fantasy
Celebrating the fantastical. Let your imagination run wild.
"SYFY REALITY OR NOT?". Content Warning.
I have tried another style of writing, graphics, voice-over, and video of a rather, an alternate reality visually created through photos and video, music, voice-over to appear as different realities of highs and lows.
By Vicki Lawana Trusselli about a year ago in Futurism
The Symphony of Tomorrow
The world of 2050 pulsed with a dazzling blend of light and data. Streams of neon information flowed invisibly through the air, accessible only to those equipped with neural overlays—augmented reality devices that unveiled the unseen. Towering skyscrapers grazed the heavens, their dynamic façades shifting with the moods of the metropolis. Swarms of autonomous drones zipped through the skies, ferrying goods, managing ecosystems, and orchestrating the intricate choreography of urban life.
By Silviya Rankovaabout a year ago in Futurism
Happy New World
An anxious anticipation filled the room as the clock moved closer to midnight. So much has changed in just twenty-five years. We were all so young and naïve. No person in the room likely expected the turbulence that would lead us to where we are today.
By Jason Ray Morton about a year ago in Futurism
I Built My First Robot. Runner-Up in Future Fragments Challenge.
I built my first robot in the basement of Pteetneet Academy when I was seven years old. I had been jealous of the other boys in my class being excused on Grandparent’s Day. I didn’t have any living grandparents and had to stay in a stale classroom learning geometry while they went to the Golden Onion Retirement Center for bingo and strawberry cake.
By Amos Gladeabout a year ago in Futurism
This Man Controls 40% of the Internet, and It’s a Problem
Matt Mullenweg cloned a CMS called b2/cafelog to include functionality he believed was lacking. By October 2009, the project, going by the name of WordPress, has become the most popular open-source CMS on the Internet, presently powering around 810 million websites globally, or 40% of the Internet.
By Mohammed Abu Jazarabout a year ago in Futurism
Tomorrow's Horizon
The year was 2050, and the world hummed with a peculiar kind of energy. Cities gleamed with crystalline spires, their translucent surfaces catching the light like fractured rainbows, while the faint hum of airborne pods traced unseen melodies through the sky. The air carried a curious blend of metallic tang and floral sweetness, as if nature and technology had brokered an uneasy truce. Below, green terraces clung to the edges of towers, their vibrant foliage standing in defiant contrast to the sterile precision of the architecture. Roads no longer existed in the traditional sense; instead, pathways of light transported pods silently and swiftly through the air. Yet beneath this veneer of progress lay a tapestry of stories, woven with threads of ambition, sacrifice, and loss—not all of them as luminous as the neon lights that pulsed through the night. There were whispers of lives forgotten in the rush toward utopia, of histories buried beneath the weight of collective amnesia. Each glowing spire cast shadows, and within those shadows lay truths too complex and inconvenient to fit the polished narrative of human triumph.
By Kayleigh Taylorabout a year ago in Futurism
Windfall Podcast: Season Two
Several podcast networks such as Spotify have crafted expensive sci-fi audio dramas with uneven results. No huge hits, but solid download numbers. Therefore, an independently produced sci-fi audio drama seems unlikely, given the financial constraints.
By Frank Racioppiabout a year ago in Futurism









