supremek
Imagine a world so ridiculously huge that its smallest island is bigger than our entire Earth map. A world with two suns, three moons, gods who actually manage reality, and laws so strict that even power has rules. That world is Archana-perfect, patient, and absolutely unforgiving.
Now imagine the last person who should exist there.
Kalyan wasn't special. He wasn't brave, ambitious, or chosen by fate. In his old life, he gave up easily and lived quietly, until one strange, underrated novel changed everything. The Chronicles of Archana wasn't flashy or popular, but it was deep-obsessively detailed, logical, and full of terrifying possibilities. Kalyan didn't just read it; he studied it, argued about it with the author, and accidentally built his entire career around understanding how such a world could work.
Then the story ended unfinished.
Kalyan made one casual mistake-he offered to help "perfect" the world.
Next thing he knew, reality pulled him in.
He wakes up in Archana as a filthy, hungry beggar, surrounded by monsters, gods, and races powerful enough to crush him without noticing. The rules he once admired now decide whether he lives another minute. There's no prophecy, no cheat ability, and no mercy waiting for him.
But Archana has one weakness-it rewards understanding.
From the lowest point imaginable, Kalyan starts doing the unthinkable: using knowledge instead of destiny. As he survives, learns, and slowly bends the rules, the world begins to notice. And when a world built to prevent chaos starts reacting to one man...
That's when things get interesting.
Absolute Power is a slow, satisfying rise from nothing to everything-a story about systems, survival, and what happens when the quietest person in the room learns how the world really works.