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Zombolution: Unleash the Undying Power

In the wake of the apocalypse, betrayal doesn't just stab you in the back—it bites. Zorvax learned this the hard way. Abandoned by those he trusted, he didn't just become another number in the legion of the undead. No, his fate was far more peculiar. "I thought death was the end... I was wrong," Zorvax mutters, his voice a gravelly echo of his former self. He's a zombie, but with a twist—he's got his human mind intact. Trapped in a decaying body with an insatiable hunger, Zorvax finds himself in a gruesome predicament that's just the beginning of his ordeal. Enter the 'Zombolution System,' a mysterious power he awakens that's as cryptic as it is potent. "They wanted a monster? I'll show them the true meaning of terror," Zorvax boasts, with a smirk only a sentient zombie could muster. This dark gift is his ticket to ascend beyond a mere walking corpse, promising to unlock abilities that could crown him the emperor of the undead. As Zorvax hones his newfound skills, the line between man and monster blurs. Will his human intellect triumph, or will the beast within claim the throne? "This world has no place for the weak," he arrogantly declares, ready to challenge fate itself.

HaozDancer · Kỳ huyễn
Không đủ số lượng người đọc
287 Chs

The Uses Of Zombie Cores For Humans

In the sterile environment of the laboratory, the sound of scalpels and medical instruments had ceased, signaling the end of the dissections. The researchers stood back from the operating tables where the remnants of their meticulous work lay. One by one, they began to evaluate the quality of the zombie cores they had extracted.

A senior researcher peered through his glasses at the line of specimens now laid out on the pristine surface. "Any variations in quality?" he inquired, his voice steady, betraying neither disappointment nor hope.

A junior scientist, clutching a digital tablet to his chest, scrolled through the data. "It's consistent with the previous extractions, sir. No significant deviations," he reported, his tone matching the clinical atmosphere of the lab.