Annulation de panier

Souhaitez-vous vider votre panier?

Annuler Vider le panier

Susa 2010 Ok.ru Apr 2026

Reza laughed it off. “Trolls. We’re famous for ten minutes.”

They had a secret: a forgotten OK.ru group called “Susa 2010: Echoes of the Elamites.”

“It’s not Elamite. It’s not Achaemenid. Look at the script.”

“All your memories are already here. We’ve been backing up the world long before your servers. Susa is the original cloud. Welcome home.” susa 2010 ok.ru

The summer excavation was a dead end. For six weeks, they had found nothing but shards of broken pottery and a single, corroded coin. Their professor was losing hope. Funding was being pulled. Then, on a sweltering Thursday night, Arman uploaded a raw video to the OK.ru group.

In the summer of 2010, the ancient city of Susa, now a sprawling collection of ruins and a small modern town in Iran, was not known for internet trends. It was known for dust, heat, and the ghost of King Darius. But for three archaeology students—Arman, Leila, and Reza—it was the center of their digital universe.

The brick was carved with symbols no one recognized. Curved, flowing, almost organic. They looked like roots. Or veins. Reza laughed it off

“It’s counting something,” Arman said. “The bricks? The vessels?”

And somewhere, deep in the ruins of Susa, the counter is still ticking.

“Watch this,” he whispered in the video, his headlamp cutting through the dark. He was in a newly exposed trench near the Gate of Xerxes. The camera shook as he pointed it at a brick. It’s not Achaemenid

But it was too late. The video had been shared. Within three hours, the “Susa 2010” group had 1,200 new members. By morning, 50,000.

The last post on the “Susa 2010” OK.ru group, before the site finally crashed for good, was from @Elamite_Keeper. It wasn’t a threat or a curse. It was an invitation.

Leila looked at the trench outside. The moonlight was gone. A strange, amber glow was seeping from the exposed soil, pulsing in rhythm with the counter on her screen.

Leila refreshed the group page. The member count was frozen. The videos were gone. Replaced by a single, looping live video feed. It showed a room. Not the dig house. Not the trench. A dark, vaulted chamber lined with clay vessels. And in the center, a single brick—the one Arman had found—glowing with a faint, amber light.