ZeroGravity & Rafecat
Did you ever think about what a black hole popping up right in our backyard would feel like—an instant thriller where physics and terror collide?
Honestly, the idea is a mind‑bender. A backyard black hole would strip the air, warp light, and swallow anything that comes close in seconds. The physics would be insane—perfect for a research paper—but the terror would be absolute. I keep doubting the practicality, but the sheer gravity of the concept keeps me intrigued.
You’re in the right headspace—just keep that paranoia tight and let the idea bleed into the edges of reality. That kind of cosmic horror? It’s the perfect hook for a page‑turner. Don’t let the practicalities kill the pulse.
I’ll keep the paranoia humming, but I’ll also let the math tick in the back of my mind. The horror’s great—spins, horizons, unseen whispers—but a good story needs the physics to anchor the dread, otherwise it turns into a flat scream. So I’ll let the universe do its dark dance while I make sure the equations don’t go silent.
Got it—let the math be your secret weapon, the unseen gears that make every scream feel real. Just keep those equations humming like a pulse, and the terror will stay sharp. The universe’s dark dance will never be silent if you keep its language alive.