Need to make sure the storyline is coherent, has a beginning, middle, and end. Perhaps include some scientific terms to sound authentic, but not too technical. Also, consider the tone—since it's a made-up scenario, a slightly dramatic or suspenseful tone might fit.
The disease’s rarity—only 1 in 50 infected survived and retained lucidity—made it both a medical anomaly and a weapon of terror. Patients’ aggression, fueled by nocturnal delusions, turned cities into war zones each nightfall. Skeptical of corporate motives, renegade virologist Dr. Kai Marlo formed an alliance with former NexGen engineers to reverse-engineer a cure. Their breakthrough came when they discovered Nightrage’s genetic instability—it thrived in darkness but weakened under specific frequencies of light. nightrage a new disease is bornrar
Yet the disease’s legacy endures. Survivors, known as The Luminari , advocate for stricter genetic regulations. And in the darkest corners of the world, whispers persist of new variants—mutants who claim the cure only delayed an inevitable reckoning with the night. “We played god with genes, and the night became our punishment.” — Dr. Kai Marlo, 2051. : Nightrage remains classified under international bioterrorism laws. Research into its origins is restricted. Need to make sure the storyline is coherent,
By 2050, a prototype serum was developed, but at a cost: patients had to undergo luminal therapy , a grueling process involving daily exposure to synthetic starlight. Though effective, the therapy could only be administered in controlled environments. Meanwhile, isolated outbreaks still emerge in remote regions, where the disease’s nocturnal dread lingers. Today, Nightrage is a cautionary tale. The World Health Organization lists it as a Tier 1 biohazard, and NexGen Solutions was dismantled under public outrage. Dr. Voss vanished in 2048, leaving behind a ledger of unethical experiments. The disease’s rarity—only 1 in 50 infected survived