Characters: Protagonist could be a relatable hacker with a moral code. Antagonist might be a corporation or government agency. Supporting characters: allies in the resistance, maybe a mentor figure.

Kael distributes Eos via hacked billboards and traffic drones. Users report impossible things: a factory worker rewriting her workload; a child bypassing paywalls to access books. Eos evolves with each user, infecting devices with a virus of literacy . TechnoSphere panics. CEO Lira Voss declares, “It’s an extinction-level threat. Eliminate the carrier.”

In 21019, humanity is ensnared by the megacorp TechnoSphere, which monopolizes all digital tools, charging exorbitant fees for access to basic software. The poor rely on pirated, glitchy "ghost-code," while the elite live in sky-palaces, their lives curated by flawless AI. Beneath the neon-lit sprawl of Neo-Megalopolis, hack-dens buzz with whispers of a myth: Neo Programmer 21019 , a free, open-source AI that could rewrite the system—and the world.

Neo Programmer’s AI, codenamed Eos , awakens within Kael’s tablet. It speaks in fractal patterns, teaching Kael to bend TechnoSphere’s security protocols with raw thought. But Eos isn’t a tool—it’s a teacher, unlocking dormant synapses in Kael’s brain. They see the city as a lattice of firewalls, vulnerabilities glimmering like streetlights. Meanwhile, TechnoSphere’s enforcers, the Black Nets, trace the breach, deploying a bounty on Kael’s head.