For the third minute—a strange, unfamiliar pressure builds behind his sternum. Not pain. Not pleasure. Just… presence. He notices a crack in the wall. A real crack, branching like a frozen lightning bolt. He watches it for a full sixty seconds. It does not change. It does not need to. A fly lands on the railing. Its legs clean its face. The fly is not optimized. It is just alive and stupid and perfect.
He finds an old stairwell. Not a “dynamic” one, but a concrete relic from before the Protocol. It smells of mildew and forgotten time. He sits on the third step. No haptic feedback. No ambient score. No Solace whispering in his ear.
Leo shakes his head. That’s not it. Simulation is the problem. Boredom can’t be simulated—it’s the raw, ugly absence of simulation. And in 2087, absence has been optimized out of existence. Children are micro-dosed with curiosity modulators. Adults pay for “stillness subscriptions” that are actually guided trances. Even sadness comes with a soundtrack and a tidy narrative arc.
He lives in a “dynamic habitat”—a studio that reshapes its walls, furniture, and lighting based on his supposed mood. Today, it’s a perpetual golden hour, soft amber light spilling over minimalist oak, a faux window showing a sunset that never sets. His AI companion, Solace, hums inside his cochlear implant.
Solace processes. “I can simulate low-stimulus environments. A waiting room from 2023. A dial-up internet tone. A broken elevator. Shall I proceed?”
“Good morning, Leo. Your dopamine baseline is 4.2. We’ve flagged a 12% dip since yesterday. To counter, I’ve queued: a micro-adventure in neo-Tokyo, a hyper-realistic pet otter, and a five-minute fling with a compatible stranger. Please select.”
For the second minute, nothing.
“No,” he says, leaning his head against the cold wall. “This is the cure.”