What is Simulation – 1988 about?
Simulation – 1988 follows people trapped in a malfunctioning simulated world, waking each day in a different body while clinging to memory, love, and identity. It blends character-driven sci-fi with a reality-loop mystery centered on survival and connection.
It’s primarily a simulation story. Characters are thrown from 2057 into a reconstructed 1988 due to a large-scale system glitch. The “reset loop” feels time-based, but the mechanism is simulation-driven, not traditional time travel.
Yes. Every day, the world resets and the characters awaken in new physical forms, but their memories remain intact. Identity, connection, and survival depend on memory alone.
While Simulation – 1988 is the first book written in the series, it stands firmly on its own.
The book explores identity without a fixed body, love as a deliberate choice, memory as the only stable truth, and the tension between agency and control inside a glitching system.
The story is written for adults and older teens who enjoy character-focused sci-fi, simulation theory, and emotionally grounded speculative fiction.
The story includes emotional tension and occasional violence connected to survival inside the glitching world, but it is not graphic. The focus is on psychology, connection, and meaning.
The book is available in ebook and paperback formats on Amazon, Apple Books, Barnes & Noble, Google Books, Kobo, and Smashwords.
It blends soft sci-fi emotional storytelling with grounded simulation mechanics, focusing on identity, memory, and love under system failure.
Its central mechanic is waking in a new body every day—forces characters to rebuild identity and connection from memory alone.