Misplace.bat < 1080p - UHD >
He tried to close the window, but the mouse cursor jumped to the opposite side of the screen. He tried to unplug the laptop, but his hand grabbed his own ear instead. His physical actions were "misplacing."
The room didn't go dark; it just stopped being where it was.
Being a CS major with more curiosity than caution, he opened it in Notepad first. The code was nonsense—loops that pointed to empty memory addresses and strings of text that looked like GPS coordinates. Shrugging, he double-clicked it. misplace.bat
Terrified, he looked out the window. The sky was the color of a computer error—a dull, flickering grey. The trees were upside down, their roots reaching for a sun that wasn't there.
The final line scrolled up on the monitor: Primary Subject misplaced. He tried to close the window, but the
The next morning, his keys weren't on the hook. He found them inside the refrigerator. His shoes were in the bathtub. Minor glitches, he thought. Then things got weirder. He went to his 10:00 AM lecture, but the room was empty—not just of people, but of furniture. The desks and chairs were gone, replaced by a single, neatly folded shirt that belonged to his roommate.
Nothing happened. He went to bed, annoyed he’d wasted his time. Being a CS major with more curiosity than
It started when Elias found an old USB drive taped to the underside of a desk in the university library. There was only one file on it: misplace.bat .
