Shape & Form – Blob


Twenty years ago, Earth made first contact with an alien civilization. To everyone's surprise, these visitors didn't come for our resources or technology, they came for boba tea. The aliens had somehow discovered our bubble tea transmissions and became obsessed with the chewy tapioca pearls floating in sweet milk tea.

The aliens proved to be peaceful partners, freely sharing advanced technologies that helped solve many of Earth's environmental and energy problems. They integrated into human society, and their presence became a normal part of daily life. Boba shops flourished as never before, with aliens becoming their most devoted customers.

Recently, the aliens introduced their own innovation pearls made from graphene nanoparticles. These high-tech pearls can change their shape and flavor when exposed to different electronic frequencies, creating an ever-changing taste experience throughout each drink. A single cup of tea might transition from strawberry to chocolate to green tea flavor as you sip.

However, this new technology was rushed to market without thorough safety testing. No long-term studies have been conducted to determine its effects on human biology. Now, a trend has emerged where humans who regularly consume the new graphene boba are beginning to physically transform. Their bodies are becoming more gelatinous and amorphous, gradually taking on characteristics eerily like the blob-like form of their alien visitors.

The video was created in Vray and composed in After Effects. Music was composed in MPC and mixed in Cakewalk. This is the tenth in a series of simple synthwave and electronic instrumentals. Eventually they will be composed into an album. That’s all for now, thanks for listening 😊



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4 comments
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Whao what a good text with many bottoms and many
truths! I've been a big sci-fi fan for 40 years and it never ceases to amaze me. It gives me strength and inspiration to create. Keep doing what you're doing...

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(Edited)

I just hope my coworkers don't read this story. They all drink boba tea :-)

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No long-term studies have been conducted

stories that start like this seldom end well lol

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But quick fixes are big bucks for advertising, they just have to put a quickly read disclaimer at the end of the commercial.

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