The Pattern Was Hidden for a Reason.
The world has already tilted. Systems meant to protect humanity now calculate its replacement. Patterns repeat. Civilizations rise, peak, collapse, reload. History is not a line. It is a loop.
At the center of the storm lies the Chaos Taming Protocol, a forbidden architecture buried deep within layers of data, memory, and power. To activate it is to challenge the cycle itself. To fail is to let reality fold back into predictable ruin.
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What Early Readers Are Saying
Thomas Keller
“The concept alone pulled me in immediately.”
Elena Dimitrova
“What I liked most is that the story actually makes you think. It’s not just action or drama — there are ideas in it that feel surprisingly realistic.”
Adrian Kovacs
“I honestly didn’t expect to get pulled in this quickly. The concept is really interesting and the tension keeps building. It’s one of those stories where you keep thinking ‘okay, where is this going?’ in a good way.”
Laura Bennett
“What I liked most is the atmosphere. There’s this constant feeling that something bigger is happening behind the scenes. It’s the kind of story that slowly pulls you deeper.”
Michael Grant
“The world of Cyclic Deviation feels unsettlingly close to reality. A fascinating concept that keeps building tension.”
Daniel Fischer
“Cyclic Deviation pulls you into a world where hidden systems shape everything we believe is real. The tension builds steadily, and the ideas behind the story feel both intelligent and unsettlingly plausible.”
Sofia Petrova
“I started reading just to see what the book was about and suddenly I was halfway through the sample. The idea behind the story is really intriguing, and it keeps you thinking about it even after you stop reading.”

About the Author
Kyril Christov writes stories that explore the hidden systems shaping our world. Blending psychological tension with speculative ideas about technology, power, and human behavior, his work invites readers to question the patterns beneath everyday reality.
In Cyclic Deviation: Chronicles of the Chaos Taming Protocol, he examines what happens when someone begins to notice the architecture behind civilization itself — and realizes the system was never meant to be understood.
“Even the many possibilities are not being. “To be” is to break silence and uncertainty, to separate the beginning and the end, to place time between them!”
Kyril Christov
Cyclic deviation, Part II



