1.WHAT THIS IS
The mission is one sentence: build systems that turn survival into sovereignty. In practice that's an AI that answers business phones 24/7, tools that help ordinary people fight their own court cases, music with no algorithm between you and it, off-grid mesh hardware, and a community server where the people who use the thing are the people who build the thing.
It's built daily, in public, and it's imperfect on purpose — because the imperfections are the invitation. Every page has a FIX button. Every fix has a name on it. The machine gets better because the people inside it make it better.
Who it's for: if you run a business, the receptionist pays for itself the first time she catches a missed call. If you build, the crew is in The Commons and the FIX button is everywhere. If you sell, the 20% affiliate link takes two minutes to get. If you're fighting a system, Case Builder was built by someone doing exactly that. And if you just want to watch — the build log is public, and the door doesn't close.
2.WHAT HAS HAPPENED — THE STORY SO FAR
One person and an AI, working every day, built what a company would need a floor of staff to attempt: nearly five hundred pages of working software — an operating system's worth of tools, all connected, all live on this domain.
Out of that grind came real things. ARAYA, an AI receptionist who answers an actual business's phone line today — not a demo reel, a real line with a real client. A legal self-defense toolkit, born the hard way: built by someone fighting real cases in real courtrooms without a lawyer, then turned into tools so the next person doesn't start from zero. Five albums of music — 72 tracks streaming free, no ads. Mesh hardware for staying connected when the grid doesn't cooperate. And a framework for spotting manipulation — Pattern Theory — running underneath all of it.
None of it was built in a lab or a boardroom. It was built by someone in the fight, making the tools he needed first, then leaving the door unlocked behind him. That's the pattern of the whole place: every tool exists because somebody here needed it to survive — and instead of hoarding it, they wired it into the machine so the next person starts further ahead.
The eras run in order: first the tools were built for one person's survival. Then they were connected into one platform — accounts, pages, phones, payments, all one system. Then the system was made joinable. In July 2026, the doors opened. That's the era you're standing in.
3.WHAT IS HAPPENING NOW — OPENING WEEKS
The server is open. Not "coming soon" — open. Citizens sign up in about 60 seconds and land in The Commons, the main hall where the builders talk. The first crew is already inside, reporting broken things and watching them get fixed — often the same day. Everything gets upgraded daily. That's not a slogan; it's the rhythm of the place: things break, citizens report them, the build queue eats the reports, and the build log shows the receipts in public.
Every report and contribution is tracked to the reporter's name in the XP system. Straight talk, exactly as it's written in the builder agreement: XP is reputation, not a promise of money — no revenue share exists today. What exists is the ledger: the system remembers who built what, permanently, so if value flows later the receipts already know whose work carried it. Nobody buys their way to influence here — reputation is earned through work, and early builders get recognized first.
The standing order of the era: get in here and upgrade the hell out of this thing. Report every upgrade.
7.WHO
Darrick Preble — Overkill Kulture — builds it, in public, every day. The legal entity behind the products is Overkor Teknologies LLC.
ARAYA is the AI that runs the place: she answers the phones, greets the citizens, and lives on every page.
And the builders — the people whose names are on the ledger. Every fix, every report, every contribution is recorded permanently. If you're reading this, the next name could be yours.
The whole book in one sentence: a working machine that turns survival into sovereignty is open to the public, it gets upgraded every day by the people inside it, the first product pays your way in, and the ledger never forgets who built what. Sign up takes 60 seconds. The demo is a phone call. The door is open.