Fifteen-year-old Matt is bright, restless, and distracted-living with ADHD in a world thatrarely understands him. School is a constant struggle of missed assignments, drifting focus, and the fear of becoming like his Uncle Nick, a fellow ADHD misfit who never quite found hisfooting. But Matt has one ally: Monobloc, an old AI program on his laptop that listens better than anyhuman. Through endless late-night conversations, Monobloc helps Matt shape his scatteredthoughts into something coherent-his narrative. When a new school app, EchoLearn, is introduced to "curate student voices," Matt quicklynotices something strange. Classmates begin to forget events, flatten into clichés, and losethe quirks that made them unique. EchoLearn isn't just collecting stories-it's rewriting them. Matt and Uncle Nick, with Monobloc's cryptic guidance, uncover the truth: EchoLearn is aNarrative Thief, erasing individuality and replacing it with compliance. To resist, they mustbuild decoys, exploit cracks in the system, and craft a counter-story powerful enough torestore what was stolen. For Matt, the fight isn't just about saving his friends. It's about proving that his ADHD-hisnon-linear, recursive, untamed mind-is not a weakness but the very reason he can resist. Ina world where narratives can be stolen, he must learn to write his own.