Should we expand this into a from the recovery team, or perhaps a character dialogue between the people who just discovered the file? AI responses may include mistakes. Learn more
The screen flickers to life with a harsh, digital snap. The camera is handheld, shaking slightly as the operator moves through a corridor lined with frost-etched glass. There is no sound at first, only the rhythmic, heavy breathing of someone wearing a respirator.
A gloved hand wipes a layer of crystalline ice from a viewport. Outside, the world is a monochromatic void of white and bruised purple. The storm—the "Frost"—is no longer just weather; it is a physical weight, pressing against the reinforced hull of the station.
The video cuts to black. A single line of text scrolls across the bottom of the frame:
The camera pans down to a console. A single light is blinking—a deep, unnatural amber. As the operator leans in, the frost on the glass begins to move. Not melting, but crawling, forming geometric patterns that mimic the structure of a neural network.
The audio spikes with a high-pitched frequency. For a split second, the static clears, and you hear it: a low, melodic hum vibrating through the floorboards. It sounds less like a machine and more like a heartbeat.
04:12 GMT | Location: Sector 7, Sub-Surface Research Station "Boreas"





Atd-frost-01-prologue.mp4 -
Should we expand this into a from the recovery team, or perhaps a character dialogue between the people who just discovered the file? AI responses may include mistakes. Learn more
The screen flickers to life with a harsh, digital snap. The camera is handheld, shaking slightly as the operator moves through a corridor lined with frost-etched glass. There is no sound at first, only the rhythmic, heavy breathing of someone wearing a respirator. ATD-FROST-01-Prologue.mp4
A gloved hand wipes a layer of crystalline ice from a viewport. Outside, the world is a monochromatic void of white and bruised purple. The storm—the "Frost"—is no longer just weather; it is a physical weight, pressing against the reinforced hull of the station. Should we expand this into a from the
The video cuts to black. A single line of text scrolls across the bottom of the frame: The camera is handheld, shaking slightly as the
The camera pans down to a console. A single light is blinking—a deep, unnatural amber. As the operator leans in, the frost on the glass begins to move. Not melting, but crawling, forming geometric patterns that mimic the structure of a neural network.
The audio spikes with a high-pitched frequency. For a split second, the static clears, and you hear it: a low, melodic hum vibrating through the floorboards. It sounds less like a machine and more like a heartbeat.
04:12 GMT | Location: Sector 7, Sub-Surface Research Station "Boreas"