Most sci-fi runs on dread. The machines wake up, decide we’re the problem, and the rest of the runtime is humanity scrambling to survive its own invention. Lord Conrad’s Forever Mirin wants nothing to do with that story. The video, released by the Italian producer also known as Corrado Garibaldi, opens with on-screen text announcing that the “Quantum CPU AI Revolution” has already fixed everything, and then spends the rest of its time proving it meant the cheerful version.
That’s the whole bet here, and it’s worth paying attention to because of how rare it is. The fear that usually drives this genre gets swapped out wholesale for techno-optimism, and the swap is matched to a progressive house track engineered for lift rather than tension. Where most futuristic visuals lean on cold blues and warning klaxons, this one builds toward the drop. The beat isn’t there to make you nervous. It’s there to make you believe.
The imagery commits all the way. Spacecraft cross deep space toward distant galaxies, humanity pushes past Earth, and advanced civilizations stretch out in every direction. The video reads expansion as triumph, not as the setup for some inevitable fall. There’s no twist coming where the technology betrays everyone. Innovation just keeps working, and the camera keeps treating that as the good news it claims to be.
Then there’s the money. Neon tickers flash $1,000,000 next to Bitcoin and the Nasdaq, and the markets in this future only climb. It’s a fictional artistic concept by the video’s own admission, with a disclaimer noting none of it should be read as investment advice, but the choice tells you something. When this video pictures tomorrow, prosperity isn’t a question mark. It’s a foregone conclusion, handed out to everyone, alongside the wealth and immortality the on-screen text promises to all.
What makes the move interesting is what it says about who’s watching. There’s a real audience right now that doesn’t want another cautionary tale about runaway AI. They want the upside, loud and unqualified, set to something they can move to. Forever Mirin gives them exactly that, no hedging, no shadow over the bright parts.
The genre keeps telling us to be afraid of what’s coming. This video answers a different question entirely, which is what tomorrow looks like if we decided to root for it. You can find more from Lord Conrad on his website, Spotify, YouTube, Instagram, TikTok, and Facebook.
