Story cover for Doomsday virus zombie outbreak in 12 hours, i got God-level Base System by nurFir4
Doomsday virus zombie outbreak in 12 hours, i got God-level Base System
  • Reads 366
  • Votes 1
  • Parts 32
  • Time 3h 11m
  • Reads 366
  • Votes 1
  • Parts 32
  • Time 3h 11m
Ongoing, First published Sep 22
Armed with knowledge of the impending doom, Luo Ren seizes his chance to rewrite humanity's fate. With the god-level base system at his command, he transforms desolate ruins into a beacon of hope. As chaos spreads and civilization crumbles, Luo Ren becomes the last pillar of order. He gathers survivors, cultivates alliances, and brings discipline to the disorder. Every decision shapes the future-will he create a utopia or a fortress of war? As enemies close in and mutated horrors rise, Luo Ren must expand, innovate, and dominate to ensure mankind's survival in a world where only the strong endure.
All Rights Reserved
Table of contents
Sign up to add Doomsday virus zombie outbreak in 12 hours, i got God-level Base System to your library and receive updates
or
#98kill
Content Guidelines
You may also like
You may also like
Slide 1 of 10
One of a Kind G/T cover
A transmigrated farm life of a retired soldier cover
A Chill Guy cover
FREEZE cover
Transformers Prime: Arise the Beast Warriors cover
Magic & Aliens (Charmcaster X Reader) cover
Spending Money Does Not Decrease But Increases, I Am Invincible With Dual System cover
وكل غصنٍ في خَفوقي باتجاهك انثنا cover
Apocalypse? So what I got a 5 year old to raise! cover
Science Is Math (OC X Dr Xeno) cover

One of a Kind G/T

28 parts Ongoing

In a world where humans are considered nothing more than commodities-bought, sold, and studied like exotic livestock-Vareshian university student Lorian Thorne receives a young 6 inch human as part of a groundbreaking class experiment. Unlike the older, scarred, and vacant humans distributed to his peers, Lorian's human is barely more than a child, wide-eyed and trembling in the corner of his cage. Lorian has always understood humans the way his parents taught him: resources, tools, valuable for their rarity but not worth empathy or consideration. Yet as he observes his human's fragile existence and begins to interact with him, Lorian starts questioning everything he's been told. The boy's small, defiant attempts at connection force Lorian to confront not only the morality of his own actions, but the brutal reality of the society he lives in. As the class progresses, Lorian must navigate the expectations of his Vareshian peers, his parents' ingrained beliefs, and his growing sense of responsibility toward the life in his care. What starts as a sterile academic exercise becomes a journey of unexpected connection, forcing Lorian to face the uncomfortable truths about his world, his family, and ultimately, himself.