
Artificial World Colony: The First Journey
Release Date: Sunday, March 23rd, 2025
Pages: 252 pages
Artificial World Colony: The First Journey is a hard sci-fi novel exploring humanity's quest for survival in space through digital memories and artificial intelligence.
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Full Description
What if humanity's last chance for survival wasn't Earth… but a memory?
Artificial World Colony: The First Journey is a deeply imaginative, emotionally rich science fiction novel that blends space exploration, artificial intelligence, and the fragile beauty of human memory.
In a future where Earth—once called the Blue Sphere—is no longer habitable, mankind turns to colossal space vessels known as Artificial Worlds. Inside them, young minds like Selene’s grow up exploring not planets, but digital memories, artificial dreams, and lost histories. Guided by Chacha—a witty, soulful robolike intelligence—Selene embarks on a journey that blurs the lines between past and future, fiction and fact.
From the ruins of the Cotton Sphere to the philosophical shadows of the Orange and Navy Spheres, Selene’s quest becomes more than personal. It becomes collective.
At once a space odyssey and a coming-of-age story, this book invites readers to question what makes us human—our genes, our memories, or the stories we choose to tell?
Artificial World Colony: The First Journey is a deeply imaginative, emotionally rich science fiction novel that blends space exploration, artificial intelligence, and the fragile beauty of human memory.
In a future where Earth—once called the Blue Sphere—is no longer habitable, mankind turns to colossal space vessels known as Artificial Worlds. Inside them, young minds like Selene’s grow up exploring not planets, but digital memories, artificial dreams, and lost histories. Guided by Chacha—a witty, soulful robolike intelligence—Selene embarks on a journey that blurs the lines between past and future, fiction and fact.
From the ruins of the Cotton Sphere to the philosophical shadows of the Orange and Navy Spheres, Selene’s quest becomes more than personal. It becomes collective.
At once a space odyssey and a coming-of-age story, this book invites readers to question what makes us human—our genes, our memories, or the stories we choose to tell?