Five months after the destruction of The House of White Feathers …
For weeks The Games that took place inside The Dome had dominated every news channel and podcast.
The story spread across the internet faster than anyone could control it. Footage, interviews, speculation. Everyone wanted to understand what had happened inside those walls.
Eight celebrities had entered The Dome.
Eight celebrities had left it.
After being held there for months on end, they had been tricked into thinking they had been there for just a week.
Their lives would never be the same …
The world would never be the same.
Late night talk shows joked about it. Streaming platforms rushed out documentaries. Social media filled with challenges and reaction videos. Some of The Games’ contestants wrote books about their ordeal: Timothée Chalamet’s ‘The House of White Feathers: My Time in The Dome’ was New York Times best seller for sixteen weeks running …
Almost everyone found it interesting.
Some found it strange.
The rest simply accepted that the world had changed a little.
The eight contestants became globally famous almost overnight, if they weren’t already. Not just actors or musicians anymore, but survivors of something that the public couldn’t stop talking about.
And while the world watched them with curiosity, the contestants themselves were still figuring out what The Games had left behind and how their careers, their lives, could adapt to a landscape that knew what they had been through.
Each of them now had a unique way of individually handling this brave new world …