WHEN EVERYONE'S THE JUDGE, NO ONE'S INNOCENT. In a world where courtroom dramas have been replaced by live-streamed spectacle, "Justice For AllT" is the show that decides your fate - not by evidence, but by engagement. There are no judges. No lawyers. No appeals. Just an endless feed of public votes, real-time biometric feedback, and audience-triggered sentencing. Elias Rask never wanted the spotlight.
But when he's thrown into the Cry-Box - a high-tech pod that turns guilt into content - his suffering becomes must-watch programming. The crowd can't get enough. Ratings soar. Brands compete to sponsor his torment. But as his memories begin to glitch, as reality blurs with curated remorse, a deeper question surfaces: what if the crimes he's reliving aren't his?Part Black Mirror, part 1984, Justice For All is a razor-sharp, satirical thriller that skewers surveillance capitalism, performative outrage, and the twisted future of "feel-good punishment."Perfect for fans of Charlie Brooker, Philip K.
Dick, and anyone who's ever scrolled too far.
WHEN EVERYONE'S THE JUDGE, NO ONE'S INNOCENT. In a world where courtroom dramas have been replaced by live-streamed spectacle, "Justice For AllT" is the show that decides your fate - not by evidence, but by engagement. There are no judges. No lawyers. No appeals. Just an endless feed of public votes, real-time biometric feedback, and audience-triggered sentencing. Elias Rask never wanted the spotlight.
But when he's thrown into the Cry-Box - a high-tech pod that turns guilt into content - his suffering becomes must-watch programming. The crowd can't get enough. Ratings soar. Brands compete to sponsor his torment. But as his memories begin to glitch, as reality blurs with curated remorse, a deeper question surfaces: what if the crimes he's reliving aren't his?Part Black Mirror, part 1984, Justice For All is a razor-sharp, satirical thriller that skewers surveillance capitalism, performative outrage, and the twisted future of "feel-good punishment."Perfect for fans of Charlie Brooker, Philip K.
Dick, and anyone who's ever scrolled too far.