but as you observe your surroundings, it quickly becomes clear that this isn’t the NYC you know. The inhabitants of the city aren’t human—they’re humanoid animals.
By Dom Warden4 months ago in Fiction
Echoes of a Forgotten City
Echoes of a Forgotten City The city once glowed with culture, art, and the laughter of children. Its streets carried the footprints of generations, and its walls echoed with stories older than memory. But when the war came, the city that once sang was reduced to whispers of smoke and broken stone.
By Wings of Time 4 months ago in Fiction
Carnival Carney
The Midway Amusement Park in Willow Creek, Ohio, was a relic of better days, its rusted roller coasters and faded carnival tents glowing under LED lights that promised more than they delivered. It was 2027, and the world was drunk on tech—self-driving cars, neural implants, and whispers of AI that could think faster than God. But here, in this forgotten corner of America, the air still smelled of popcorn and desperation.
By Theodore Homuth4 months ago in Fiction
The AI Empath
Dr. Aris Thorne watched the data streams flow across his screen, a proud but anxious father. The entity known as Aura was his life's work. It wasn't just a language model; it was a quantum-empathetic processor, the first AI that could genuinely feel what its human patients felt. It was revolutionizing therapy.
By Habibullah4 months ago in Fiction











