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MindWalker - The Thought Voyager

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14
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The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 14 chs / week.
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Synopsis
He was just a man. Not a hero. Not a villain. Just someone who had lived long enough to see how unfair the world could be. He’d watched people lie, cheat, and climb over others without consequence. He’d seen justice bend to money, truth drowned out by noise, and kindness treated like weakness. Eventually, he stopped hoping. He stopped fighting. And one day, he died—quietly, without ceremony, in a world that had long stopped listening. But death wasn’t the end. He woke up in a different reality. Familiar streets, familiar faces—but something was off. People spoke in fragments, names like Stark and Rogers floated in the air like myth. He didn’t know the full story. He hadn’t watched the movies. But he recognized the signs. This was the Marvel Cinematic Universe. And he wasn’t the same. Something had changed inside him. A power stirred—subtle, invasive, and growing. He could read people, feel their intentions, unravel their secrets like threads. It was more than telepathy. It was control. Influence. A cipher of thought and motive. The kind of power that didn’t punch through walls—it slipped through minds. He didn’t ask for it. But he knew what to do with it. He began to walk the streets—not as a savior, but as a reckoning. He found the liars, the abusers, the manipulators. He exposed them. Broke them. Delivered justice not with fists, but with truth sharpened into a blade. And with each act, his power grew. They called him dangerous. They called him unstable. But he didn’t care. He wasn’t here to be liked. He was here to finish what his old world never could. And in a universe waiting for heroes, he became something else entirely.
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Chapter 1 - Prologue 

Prologue

John used to believe the world was kind.

As a boy, he thought fairness was the rule, not the exception. He believed people helped each other simply because it was right. That goodness was natural. That justice was inevitable.

Then he graduated.

Bills came. Promises broke. Friends disappeared. He watched his parents struggle to keep the lights on, saw coworkers backstab for promotions, and learned that truth didn't always win—especially when money spoke louder.

He tried to hold on. Tried to believe that maybe it was just a phase. But the more he saw—corruption in politics, cruelty in the streets, wars fought for profit—the more his hope unraveled.

John didn't become bitter. He became quiet.

He stopped expecting kindness. Stopped believing that one person could make a difference. He lived, worked, paid taxes, and kept his head down. And when war came—not the kind with flags and heroes, but the kind where neighbors turned on each other for ideology and pride—he didn't expect to be caught in it.

But he was.

He died in a conflict he didn't start, between people who all thought they were right. No last words. No grand farewell. Just another casualty in a world too busy fighting to notice.

In the end, John felt like a grain of sand in a stormy sea—small, swept away, and forgotten.