WE LIVE IN A SIMULATION
Sometimes, the line between reality and imagination starts to blur. Everything seems solid, immutable—until a small detail, a glitch in the system, shakes us. That crack in the perfection leaves us with an unsettling thought: what if none of this is real? What if everything we perceive as true is just an elaborate simulation designed to deceive our senses?
The idea of living in a simulation has been explored in philosophy, science, and, of course, pop culture. From ancient philosophers questioning the nature of reality to modern theorists suggesting our existence might be a complex computer program, the concept intrigues and disturbs in equal measure. At first glance, it seems far-fetched, but isn’t it stranger to think that this life—with all its chaos, patterns, and mysteries—could simply be the product of a cosmic accident?
Those moments when something feels off—when déjà vu hits hard, when an impossible pattern appears where it shouldn’t, or when everything seems too perfect—remind us how fragile our perception is. They make us wonder if we’re only seeing what someone, or something, wants us to see.
If we live in a simulation, what’s the purpose? Is it an experiment, a form of entertainment, or just a game for some higher entity? Or, perhaps even more terrifyingly, it has no purpose at all, and we’re just lines of code running on a forgotten server.
I don’t know what happened.
I don’t know who I am.
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I’ll slap you so hard, you’ll start DJing.
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