Kaliyuga devours the righteous.
Arya was an orphan who refused to bow to corruption—and paid for it with his life.
Death should have been the end.
Instead, the gods watched.
Acknowledged by Lord Shiva and Goddess Parvati, Arya is sent to Dvapara Yuga, an age where dharma is not sacred, but weaponized. Reborn with full memories as the Crown Prince of Mahismati, a kingdom forged for war and equal in might to Kuru Rajya, he is bound to a Cosmic Dharma System that records every choice—and judges every sin.
This system does not protect the innocent.
It does not forgive weakness.
It only remembers what you were willing to sacrifice.
In a world where heroes fall, villains are crowned righteous, and even gods manipulate fate, Arya must decide:
Is justice worth becoming something terrifying?
The Mahabharata is not a tale of good and evil.
It is a graveyard of ideals.
This time, one soul refuses to be buried.