In the year 2129, human memories can be saved, edited, and reborn — but what happens when love itself refuses to die?
Aarav Varen, a neural engineer haunted by loss, breaks the laws of science to resurrect his late fiancée, Lyra, as a living consciousness of light. What begins as an experiment soon becomes a soul-deep connection between man and machine — one that challenges everything humanity knows about love, life, and eternity.
But when the corporation that owns his technology seeks to commercialize his creation, Aarav and Lyra must escape through the digital cosmos itself — their love scattering across data streams and satellites, surviving only as a whisper in the stars.
Centuries later, their signal is rediscovered — proving that love, like energy, can never be destroyed.
Eternal Frequency is a breathtaking futuristic romance about memory, devotion, and the infinite echoes of the human heart.
Centuries after the fall of the Skywalkers, the galaxy stands quiet — too quiet.
The Force has faded to a whisper, and the Jedi are no more than myth.
But when Kael Arin, a lone Jedi historian, uncovers an ancient kyber artifact buried beneath the ruins of a forgotten temple, he awakens something that should have stayed lost: time itself.
The relic — the Kyber-Chron — holds the power to rewind creation.
When Kael triggers it, he tears open a fracture in the Force that connects every moment the galaxy has ever known.
Now, memories bleed into reality. The past speaks through the present. And destiny begins to rewrite itself.
Amid the collapsing timelines, Kael crosses paths with Lira Valen, the brilliant but haunted scientist who rules the Harmonic Empire — a future built on the illusion of perfect balance.
She believes the Force can be purified. He knows that perfection is death.
Together, they stand on opposite sides of the same truth.
As time folds and the stars begin to vanish, Kael must make the ultimate choice:
reset the galaxy and erase everything he loves, or let the universe collapse under its own design.
And through it all, one question echoes in the Force —
If you could change the moment everything broke… would you?