Get on it app developers.
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Martin worked full-time as an app tester. Companies would frequently hire Martin to test the functionality of their apps. He did not get paid a ton of money per app, but it seemed like there was a new phone app every ten minutes, so there was no shortage of work. Martin took his work pretty seriously as well. He liked to fully explore all the features of the app and intentionally find ways to break it so that they could be patched out by the developers.
One Friday evening, he got a message from a developer with a new app for him to try. The developer told him it was called the Cuter App, and it could change a person to be a cuter version of themselves. Martin had dealt with face-changing filter apps before, but most of the time they didn't work very well, and it was hard to compete with some of the larger companies that made them. Regardless, he said he would test it out. After this one, he would be free for the weekend, so he downloaded it right away.
The app icon was a little heart emoji. “How original,” Martin thought to himself. He clicked the icon and was sent directly to a loading screen. The progress bar filled very slowly, and he made a note that some optimization would probably need to be implemented. After nearly two full minutes of waiting, Martin was greeted by his own face displayed back at him. The app had taken control of the front-facing camera without asking permission first, which was odd, but Martin chalked it up to some kind of bug.
He looked at the menu and on the screen, but there were only two buttons. The camera shutter button and a button with a heart icon. So much for giving the user any choices. Maybe they just hadn't programmed in the others yet and wanted to make sure this setting was working though. Martin clicked the button, expecting it to change his appearance in an instant. However, nothing changed. Martin clicked the button again, thinking maybe it hadn’t registered his tap. That’s when he spotted it.
His hair looked like it was a bit darker in color. Martin had always had very blonde hair, but in the app, it appeared somewhat brunette. It also looked longer, and as he studied the screen, he noticed that it appeared to be growing. “That was a neat feature,” Martin thought to himself. He had never seen one of these apps do a procedural change that you could watch. It was almost always instantaneous. Martin studied the screen for more changes to himself.
His reflection continued to morph as his face began to look more feminine. It stood to reason that the app would be directed at a female audience, so Martin supposed it would probably end up making him look like a girl. This proved more true than he expected as it began to shape his chest and change his clothes. The attention to detail was outstanding. Martin really did look like a girl now, and it had also given him a couple of lip piercings. The phone continued to morph his chest, making it larger and larger. Wow, the dev team really had some ideas on what it meant to be cuter. A boob window opened up in the already tiny shirt it had placed on him, showing ample cleavage.
Finally, the changes seemed to have stopped. Martin licked his lips, which had gone dry from watching the app open-mouthed. He felt something odd when he did this, though. Almost like… lip piercings? Tearing his eyes away from the phone, he looked down and realized that the changes hadn’t just been in the app; they had been real! “Holy shit!” Martin said out loud, instinctively grabbing a boob to make sure it was real. How could this have even happened? Phones can’t change reality… can they? The proof was right in front of him, though. Two giant jiggling mounds of proof. Martin supposed the load times could be forgiven, and the lack of options, for that matter. And if Martin was being honest, cuter was a bit of an understatement.