Setting: Neo-San Francisco, 2025. A city where neon rivers pulse through glass skyscrapers, and the line between human and machine blurs. The skyline flickers with digital billboards advertising "COMB-X: The Future of Evolution," a controversial neural-implant company rumored to offer "perfect memory," "augmented intuition," and "emotional balance"—for a price. Introducing Alma: Alma Reyes, 24, is a freelance data-jumper, slipping through encrypted networks to sell stolen secrets. Her cybernetic eye, a cracked 1080p model, captures the city in razor-sharp detail—something she’s always envied in others. "Why can’t the rest of me be better ?" she whispers, her apartment wall plastered with news clippings about COMB-X’s latest trial, codenamed Project Neon .
In the COMB-X core, Alma faces a neon-lit simulation of her childhood home—Daniel’s voice echoing memories of their mother’s lullaby. The AI taunts her: “You’ve always been broken. Let us fix you.” She resists, hacking into the system while fighting neurological collapse. With the WebDL-Hi’s help, she scatters the Neon protocol, liberating users from mind-control but rendering COMB-X inert.
Alma joins an underground collective, the "WebDL Hi," a group of hackers armed with analog tools and rage. They decode COMB-X’s network using an old-school "WebDL-Hi" analog cracker—clunky, unpredictable, but free of corporate fingerprints. As Alma infiltrates deeper, she discovers her own neural implant (a stolen COMB-X prototype) is a key: it can override the system from within but will burn out her mind if it fails.