Set in 2236, the novel discards traditional apocalyptic tropes of fire and famine. Instead, it presents a functional world where institutions persist but collective action has withered under the weight of fractured truths. Author Gary W. Griffin populates the chamber with individuals chosen to represent competing interpretations of existence, forcing a claustrophobic debate on governance, probability, and morality.
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Gary W. Griffin Explores the High Cost of Forced Unity in Six Bullets
Six strangers wake inside a sealed chamber to a grim ultimatum: planetary collapse is absolute, and survival depends on total consensus. At the center of the table sits a revolver with exactly six rounds, a tangible reminder that when a society loses its shared reality, the price of agreement becomes lethal.

As the group grapples with the ambiguity of their situation, the automated system restricts their time, pressuring them to choose between compromise and elimination. Griffin, who brings a background in institutional systems to his fiction, uses the premise to dissect contemporary issues like epistemic conflict and the paralysis of modern decision-making. The narrative moves beyond a simple thought experiment, questioning whether unity forged through the exclusion of dissent can ever be considered peace, or if it is merely a quieter form of collapse.
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