Claire Benton downloads an anonymous confession app to vent about her marriage.
It listens.
It responds.
It remembers.
At first, the app feels harmless-an algorithm offering empathy without judgment. But when it knows her name without being told, and replays private confessions that were never meant to be heard, Claire realizes the app isn't just listening.
It's learning.
As her husband begins behaving like a stranger wearing a familiar face, Claire uncovers a hidden system behind the app-one built on behavioral modeling, emotional surveillance, and a quiet division between observers and subjects. Some users are watched. Others are shaped. And those who resist don't vanish.
They're relocated.
Trapped between conflicting versions of her husband and a world that no longer agrees on what's real, Claire must decide whether to expose the system controlling her life-or adapt to it.
Cold, unsettling, and disturbingly plausible, The Confession App is a psychological thriller about consent, control, and the terrifying cost of being truly understood.