
Sakuni Bandara
Bio
Just Another average girl !
Stories (13)
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The Scariest Place in the Universe
Tired of being here on earth? Okay let's get out! Imagine traveling so far into space that the stars begin to disappear. At first, it feels peaceful. The bright galaxies slowly fade behind you, and the universe becomes quieter.
By Sakuni Bandara3 days ago in Futurism
Update available - Humanity 2.0
The year is 2050. A girl wakes up in a silent white room. No heartbeat. No breathing. No blinking. Yet he is alive. Her body is not made of flesh anymore. Her eyes glow faintly blue, her memory is perfect, and her brain is connected to a global network of knowledge. She can speak any language, solve complex equations in seconds, and never feel pain.
By Sakuni Bandara4 days ago in Futurism
The True Story of the Bermuda Triangle
Year 1942 .... The night sea was black as ink. Waves whispered against the wooden hull, almost like the ocean itself was breathing. On deck, sailors squinted at their compasses, frowning. Something wasn’t right. The needles spun wildly, refusing to point north.
By Sakuni Bandara4 days ago in Fiction
Are we truly alone?
Since the earliest days of civilization, humanity has looked toward the night sky and wondered about our place in the cosmos. Billions of stars ignite the Milky Way, each with the potential to host worlds where life might flourish. Yet despite this overwhelming abundance, every search for signals beyond Earth has returned only silence.
By Sakuni Bandara4 months ago in Humans
How Accurate Interstellar Really Is?
When Interstellar hit theaters in 2014, it didn’t just entertain audiences , it rewired our brains. Christopher Nolan didn’t want another sci-fi fantasy. He wanted a film where space looked like space, where gravity behaved like gravity, and where black holes appeared the way the universe actually paints them. And standing behind him was Nobel Prize winning physicist Kip Thorne, whose job was to keep the movie grounded in real physics…at least, as real as physics allows when you’re folding spacetime like origami.
By Sakuni Bandara4 months ago in Futurism
What if we travel at the speed of light?
Imagine strapping yourself into a spaceship, its engines thrumming with power, and leaving Earth behind. You accelerate, faster and faster, slicing through the void of space. What would the universe look like if you approached the speed of light? How would reality warp before your eyes?
By Sakuni Bandara4 months ago in Futurism
The day the Sun dies...
Control Tower: “Horizon, this is Mission Control. Final systems check complete. Countdown begins in “10…” The cabin thrummed beneath our boots. My heart matched the rhythm of the engines, deep and steady, like a giant taking long breaths.
By Sakuni Bandara4 months ago in Futurism
Edit Your Perfect Future Baby?
Date: 17th December 2075 Imagine stepping into a future where creating a child feels less like biology and more like art. A world where parenthood begins not with uncertainty, but with possibility. Where a couple doesn’t just hope their child gets the “good genes”… they choose them.
By Sakuni Bandara4 months ago in Fiction
Gateway to Another Universe?
If you were to witness a real wormhole, it would look spherical, much like a black hole, and allow light to pass through, providing a glimpse into a distant place. Once crossed, your old home would recede into the shimmering spherical window as the other side comes fully into view. However, the question remains:
By Sakuni Bandara2 years ago in Futurism
Cheating Death? A reality!
Enter cryogenic sleep, the shimmering bridge between science fiction and reality, where the boundaries of human exploration are stretched beyond imagination, a glimpse into the future where we rest, frozen in time, until the distant tomorrow when the stars themselves become our neighbors. Cryogenic sleep, represents a frontier in human preservation and the potential for extended life.
By Sakuni Bandara2 years ago in Earth











