Makono’s Journal — After the Fall of Sundora
Found by Nyra, year 2054. Author attributed to Makono Jahlé, this journal records the terrifying aftermath of Sundora’s collapse, where reality no longer obeys memory, identity, or stable existence
Found by Nyra, year 2054. Author attributed to Makono Jahlé, this journal records the terrifying aftermath of Sundora’s collapse, where reality no longer obeys memory, identity, or stable existence
In a city where reality is constantly negotiated, three analysts discover that history is not fixed — and that they may not all be living in the same version of it
In a world of absolute control, three individuals are drawn to an island that resists comprehension, where experience transcends knowledge and consciousness undergoes transformation
In a city that doesn’t collapse but evolves beyond human control, three individuals face a terrifying moment: the need to decide without data
In 2043, a container ship vanishes without a trace, forcing an archivist to confront erased realities, fractured memory, and the terrifying cost of a world that learns to forget
In “Collections of Tales — Cycle 1: Urban Futures, Voyage 4: Shadows in the Archive — The Pre-Age of Oblivion” unveils a haunting future where cities become infinite libraries and memories dissolve into machine-born shadows
A visionary journey into the Neural States of 2175, where memory becomes currency, consciousness becomes infrastructure, and humanity reshapes its identity through shared cognition and AI-integrated societies
Professor Yuen Kum Fai of NTU, Singapore, explains how AI is reshaping shipping—from Safety 4.0 and decarbonization to digital fluency and maritime leadership—highlighting both the challenges and opportunities in the evolving global maritime landscape
Geopolitical tensions, a rapid AI race, and internal economic pressures intertwine, reshaping the China–India relationship and redefining the global balance of power over the coming decade
China isn’t just following the AI race—it’s accelerating. With tech giants like Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent, the game is changing fast, and the U.S. knows it