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System Of The Undead

Many years ago, a meteorite crashed into earth in New York city and this was the beginning of mankind's unprecedented evolution. The year was 2030 and humanity had reached a stage that would not have been possible otherwise without this external factor but they weren't satisfied. In the selfish attempt for humanity to once again force their evolution, the search for immortality began. A man named Dr. Schneider was the man responsible for this feat and he did achieve his goal but like the saying goes, be careful for what you wish for because that immortality came in the form of something perverse and twisted to nature. It came in the form of zombies. The world was in shambles or was it? Jason, a 21 year-old shut in, he was at the bottom of the food ladder due to his life choices, disowned and alone, he was willing to waste the left his life gaming but even with this dedication, he wasn't that great a gamer. But fate had something in store and that was in the form of a 'virus' transmitted through the gaming headset he had on and this would change Jason's life for either for better or for worse. [Image does not belong to me, all rights reserved to the owner]

Kelvin_A · sci-fi
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333 Chs

Am I Dead?

Things were going to shit at every corner and no one knew the situation outside their direct sphere.

Jason had lost consciousness and no one knew why, the safest guess would be the impact from the earlier car crash, which had the potential to cause internal damage.

Jason was lost in his mind but there was something strange, he wasn't dreaming.

It felt like he could momentarily see the world through Chronos' view like he was merging with its interface.

And in front of him, he could see something that looked human but he couldn't see the face due to the position of the person.

The back was faced against them and Jason tried to call out but he didn't have a voice.

He looked at his hands and noticed that it was nonexistent, it was algorithms and codes that made up his limbs.

Jason walked forward but with each step he took, it felt like it didn't make a difference because the distance never closed.