In a world where every thought can be filtered, every desire optimized, and every life quietly monitored, freedom begins with the simple act of looking up.
By 2034, the RePHleX protocol has made life seamless. Homes anticipate needs. Feeds shape opinions. Smart systems curate work, art, fitness, romance, and identity itself. For Kaidan Vale, a struggling AI-assisted musician navigating the gig economy, constant connectivity is not a threat. It is just how the world works.
Until a stranger hands him a note.
Tell your feed it's a lovely yellow sky today.
The sky is blue. But when Kaidan says otherwise, his feed agrees. Some claim they see it too. Others explain what it means. A single false statement becomes a shared reality, and Kaidan begins to wonder how much of what he believes has been chosen for him.
As his relationship with Aria, an analog artist fighting to preserve human creativity, pulls him toward a world beyond the screen, Kaidan is forced to confront the systems that have shaped his desires, his work, his relationships, and his sense of truth. What begins as unease becomes a reckoning with surveillance, artificial intelligence, digital consensus, and the seductive comfort of a life made frictionless.
RePHleXions: Echoes of Existence is adult speculative fiction about technology, intimacy, creativity, and the fragile line between convenience and control. For readers interested in near-future dystopia, AI, digital culture, social manipulation, and the human cost of algorithmic life, this novel asks a question that feels less fictional every day:
When the system knows what you want before you do, how do you know which thoughts are still your own?
A standalone novel in the Symbiosis Sequence, RePHleXions: Echoes of Existence belongs to a loose conceptual series exploring humanity's evolving relationship with intelligence, technology, ecology, and the systems we create.
Content advisory: Intended for mature readers 18+. Contains explicit sexual content, complex relationship dynamics, digital surveillance, manipulation, technology dependency, and psychological themes.