science fiction
The bridge between imagination and technological advancement, where the dreamer’s vision predicts change, and foreshadows a futuristic reality. Science fiction has the ability to become “science reality”.
The First Harvest
Chapter 4: The First Harvest The District of Rust smelled of wet iron and dying dreams, a sharp contrast to the sterile, pressurized air of the Vane Tower. I sat in the corner of a grease-slicked diner, my hands shaking—not from the cold, but from the low-frequency hum of the Static that had begun to chew at the edges of my vision. I needed a fix. Not the chemical stimulants of the Obsidian Room, but a different kind of grounding. I needed to see Elena Vane.
By Nathan McAllisterabout 2 hours ago in Futurism
The Frequency of the Doomed
The loss of my career, my name, and my penthouse was a sequence of external tragedies, a series of demolitions I could at least understand through the lens of cause and effect. But they were nothing compared to the loss of my silence.
By Nathan McAllisterabout 24 hours ago in Futurism
A Signal From Earth. AI-Generated.
The signal arrived at 02:17 ship time. At first, I assumed it was interference. Out here, space was never silent. It hummed with radiation storms, dying satellites, fragments of old civilizations drifting endlessly through vacuum. The receiver panels aboard the exploration vessel Aurora picked up thousands of meaningless transmissions every day—ghost echoes bouncing through the dark.
By Stephanie Edwards2 days ago in Futurism
The 1947 Paradox: The Secret Geometry of Our First Alien Encounter
We have spent eighty years looking for "little green men" in flying saucers, but the most confusing secret of the search for extraterrestrial life is that we may have been looking at the wrong thing entirely. As we sit here in 2026, with the James Webb Space Telescope sniffing out industrial chemicals on planets 120 light-years away, the evidence suggests that "aliens" aren't just visitors from another star—they are the operators of a technology that treats our laws of physics like a suggestion rather than a rule.
By imtiazalam5 days ago in Futurism
The Last Fortress
The Final Frontier of Privacy For centuries, the human mind has been the only place where true freedom existed. No matter how oppressive a regime was, or how invasive a technology became, your thoughts were yours alone. They were the "Last Fortress"—a sanctuary of private dreams, silent rebellions, and unspoken loves.
By Alex Sterling 8 days ago in Futurism
The Discovery of the Largest and Most Distant Black Hole
Black holes are among the most mysterious and fascinating objects in the universe. Formed when massive stars collapse under their own gravity, these cosmic giants possess gravitational forces so powerful that nothing—not even light—can escape them. Over the past few decades, astronomers have discovered thousands of black holes scattered across the universe. However, the discovery of one of the largest and most distant black holes ever detected has astonished scientists and opened new questions about how the early universe evolved.
By Irshad Abbasi 9 days ago in Futurism
Title: War's Effects on the World Economy: How Wars Change Financial Stability
Title: War's Effects on the World Economy: How Wars Change Financial Stability Introduction One of humankind's most destructive experiences is war. The immediate effects are frequently observed on battlefields, but the effects go far beyond military conflict. Around the world, wars have an impact on economies, cause trade to be disrupted, increase poverty, and cause financial instability.
By Farida Kabir9 days ago in Futurism








