Something feels off.
Not dramatically. Not visibly broken. Just slightly wrong in ways that are difficult to name and easy to ignore.
Everything Feels Off is a precise analysis of that sensation.
Leon Arcton argues that the modern environment has not collapsed. It has been optimized. Systems work. Interfaces are seamless. Output is constant. Yet the underlying experience feels increasingly hollow.
This is not a failure. It is a structural outcome.
Across media, work, culture, and perception, Arcton shows how friction has been removed, signals have been flattened, and meaning has been diluted by design. What once required effort now appears instantly. What once stood out now blends in. What once felt real now feels staged.
The result is a world where nothing is obviously wrong, yet everything feels slightly misaligned.
This book explains why.
Clear, controlled, and analytically sharp, Everything Feels Off gives language to a condition many recognize but few can articulate.
Once you see the pattern, you cannot unsee it.