My Ultimate Sign-in System Made Me Invincible-Chapter 461: The Promise Of A Future Nobody Was Prepared For

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Chapter 461: The Promise Of A Future Nobody Was Prepared For

Nova Technologies has been doing impossible things from the very day the video of their first product, Lucid, surfaced on the Internet.

That was barely five months ago, when they released the world’s first most disruptive piece of technology. And after that, they haven’t even allowed the world time to breathe, as they drop shocking announcement after shocking announcement, month after month.

But what everyone didn’t expect was that the company that came out just a couple of months ago was now about to run clinical trials for the single most disruptive and market-shattering product ever.

The ten-minute silence broke all at once.

The first comment that dropped on the post was one that showed exactly how everyone in the world was feeling.

"What in the actual f*ck?!"

It received 2.3 billion reactions in four minutes.

Then the floodgates opened.

"I just woke up. I saw the notification. I thought it was fake. I checked the official page three times. I’m sitting in my bed and I genuinely cannot process what I just read. They’re curing cancer. They’re regrowing limbs. They’re REVERSING ALZHEIMER’S. I need someone to tell me this is real." 𝗳𝚛𝚎𝚎𝘄𝕖𝕓𝕟𝕠𝚟𝚎𝕝.𝗰𝕠𝐦

"My grandmother has been in a wheelchair for sixteen years. Sixteen years. I just read that these nanites can regrow limbs and I started crying in the middle of a coffee shop and I don’t even care. I don’t care if people are staring. If this is real, if this actually works, my grandmother can walk again."

"I have Type 1 diabetes. I’ve had it since I was seven years old. I’m thirty-two now. I’ve been managing insulin, monitoring blood sugar, dealing with the constant fear of complications for twenty-five years. And I just read an announcement that says genetic anomaly correction. Does that mean what I think it means? Does that mean I could be cured? Actually cured?"

"My little brother is autistic. Non-verbal. He’s twelve and he’s never spoken a single word. I just saw ’neurological stabilization’ and I don’t know if that applies to him but I’m sitting here hoping so hard it hurts."

"Okay but can we talk about how they just casually mentioned they have an OFF-WORLD BIOMEDICAL FACILITY? Like that’s just a normal thing to have? Where? The moon? Mars? How long has that existed? Why are we not talking about this?"

"THEY’RE GOING TO LIVESTREAM THE TRIALS. Do you understand what that means? We’re going to watch, in real time, as people get cured of diseases. We’re going to see limbs grow back. We’re going to watch paralyzed people walk again. This isn’t a press release. This isn’t a medical journal. This is going to be broadcast to the entire world."

"I work in insurance. Not a scientist, just a regular person in insurance. And I just realized my entire industry is about to cease to exist. We price policies based on risk. Medical risk. Genetic risk. Lifestyle risk. If everyone has access to nanites that can cure literally anything, what’s the point of health insurance? What’s the risk? What are we even insuring against?"

"My dad died of a heart attack three years ago. Sudden. No warning. Just gone. I keep reading about the emergency protocol and thinking... if he’d had these nanites, would he still be alive? And I don’t know if that thought is comforting or if it’s making everything worse."

"$99 a month for Essential Care. That’s less than most people’s phone bills. That’s less than streaming services. That’s less than car insurance. For continuous health monitoring and disease elimination. HOW IS THAT POSSIBLE?"

"The Sovereign Care tier is $60,000 a year. For context, that’s more than the median household income in most countries. So yeah, it’s technically available, but most people will never be able to afford full regeneration. The wealth gap just got a health gap too."

"Wait. So if you lose your Lucid device or your subscription lapses, the nanites go dormant? So your health is literally dependent on maintaining a subscription? That’s... I don’t even know what to call that. That’s concerning on a level I can’t articulate."

"Everyone’s talking about curing cancer and regrowing limbs, but I’m stuck on ’addiction intervention.’ I’ve been trying to quit smoking for eight years. Eight years of patches, gum, medication, willpower, failure. And they’re saying the nanites can just... fix that? Rewire my brain chemistry so I’m not dependent anymore? That’s not even medical. That’s neurological reprogramming."

"My sister has severe depression. She’s been on medication for twelve years. Different combinations, different dosages, constant adjustments because nothing works perfectly. And the side effects are brutal. I just showed her the announcement and she’s crying. Not sad crying. The other kind."

"I’m sorry but can we acknowledge how insane it is that they’re bypassing all regulatory approval? They’re not asking the FDA for permission. They’re not asking the CDC. They’re saying ’you can watch if you want, but we’re doing this regardless.’ That’s not how medicine works. That’s not how ANY of this works."

"The fact that they specifically said ’no third-party access, no government backdoor’ means they KNEW governments would try to get access. They’re explicitly saying no before anyone even asks. That’s a level of control I’ve never seen from any company."

"I keep thinking about what happens to hospitals. Not in a career way, just... logistically. If nanites can cure everything, why would you ever go to a hospital? For the injection? For monitoring? Most of what hospitals do becomes obsolete. Emergency rooms, surgical wards, intensive care units—all of it becomes unnecessary if everyone has nanites."

"My mom has early-stage Alzheimer’s. We’ve been watching her decline for two years. It’s slow. It’s horrible. Every month she forgets a little more. I just called her and I couldn’t even explain what I’d read because I was crying too hard. She didn’t understand why I was upset. That’s the disease. But maybe—maybe—there’s a chance she doesn’t have to keep forgetting."

"The volunteer selection happens in 90 days. They’re taking 100 people. That’s it. 100 people out of 8 billion. I’m already thinking about applying even though I’m perfectly healthy. Just to be part of it. Just to say I was there when everything changed."

"If nanites can regrow organs, does that mean organ donation becomes obsolete? Like, completely obsolete? No more transplant lists. No more compatibility issues. No more people dying waiting for a kidney. Just... regrow it. I can’t wrap my head around that."

"I’m reading the emergency protocol section again and it’s so detailed. Vehicle collision, gunshot wound, cardiac arrest, stroke. They thought about everything. This isn’t theoretical. This isn’t speculative. They’ve already figured out exactly how the nanites respond to every major emergency. That means they’ve tested this. Extensively."

"Everyone’s focused on the medical capabilities but I’m stuck on the fact that this requires a Lucid device. So if you don’t win the pre-order lottery, you can’t ever get nanites. Even if you need them. Even if you’re dying. Access to life-saving medical technology is literally locked behind a device that 99.9% of humanity can’t get. That’s not just unfair. That’s dystopian."

"My best friend has terminal cancer. Stage 4. The doctors gave him six months. That was four months ago. I don’t know if I should tell him about this. I don’t know if it’s cruel to give him hope when the trials don’t start for 90 days and he might not make it that long. I don’t know what to do."

"Conditional Automatic Mode. That’s the thing that’s getting me. You can set parameters and the nanites will just... act. Autonomously. Inside your body. Making medical decisions without asking. I know it’s optional but the fact that it EXISTS is wild. You’re trusting microscopic machines to decide when to intervene in your biology."

"I just realized everyone with chronic illness is now in this horrible waiting period. They know a cure exists. They know it’s real. But it’s 90 days until trials even start, and who knows how long until actual deployment. So they’re just... stuck. Knowing salvation is coming but having no idea when they’ll get access to it."

"The 72-hour grace period is simultaneously generous and terrifying. Generous because it gives you three days if you miss a payment. Terrifying because it means your health is literally on a timer. Miss a payment, wait 72 hours, and the nanites shut off. Everything they were treating just stops being treated. How is that acceptable?"

"I’m healthy. Completely healthy. No chronic conditions, no genetic disorders, no disabilities. And I’m still desperate to get this. Not because I need it now, but because I might need it someday. Because everyone gets sick eventually. Everyone gets injured. Everyone ages. And now there’s a way to fix all of that, but only if you have access. The pressure to get a Lucid device just became existential."

"They said life extension research is ongoing. Not ’we’re thinking about it.’ Not ’maybe someday.’ ONGOING. As in, it’s actively being worked on. As in, immortality might actually be possible and they’re already trying to figure it out. I cannot handle that information right now."

"My nephew was born with a heart defect. He’s had three surgeries. He’s five years old and he’s spent more time in hospitals than most adults. I just sent the announcement to my sister and she hasn’t responded yet and I’m terrified she’s going to hope too much and I’m terrified she’s not going to hope enough."

"The livestream is going to break the internet. Not metaphorically. Literally. When billions of people try to watch medical miracles happen in real time, every streaming service on Earth is going to collapse under the load. LucidNet is the only platform that could possibly handle it, which means they’re about to become the most-watched network in human history for the nth time."

"I keep coming back to one thought: this changes everything. Not some things. Not most things. Everything. Society, economy, healthcare, government, life expectancy, human capability—everything we know is about to be rewritten. And we’re all just sitting here watching it happen, posting reactions on social media like this is normal. But it’s not normal. Nothing will ever be normal again."

The posts kept coming. Millions of them. Faster than any human could read. Faster than any system except LucidNet could process.

Parents of sick children. People with chronic pain. Individuals facing terminal diagnoses. Those who’d lost loved ones to preventable deaths. Those who were healthy but terrified of future illness. Those who wanted to live longer, be stronger, transcend the limitations that had defined humanity since the beginning.

Every single person was trying to process the same impossible information: mortality had become negotiable, but access was still a lottery, and nobody knew if they’d be lucky enough to survive long enough to benefit from the technology that could save them.

The conversation didn’t slow. Instead, it intensified, fracturing into thousands of threads, each one grappling with different implications, each one oscillating between hope and despair and wild, irrational excitement.

And through it all, the announcement sat at the top of Nova Technologies’ page, unchanging and absolute, promising a future that nobody was prepared for but everyone desperately wanted.