Void used to be that guy. You know—the walking apocalypse. The bringer of end times. The one responsible for sending an entire realm into therapy. Wielding the Destruction Principle, he nearly wiped the World Realm clean off the cosmic map.
Why?
Because he could. And also because existence was boring and needed a little… shaking up.
But surprise! Blowing everything up isn’t as fun when you realize there’s no second season. So what does an all-powerful existential threat do when he’s bored?
He reincarnates.
Now walking the mortal world like a grumpy tourist with divine PTSD, Void sets out to comprehend the Creation Principles—you know, the opposite of what he’s good at. Classic character development.
But don’t worry. This isn’t your usual redemption arc. Because as Void digs deeper, he discovers the World Realm is just one small corner of the Nothingness Realm, and there are bigger, dumber, and more suspiciously mysterious universes out there—with secrets that make destruction look like a toddler tantrum.
So yeah. He might end up protecting the world.
Or he might finish what he started. Depends on his mood. And how annoying the gods are that week.
⸻
Author’s Note
Hey.
Yes, you.
This is my first book, so don’t expect 10,000-word chapters out the gate. Early chapters are short, chaotic, and full of me learning how to write like someone who isn’t high on Void energy.
Stick around. It gets longer. It gets wilder. And Void gets weirder.
Let’s wreck reality together.
Writing this felt like riding a sentient rollercoaster through realms powered by sarcasm, existential dread, and random dwarves doing backflips. Every chapter either emotionally damages you or makes you question your loyalty to fictional gods. The worldbuilding? Deep. The character design? Unhinged, in the best way. Story development? Look, even I don’t always know where we’re going—but it’s somewhere ridiculous and meaningful. I may or may not have ADHD and forgot what this book was about halfway through. Five stars anyway. Final verdict: If chaos had a favorite child, this book would be it.