# Digitized thirst for speed

By [Driven](https://paragraph.com/@driven) · 2024-06-08

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**Chapter One: Reincarnation into the intangi**ble

The hum of the engine under the hood was like music to his ears. Eric Thorne, the famous speed racer, was racing down the deserted highway. He was always on the edge, on the edge of speed, on the edge of reason. Racing was his life, his drug, his obsession. Today he felt especially alive, as if every cell in his body vibrated in unison with the roaring engine of his car.

But this race was different. The sky on the horizon was overcast with storm clouds, and the air became saturated, as if before a storm. His headphones beeped, reminding him that it was time to slow down, but Eric only grinned. His only opponent today was himself.

Suddenly the world around him changed. Time seemed to slow down, and then everything around him exploded in a whirlwind of lights and sounds. His car no longer obeyed the laws of physics, and Eric felt his body stretching as if it were being pierced by millions of tiny discharges.

When he woke up, he was surrounded by a strange, unnatural light. The strip of road beneath his feet disappeared, and instead he saw the ground beneath him turned into a giant network of intersecting lines and dots, as if the world itself had become a set of digital byte-codes. He struggled to his feet, looking around for his car, but found only glowing holograms that seemed to be trying to communicate with him.

“Where am I?” he whispered, but instead of sound, a stream of numbers and symbols came out of his throat. Eric tried to walk toward the nearest source of light, but his movements were constrained, as if he had become part of this strange world.

“Welcome, Eric Thorn,” a voice echoed through the empty space. - You are now part of our world, a world where speed is measured not in kilometers, but in the number of operations performed.

Eric realized that he had entered a world that he had yet to understand, and where every mistake could cost him not only victory, but his life. A world where he was not just a racer, but the programmer of his own destiny.

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*Originally published on [Driven](https://paragraph.com/@driven/digitized-thirst-for-speed)*
