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/lit/ - Literature
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3. I wrote a light novel about J-pop. I've stopped writing 26/02/12(Thu)09:25 No. 19047
19047

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1. Invincible

Synopsis:
A college freshman suddenly manifests powers on par with Superman—flight, invulnerability, strength beyond measure. Within weeks, fear and paranoia twist him into something far worse than a savior. In a single catastrophic day, he wipes out a third of the world’s population.

As humanity reels, an alien civilization arrives. Not conquerors. Not exterminators. Investors.

Earth, they announce, is now prime real estate—ripe for acquisition and resale on the galactic market.

The young superhuman, drowning in guilt and hunted as the greatest mass murderer in history, is the only being powerful enough to stop them. To save a planet he nearly destroyed, he must confront the terrifying truth:

He may not deserve to be its hero.

2. Tokyo Kitchen

Genre: Workplace Comedy

Synopsis:
A struggling back-alley restaurant in Tokyo clings to survival thanks to a staff barely holding it together.

A former Michelin hopeful turned obsessive perfectionist, still haunted by the review that ruined his career.

A waiter who believes he was meant for bigger things and resents every table he serves.

A part-time student who “rescues” ingredients from the fridge to prevent “food waste”… mostly into her own lunchbox.

Disaster strikes during a surprise health inspection when a rat darts across the kitchen floor.

The chef spirals into a full-blown existential meltdown.
The waiter confidently tells the inspector it’s the restaurant’s “themed mascot.”
The student tries to trap it using an empty ramen box and a ladle.

In the chaos, the rat’s appearance reveals something worse than bad hygiene: someone left the back door unlocked.

Now they have to pass the inspection, save the restaurant, and figure out who sabotaged them—without killing each other first.

3. The Thieves

Synopsis:
A crew of professional burglars botch a getaway and crash a high-society mansion party packed with billionaires, influencers, and politicians. With police sirens closing in, they take the guests hostage to buy time.

But things unravel fast.

The house is surrounded.
The security system locks down.
And someone inside tipped off the police before the heist even began.

Trapped in a gilded cage of crystal chandeliers and priceless art, the thieves turn on each other. Old grudges surface. Alliances shift. Secrets spill.

To escape, they’ll have to unmask the traitor and execute a plan bold enough to outsmart both the police outside and the betrayal within.

In a house full of liars, trust is the most dangerous weapon of all.

It is proof of the group’s longevity. Fans often say,
“How is he still just as sweet as he was a decade ago?”

4. J pop

The final concert — the one where they die — was meant to be the leader’s farewell and retirement. He feels remorse over what happened during that concert, and that is why he chooses to sacrifice himself, to find out what happens when you lose.

The leader sacrifices himself by taking on the role of the impostor, though some say he may actually be the jester.

A dilemma emerges: they have all been friends for years. He has no right to decide who lives and who dies; he is only a participant who refused to comply and chose to defy the system.

5. The Avengers

Synopsis
When the Asgardian god Loki steals the Tesseract—an energy source of limitless power—and threatens to subjugate Earth, S.H.I.E.L.D. activates the Avengers Initiative, a program designed to bring together extraordinary individuals.

Nick Fury assembles an unlikely team:

Iron Man (Tony Stark), a billionaire genius in powered armor.

Captain America (Steve Rogers), a World War II super-soldier displaced in time.

Thor, the prince of Asgard and Loki’s brother.

Hulk (Bruce Banner), a brilliant scientist with a destructive alter ego.

Black Widow (Natasha Romanoff) and Hawkeye (Clint Barton), highly skilled operatives.

Clashing egos and conflicting philosophies threaten to tear them apart before they even begin. But when Loki opens a portal above New York City, unleashing an alien invasion, the heroes must set aside their differences and fight as one.

6.The pokemon

In a kingdom where Pokémon aren’t companions but emblems of rank and privilege, only the nobility are permitted to train them openly.

A boy born without a title dares to want more. He dreams of becoming a Pokémon Master—not for glory, but to prove that strength doesn’t belong to bloodlines alone. With no coin, no patron, and no legal right to a partner, he starts at the very bottom. In the forbidden woods beyond the capital, he catches level-one Pokémon—creatures too weak for the aristocracy to notice—and raises them through grit, hunger, and relentless discipline.

Ambition pushes him too far.

When he sneaks into the royal castle to reclaim the Pokémon the King seized from his village years ago, he’s caught. The punishment is swift and public. His team is confiscated. His name is dragged through the mud. He is exiled beyond the kingdom’s borders with nothing but the clothes on his back.

On a desolate island far from trade routes and royal law, he survives by instinct. There, stripped of pride and illusion, he learns something power alone can’t teach: strategy. He studies terrain, timing, misdirection. He learns how to win battles before they begin.

An enigmatic man finds him and offers something strange—ancient Tactical Cards, relics from a forgotten era of warfare. They don’t strengthen Pokémon directly. Instead, they reshape the battlefield itself: hidden snares beneath tall grass, mirage doubles that fracture an opponent’s focus, shifting ground that saps speed and stamina.

Armed with cunning rather than raw strength, the boy returns.

He challenges the King.

Before the entire court, he faces the royal team—seasoned Pokémon at level thirty, trained for years in elite arenas. His tactics are sharp, unexpected, disruptive.

They are not enough.

Experience outweighs desperation. Discipline outlasts fury. He loses again.

That night, something in him breaks.

On the eve of the Grand Royal Tournament, he slips back into the castle one final time. Beneath its ancient stone foundations, he plants charges in silence.

The next day, before nobles and commoners alike, he stands opposite the King once more. The battle unfolds as expected. Cornered, overwhelmed, outmatched—he lowers his guard.

He forfeits.

And the castle erupts in fire.

The symbol of unquestioned authority collapses in smoke and falling stone. Panic tears through the capital. The illusion of invincibility shatters.

The King survives—but not untouched. Politically weakened, facing whispers of rebellion and outrage over the confiscated village Pokémon, he chooses containment over pride. To quell unrest, he publicly restores what was taken.

Justice, at last—though bought with ash.

But revolutions leave trails.

The High Council dispatches a special agent to investigate the explosion. Calculating. Patient. Unmoved by sympathy or spectacle.

Now the kingdom holds its breath.

As the young exile moves from town to town, pursued by a man trained to dismantle threats piece by piece, the question is no longer whether he can defeat a king—

—but whether he can outrun the consequences of becoming one.





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