Creation Details
Prompt: “Write a dark, psychological isekai-style anime/manga story with a serious and emotional tone. The story should focus heavily on mental struggle, identity, and the slow loss of humanity rather than action or superpowers.
The protagonist is King a boy who, from the age of 6, begins experiencing vivid, realistic visions of his own death at the age of 16–17. These visions are not random—they are full lifetimes he actually lives through. Each time he dies at that age, he is sent back to his 6-year-old self, effectively reincarnating into his own past.
However, there are strict psychological rules:
* Each time he resets, he loses all his memories the following day, as if everything was just a fading dream.
* On his 16th birthday in every loop, all past memories suddenly return at once, overwhelming him.
* He becomes aware that he has lived and died many times before, always failing to escape his fate.
* There are NO superpowers, magic abilities, or combat-focused skills—everything must be grounded in realism and psychological tension.
As the loops continue:
* His emotional capacity begins to deteriorate.
* He gradually loses the ability to feel deeply (e.g., he can no longer cry, struggles to feel joy, love feels distant).
* His reactions to fear, pain, and relationships become dull and disconnected.
* He starts to question whether he is still human.
Make the story feel like an isekai, but instead of being transported to another world, he is trapped in a cycle of his own life—his “other world” is the repeated timeline he cannot escape.
Include:
* Deep internal monologue and conflicting thoughts
* Themes of fate vs free will
* Psychological breakdowns and moments of numbness
* Subtle changes in how he interacts with people each loop
* A growing fear of becoming completely emotionless
* Attempts to change small details in his life to avoid his death
* A sense of dread leading up to his 16–17 age
The tone should be:
* Dark
* Introspective
* Haunting
* Slow-burn psychological tension (similar to a mental thriller manga)
Structure the story like a manga:
* Break it into arcs or chapters
* Include key emotional scenes and turning points
* Focus more on character psychology than external action
Avoid clichés, avoid exaggerated anime powers, and keep the story grounded, disturbing, and thought-provoking.
End the story on a strong, ambiguous note that leaves readers questioning whether escaping fate is even possible. ”
Art Style: Urban Drama
Color Mode: Full Color
Panels: 2
Created: