Editor's Note:

"I got into Worm through its fan fiction—after making dozens of cover images for Worm fanfics, tweaking them over and over, I figured I had no excuse not to read the original. (Don't ask me why I was making covers for novels I hadn't even read.) A single web novel spawning dozens of fan works is practically unheard of in English web fiction. Reading the original meant losing sleep. Real sleep loss—not the "just one more chapter" kind, but the "look up and it's dawn" kind. Taylor Hebert goes from a bullied high schooler shoved into a locker to an existence that makes gods despair—and every step costs something. Her power is controlling bugs, which sounds laughably weak, but Wildbow spent 1.68 million words proving that the power doesn't matter. What matters is how desperate, how ruthless, and how willing its user is to bear the consequences. This isn't a happy ending. The further you read, the heavier it gets—a feeling that reminded me of *Attack on Titan*: you watch someone you've been rooting for walk somewhere you can no longer follow, but you understand why they had to go there. This book may ruin other superhero stories for you. Here, doing the right thing often demands a terrible price. Honestly, I've always wanted to see Worm adapted into an animated series. ByteDance just released Seedance 2.0, and unlike previous half-baked prototypes, this one feels like it could be an iPhone moment for film production. The cost of making things is collapsing—superhero battles that used to need tens or hundreds of millions of dollars may soon cost a fraction of that. Worm and its dozens of fan works form a massive universe tailor-made for this new era. It may not be long before we see an AI-driven Worm series."

Synopsis

An introverted teenage girl with an unconventional superpower to control insects, Taylor Hebert goes out in costume to find escape from a deeply unhappy civilian life. Her first attempt at taking down a supervillain sees her mistaken for one, thrusting her into the local cape scene's politics, unwritten rules, and ambiguous morals. As she risks life and limb, Taylor faces the dilemma of having to do the wrong things for the right reasons.

Tags

SuperheroDarkCharacter Driven

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