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YUGANT: The Last Epoch

AsherCrown
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
YUGANT: The Last Epoch Across infinite timelines and layered multiverses, the gods are disappearing. An ancient silence has fallen over the heavens, leaving the cosmos defenseless. An encroaching Void no longer hides in the unseen realms—it is preparing to invade. With every passing moment, countless worlds are being erased, reduced to cold, empty voids. As the boundaries of reality begin to shatter, the remnants of creation turn against each other. From the ashes, universal empires rise, seeking to conquer the fractured realms. Amid this cosmic collapse stands Earth. For the first time since forgotten ages, humanity begins to awaken supernatural powers—becoming a beacon that attracts both predators and conquerors. But humanity remains unaware. The monsters hiding in plain sight are already wearing human faces. The awakened are hunted, dragged into an invisible war they cannot comprehend. Nowhere is safe. In a universe waiting for a savior, the fate of reality currently rests on a scattered generation of survivors fighting their own wars across the stars. From a boy trapped in an endless loop of death and vengeance across fractured timelines, to Earthlings stranded on hostile rogue planets; from a simple soul bearing the weight of countless lifetimes to anchor a world-swallowing power, to trapped teenagers risking their humanity to escape a subterranean slaughterhouse; from a lone disciple learning the forgotten, lethal arts of ancient immortals, to the looming prophecy of a final Avatar destined to clash with the ultimate evil. But will there be someone to unite these fractured legends? Is there an anomaly capable of holding up the collapsing sky, buying enough time for this shattered generation to mature? And if that day comes—when these isolated heroes finally stand together as one—what kind of cosmic reckoning will they unleash upon the forces hunting them? The countdown to universal annihilation has begun. The endgame is closing in. To survive what is coming, mortals must evolve— or be erased forever. Volume 1: Kaal Giza and Friends He lived a painfully ordinary life—the kind where a broken radio felt like his biggest problem. Running a small roadside store, he spent his days drinking too much sweet tea and dealing with the weird anomaly of batteries dying whenever he gripped something in frustration. His life was peaceful until… Until the night the darkness swallowed his world. In the blink of an eye, his home, his family, and his entire village were erased from existence, leaving behind nothing but a barren, silent wasteland. Ruthless shadows descend from the sky to claim him. But they aren't the only ones. A group of strangers wielding superpowers crashes into the fray, turning the wasteland into a violent battlefield. He is caught in the crossfire. To a powerless boy who lost everything, the terrifying entities who erased his world and the super-powered beings shattering the earth look exactly the same: dangerous, unpredictable threats. With no home left and no abilities of his own, he is dragged into a deadly war he doesn't understand, surrounded by forces he cannot trust. Beneath his ordinary facade lies a secret bound by blood and time. He harbors something so absolute that it will eventually push him and the ones fighting beside him beyond the boundaries of their broken reality, steering them all toward a much grander, universal destiny. The shadows pursuing him think he is just valuable prey. They don't realize that if they push him too far, the thing hiding inside him will finally wake up.
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Chapter 1 - The Silence of the Hallway

I had a good family.

Not the kind you see in advertisements where everyone is smiling over breakfast. Just a normal, noisy, slightly chaotic family. But it was enough.

My mother loved me more than I probably deserved. If I came home with my shirt torn from a stupid neighborhood fight or a note from my teacher, she would yell enough to bring the roof down. "Do you think money grows on trees? Are you out of your mind?" But the strange thing was, her anger came with an incredibly short timer. Five minutes later, she'd stop mid-sentence, notice a scratch on my elbow, and her entire demeanor would flip. Suddenly, she was dragging me to the sink, fussing over the cut, and asking if I wanted anything to eat. She had a temper that lasted exactly five minutes, replaced instantly by an endless supply of forgiveness and food.

My father was… different.

If you asked him directly what he felt, he would probably just grunt, adjust his glasses, and change the subject. He didn't do long emotional talks. But he had his own quiet, awkward way of speaking.

It was in the way I'd wake up to find my broken earphones carefully patched up with black electrical tape on my desk. It was the way he'd stand outside my school gate on a rainy afternoon—not calling to check on me, just standing there with an umbrella. We would walk the entire way home in total silence, but I always noticed that the umbrella was tilted slightly more towards my side, leaving his own shoulder completely soaked.

And then there was my sister. I definitely can't leave her out.

She possessed an annoying, almost magical talent for starting a world war over absolutely nothing. I remember this one time we didn't speak to each other for three straight days just because she ate the last piece of leftover pizza I had explicitly hidden at the back of the fridge.

"If you wanted it, you should have written your name on it. Fridge rules," she had declared with a smug look, completely ignoring the fact that I had literally covered it in a plastic wrap fortress.

I wanted to throw her out the window that day. But later that same week, when a senior tried to shove me around in the alley near our house, she didn't hesitate for a second. She marched right up to him, barely reaching his chest, and started shouting like an absolute lunatic until he backed off.

She was my biggest headache. But looking back now… she was my best friend.

The best part of our week was always Tuesday night. Every Tuesday, the four of us would crowd onto the living room sofa to watch those overly dramatic TV serials. The ones where someone was always plotting a murder behind a curtain, and dead characters came back to life with a different face just for the sake of drama.

My mother would sit there and genuinely complain about the plot holes. "Why didn't she just call the police? This makes no sense." My sister would loudly make fun of the dramatic zoom-in camera effects.

And my father? He would sit in the corner chair, pretending to read a newspaper, acting completely uninterested. But whenever a commercial break hit, he'd be the first one to ask, "Wait, so the lawyer is actually her brother?"

Life was good back then.

It didn't give us every luxury or comfort in the world, but the house was always loud. It was full. Complete.

Like most kids my age, I had my share of ridiculous, childish dreams. Lying in bed staring at the ceiling, I used to imagine that one day I would wake up with superpowers. I would become a hero, save people, fight villains.

The twisted part is that one day, that childish wish actually came true.

At least the part about getting powers did.

The hero part… didn't really go according to plan.

If I had known what that wish would cost me, I would have kept my mouth shut. Because I didn't realize that the exact moment my wish came true, the small, loud, annoying happiness I had would begin to disappear.

Everything started with the dreams.

For an entire week, it was the exact same dream. It played out like a recorded video stuck on repeat. There was always a man standing at the far end of our dark hallway. I could never make out his face—it was always blurred by a weird, static-like fog—but I clearly remember the heavy black coat he wore, and the slow, rhythmic sound of his boots against the wooden floorboards as he walked toward me.

At first, it just felt weird. But the closer he got with each passing night, the heavier the air in my lungs became. A quiet dread would start building in my chest. It wasn't the kind of fear you get from a jump-scare in a movie. It was a cold, sinking feeling. The sort of terror that spreads through your veins when you realize you are completely, utterly alone.

Like I had already lost something. Something I could never get back.

In the dream, I would shout for my mother. I would yell for my father. I even screamed my sister's name. I knew they were supposed to be right there, just inside the house.

But no matter how loudly I screamed, no one ever answered. The house was dead. Empty.

That was the part that unsettled me the most. In real life, they were always there. My house was never silent. Yet in those dreams, it felt as if they had been completely erased from the world.

Back then, I just brushed it off.

They were just dreams. Nothing real. At least… that's what I told myself over breakfast the next morning while my sister fought with me over the remote.

And for a while… I believed it.

Unfortunately… the next night proved exactly how horribly wrong I was.