Summary: It had been his thirtieth birthday.
Bradley Peterson had faced thirty years of agonizing mediocrity in an ever harsh and deteriorating world. Now recently jobless and having no future, the depressed man, on the night of his third decade on Earth, drunkenly throws himself in a pond. When he mysteriously awakens in his apartment, he finds that he is not alone. A strange woman, claiming to hail from a distant planet, speaks to him, offering to bring prosperity to planet Earth.
The situation proves to be much bigger than Bradley could have ever imagined, and he suddenly finds himself stuck between growing tensions between his immense visitor from another world and his suspicious fellow humans.
Categories: Adult 30-39,
Giantess,
New World Order,
Adventure,
Sci-Fi Characters: None
Growth: Mega (501 ft. to 5279 ft.)
Shrink: None
Size Roles: F/m
Warnings: None
Challenges: None
Series: None
Chapters: 3
Completed: No
Word count: 9451
Read: 4549
Published: April 30 2022
Updated: April 30 2022
I don't know if there's anyone out there who even remembers this series, but
if you're there...thank you. I am compelled also to say that, while this is
technically a giantess story, it is not a fetish story. If you're here for that
experience, you probably won't enjoy this.
When I first wrote "The Final Frontier" back in 2013, I didn't
mean for it to become a very big story. It was meant to be your standard
"Hot Alien giantess invades Earth and dominates the planet" sort of
thing. But I guess some part of me didn't really like for Arell to be just some
stereotypical evil conqueror, so I ended up giving her a redemption arc. While
people who read the story seemed to really enjoy Arell's change of heart, I
felt it never really worked. The first chapter of the original has Arell
behaving like a sadist while later installments made her seem more caring
and gentle. This blatant contradiction was never really fully resolved to me,
and it glared at me as I tried to paint the Avakonians as a vastly superior but
gentle race. But I continued writing the series, which unfortunately
stalled during "The Distant Frontier" which was moving towards
Bradley being taking to Avakon to speak to the leaders there.
Part of the reason the series stopped was because I had found work with
Interweb Comics, where I would eventually go on to write the "A Weekend
Alone" series, which has proven to be very popular. One of the curses of
this, however, is that "A Weekend Alone" has, in many ways, eclipsed
my other works and demanded so much attention that I couldn't focus on older
stories. As such, the "Frontier" series quietly sat unfinished. But I
never really forgot it. I would argue that, before "A Weekend Alone"
came to exist, The "Frontier" series were my most popular works. It
would be very difficult to restart such a long going series after so many
years, and I was always unhappy with many aspects of the story, my poor
handling of Arell being only one. There were too many characters that bloated
the story, too many things that drew away from the stars of the show, Arell and
Bradley.
Off and on I thought about what I'd do differently if I rewrote the
"Frontier" series. I imagined a scenario where it isn't just Arell
that Bradley has to contend with but his fellow humans as they become
suspicious of Arell's intentions due to the "golden age" she promises
to bestow. Surely such promises come with a high cost? Is humanity expected to
surrender to the Avakonians? Will we be prisoners of a new paradise? What
effects will Arell's presence have on strained relationships among certain
Earth leaders? I felt there were a lot of newer possibilities here that
could lead to a far more interesting story than what I wrote back in 2013. I
hope that you, especially if you were a reader of mine back then, agree.
Look to the stars, my fellow Earthies. For Arell has returned.
- KevinFred