Jax gripped his digital stylus. On his screen, a simple black line-man named 'Zero' stood poised against a backdrop of neon skyscrapers. With a flick of his wrist, Jax animated a frame-perfect dodge. Zero slid under a flurry of red-line arrows, his movements fluid and kinetic.
By dawn, he hit upload. The "Stick-Teen" world was about to get a lot more complicated. If you want to continue Jax's journey, tell me:
The blue light of the tablet was the only thing keeping Jax awake at 2:00 AM. He wasn’t watching a movie or a high-budget series. He was deep in the world of "Stick-Zone," a viral animation channel where stick figures moved with more grace and brutality than any Hollywood stuntman.
The "Stick-Teen" subculture was exploding. To outsiders, it looked like doodles. To Jax and his three million followers, it was the purest form of storytelling. No faces meant no barriers—anyone could be Zero.
I can draft the next chapter or create a storyboard outline for you.