WELCOME TO

THE FUTURE OF STORYTELLING

Futuristic cityscape with flying cars, towering skyscrapers, and holographic technology in a city center.

WE ARE BUILDING SOMETHING EXTRAORDINARY.

Our journey begins with storytelling, and immersive technology, and leads to the stars.

We envision a future where writing transcends the page, immersing readers in worlds so vivid and compelling it reshape the boundaries of reality and imagination.

Our goal is to craft narratives so enthralling, so captivating. They draw readers into realms beyond the page. These narratives will further inspire cinematic experiences so immersive that audiences lose themselves, their sense of time, and the world around them.

But my ambitions extend beyond storytelling.

I invite you to join me in taking the first steps toward a future that challenges the imagination and opens the door to endless horizons.

Let’s build the future together.

WRITTEN PROJECTS

The Mistakes We Make (My Wife)

Title page of a document titled "The Mistakes We Make" by Tyler R. Letran, dated 07012023, with a subtitle attributing the work to "My Wife."

Welcome to the ruling class, you outsider.

When cellist Lucas marries Claire, a brilliant surgeon and darling of New York's elite; he's thrust into a world where every move is watched and every misstep costs. Balancing parenthood, social pressure, and his own art, Lucas quickly learns that prestige has a price.

His stepson Oliver thrives on the lacrosse and polo fields. His daughter Penelope is making a name for herself in the pool. Everyone is performing. Everyone is polished. And Lucas is expected to follow suit.

When Claire's father, a powerful politician, taps Lucas to run his campaign for Governor of New York, the stakes become impossible to ignore. Caught between family ambition, public scrutiny, and his own sense of self, Lucas faces the hardest question of all: in a world built on image, can you afford to be real?

Cover page of a book titled 'PULSE', written by Tyler R Letran, labeled as draft version 2.

PULSE

An artist loses his phone, an executive forgets her wedding ring, and amidst it all, someone asks, “Is that a harpsichord?”