Timeline

ABO Personality Quiz
Take a quick quiz to find out whether you‘re Alpha, Beta, or Omega.
Scent
Personality
Ideal Love Pattern
Secret Desire
Your Dark Side
Start Test
THE VILLAINESS REMEMBERED ME:In Every Timeline, She Chose De
THE VILLAINESS REMEMBERED ME:In Every Timeline, She Chose De
She was never supposed to matter. The novel never gave her a name worth remembering. After dying in a mundane accident, twenty-three-year-old Clara Quinn opens her eyes inside the pages of the fantasy novel she despised most — reborn not as the heroine, not as the villainess, but as an unnamed background character fated to die before the story even begins. Her plan is simple: stay invisible. Attend the Imperial Academy of Asterveil, avoid every named character, and quietly survive a plot designed to destroy everyone foolish enough to interfere. That plan lasts exactly one day. During the entrance ceremony, Lady Morwen Ashvale — the infamous crimson-eyed prodigy that even crown princes fear — steps off her platform, walks past every noble heir waiting for her acknowledgment, and stops directly in front of Clara. "You belong to me," Morwen says, loud enough for every student in the hall to hear. "Do not forget it this time." This time. Clara has never met this woman in her life. Yet Morwen looks at her as though she has been searching for centuries. As shadows begin stalking Clara through the academy's cursed corridors — as the original story fractures and rewrites itself around her — Clara uncovers the truth that should be impossible: Morwen has lived this story hundreds of times. She has watched Clara die in every single one. And in every timeline where Clara falls, Morwen burns the kingdom to ash. She is not obsessed. She is grieving. She has always been grieving. And this time, she refuses to lose again.
Not enough ratings
|
200 Chapters
He Fumbled Both Timelines
He Fumbled Both Timelines
The year my dad went broke, I was sent to live with billionaire heir Jace Blackwell. We grew up together. When he had a fever, he clung to me, face buried in my arms. When he got yelled at, he sprawled across my lap and sulked. And when another boy wrote me a love letter, Jace pinned me down and kissed me—shaking, jealous, possessive. Everyone thought we were the perfect couple. Then, on the day we were filling out our early college applications, a sharply dressed man burst into the classroom and shoved me to the floor. He grabbed eighteen-year-old Jace, his eyes bloodshot. "Jace! Look at me! I'm you ten years from now! Don't go to the same college as Nadia. She's not the one you love. It's Faye!" Faye Whitmore. The broke new girl. Eighteen-year-old Jace stared at that identical face, stunned. Then his expression went dark. "What the hell are you talking about? The only person I love is Nadia! I don't care who you are. Touch her again, and I'll kill you!" He rushed over and pulled me into his arms. He was shaking. I gave a bitter smile. No one knew. I was from ten years in the future, too. And twenty-eight-year-old Jace wasn't lying. By then, I wasn't the girl he loved anymore.
|
8 Chapters
A Scorned Luna's Revenge
A Scorned Luna's Revenge
She built him from the ground up so can’t she destroy him? Persephone died at the hands of her mate, a man she sacrificed everything for but in the end, he chose his true mate over her. She is granted a chance to redo everything, waking up two years before her death and this time, all she wants is revenge. She doesn’t mind dying a second time as long as she takes her enemies down with her. To repay the people responsible for her and her father’s deaths, Persephone is ready to live as a wicked woman. To guarantee her father’s future, a victim of her stupid choices in her past timeline, Persephone joins hands with the arrogant Alpha Koa, the prince of wolves. Koa, the first prince hated by both his family and all wolves, lost everything to gain the throne in Persephone’s last life. Now, she uses her knowledge of the future to help him ascend the throne with ease and in turn, he becomes her shield. As Persephone and Koa work together to achieve their goals, an unlikely love story blossoms between the two. However, Persephone’s ex is desperate to shackle her to his side and Koa’s family will not stand to see him succeed. With powerful forces standing against their love, will it have any chance to bloom?
9.6
|
136 Chapters
The Apocalypse Hoarder
The Apocalypse Hoarder
The world plunged into a new Ice Age. As the frozen apocalypse spread, 95% of humanity perished. In his first timeline, Cyrus Knovell's kindness cost him everything. The people he had helped betrayed him and left him for dead. Fate, however, granted him a second chance. He awakened one month before the world froze, gaining a dimensional ability that let him store anything without limit. Now he hoarded supplies by the billions and built a fortress no one could breach. While others shivered, starved, and traded their dignity for a morsel, Cyrus lived in comfort. The desperate came begging. The manipulative vixen: "Cyrus, let me into your shelter, and I'll be your girlfriend, okay?" The spoiled rich heir: "Cyrus, I'll give you all my money for just one meal!" The greedy neighbors: "Cyrus, you shouldn't be so selfish. You should share your supplies with us!" Cyrus remembered their betrayals. Lounging in his steel fortress and savoring his private paradise, he sneered, "Your survival has nothing to do with me. I'd rather feed the dogs than feed you."
8
|
595 Chapters
Loved Me, Then Destroyed Me
My wife, Janice Frost, was an interworld traveler. People like her weren't supposed to form attachments with anyone in another world. But she fell for me the moment she saw me. Every time her feelings stirred, it tore through her, like her soul was being ripped apart. She had endured that pain 99 times. Later, I was abducted and taken to North Kaman. They beat me every day, over and over. Right when I was about to break, I remembered the method Janice once taught me, a way to reach her across worlds. Somehow, I managed to use it. But instead of her voice alone, I heard her speaking with her mentor from the other side. "Janice, how could you contact a resistance group yourself and have them take Samuel? I thought you loved him." Janice's voice was cold and hard. "This ordeal was meant for Tim. I had to do this to save him. Samuel is the main protagonist of this world. He's protected by fate. Nothing will happen to him. Once this mission is done, I can stay in this timeline for good. When that happens, I'll make it up to him." My chest tightened until it felt like it might split open. When those people closed in on me again, I stopped resisting completely.
|
9 Chapters
Inevitable
Inevitable
*Disclaimer* This story is based in an imaginary timeline created by myself, it includes issues as well as the lifestyle from the late 1800s and early 1900s. The book is also unedited. Hannah has always been an outcast among society, not just for how she dressed or behaved but also for what she desired secretly when Hannah falls for her friend's bride to be, in a town where such an act is punishable by death. Will she hide away her feelings? Or Will she love without regret?..
10
|
29 Chapters
Hot Chapters
More

How Does The Timeline Shift In Outlander S7e13?

2 Answers2025-10-14 21:53:42

Watching 'Outlander' s7e13 felt like riding a temporal roller coaster — the show deliberately toys with your sense of 'when' rather than just 'what happens next.' Right away the episode signals that it's going to be less linear: you get quick cross-cuts between scenes that look similar in composition but are separated by years, then a few sharp visual anchors (a different style of clothing, a weathered prop, a dated newspaper headline) that quietly tell you which timeline you’re in. The editing leans on sound bridges — the echo of a bell, the creak of a door — so a line of dialogue or a musical cue will carry over a cut and make the emotional throughline obvious even when the clock has jumped. As a viewer, those techniques made me pay more attention to small details, which is exactly the point; they want you to connect cause and consequence across decades rather than watch events unfold in isolation.

One of the clever things 's7e13' does is use character perspective to anchor time shifts, not just visual shorthand. Instead of slapping a title card that reads 'Five Years Later,' the episode often stays with a single character’s reaction and then slices to another era where that reaction has aged into a scar or a line on someone’s face. That gives the time jumps emotional weight: you can feel how decisions in one scene reverberate into the next. There are also a couple of extended flashbacks that are layered into present-day conversations — the past is not just background, it’s conversational; characters recall, argue, and reinterpret old events, and that reinterpretation is what flips the timeline for the audience. I loved how memory itself becomes the vehicle for time travel here.

Finally, the episode’s structural leaps are clearly there to set up stakes for what comes next. By compressing and then stretching moments, 'Outlander' lets you see a chain of repercussions — pregnancies, separations, legal troubles, shifting alliances — across different eras without losing narrative momentum. The pacing choices mean certain reveals hit harder because you’ve already seen the echo of them; the show trusts you to mentally fill in the gaps. I walked away feeling both satisfied and a little dizzy in the best way: the timeline shifts aren’t gimmicks, they’re storytelling shortcuts that make each emotional beat land smarter. Loved how it kept me on my toes.

How Does Ant-Man And The Wasp Affect The MCU Timeline?

2 Answers2025-08-30 09:07:21

I still get a little giddy thinking about how sneaky 'Ant-Man and the Wasp' is with the MCU timeline. I saw it at a late-night screening and left feeling like I'd been handed a backstage pass — it doesn’t shout “big event,” but it quietly rearranges a few puzzle pieces. The movie is set after 'Captain America: Civil War' and before 'Avengers: Infinity War', which is a small but important placement: Scott Lang is under house arrest the whole film (explains why he’s absent from the bigger battles), and the plot's last beats line up almost perfectly with the beginning of the Thanos catastrophe. That mid/post-credits crossover — Scott getting stuck in the Quantum Realm right as a snap happens — is the film’s main calendar move. It gives us a believable reason for his absence in 'Infinity War', and it seeds the later return in 'Avengers: Endgame' without shoehorning him into Infinity War’s action.

Beyond timing, the bigger contribution is conceptual. The film treats the Quantum Realm not just as a neat sci-fi setting but as something with strange temporal properties and untapped potential. Janet’s experience there, and Hank and Hope’s experiments, turn the Quantum Realm into narrative currency. When 'Endgame' needs a way to fix five years of loss, the groundwork laid in 'Ant-Man and the Wasp' becomes indispensable: the idea that you can manipulate quantum states and maybe even travel through “time” at subatomic scales happens because these characters have already been poking at the problem. In story terms, that means the movie doesn’t rewrite events so much as supply the method — it hands the later films a plausible tool for the time heist rather than forcing a contrived solution.

On a smaller, sweeter note, the movie affects the emotional timeline too. Because Scott is trapped in the Quantum Realm during the snap, his reappearance in 'Endgame' carries both relief and narrative purpose — he’s not just comic relief, he’s the linchpin for the plan. Also, the film’s treatment of family, regret, and second chances makes the later consequences hit harder: the stakes in the larger battles feel personal because these characters already solved a crisis without fireworks. So, while 'Ant-Man and the Wasp' doesn’t drastically rewrite the MCU timeline, it quietly bridges gaps, seeds crucial science, and positions Scott and the Pym family as the engineers of one of the franchise’s biggest fixes — and that sort of subtle scaffolding is exactly the kind of connective tissue I love finding between films.

When Does Young Sheldon Take Place In The Big Bang Theory Timeline?

4 Answers2025-10-27 00:29:24

Watching 'Young Sheldon' unfold feels like opening a time capsule of sitcom origins, and I love how clearly it sits before 'The Big Bang Theory'. The show is set during Sheldon's childhood in late‑1980s Texas — the pilot places him at about nine years old — and the seasons march through his preteen and teen years into the early 1990s. That puts the events roughly twenty years prior to the adult life we meet in 'The Big Bang Theory', which kicks off in the mid‑to‑late 2000s.

I like thinking of 'Young Sheldon' as the backstory file for the quirks and family dynamics we see later. Jim Parsons narrates the spinoff as the older Sheldon, creating an explicit throughline. There are deliberately placed callbacks—family stories, little embarrassments, and the origins of Sheldon's routines—that feed directly into the character traits celebrated (and roasted) in 'The Big Bang Theory'. For me, that twenty‑year gap makes the prequel feel both nostalgic and explanatory, and I enjoy spotting the moments that explain adult Sheldon’s weird little rituals.

How Do Authors Plan The Timeline Future For Their Books?

4 Answers2025-10-18 00:02:26

Crafting a timeline for a book can feel like piecing together a puzzle, right? One of my favorite authors, let’s call her Jane, opened up about her process during a panel discussion. She emphasized that it starts with a clear vision of where her story fits within the larger world she creates. She maps out crucial events on a timeline, noting how they affect her characters. To ensure continuity, she often uses visual aids like charts or boards, which help her visualize the flow of time and its impact on relationships and conflicts.

Jane also mentioned that she sometimes uses historical events as anchors, which really adds depth and authenticity to her narratives. Not only does this timeline help her stay organized, but it also allows her to explore character arcs and subplots in a way that feels natural and interconnected. Like, when you're deep into a sprawling fantasy epic, it's so easy to lose track of time and details if you're not careful! So, understanding how each plot event unfolds in relation to others becomes vital.

Ultimately, the magic is in adjustments. Jane has found that timelines are not set in stone. She allows for flexibility as her characters develop and the story changes, which makes the creative process all the more thrilling. It’s about balancing structure with spontaneity – kind of like life, right? Planning a timeline is just as much about mapping out a story as it is about exploring the unknown. So, next time you're lost in a book, consider how much thought went into its timeline!

Did The Show'S Timeline Answer "Did Young Sheldon Die" Questions?

3 Answers2025-12-26 13:35:27

I'll cut straight to it: the timeline in 'Young Sheldon' doesn't leave you with the mystery that young Sheldon dies. The whole conceit of the show is that an older Sheldon—voiced by Jim Parsons—narrates the younger version of himself, which already establishes that this kid grows up into the adult we see in 'The Big Bang Theory'. That alone is a pretty heavy bit of canonical reassurance; if the narrator exists, the younger character survives long enough to become him.

Beyond that, the shows play nicely with continuity: details seeded in 'Young Sheldon' are meant to line up with known facts about adult Sheldon's life (his quirks, family history, academic path). There are occasional small retcons and touch-ups for TV storytelling, but nothing in the timeline actually implies an early death. If anything, the timeline fills in how he becomes the Sheldon we watched in 'The Big Bang Theory'.

I love how the prequel uses voiceover and subtle future-references to comfort the viewer while still exploring real family pain and loss in the young Sheldons' world. So if you were worried the show was building toward an off-screen tragedy where the boy dies, you can relax—it's clear the writers intend him to keep going into that adult timeline. That certainty makes the emotional moments hit harder for me, not more ominous.

What Controversies Surround The Star Wars Legends Timeline?

3 Answers2025-09-20 14:23:59

The Star Wars Legends timeline is a fascinating yet contentious universe filled with rich stories and characters that many fans adore. One of the biggest controversies stems from its status as non-canonical material after Disney acquired Lucasfilm. When Disney announced that only the films, 'The Clone Wars' animated series, and the sequel trilogy would be considered official, it left countless fans of the expanded universe feeling a bit betrayed. Tons of novels, comics, and even video games that developed beloved characters and intricate plots were suddenly tossed aside as if they had never existed.

This dismissal often leads to heated debates among fans. On one hand, you have the purists who defend the intricate lore of the Legends timeline, insisting that it adds depth to the characters we love. On the other hand, there are new fans who argue for the necessity of a streamlined narrative, better suited for the new films. It creates a generational divide that makes discussions about Star Wars feel almost like a schism. Some feel attached to characters from 'Thrawn' or 'Dark Empire,' while others connect more with Rey or Kylo Ren.

Another hot topic is the idea of continuity and how various authors have interpreted the Force and galactic lore over the years. For example, just how powerful is Exar Kun compared to Darth Vader? Was Mara Jade the key to bringing a new balance, or was she overshadowed by the original characters? These comparisons spark passionate debates, but ultimately, they highlight the complex relationship fans have with the myths surrounding Star Wars. That blend of nostalgia and innovation, while sometimes contentious, is what keeps the conversation alive.

Do The Fnaf Books In Order Follow A Single Timeline?

4 Answers2025-11-07 05:36:29

Sorting the books into a timeline can be messy, but I like to break them into separate lanes so they stop feeling contradictory. The three-book set — 'The Silver Eyes', 'The Twisted Ones', and 'The Fourth Closet' — absolutely follow a single, continuous storyline. Read them in that order and the characters, mysteries, and revelations flow directly from one book to the next; it’s essentially a straight trilogy with a beginning, middle, and end.

Beyond that trilogy, things split. The 'Fazbear Frights' series and the later 'Tales from the Pizzaplex' collections are short-story anthologies. Most stories stand alone, but there are recurring motifs and occasional characters or hints that connect some tales. Those connections form small threads rather than a single sweeping timeline, so you can enjoy them individually or hunt for the easter-egg links.

Then there are graphic novels and companion books like 'The Freddy Files', which reinterpret or explain things rather than slot into the trilogy’s timeline. In short: yes, some books share a single timeline (the trilogy), but the whole library of 'Five Nights at Freddy's' books is more like multiple timelines and parallel stories that riff on the same mythos. I find that fractured approach keeps things spooky and surprising, which I secretly love.

What Does 'I Can Modify The Timeline Of Everything' Mean?

3 Answers2026-04-05 00:23:22

The phrase 'I can modify the timeline of everything' feels like something straight out of a sci-fi or superhero story, where a character has the power to rewrite history or manipulate events. It reminds me of shows like 'Doctor Who' or comics where time travel is a central theme. The idea isn't just about changing one event—it's about having complete control over how things unfold, like a director editing a film.

But on a deeper level, it also makes me think about how we perceive time in real life. We can't literally change the past, but hindsight lets us reinterpret it. Maybe the line is more about perspective—how we frame our own narratives. Some days, I wish I could tweak a few moments, but then again, where's the fun in a life without surprises?

Where Does 'Krypton Reborn: A Star Wars Story' Fit In The Star Wars Timeline?

2 Answers2025-06-10 20:32:16

'Krypton Reborn: A Star Wars Story' is a fascinating piece of the puzzle. It slots neatly into the chaotic aftermath of the Galactic Empire's fall, roughly around 5-10 years after 'Return of the Jedi'. What makes it stand out is how it bridges the gap between the original trilogy and the sequels, showing the New Republic's struggles against Imperial remnants. The story introduces a hidden Sith faction that's been quietly rebuilding on Krypton, a planet lost to history until now. This ties directly into the First Order's eventual rise, explaining where some of their dark side techniques originated.

The timeline placement is perfect for exploring untapped lore. While the New Republic thinks they've won, this story reveals how the Sith were always working in the shadows. We see early versions of Snoke's experiments and get hints about Palpatine's contingency plans. The Jedi survivors Luke is searching for during this period play a crucial role too, making it essential viewing for anyone who wants to understand the full scope of the sequel trilogy's backstory. The way it connects to 'The Mandalorian' era is brilliant, showing different perspectives of the same galactic rebuilding period.

Does Timeline Have A Sequel Or Follow-Up Novel?

4 Answers2025-12-24 10:48:54

I was totally hooked after reading 'Timeline'—such a wild mix of sci-fi and historical adventure! From what I’ve dug into, there isn’t a direct sequel, but Michael Crichton’s other works like 'Jurassic Park' or 'Prey' kinda scratch that same itch of blending cutting-edge tech with high-stakes drama. It’s a shame, really; I’d love to see those medieval time-travel shenanigans explored further. Maybe the open-ended nature is part of the charm, though? Leaves room for your imagination to run wild with what happens next to those characters.

That said, if you’re craving more time-travel chaos, '11/22/63' by Stephen King or 'The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August' are fantastic detours. They’ve got that same ‘butterfly effect’ tension Crichton mastered in 'Timeline.'

Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status