Hogwarts : I AM NOT DEMON KING!
Isaac Waldore isn’t your typical eleven-year-old orphan. Platinum-blond hair, mismatched eyes, and a razor-sharp gift for prophecy make him look like a young Gellert Grindelwald reborn. Sponsored by the imprisoned dark lord himself and quietly claimed by Albus Dumbledore, Isaac arrives at Hogwarts with an agenda: learn fast, stay ahead of fate, and never let anyone—Ministry, Death Eaters, or destiny—decide his future for him.
Before term even starts, he dismantles a Death Eater who comes hunting him, publishes groundbreaking papers on Transfiguration and elemental magic, and forces the Sorting Hat to put him in Hufflepuff. While Harry Potter is still figuring out which house he wants, Isaac is already speedrunning first-year (and beyond) curricula through prophecy, training brutal combat drills under Professor Vinda Rosier—Grindelwald’s former lieutenant—and quietly dismantling Voldemort’s Horcruxes with Fiendfyre and cold calculation.
Hogwarts has never seen a first-year like this. He manipulates political optics with Minister Fudge, bonds with Harry and Ron over shared orphan energy and street smarts, and turns Hufflepuff’s steady reputation into his personal shield. The common room sits steps from the kitchens, the prefects actually have his back, and the house’s “just do the job” ethos suits a prophet who prefers results over glory.
But power has a price. Every vision carries risk. Every alliance draws scrutiny. And every time Isaac uses his gift to cheat the timeline, time pushes back. Old pure-blood grudges, a cursed Defense Against the Dark Arts post, and the lingering shadow of the Dark Lord’s fragmented soul mean that being mistaken for the next dark lord in the making is the least of his problems.
Sharp, irreverent, and unapologetically proactive, this is the story of a boy who refuses to play the hero or the villain. He’s building something else entirely—on his own terms, in his own house, with his own rules.
Mature, fast-paced, and laced with dark humor, political bite, and genuine emotional weight. For readers who want a Harry Potter story where the protagonist thinks several moves ahead, isn’t afraid to get his hands dirty, and treats prophecy like both a weapon and a warning.
Sidu_A4 · Book&Literature