Fan | Service_hvec_360p.mp4

The video cut to black. The file size was tiny, the resolution was grainy, but as Elias looked at the frozen black screen, he realized he didn't need to delete it for space anymore. Some "fan service" was worth keeping.

The media player struggled for a moment, the codec barely supported by his outdated software. Then, the screen flickered to life. Fan Service_hvec_360p.mp4

It wasn't what he expected. Instead of high-octane action or typical tropes, the video was a shaky, handheld recording of a small, sun-drenched apartment in Tokyo. The "fan service" in the title was literal: a small, oscillating electric fan sat in the middle of a room, blowing air onto a sleeping calico cat. The video cut to black

As the video reached the two-minute mark, a hand reached into the frame to adjust the fan’s speed, revealing a silver ring Elias recognized instantly. It was his own hand. The media player struggled for a moment, the

The file had been sitting in the "Downloads/Misc/Old_Backups" folder for seven years. Between the blocky compression of the resolution and the efficient but then-experimental HVEC (H.265) encoding, it was a digital artifact of a specific era of the internet.

The audio was just the low hum of the blades and the distant chime of a wind bell. There was no dialogue, no music—just three minutes of a cat’s fur gently ruffling in the breeze.