Story cover for Overloaded Earth by SparklingNinja26
Overloaded Earth
  • WpView
    Reads 85
  • WpVote
    Votes 5
  • WpPart
    Parts 2
  • WpHistory
    Time 5m
  • WpView
    Reads 85
  • WpVote
    Votes 5
  • WpPart
    Parts 2
  • WpHistory
    Time 5m
Ongoing, First published Mar 20, 2013
Jack is a 16-year old boy who besides having to go through his teenage years full of hormones and more, he has to endure the problem that the earth is facing in the year 2030. The earth is overloaded...with people, and this overpopulation was caused by Stem Cell Research, the research that was supposed to be the answers to humanity's health problems, but ended up causing them more trouble than before. With his anger towards the scientist that caused him to live in a messed up crowded world, and his determination to find a way to change the course of planet Earth, Jack will go up against many challenges, bigger than any hormone-filled teenager should go through.
All Rights Reserved
Sign up to add Overloaded Earth to your library and receive updates
or
#13overpopulation
Content Guidelines
You may also like
When the Sun Begins to Die  by Thatonefnaflover
60 parts Complete Mature
Seventeen year old Cadence Buds is a normal teenager in a dying world. Well, the world isn't dying, but the sun is. It has been dying for several years now, but the effects are finally starting to come about. The sun has even been changing color. The government has been working on a plan to save a portion of the human population for quite some time. There are so many problems with the sun dying. The oceans will evaporate from the inevitable explosion, everything will be dark and nothing will be able to grow, the world will freeze over, everything will be destroyed. The sun is also giving off toxic radiation while it dies, making the world especially dangerous. The government's solution to this problem is to build a radiation proof dome over a large area. There will be synthetic heat, light, and seasons. The cost to enter such an oasis is very expensive. It is hundreds of thousands of dollars per ticket. However, there is another way to get in. Once the sun dies many will die with it. It might even vaporize part of the planet in its blast. No one knows for sure. But the world will need a larger population. You can earn your place in the dome if you agree to have a child to save the human race. This obviously only applies to women. Now remember Cadence? He is biologically female. He has been on testosterone for two years and is trying to transition in this world. Unfortunately that is horribly expensive where he lives. His family however is more focused on saving their lives from the dying sun. His parents had just enough money to afford his sister a ticket. She could not have children because she was barren. Cadence however could have children if he wished, but he didn't. Having a child meant undoing all of his hard work. He is told that in order to survive that he must have a child within the next two years. Two years is a long time, but he never wanted to have children. What will Cadence do once his two years have come to an end?
Matriarchy: No Need For Men. by feminism2
16 parts Ongoing
Chapter 2: World War III (Running!!) Men are gone. Women rule. Imagine a world where men no longer matter-would you survive the matriarchy? What happens when feminism goes too far? This book explores the consequences of a future where the natural balance between men and women collapses. Feminism, having transcended all boundaries, reshapes humanity into a female-centered species. Men, stripped of purpose, exist as relics of the past, serving only as pets in a system that mirrors a hive, where women reign supreme. Biologically, mothers are the gatekeepers of life. Historically, survival forced men and women into partnership-men as protectors and providers, sometimes oppressors, while women adapted to survive under natural pressures. But when humanity masters nature, this necessity vanishes. With no war, famine, or struggle, cooperation dissolves. Robots and AI take over all labor, while science frees women from biological dependence on men, allowing reproduction through stem-cell technology. Men are no longer needed for survival, yet they are not entirely discarded, kept instead as sentimental pets. This is the final form of feminism: a system that abandons equality under the guise of progress, reducing men to a perpetual loop of servitude. Matriarchy: No Need for Men critiques a future where dominance replaces balance, and ideology supersedes the natural truths of human existence. It is a stark warning, not only for men but for all who value the delicate equilibrium that defines humanity.
You may also like
Slide 1 of 9
Sanctuary cover
When the Sun Begins to Die  cover
Terra Firma cover
For A Girl cover
The Sky is Everywhere cover
Matriarchy: No Need For Men. cover
Qi & Code cover
A Tainted Victory cover
One soul two bodies  cover

Sanctuary

28 parts Complete

Sanctuary. That was what the quarantine dome was supposed to be, a place of refuge from the N-Gel and the deadly Neoplague they unleashed on the world. But we aren't safe here. Senna is uprooted from her rural life in the outer dome when her mother agrees to marry the President of Sanctuary. It was supposed to be a Cinderella story, but Senna can't stand the health and status obsessed city. Her only escape comes from repairing an antique piece of wireless tech, an endeavor that is seemingly hopeless due to the interference that reduced such tech useless after the invasion. Senna believes that if she can get the device to work, she can use it to contact the life she left behind. However, it isn't her old life she reaches when she gets the device to power on. Instead she catches the SOS of a little girl who claims to be held captive in the toxic world outside of the dome. The girl offers a reward for her rescue-the cure for the plague that forced humanity into quarantine and took Senna's father from her. Top Rankings: #84 in Post-Apocalyptic (11/21/2020) #6 in Genetics (12/19/2020) #2 in Asexual Protagonist (11/14/2020)