Posts tagged “serialized fiction”
Space got wild fast after orbital launch costs collapsed. After we found Max, a teenage Tibetan monk who'd accidentally killed his entire village with an uncontrolled switch, we nursed him through years of rehab. Then we handed him back to training, and he went straight into orbit on his first try.
I explain how switching technology upended transportation, economics, borders, labour, and eventually space travel, detailing the chaos, accidents, and innovations along the way, from floating ocean hotels to flying saucers, ending with humanity's expansion across the solar system.
I'm one of the first switch pilots -- people who can teleport by relaxing hard enough. Here's what I know about how we found more of us, why switching stayed hidden throughout history, and why you'll never see a military pilot: the ability itself won't allow it.
I walked you through how Switch Transport went from just me to a whole industry: how we figured out switching's quirks (distance, presence, pushback), how VC brilliantly built Recruitment, launched canyouswitch.com, and found our second pilot, Maddie, whose utterly undramatic five-minute video convinced me she was the real thing.
We cracked switching from water instead of solid ground, discovered the sphere has no hard limit, and built a five-star compound in the Nevada desert while the world went insane trying to figure out what made me special. Turns out I wasn't the only one who could switch. That changed everything.
I teleported for the first time and the media found out within an hour. We hid in a Beverly Hills hotel while VC fielded billion-dollar offers and hired mercenaries to protect us. Now we're in Nevada, figuring out exactly what I can do and how rich it's going to make us.
I'm writing a sci-fi story about a guy who accidentally discovers he can teleport, told in first person. This is part one: how it started with a mysterious explosion, catching the attention of a venture capitalist who funds research into the ability, culminating in the first successful controlled teleportation.