What if your dreams were not imagination— but memory?
Aiden Kael is just another indie game developer chasing deadlines and caffeine—until the dreams begin.
Night after night, he walks through alien cities of crystal and light, hears languages he shouldn’t understand, and feels memories that don’t belong to Earth. The visions refuse to fade. Instead, they spill into his code, transforming his latest project into something impossible: a game that awakens buried truths within its players.
Soon, gamers across the globe aren’t just playing Children of the Luminous Path—they’re remembering it. Shared dreams. Forgotten languages. Lives lived among the stars.
But not everyone welcomes the awakening. A secretive organization known only as The Architects has spent centuries burying humanity’s cosmic origins. Aiden’s creation threatens their control—and they’ll stop at nothing to erase him, his game, and the signal it carries.
Forced into the shadows, Aiden discovers the game is more than code. It’s a key to humanity’s hidden history, a map to restoring the planet itself, and a beacon calling the “starborn” back to remembrance. To finish it, he must face his deepest fears, embrace his true nature, and trust that freedom is not won by force—only by awakening.
Fans of The Matrix, Ready Player One, and Snow Crash will be electrified by this visionary blend of science fiction, spirituality, and rebellion. Starborn Code isn’t just a story—it's an initiation.
Once a starborn remembers, they cannot be made to forget.
Dan Bune is a writer (solutions architect, author, and songwriter), Reiki teacher, and creative coach with a passion for helping people tap into their natural ability to manifest and live with intention. Through his books and workshops, Dan shares simple, practical tools to align with the energy of what you want and create meaningful change from the inside out.
In December 2024, he was named Winner of the International Impact Award in the Fantasy Category, celebrating his work’s imaginative and uplifting approach to personal growth. When he’s not writing, you’ll find Dan enjoying good conversation, long walks, and getting lost in new ideas.