TechnoMysticTales is for readers who love Hindu itihaas, but do not always want it handed to them like a lecture. Some stories here are serious. Some are funny. Some are simply two divine characters talking as if they have watched every century and are still surprised by us.
If you are new here, do not worry about reading in the perfect order. Think of the site like a small library of moods. Pick the doorway that feels closest to you today and begin there.
If you want the main story experience
Start with the series archive. Each series has its own rhythm: cosmic humor, devotional moments, visual panels, or short conversations. The episode page gives you the idea first, and the reader opens the full vertical panel flow.
This is the closest version of TechnoMysticTales to a webtoon or visual comic. The images carry the mood, and the episode notes give you enough context before you step into the full reader.
If you want something quick
Open Cosmic Chats. These are short, text-first comic conversations. I use them for scenes where a full panel episode would be too heavy, but the idea still deserves a clean little stage.
Think of them as divine side conversations: Krishna and Balram disagreeing with affection, Narad pulling a thread, or a simple joke turning into a small lesson.
If you came for images
The gallery collects visual illustrations from the TechnoMysticTales world. Some are quiet devotional frames. Some are dramatic cosmic scenes. Some are modern reimaginings of familiar figures from itihaas.
The gallery is not meant to replace the stories. It is a visual shelf: a place to browse, search, share, and download images while still staying inside the larger TechnoMysticTales world.
If you want the first book
Cosmic Gossip is the first TechnoMysticTales comic book. It mixes Hindu itihaas-inspired ideas, philosophy, humor, and visual storytelling into a conversation that feels lighter than a textbook but deeper than a joke.
The book is the best place for readers who want one complete object to hold, gift, or download. The site stays free to read, but the book helps keep the project moving.