"What the...?" Leo muttered. He closed the video and launched the executable.
The clock struck 2:00 AM, and Leo was staring at a file that shouldn’t have existed: homework.zip . homework.zip
Leo clicked the video first. It was a grainy, high-energy clip of two young girls—the Olsen twins—singing a surreal anthem about giant pizzas with guacamole and whipped cream. The song looped "P-I-Z-Z-A!" over and over until the audio distorted into a low, digital hum. "What the
He was a CS student at a tech institute, currently drowning in a GBA programming project where he had to recreate a storybook using C and structs. He had just finished his "Smooth Movement" logic when a notification pinged. An anonymous user on the class forum had uploaded a file named homework.zip with the caption: "For those who want to see a real masterpiece." Leo clicked the video first
The game started in a hallway. Leo moved his character—a pixelated sprite of a student—using the arrow keys. Every time he interacted with an NPC, a text box appeared, but it wasn't game dialogue. It was a checklist for a web development course , listing tasks like "Media queries" and "Flexbox."