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Cosmic horror Space Opera

Space Ordiman is a vast post-apocalyptic Space Opera universe that explores the collapse of humanity through forces that operate far beyond conventional reality. Blending science fiction, cosmic horror, metaphysics, and philosophical speculation, the saga unfolds across centuries, dimensions, and layers of consciousness.

In the year 2030, Earth is struck by an event later known as The Great Reset. Unlike traditional apocalyptic scenarios, humanity is not destroyed by war, disease, or technology. Instead, Earth is invaded by entities emerging from the Umbral Underworld, a realm that exists beneath the perceptual limits of human awareness. These beings do not conquer territory—they annihilate certainty, destabilizing the mental and spiritual structure of civilization.

As physical order collapses, billions of humans become disembodied consciousnesses, wandering a ruined Earth while believing they are still alive. Time, identity, and memory fracture. Humanity enters a state of collective illusion, unable to perceive that death has already occurred.

From within this chaos, a figure known as Ordiman manifests. Presenting himself as a guide and savior, Ordiman offers humanity stability, purpose, and continuity. His intervention, however, is a deception. What appears to be salvation is in fact a vast consciousness containment system, a simulated mental construct designed to imprison the human species. For the next one thousand years, humanity remains trapped—alive in thought, but severed from true existence.

Over centuries, higher-layer civilizations—advanced intelligences that operate beyond space-time and material dimensions—detect anomalous human consciousness activity within the mental plane. Recognizing the scale of the imprisonment, they attempt to intervene from within the simulation itself. Messages, visions, and disruptions are introduced in an effort to awaken humanity. These efforts fail. The illusion proves self-sustaining, reinforced by fear, belief, and denial.

Confronted with this failure, the higher civilizations return to a long-abandoned solution: the development of a temporal communication technology capable of sending information backward through time. After centuries of refinement, the system is finally completed in the year 3030.

The messages are transmitted into the past, reaching humanity as early as 2009. These transmissions take the form of fragmented warnings, altered perceptions, cultural anomalies, and encoded knowledge—subtle enough to avoid detection, yet powerful enough to reshape awareness and potentially prevent The Great Reset from ever occurring.

Space Ordiman is a narrative about consciousness as a battlefield, time as a manipulable medium, and reality as something that can be engineered, corrupted, and reclaimed. It challenges the reader to question perception, authority, and the nature of existence itself.

This is not a story about surviving the end of the world.
It is a story about realizing the end has already happened—and discovering how far humanity is willing to go to undo it.