Absolutely! 'There Is No Antimemetics Division' is deeply rooted in SCP lore, specifically playing with the mind-bending concept of antimemes—entities or information that resist being remembered. The book expands on the SCP Foundation's Antimemetics Division, a secretive branch tasked with combating threats nobody can recall. It’s a brilliant expansion of the SCP-3125 entry, blending cosmic horror with bureaucratic dark comedy.
The narrative captures the essence of SCP’s collaborative writing style while adding a gripping, novelized structure. It feels like stumbling into a classified Foundation document that’s somehow alive, with characters who grapple with existential dread and office drudgery in equal measure. If you love SCP’s blend of sci-fi and surreal horror, this book is a must-read.
Yes, and it’s one of the most inventive adaptations of SCP lore out there. The book takes SCP-3125—a self-erasing cosmic threat—and weaves it into a full-blown psychological thriller. What’s wild is how it makes the Foundation’s bureaucracy part of the horror; imagine filing reports about monsters that delete themselves from your memory mid-sentence. The author nails the SCP vibe: clinical yet absurd, terrifying yet darkly funny. It’s like 'The Office' meets Lovecraft, with redacted files and coffee stains.
Definitely. The novel is a direct adaptation of the SCP Wiki’s antimemetics articles, especially SCP-3125. It explores how the Foundation deals with anomalies that manipulate memory, turning the act of forgetting into a weapon. The prose is crisp, almost like a case file, but with emotional depth—characters struggle against entities they can’t remember fighting. It’s a fresh take on SCP’s cold, scientific tone, making the lore feel personal and urgent.
Yep, it’s SCP through and through. The book dives into the Antimemetics Division, a fan-favorite SCP concept. It’s packed with that signature Foundation mix of dread and dark humor, plus meta-jokes about how hard it is to write about things designed to be forgotten. If you’ve ever lost hours down the SCP Wiki rabbit hole, this novel feels like coming home—if home was a secret lab fighting invisible horrors.
2025-07-04 14:48:30
32
Ver Todas As Respostas
Escaneie o código para baixar o App
Livros Relacionados
Not Omega
Akina
0
4.1K
On campus, Emily was surrounded by several girls. Each of them slapped Emily's face and insulted her with dirty words. Emily wanted to stand up and fight back, but her arm was stomped heavily on the ground by one of them. There were many people around who walked indifferently, as if they were no longer shocked by this scene. The second girl kicked Emily's face, "Omega is the lowest level of trash, you should have died long ago..." Suddenly their phones rang, and one of them exclaimed, "The four Alphas are having a party! They actually came back home!..." They all picked up their phones to read the text messages, "I received an invitation to the party..." "I received it too!"... They kicked Emily a few more times and cursed a few times before leaving, leaving Emily alone. Emily got up from the ground tremblingly. She picked up her phone a few meters away. Emily found that there were more than a dozen missed calls from Luna. She suddenly panicked and called back nervously. Luna's voice pierced her eardrums, "Where did you die? The four Alphas and the guests are all at home now. Come back here quickly..." Emily was stunned for a moment after hearing the words of the four Alphas, I felt even more panicked.
A young black girl with silver hair, who was raised by her loving mother until the age of 12, has been thrusted into the world of werewolves, on the account of her father being an Alpha. He only finds out about this daughter once her mother dies. But the strangest thing is, she has no wolf. She smells human, but she's definitely his. The alpha brought her to live with him, and during that time, they both discovered things about themselves that neither knew existed. She was never just "human," and his "mate" was never his to begin with. This human girl was, in fact, a long, foretold gift to the wovles and a destructive force on those who waged war on good.
I grew up abroad. My mother feared I might marry a foreign man, so she arranged an engagement for me with a talented and handsome man in Flodon. She insisted that I return home to get engaged.
I came back and started shopping for an engagement dress at a luxury boutique. I selected an off-white strapless gown and decided to try it on.
Suddenly, a woman nearby glanced at the dress in my hand and told the saleswoman, “That’s a unique design. Let me try it.”
The saleswoman immediately yanked it out of my hands.
I protested indignantly, “Excuse me, I was here first. Don’t you understand the principle of ‘first come, first served’? Or do you just not care about common decency?”
The woman scoffed and retorted, “This dress costs $188,000. Do you really think a broke nobody like you can even afford it?
“I’m Lucas Goodwin’s sister in all but blood. He’s the chairman of Goodwin’s Group. In Flodon, the Goodwin family sets the rules.”
What a coincidence! Lucas Goodwin was my fiance!
I immediately called him and said, “Hey, your ‘sister in all but blood’ just stole my engagement dress. Do something about it.”
What if humanity’s cruelest monster is the only one who can save you?
In the toxic slums of Sector 4—far beneath the glittering glass domes of the elite city—there is only one rule: keep a low profile and stay alive. Jada is a master of survival. From the scraps discarded by the upper class, she builds everything she needs to exist in this merciless world. But during a brutal raid by the ruling Consortium, her identity scanner suddenly flashes a blood-red alarm. The verdict is neither prison nor death. It is: Sector Omega.
Sector Omega is a myth born of whispered nightmares. It is the Consortium’s deepest underground laboratory, where the authorities breed genetically mutated supersoldiers. Jada is thrown into a pitch-black cell as a "calming companion" for the most dangerous experiment of all: Subject Zero.
He calls himself Kael, and he is the Apex. An unstoppable beast, engineered for war in the toxic outer world—a nightmare of muscle, claws, and blinding rage. Every woman sent into this cell before Jada never left it alive. Yet, when the monster attacks from the shadows and lunges at her, he suddenly halts. The beast catches a scent. In the rebellious scavenger, Kael sees no prey—he recognizes his destined mate.
With a single, guttural "Mine," Jada’s fate changes forever. Certain death transforms into a perilous alliance. Kael vows to protect his mate with his life, while Jada discovers the man hidden beneath the monster. To escape the cruel Consortium, they must ignite a bloody rebellion together—one that will shake the dystopian world beneath the dome to its very foundations. For an Apex does not share.
Tropes: Sci-Fi Dystopia, Werewolf Romance, Fated Mates, Touch Her and You Die.
I am a miserable nurse.
During the Halloween season, there was a three day break but I was not given any days off.
Upset, I decided to join a game featuring a haunted hospital.
There was an old man wrapped in IV tubes chasing after a player.
I sprinted forward and shoved him into the chair. After effortlessly jabbing the IV line back in him, I told him off, "It’s just an IV drip, not an action movie. Sit. Down. Move again and I’ll strap you to the chair!"
The old man did a double take before blinking in a flustered manner. "Sorry for causing you trouble, ma'am."
At night, children ghosts began to run and laugh wildly in the corridor.
I grabbed one in each hand and hauled them up. "If you’re not going to stay put in the ward, I’ll give you an injection!"
Why did I still have to work in a game? I was so tired.
The other players cried out, "Clem! That's a ghost. Are you not scared?"
I sneered, "Sorry, but burnt-out workers hold more grudges than ghosts ever could."
Ten years after being the sole survivor of a catastrophic train disaster, a Tanzanian student discovers that his survival wasn't a miracle—it was a mutation. Now, he is the most wanted organism on Earth.
FULL SYNOPSIS
The crash should have killed him. The truck should have finished the job.
Ten years ago, a midnight train to Mbeya was derailed by a mysterious explosion of violet light. Hundreds perished in the wreckage. Only one person walked away: an eight-year-old boy found without a scratch. The world called it a miracle. The government called it a closed case.
Now a Form Six student, the boy just wants a normal life. But "normal" ends the day he is struck by a speeding semi-trailer in the city streets. In front of a horrified crowd, his severed limbs don't just bleed—they boil, snap, and regenerate in a terrifying display of biological immortality.
Caught on camera, the video goes viral within hours, shattering his anonymity and alerting the shadows.
He is no longer a student. He is Patient Zero.
Hunted by "Six," a ruthless biotech corporation seeking to harvest his DNA to engineer a new breed of mutants, and pursued by a government desperate to bury the secrets of the Mbeya Incident, he is forced to run. With no allies and a body that refuses to die, he must uncover the truth about what really happened on that train ten years ago before he becomes a lab rat for the highest bidder.
He survived the crash. But can he survive the hunt?
The 'SCP Class D Containment Specialist' role is deeply rooted in the SCP Foundation's expansive lore, but it’s not directly lifted from any single canonical source. The SCP universe thrives on collaborative storytelling, so while Class D personnel are canonically disposable test subjects, the idea of a 'specialist' among them feels like a creative expansion. The Foundation’s lore often leaves gaps for interpretation, and this concept fits snugly into those shadows—elevating Class D from faceless pawns to skilled, albeit doomed, operators.
Most official tales depict Class D as expendable, but fanworks love subverting expectations. A 'specialist' could imply rare survival or expertise, like handling anomalous objects without dying instantly. The SCP community embraces such twists, blending horror with dark humor. While not official, it’s plausible enough to feel authentic, especially in fan-made games or stories where Class D characters defy their grim fate. The lore’s flexibility makes room for this niche idea, even if it’s not strictly 'real.'