'My Longevity Simulation' fascinates me with its nested storytelling technique. The novel presents immortality through three interwoven timelines: the protagonist's first hundred years full of wonder, his thousandth year consumed by apathy, and his ten-thousandth year where he's basically an alien observing humans like ants. Each timeline influences the others through subtle echoes—a melody heard in century one becomes an earworm haunting century thousand.
The simulation mechanic isn't just a plot device; it's a metaphor for how memories distort over time. The protagonist doesn't just relive events—he reinterprets them with each replay, turning joyful moments bitter and tragedies into clinical case studies. The side characters are brilliantly used as mirrors—some age normally and die, others get partial immortality but lose their minds, creating a spectrum of what 'forever' does to different personalities.
What elevates it above typical sci-fi is the economic worldbuilding. Instead of infodumping about future tech, it shows how immortality reshapes society through small details—art galleries where paintings span millennia, marriages contracted in hundred-year increments, and 'death festivals' where mortals celebrate their finite lives. The book made me rethink how we value time itself.
I've read tons of sci-fi, but 'My Longevity Simulation' hits different with its brutal realism about immortality. Most stories treat living forever as glamorous, but this novel dives into the psychological decay that comes with endless time. The protagonist isn't some heroic figure—he's a broken soul who's watched civilizations rise and fall while he remains unchanged. The tech isn't flashy nanobots or warp drives; it's subtle brain modifications that slowly erase your humanity. What really chilled me was how the simulation aspect isn't just a VR playground—it's a prison where each iteration makes you more detached from reality. The author doesn't shy away from showing how immortality warps relationships, turning love into temporary distractions and children into fleeting curiosities. The prose is clinical yet poetic, like reading a centuries-old diary written by someone who's forgotten how to feel.
'my longevity simulation' stands out by making immortality terrifyingly relatable. It's not about cosmic battles or time travel paradoxes—it's about forgetting your mother's voice after five centuries. The protagonist starts recording every conversation, then stops because playback just reminds him how much he's changed. The simulation sequences are masterclasses in tension; you never know if he's controlling the simulation or if it's rewriting his memories.
Unlike other sci-fi that treats long life as power fantasy, this shows the mundane horrors. The protagonist develops obsessive habits—collecting identical teacups because breaking one doesn't matter anymore, or letting lovers leave because he can't bear another goodbye after centuries. The writing makes you feel the weight of time through physical details: his hands stay young while his eyes develop ancient cracks in the irises, like porcelain left in the sun too long.
The most innovative aspect is the 'memory economy'—immortals trading experiences like currency, leading to chilling scenes where characters auction off childhood memories just to feel something new. It questions whether living forever is a gift or just delayed extinction.
2025-06-14 09:58:18
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After I was caught in a dockside explosion, I was bound to a Survival Program.
It gave me twenty-five years and four designated targets.
If even one target’s Love Score or bond score reached 100%, I could wake up in my real world.
But I failed all four.
Because every target I tried to reach eventually turned toward Sophia Lane, the heroine of this world.
They called my pain a performance.
They called my tears manipulation.
They said I was only pretending to break down so they would choose me over Sophia.
But if they never loved me, why did they lose control when my mission failed and I chose to leave this world for good?
When the apocalypse came, she lost everything. Starving, hunted, and desperate, she trusted the one man she loved… only for him to betray her in the cruelest way possible. He stole her last supplies to please another woman and left her to die in a sea of the undead.
But death wasn’t the end.
She woke up days before the world collapsed.
After cutting ties with her ungrateful ex and his parasitic family, a mysterious voice awakens in her mind, LUS, a Level-Up System designed to help her survive the coming end.
With knowledge of the future and a system guiding her every move, she begins to prepare. She stockpiles resources, builds a base, and learns how to fight back against the horrors that once destroyed her.
And when the apocalypse arrives again… she’s ready. But survival isn’t the only thing waiting for her in this new life.
A silent killer who watches her like prey.
A manipulative genius who wants to unravel her secrets.
A gentle protector who sees the girl she hides.
And a dangerous man who thrives in chaos.
As the world burns and power shifts, they’re all drawn to her, each with their own motives, each with their own darkness. Even her past refuses to stay buried.
Because now, the man who once abandoned her is back, broken, desperate, and begging for a second chance. Too bad she has no time for regrets.
Not when she’s busy rising to power… and building a kingdom in the ruins of the world.
In the third year after my death, the one who remained faithfully by my wife's side was still the bionic robot I had painstakingly designed.
It looked exactly like me and carried within it every detail of my mannerisms, speech, and habits. The only difference was that it never lost its temper with her.
Because of that, my wife never sensed anything amiss. Yet each night, she brought home a different man, deliberately testing "me," desperate to see the wild jealousy and rage I once wore so vividly.
Then, one day, her childhood sweetheart and first love, shoved "me" off the balcony.
It was only then, in her horror, that my wife realized… "I" didn't bleed.
Neglected and abused since childhood for not having elemental karamat (the ability to control air, fire, water or earth) and waiting for intrinsic karamat (special ability unique to every person), Sikandar's life turns upside down when he realizes that he is in a revenge fantasy AI slop story. It happens on his birthday when he gets the ability to control void and nullify other karamats. Not willing to be a part of the revenge plot, Sikandar leaves home for peace of mind. Soon, the AI writing the story becomes sentient and decides to add more drama to Sikandar's life.
The day I win a brand-new BMW, I suddenly receive a call from myself, ten years in the future.
"Kieran will ask to borrow your car in a bit. And whatever you do, do not lend it to him. He intends to use it to pay off his gambling debt."
Even with such an impossibility happening to me, I do not doubt a thing. When Kieran asks for my keys, I shut him down at once.
That very night, he drives his old beater car to visit our parents. Along the way, he loses control of the car and collides with another vehicle.
Just like that, he slips into a coma.
The guilt hit me so hard that I eventually pass out. Mom and Dad stay by my side day and night until I can stand on my own two feet again.
But the future version of me sounds cold when she calls again. "They only want to push you onto an operating table. They want your heart to save him!"
Growing suspicious, I check their bags and find a donor report.
Rage burns through me. I immediately block them on all platforms and throw them out of my home.
When news that Kieran dies from blood loss arrives, I learn that they only ever needed my blood—not my heart.
I try to find them to tell them the truth and apologize for my mistake.
But the mysterious phone rings again.
"They hate you because Kieran died. If you go to them now, they will drag you into a suicide pact."
I freeze at the revelation, then tell my future myself that I will wait until they calm down.
Later, I learn that a thief breaks into their home and kills them.
I try to rush over and see them one last time, but a truck hits me and kills me on the spot.
I die without ever understanding why the version of me from ten years in the future wanted me dead.
When I open my eyes again, I am back on the day I won the prize.
Earth is doomed, and humanity is on the verge of extinction. In reality as we know it, where humanity will undoubtedly be annihilated, six legends are gathered with the sacred mission of saving humankind from annihilation.
Creating and finding a new world foe the remnant of humanity was the hope of mankind, but which world will surrender or give out it terrain without a feat.
The undertaking of driving them in their campaign falls upon the shoulders of a solitary amnesic and frail man neglected in the wild alone with next to no method for endurance.
Join Tsao's adventure in this slow-paced journey submerged in a fantasy world where he'll meet friends, enemies, and love interests who will discover this brand new world along with him.
Will Tsao be able to find hope again for humankind?
Will the remnant be able to stand against the world that stands against them even in this their feebleness?
In this way, survive in the parallel world, please!
The way 'My Longevity Simulation' merges sci-fi with immortality is brilliant. It doesn’t just throw futuristic tech at you—it makes immortality a curse disguised as a gift. The protagonist uses advanced neural simulations to live thousands of virtual lifetimes, but each cycle erodes his humanity. The sci-fi elements are grounded: nanotech repairs his body, AI archives his memories, and quantum networks let him communicate across epochs. Yet, the focus isn’t on flashy gadgets; it’s on the psychological toll. He watches civilizations rise and fall, lovers turn to dust, and his own morals decay. The story asks if endless life is worth losing everything that makes life meaningful. For fans of existential sci-fi like 'Altered Carbon', this nails the genre’s soul.
I just finished binge-reading 'My Longevity Simulation', and the way it tackles immortality ethics blew me away. Most stories treat eternal life as either a blessing or curse, but this novel digs deeper. The protagonist constantly faces moral decay over centuries—watching loved ones die while he remains unchanged creates brutal emotional weight. His solution? Creating temporary mortal identities to experience full human lifespans, which keeps him grounded in empathy. The story doesn’t shy from showing how immortality warps power dynamics either. He manipulates kingdoms from the shadows, but the narrative forces him to confront whether guiding humanity for millennia makes him a god or a tyrant. What’s brilliant is how the simulation aspect adds layers—every failed timeline becomes a lesson in ethics, making his choices feel earned rather than preachy.
The world-building in 'My Longevity Simulation' feels deeply rooted in classic xianxia tropes but with a fresh cyberpunk twist. I noticed how the cultivation realms mirror corporate ladder climbing, where power isn't just about spiritual enlightenment but also about hacking the system. The author clearly drew inspiration from competitive MMO economies—sects function like guilds hoarding resources, and immortal auctions resemble high-stakes stock trading. The blend of ancient daoist philosophy with futuristic virtual reality elements creates this unique tension where characters question whether they're cultivating their souls or just optimizing code. The celestial bureaucracy is straight out of Chinese mythology but runs like a corrupt tech startup, which makes the satire cutting and hilarious.
In 'Immortality', the concept of eternal life isn't just about living forever—it's a curse disguised as a blessing. Unlike 'The Picture of Dorian Gray', where youth comes at the cost of a soul, or 'Tuck Everlasting', which romanticizes endless time, 'Immortality' dives into the psychological toll. The protagonist outlives civilizations, watches loved ones turn to dust, and grapples with existential dread. The novel stands out by focusing on the loneliness and moral decay that come with eternity, rather than the superficial perks.
What sets it apart is its refusal to glamorize immortality. While 'Interview with the Vampire' paints it as a dark gift, 'Immortality' strips away the romance entirely. The protagonist’s memories fracture over centuries, identities blur, and the world becomes a repeating loop of monotony. The prose is raw, almost clinical, contrasting sharply with the poetic melancholy of 'The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue'. It’s a brutal, unflinching take on an overdone trope.