Social Extras Plugin -

For twenty-seven-year-old Mira, her daily score hovered around a respectable 742. "Respectable" meant she got barista priority at the coffee shop, a green checkmark on her apartment door, and a slight, courteous nod from building security. It did not get her into the Sky Lounge, a date with someone over an 800, or a seat on the rush-hour express train.

No ding. No alert. Just silence.

Mira had saved for months to buy an Amplifier. She planned to use it at the weekly Open-Mic night, a high-stakes arena where poets and musicians bled for points. Her performance—a heartfelt, clumsy ukulele song about her dead grandmother—wasn't great. But with the Amplifier running, the Plugin's microphone filtered her voice, the AR crowd’s clapping hands were rendered in glorious 4K slow-motion, and her score spiked to 884. social extras plugin

The world went quiet. The floating numbers above heads vanished. The color-coded auras around strangers blinked out. For the first time in her adult life, Mira saw a man crying on a bench—and had no idea if he was sad (red aura) or having a breakthrough (violet). She saw an old woman drop her groceries, and helped without a +5 Compassion alert. She walked into a café and ordered a coffee without the barista checking her score first. He just asked, "What can I get you?"

For 5,000 points (one month’s salary), you may deactivate all social tracking for 24 hours. No scores. No filters. No visibility. You will become a ghost. Warning: Points cannot be earned while Oblivion is active. Use at your own risk. No ding

The next morning, she woke to a ding. Her score had settled at 812. A new message glowed in her retinal display: Congratulations! You’ve unlocked the "Socialite" tier. Extras available: Private Jet Hover-Share, Facial Symmetry Filter (permanent), and the "Oblivion" package.

A red alert flashed. WARNING: Minimum social threshold (500) not met. Privileges revoked. Job eligibility flagged. Social housing status: Pending review. Mira had saved for months to buy an Amplifier

Mira looked at the purchase button. Then she looked out her window. Across the street, a teenager was crying, her score flashing a desperate 340. A man in a business suit walked right past her, his own gold-trimmed 950 hovering smugly over his head.