In Americore, heroes are brands, cities are stages, and morality is curated for profit.
Damon Smith is an 18-year-old anomaly—quiet, sharp, and utterly unlikable—who hunts heroes not with brute force, but with Abso-Judo, a technique that intercepts reality at the moment it commits to an outcome and redirects it somewhere fatal.
When Damon publicly executes a beloved hero in Nork City, the world turns on him. Media calls him a terrorist. Fans call him evil. Governments quietly take notes. As bodies fall and narratives collapse, Damon exposes the rot beneath hero culture—corruption, ego, selective mercy—while refusing to justify himself to anyone.
He can die like any human.
But when reality decides he shouldn’t exist, Absotick triggers—and Damon becomes something reality can’t finish killing.
This is not a redemption story.
This is what happens when the system meets a flaw it can’t contain.
In Americore, heroes are brands, cities are stages, and morality is curated for profit.
Damon Smith is an 18-year-old anomaly—quiet, sharp, and utterly unlikable—who hunts heroes not with brute force, but with Abso-Judo, a technique that intercepts reality at the moment it commits to an outcome and redirects it somewhere fatal.
When Damon publicly executes a beloved hero in Nork City, the world turns on him. Media calls him a terrorist. Fans call him evil. Governments quietly take notes. As bodies fall and narratives collapse, Damon exposes the rot beneath hero culture—corruption, ego, selective mercy—while refusing to justify himself to anyone.
He can die like any human.
But when reality decides he shouldn’t exist, Absotick triggers—and Damon becomes something reality can’t finish killing.
This is not a redemption story.
This is what happens when the system meets a flaw it can’t contain.