(Interstellar Game + Comedy + Female Lead with No Romance)
Ye Yuxi transmigrated into an interstellar era where everyone is a powerhouse. Right from the start, she’s thrown into a crude knockoff version of Saw made by a classmate with no conscience—and they even mock her, saying she’s too cowardly to make a real horror game?
In her past life on Earth, Ye Yuxi had been immersed in countless horror cultures from both the East and West. Now, staring at the interstellar game rankings full of repetitive shooting and combat games, she pulls out a haunted horror game and decides to give the people of the stars a little ghostly shock therapy.
When she releases "Campus Horror Night", interstellar players freak out: I’ve never been this scared to go to school in my life!
When she launches "Massacre in the Neighborhood", players cry: This isn’t the kind of battle royale I signed up for!
Then comes "A Loving Home", and players lose it: Where’s my quilt barrier?! Is there any safe place left in this world?!
Later, after receiving the 10,086th complaint message from terrified macho men and women, Ye Yuxi calmly accepts an interview:
“As a responsible game designer, my ultimate goal is to let everyone feel passion and release themselves through my games. Look at how happy the players are—laughing so hard!”
Meanwhile, players with twisted expressions: Thank you so very much!!
(This is the story of a female MC who’s a troll game dev building her horror game empire and watching chaos unfold like a true bystander. When it needs to be scary, it’s scary. When it needs to be funny, it’s funny. No romance for any main characters—ship if you want, but please don’t argue or leave bad reviews over imaginary couples! Please and thank you!)
[No female lead] + [Game development] + [Seamless production]
The ratings have just been released and will increase.
There are no long-standing horror stories here.
There is no vast world with seamless connections here.
Shen Rui, who traveled through time and space to become a college student, seemed to have encountered a devastating beginning.
But he was perceptive and discovered that the level of development of games in this world was extremely low!
Gunfights, fighting, racing.
Is this the entire gaming industry?
So, let me knock on the door of the ninth art!
"But why do they all call me an old thief?"
Shang Jingyan wakes up in the interstellar era and quickly realizes—this world is weird.
The arts have flourished, and entertainment comes in all shapes and sizes. But there’s one glaring omission: darkness. No horror, no fear, nothing remotely unsettling. Instead, the entire galaxy is obsessed with love stories, dreamy fantasies, and endless pink bubbles.
System: “Your mission is to become a literary icon! Collect ‘Heartbeat Points’ by making audiences swoon!”
Former horror director Shang Jingyan: “Got it. No problem.”
A few days later, a short film titled Married to an Eldritch God goes live. The opening shot? A cosmic horror’s grotesque visage filling the screen. The middle? Blood, madness, and creeping dread. The ending? Unspeakable.
—Statistically, every single unfortunate viewer’s heart rate that night skyrocketed to 180 bpm.
System: “Wait… WHAT?! This works too?!”
Viewer A: “I only watch romance shows… Wait, horror is actually amazing?!”
Gamer B: “I just wanted to romance the NPCs… Ghost, prepare to die!”
Casual Viewer C: “I’m not scared of anything—oh hell no, I’m not sleeping tonight.”
With sheer creative force, Shang Jingyan ignites a horror frenzy across the galaxy.
They say she can terrify an entire civilization with just three sentences:
“I’m making a movie.”
“I’m developing a game.”
“I’m directing a variety show.”
And yet, despite the screams and tears, people just. Keep. Watching.
Years later, critics would say:
“She was the queen of the Second Galactic Era, the one who reintroduced fear and rage to the masses.”
“She created countless works, all to deliver a single message—”
“I will awaken your nightmares. So scream for me. Let your heart race!”
Carrying the Game Producer System, he traveled to a parallel world. The people there were rabidly obsessed with games. Seeing them having so much fun playing pixel-based games, Chen Pingan felt it was time to show them real games. Starting with "Pirates of the Caribbean," he adapted classic film and television works into games, shocking the world like never before. Chen Pingan constantly updated and iterated, from the initial 3D to VR and then to the Super Fantasy system, repeatedly challenging players' perceptions. In a world starved of entertainment, he gradually became the master of the gaming and entertainment empire.
Lin Shu transmigrates to a parallel version of Blue Star, where people can upload their consciousness into virtual space through immersive pods. Watching movies is no longer limited to screens—viewers experience them firsthand. Gaming doesn’t require a computer anymore; players are fully immersed.
As a game developer and horror enthusiast, Lin Shu seizes the opportunity. Drawing from classic horror films of his previous life, he creates one terrifying game after another that leaves players screaming and scrambling.
When Chu Renmei from *The Haunted Village Corpse* lifts her long hair, players nearly lose their souls.
When Kayako from *Ju-On* crawls up the stairs, streamers shriek in terror.
When Sadako from *The Ring* climbs out of the TV, a famous ghost-hunting streamer wets his pants.
When the eerie housewife from *Coming Soon* smiles faintly, a popular female streamer collapses in convulsions.
When Valak from *The Nun* merely shows her face, countless players suffer heart palpitations.
A half-adapted, half-remixed blend of horror cinema and immersive gaming. Enter at your own risk.
"Now, a brief interruption: a war criminal named Lu Qian. It is alleged that he committed crimes including, but not limited to, those listed below: 'Turning his own customers into food in his restaurant;' 'Connecting sewage pipes to the city's drinking water system to boost healthcare stock prices;' 'Using neutron beams to brutally annihilate an entire planet of aliens…' Citizens, please be wary of this heinous war criminal." Lu Qian stared blankly at his own photo in the marketing article. He just made a game, how could he be a war criminal? The next day, Lu Qian solemnly clarified in the *Game Observer*: "Who said I'm a war criminal? The games we make always promote truth, goodness, and beauty; it's just that players have misunderstood. Besides, I haven't been caught, how could I be a war criminal!"