Caelaxis is a sweeping sci-fi saga spanning two bound-together universes:
Corevalis, where peace and knowledge reign—but at the cost of freedom of thought.
Myrios, scarred by empire, where rebellion is survival and hope is a dangerous dream.
Told through deeply connected stories and unforgettable characters, Caelaxis explores the cost of belief, the power of choice, and a thread running through it all that changes everything.
This is rebellion and wonder, memory and myth. This is the fight to shape what comes next.
Coming November 2025
Days
Hours
Minutes
Seconds
The Corevalis universe is rooted in scientific exploration—not just of the cosmos, but of consciousness, morality, and survival itself. It explores the boundaries of sentience through ship-bonded intelligences, android engineers, and the quiet minds of mycelial networks, forests, and storm systems. What counts as alive? What does it mean to be? And who gets to decide?
At its core, Corevalis is a story of restoration. Scarred worlds are not abandoned—they are reimagined, rewilded, and reborn through science, perseverance, and collaboration. In facing planetary ruin, the characters seek hope—not just for themselves, but for readers who wonder whether Earth’s own wounds can still be healed.
But even in the pursuit of peace, there are dangers. The Consensus, once a symbol of inclusive harmony, has calcified into a regime where sameness is virtue and difference is rebellion. Color, culture, and identity have been scrubbed away in the name of equality, until empathy curdled into oppression.
Throughout the Corevalis saga, perspectives shift. Protagonists in one tale may become obstacles in another. The universe does not reward easy answers. It asks instead: how do good intentions go wrong? What are we willing to lose to protect what we love? And how far can we go before we become the thing we were fighting against?
The Myrios universe begins where most stories end—with the fall of an empire, and the question of what comes next. For 250 years, Itheria ruled through force, assimilation, and the erasure of culture. Now, its grip is broken. But freedom doesn’t fix the soil. It doesn’t restore lost languages, or teach children how to dream again.
In Myrios, survival isn’t enough. Worlds must be replanted—ecologies rebuilt, histories remembered, and people taught to become more than what they were shaped to be. Some seek to heal. Others want to rush the process, no matter the cost. The line between visionary and villain grows thin when you're desperate for progress.
Elendril, once a smuggler and saboteur, now finds himself navigating diplomacy, trying to build something stable without becoming what he fought against. Meanwhile, extremists like Arjan Vortan see restoration as war by other means—willing to burn a planet clean in the name of rebirth.
Myrios is a story of contested peace: of revolutionaries who don’t know how to stop fighting, of oppressors learning what it means to be powerless, and of survivors who must choose who they will become when the chains fall away.
This is not a tale of victory. It is a tale of aftermath—where every step toward hope must pass through the wreckage of what was.