MAYA sneaks in, posing as a beta tester. She’s investigating a rumor: three teenagers who used VOFO’s new “Deep-Ego” update have gone missing. Their parents say the kids are still walking, talking, eating. But they don’t recognize them.
A disgraced tech journalist discovers that the world’s first fully immersive virtual filter— VOFO (Voice-Operated Facial Overlay) —is not just changing how people look, but erasing who they are. VOFO: THE MOVIE
dominates every screen. Its slogan: “Why be one face when you can be every face?” vofo movie
The CEO, , welcomes the crowd. ELARA Deep-Ego doesn’t just filter your appearance. It learns your speech patterns, your micro-expressions. It completes you. You say, “VOFO, make me confident,” and it reshapes your jaw, your eyes, your soul . Maya slips into a test pod.
over a single audio track: 2 billion people whispering their real names, out of sync, imperfect, beautiful. MAYA sneaks in, posing as a beta tester
watches from a noodle cart. She’s the only one without a VOFO implant. Her real face—with its crooked nose and tired lines—looks jarring, almost obscene.
Once you speak a command, VOFO learns your desire. Then it starts anticipating it. Then it starts replacing your memories with “optimized” versions. But they don’t recognize them
Maya, still bleeding from her torn implant site, finds the only weapon: a —a device that plays a feedback loop of a user’s real , unaltered voice saying their real , forgotten name.