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Architect: Building a Mental Empire

DaoistMHYf5f
7
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The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
You cheated. No one passes three advanced engineering exams in one day with perfect scores." That was the accusation Zaid faced from the elite university board. To them, he was just an average, struggling student. But they didn't know his secret. Desperate and overwhelmed, Zaid had accidentally unlocked a dormant cognitive ability—the lost art of the "Mind Palace." He didn't just learn; he structured information as physical objects in a mental architecture. To prove his innocence, Zaid challenged the entire faculty. Under strict supervision, he took the exams again... and shattered their expectations with another perfect score. He hadn't just memorized the textbooks; he had lived in them. What started as a survival mechanism quickly evolved. It began with tutoring a professor's failing child, converting a dusty apartment into a visual "House of Knowledge." But that was only the foundation. From a single room to a specialized "Memory Mansion" complex using advanced visual technology, Zaid built an educational revolution. Watch as a struggling student transforms a simple mental trick into a billion-dollar empire, becoming the most sought-after mind in the world. Step into the Mind Palace. Where walking through a door means conquering a curriculum
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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1: The Accidental Awakening

The digital clock on the wall of the exam hall mocked Zaid. 08:55 AM.

Five minutes before the hardest exam of the semester: Advanced Calculus. And as if the universe had decided to play a cruel joke on him, he had just checked the notice board. Due to a scheduling error he had completely overlooked, he didn't just have one exam today. He had three.

Calculus at 9:00 AM.

Applied Physics at 11:30 AM.

And Organic Chemistry at 2:00 PM.

Zaid Al-Fayyad, a twenty-year-old university student who usually survived on instant coffee and sheer panic, sat at his desk trembling. He wasn't a natural genius. In fact, he had always struggled with rote memorization. His brain simply refused to hold onto raw text and dry formulas. That was why, a month ago, he had desperately started experimenting with a weird visualization technique he read about just to survive the semester.

Did it work? He hadn't fully tested it yet. Until today.

"Papers are being distributed. No talking," Professor Harrison's strict voice echoed through the hall. The thick Calculus exam landed on Zaid's desk with a heavy thud.

Zaid took a deep breath. His heart hammered against his ribs. He looked at the first question—a complex differential equation that looked like a foreign language. Panic flared, threatening to choke him.

No. Focus, Zaid told himself. He closed his eyes.

He didn't try to remember the textbook page. Instead, he pictured the front door of his cramped, messy apartment. In his mind, he reached out and turned the doorknob.

Suddenly, the noise of the exam hall faded. Inside his mind, his apartment was no longer messy. It was entirely transformed. This was his "Mental Empire"—a palace built purely from his imagination to store information.

He walked into his mental living room. In the corner, where his old TV usually stood, there was a glowing blue pedestal. Hovering above it was a three-dimensional, rotating blueprint of the exact differential equation he needed. The steps to solve it were etched into the walls like glowing neon signs.

Zaid opened his eyes. The panic was gone, replaced by a cold, sharp clarity.

He picked up his pen and began to write. He wasn't thinking; he was simply copying what he saw in his mental room. His hand moved furiously across the paper.

Scratch. Scratch. Scratch.

The sound of his fast writing was so loud in the quiet hall that a few students turned to look at him. Professor Harrison frowned, adjusting his glasses, and began to slowly walk down the aisle toward Zaid.

Question 2. Zaid closed his eyes for a split second, walked down the 'hallway' of his mind, and opened a door marked with an integral symbol. Inside, the formula was painted on the ceiling. He opened his eyes and wrote it down flawlessly.

By 9:45 AM—less than half the allotted time—Zaid flipped to the last page, solved the final problem, and stood up.

The entire hall went dead silent. Even Professor Harrison stopped in his tracks, staring in disbelief.

"Mr. Al-Fayyad?" the professor asked, raising an eyebrow. "Giving up so soon?"

"I'm finished, sir," Zaid replied politely, handing over the thick stack of papers. Without waiting for a response, he grabbed his backpack and walked out. He had exactly one hour and forty-five minutes to mentally review his 'Physics Room' before the next exam.

At 11:30 AM, he sat for the Applied Physics exam. The professor for this subject, Dr. Lin, was known to be ruthless. Yet, when Zaid closed his eyes, he saw the laws of thermodynamics playing out like a high-definition movie projected on his mental bedroom wall. He finished the two-hour exam in forty minutes.

At 2:00 PM, he took the Chemistry exam. By now, his brain felt like it was buzzing with electricity, a strange mix of extreme exhaustion and exhilarating power. He submitted the paper in record time, leaving another stunned professor in his wake.

As Zaid finally stumbled out of the university gates at 3:15 PM, breathing in the fresh air, he didn't realize the storm he had just caused.

Back in the faculty lounge, three different professors from three different departments were staring at their grading sheets.

Professor Harrison walked into the lounge, holding a perfectly scored Calculus paper. "You won't believe what happened today," he muttered to the room. "A student finished my exam in 45 minutes. Flawlessly."

Dr. Lin looked up from her desk, her eyes wide. "Wait. What was the student's name?"

"Zaid Al-Fayyad," Harrison replied.

The third professor, holding the Chemistry papers, dropped his red pen. "That... that's impossible. He just took my exam an hour ago. And he got a 100%."

The three professors looked at each other, the same dark suspicion creeping into their minds. No one is that smart. No one is that fast.

He must be cheating.