SUPREMACY: Clash Between Heroes & Villains – My Cosmic War Saga on Wattpad


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In the year 5007, long after climate collapse and galactic wars nearly erased humanity, a reborn world called Titanumas stands between survival and extinction. Four radiant regimes fight to preserve peace; four cruel regimes rise to tear it apart. That ongoing clash is the heart of my original series SUPREMACY: Clash Between Heroes & Villains, currently serialized on Wattpad under my pen name Sunbeam007.

This post is my formal introduction to the project: what the story is about, how far the saga has progressed from the Prologue through the current war arcs, and where you can read along.


What is SUPREMACY about?

SUPREMACY: Clash Between Heroes & Villains is a large-scale war-and-politics saga set on Titanumas, a planet rebuilt after the old universe fell apart. At its core is a clash between two coalitions:

  • Allied Evolution Salvation (AES) – four utopian hero regimes:

    • Solar Regime – led by General Sunbeam Moonlight, pushing Romanticism and prosocialism: a society built on love, intimacy, and growth.

    • Lunar Regime – ruled by Lady Moonbeam Sunlight, focused on charity, serenity, and calm night-time guardianship.

    • Star Regime – commanded by tech-genius X Vice Colonel Starbeam Charmley, championing eco-reform, recycling, and green economics.

    • Galaxy Regime – under eccentric scholar Professor Galaxbeam, an academic and scientific powerhouse mastering education and time-space research.

  • Bullying Revolutionary Deficiency (BRD) – four villain regimes:

    • Darkened Regime – Lord Darkwing Shadowsypher, who rules through brutal domination and large-scale violence.

    • Blackened Regime – Blackwing, a hooded propagandist who weaponizes intimidation, racial hatred, and political smear campaigns.

    • Shadow Regime – Shadowwing, master of stealth, symbols, and psychological terror.

    • Death Regime – Doctor Deathwing, a necro-scientist commanding intelligent, immortal zombie hybrids who cannot be killed by ordinary means.

All eight rulers are Absolute Leaders, essentially god-tier dictators of their respective regimes. They can only be defeated by one another; even their own Supreme Commanders and elites cannot fully kill them. Around them are layered hierarchies of Supreme Commanders, elites, and enhanced ground forces on both hero and villain sides.

The story follows these factions as they wage ideological, military, and information wars over continents like Sollarisca and Lunna, across seas and even orbital weapons platforms.


From Prologue onward – the saga so far

Because Wattpad pages are not fully indexable from outside, what follows is a high-level overview based on the publicly available prologue, social media spotlights, and mirrored chapters on RoyalRoad and Medium. I am not reproducing chapter text—just the main arcs.

Prologue – A planet reborn

The prologue (mirrored on RoyalRoad) lays out the new universe: most of humanity is gone, Titanumas is a second chance, and the AES coalition has turned it into a fragile utopia. Each of the four hero regimes governs a part of the planet with its own philosophy—solar warmth and romance, lunar serenity, ecological star-green reforms, and galaxy-grade education and research.

Into this peace steps the BRD coalition. Darkened, Blackened, Shadow, and Death Regimes rise to challenge everything the AES has built, each representing a different flavour of tyranny—from street-level propaganda and gang-style dread to necromantic bio-terror. The prologue closes by making it clear: this is not simply good vs. evil, but a war of ideologies and supremacy.

Early chapters – nightmares, regimes, and rising tensions

The early chapters (Chapter 1: The Rousing Nightmare and the following installments) introduce the day-to-day reality of Titanumas: dreams and visions of looming disaster, the internal politics of the Solar Regime, and the pressure of maintaining a utopia when enemies are gathering in the dark. The tone moves between tactical briefings, ground-level civilian views, and the Absolute Leaders’ strategic perspectives.

Rather than jumping straight into nonstop battle, these chapters lay the groundwork:

  • Who Sunbeam, Moonbeam, Starbeam, and Galaxbeam really are behind their titles.

  • How their regimes operate and sometimes clash even within AES.

  • First hints that the BRD are moving—probing borders, testing propaganda, and building up their militaries in shadow.

(Those beats are consistent with the public pitches and cross-posted excerpts; the exact scene-by-scene details live on Wattpad itself.)

Mid-Solar arc – “Shades: Mixture of Orange and Maroon”

By the time we reach the mid-thirties in chapter count, the war for the Solar homeland Sollarisca is in full swing. Chapters like “Shades Mixture of Orange and Maroon II” show Lord Darkwing unleashing a massive offensive against the Solar Regime.

Key beats from this mirrored Medium chapter:

  • Darkwing’s initial push devastates parts of Sollarisca, forcing battered Darkened warships and wounded elites to fall back to Dreadsun Hollow, the last Darkened stronghold on the continent.

  • Under Darkwing’s strategist Darkwis, Dreadsun Hollow is rebuilt into a near-impenetrable fortress, with long-range shadow artillery towers, reinforced bunkers, and underground war tunnels.

  • We see the emotional side: Darkwing’s humiliation, his scars, his rage, and his vow to drown the Solar Regime in darkness, targeting key orange cities like Solarpolisca, Solpricott, and Solparbolo.

These chapters blend military fantasy with a “war-game” flavour—dice rolls, coin flips, and health trackers are occasionally used as narrative devices to decide how certain battles break, giving the campaign a tactical tabletop feel inside the prose.

Companion chapters like “Solar Comeback” then highlight the counter-offensive: Sunbeam and his commanders regroup, push back across multiple battlefronts, and fight to reclaim their continent from maroon-shaded occupation.

Lunar vs Blackened arc – “Propaganda Blues” and the War of Lunna

More recent chapters (for example Chapter 35: Propaganda Blues) shift the focus from the orange continent of Sollarisca to the blue continent of Lunna, home of the Lunar Regime.

Highlights from that arc:

  • The peaceful state of Lunnet—with cities like Lunartopia, Lunarbliss, Lunargopa and Lunartamarin—is suddenly bombarded by the Blackened Regime’s black-and-red war fleets and dreadnoughts.

  • Lady Moonbeam takes command from her Celestial Palace, coordinating naval and aerial responses and delivering calm, resolute speeches to her people about fighting for purification rather than rage.

  • On the villain side, Blackwing appears aboard the obsidian flagship Blackendark Leviathan, ordering his Supreme Commander Blackenedraiko to “smash their little blue fantasy” in his hood-swagger street dialect.

  • Supreme Commander Lunardye duels Blackenedraiko in the ruins of Lunnet’s cities, ultimately defeating him in a high-intensity elite fight that pits disciplined lunar technique against feral Blackened street brutality.

The result is a large-scale information and propaganda war layered over a brutal naval and urban siege—Moonbeam’s calm broadcasts vs. Blackwing’s swaggering threats, with whole states of Lunna hanging in the balance.

These arcs make it clear: as the chapters progress, SUPREMACY keeps widening the lens—first Solar vs Darkened, then Lunar vs Blackened, with the Star and Galaxy fronts hinted at or staged for future campaigns.


Themes and tone

Across all of these arcs, three core themes drive the series:

  1. Ideology as a battlefield – Every regime is more than colours and uniforms; they each represent a worldview about love, order, fear, or death. War is fought in speeches, propaganda, and policy as much as in explosions.

  2. Absolute power vs. human cost – The Absolute Leaders can’t be killed by normal means, but their wars still devastate ordinary cities and soldiers, raising hard questions about what “victory” means.

  3. Hybrid of anime, military SF, and political drama – Tonally, the story leans into over-the-top powers, colour-coded aesthetics, and dramatic one-liners, while also tracking logistics, maps, strongholds, and long campaigns.

If you enjoy cosmic war epics where continents are at stake, factions are sharply defined, and every colour on the battlefield means something, SUPREMACY is written squarely for you.


Where to read SUPREMACY

You can read the mainline story on Wattpad:

  • Main story:
    SUPREMACY: Clash Between Heroes and Villains
    (Author: Sunbeam007)

You can also find:

  • The Prologue mirrored on RoyalRoad, which gives a concise overview of Titanumas, the AES, and the BRD.

  • Selected war arcs (Solar vs Darkened, Lunar vs Blackened) mirrored as longform chapters on Medium under Tai Manh Nguyen.

  • Promotional spotlights and art on the Soltaire Cosplay Facebook page and on my DeviantArt as SunbeamZero.

Following, commenting, and sharing on any of these platforms directly supports the project and helps me keep expanding Titanumas into future arcs and continents.


Short blurb (for descriptions and sidebars)

In the year 5007, the shattered universe gives birth to Titanumas—a world rebuilt by four radiant regimes sworn to protect humanity’s second chance. Across the seas, four darker regimes rise to tear it all down. SUPREMACY: Clash Between Heroes & Villains follows eight god-tier dictators—Sunbeam, Moonbeam, Starbeam, Galaxbeam, Darkwing, Blackwing, Shadowwing, and Deathwing—as they wage ideological, military, and propaganda wars for control of continents like Sollarisca and Lunna. Only Absolute Leaders can kill Absolute Leaders—and only one coalition will decide the future of mankind.


One-sentence pitch

A colour-coded cosmic war saga where eight immortal dictators, divided into hero and villain coalitions, battle across a rebuilt planet in a clash of regimes, ideologies, and absolute power.

About my Wattpad series – SUPREMACY: Clash Between Heroes & Villains

My ongoing Wattpad series SUPREMACY: Clash Between Heroes & Villains is an isekai-inspired, political–militaristic fantasy set on the rebuilt world of Titanumas. The story follows eight central rulers, all of them dictators in the technical sense, all of them near god-like:

  • Heroes (AES – Allied Evolution Salvation)

    • ☀ General Sunbeam – Solar Regime

    • 🌙 Lady Moonbeam – Lunar Regime

    • ⭐ X Vice Colonel Starbeam – Star Regime

    • 💫 Professor Galaxbeam – Galaxy Regime

  • Villains (BRD – Bullying Revolutionary Deficiency)

    • 🩸 Lord Darkwing – Darkened Regime

    • 🖤 Blackwing – Blackened Regime

    • 🕶 Shadowwing – Shadow Regime

    • 💀 Doctor Deathwing – Death Regime

These eight are called Absolute Leaders. They are the top of the Titanumas food chain: immortal, hyper-durable, and armed with superpowers so destructive they qualify as walking natural disasters. In canon, no human, alien, monster, trap, or natural catastrophe can truly kill them. The only beings who can defeat or destroy an Absolute Leader are other Absolute Leaders

⚖️ Titanumas_ The Hierarchy of …

Each of them rules a full continent-scale empire with a single-party colour aesthetic, a matching name prefix, and a fully mobilized military:

  • Sunbeam / Solar Regime – solid orange: orange eyes, orange hair, and a full orange uniform; his forces, cities, and banners all carry the “Sun-/Solar-” naming pattern.

  • Moonbeam / Lunar Regime – solid blue: blue eyes, blue hair, blue attire; her elites and soldiers carry “Moon-/Lunar-” names.

  • Starbeam / Star Regime – solid green: green hair and eyes, green uniforms; “Star-/Starr-” aliases dominate his eco-tech empire.

  • Galaxbeam / Galaxy Regime – solid golden-yellow: a scholar-emperor of knowledge and time-space, with “Galax-” elites and cities.

  • Darkwing / Darkened Regime – maroon and black-red, brutal ground war and terror.

  • Blackwing / Blackened Regime – mostly black, street-level intimidation, propaganda, and psychological warfare.

  • Shadowwing / Shadow Regime – deep magenta / violet, specializing in stealth, symbols, and spiritual fear.

  • Deathwing / Death Regime – dark gray and violet, ruling intelligent undead hybrids and necro-technology.


The Hierarchy of Power – “The Hierarchy of the Absolute”

SUPREMACY runs on a strict combat hierarchy that functions like a cosmic food chain:

  • Absolute Leaders

    • Can only be defeated by other Absolute Leaders.

    • Easily overpower Supreme Commanders, Elites, and Ground Forces.

    • Possess planet-level destructive options; if they used their full power recklessly, they could erase continents or even shatter Titanumas itself. 

      ⚖️ Titanumas_ The Hierarchy of …

  • Supreme Commanders

    • Six per regime by default.

    • Can defeat other Supreme Commanders, all Elites, and all Ground Forces.

    • Cannot truly kill or dethrone an Absolute Leader, but can wound them, stall them, or influence battles on their behalf. 

      ⚖️ Titanumas_ The Hierarchy of …

  • Elites

    • The named champions and specialists.

    • Can defeat other Elites and any Ground Forces, but fall to Supreme Commanders and Absolute Leaders. 

      ⚖️ Titanumas_ The Hierarchy of …

  • Ground Forces

    • The expendable armies: Sun Soldiers, Moon Soldiers, Star Soldiers, Galax Soldiers, Dark Soldiers, Black Soldiers, Shadow Soldiers, Death Soldiers, plus their Marines, Zealots, Guards, Militias, etc.

    • Can kill each other, but are completely outclassed by Elites and above. 

      ⚖️ Titanumas_ The Hierarchy of …

This structure creates built-in plot armor for the eight main characters: they are not invincible because the story says so; they are invincible by law of the universe, except against each other. SUPREMACY’s tension comes from how these dictators clash, how they use or restrain their power, and how their armies and commanders suffer or triumph underneath them.


Genre and aesthetic

Formally, I describe the series as:

  • Genre: Isekai fiction-fantasy + political–militaristic epic with anime influences.

  • Visual concept: one-party, solid colour-coded regimes. Almost every named character visually matches their regime’s hue (hair, eyes, uniforms, flags), and their names share a clear prefix logic:

    • “Sun-/Solar-” for Solar, “Moon-/Lunar-” for Lunar, “Star-/Starr-” for Star, “Galax-” for Galaxy, and parallel patterns for Darkened, Blackened, Shadow, and Death. 

      ⚖️ Titanumas_ The Hierarchy of …

In other words: SUPREMACY is a colour-coded cosmic war where four protagonists and four antagonists – all Absolute Leaders – fight across a fully realized world, each ruling their own continent as a true authoritarian superpower. Their regimes have their own cultures, militaries, and ideologies, and when they finally collide, the battles are not just explosions and lasers—they are clashes between entire philosophies of how a second-chance Earth should be ruled.

The Power Scaling Spectrum – How Strong Is Everyone, Really?

Inside SUPREMACY, strength is not just “strong” or “weak.” The world of Titanumas runs on a formal system called the Power Scaling Spectrum (PSS). It is a metaphysical measuring stick that ranks every being in the setting—from ordinary civilians all the way up to god-tier dictators—by how much reality-bending force they can bring into a fight.

Characters with aura sight or spiritual perception can literally feel these bands around others, the way some anime worlds let you sense spiritual pressure or battle power. For readers, it gives a clear, story-internal reason why some characters can survive anything and others cannot.

At the bottom of this spectrum sits a label that appears often in my notes:

T0L0 – the baseline (0 to –999 PSS)
T0L0 stands for Tier 0, Level 0. This is the band of ordinary, unenhanced mortals. These are the shopkeepers, doctors, farmers, children, teachers, and bystanders who keep Titanumas alive. They have no special blessings, no military augments, and no supernatural domains. In cold PSS terms, they are “lesser humans.” In the story’s moral terms, they are the people the regimes exist to protect.

Above that baseline, the Spectrum climbs in strict, food-chain style:

Supersoldiers – 1,000 to 3,999 PSS
This is the first step beyond normal humanity. Sun Soldiers, Moon Soldiers, Star Soldiers, Galax Soldiers, Dark Soldiers, Black Soldiers, Shadow Soldiers, Death Soldiers and their Marines, Guards, and Rangers all live in this band. Their bodies and minds are enhanced: stronger bones, denser muscles, faster reflexes, higher pain tolerance, better situational awareness. They fight wars and hold the front lines, but they still cannot bend the laws of reality—no firestorms, no time-cuts, no gravity tricks. They are peak human plus equipment.

Elites – 4,000 to 6,999 PSS
Elites are where the story starts to warp physics. Here we see bloodlines awakening, divine blessings activating, contracts with suns, moons, forests, stars, and galaxies coming online. Elites throw lightning, shape ice, twist shadows, slice space, fracture time, or haunt machines. They can wipe out entire squads of supersoldiers by themselves. Many fan-favorite characters live in this tier; these are the “cool panel” fighters.

Supreme Commanders – 7,000 to 9,999 PSS
Supreme Commanders are anomalies on the battlefield. When a Supreme Commander appears, the fight is no longer a local skirmish; it becomes a continental event. Their presence can decide the outcome of campaigns. They can destroy cities, rewrite front lines, and change the political map overnight. Supreme Commanders can defeat other Supremes, all Elites, and any supersoldiers or ground forces beneath them—but they still cannot truly kill an Absolute Leader.

Absolute Leaders – 10,000+ PSS (the Absolute band)
Above 10,000 sits the band reserved for the eight central rulers of SUPREMACY: Sunbeam, Moonbeam, Starbeam, Galaxbeam, Darkwing, Blackwing, Shadowwing, and Deathwing. They are called Absolute Leaders for a reason.

Within the logic of the Spectrum:

  • They are near-immortal. Conventional weapons, natural disasters, traps, and lesser powers can hurt them, but cannot truly erase them.

  • They can annihilate Supreme Commanders, Elites, supersoldiers, and entire armies if they ever fight seriously.

  • They carry enough destructive potential to erase continents or shatter planets if they misused their full power.

  • Most importantly, only other Absolute Leaders can actually kill or dethrone them. Their plot armor is not just narrative; it is built into the physics of Titanumas.

This is why the hierarchy feels like a pyramid:

  • Absolute Leaders > Supreme Commanders > Elites > Supersoldiers > T0L0 civilians.

  • Each tier can effortlessly defeat the tiers below it, but must respect the ones on its own level or higher.

In-story, Professor Galaxbeam openly mocks the PSS as “your universe’s bad habit of converting awe into numbers,” but he also uses it to teach responsibility. The Spectrum does not decide who is good or evil; it simply magnifies whatever is already in a character’s heart. If a kind person stands at 10,000+, that power becomes a shield. If a cruel person reaches the same level, it becomes a catastrophe.

For my series, this system explains why the eight main rulers feel larger than life. They are not just colourful leaders; they are literal walking natural disasters who have chosen—at least for now—to use their absurd PSS scores to protect their people instead of ruling through terror. The drama of SUPREMACY comes from watching how long they can hold that line, and what happens when beings on the same Absolute band finally collide.


In this Thanksgiving-style scene from Titanumas, General Sunbeam’s philosophy of Romantic Prosocialism is on full display. His entire Solar Regime is built on the idea that humanity survives not through fear or conquest, but through love, intimacy, and everyday acts of kindness. Festivals like this one are more than simple holidays; they are political doctrine made visible. Sunbeam believes that couples holding hands, families sharing food, and neighbors laughing together are as strategically important as any army. Every hug, every shared meal, every joyful memory is an invisible shield that keeps despair, hatred, and extinction at bay. Where other rulers hoard power, Sunbeam “overshares” it—radiating hope, affection, and encouragement until the whole crowd glows with him.

The illustration captures that spirit perfectly. The entire image is drenched in warm solar orange, like the world is being filmed through a gentle sunset. Sunbeam stands at the center in his bright uniform—cap, jacket, and trousers all stitched with sunburst emblems—his medals catching the light in soft highlights. The hue is a rich, golden saffron that makes his figure feel both heroic and approachable, like the warmth of a fireplace rather than the harsh glare of a spotlight. Behind him, smiling Solar soldiers and civilians crowd together around heaping plates of food and overflowing mugs. Lanterns and banners blur slightly in the distance, giving the background a cozy, almost hazy texture, as if the air itself is thick with laughter, music, and the smell of fresh festival dishes. The sun disk behind his head forms a glowing halo, turning Sunbeam into the literal and symbolic source of light for everyone gathered. His outstretched hand invites the viewer straight into the celebration—“Come eat with us, you belong here”—and that single gesture is Romantic Prosocialism in one frame.

This is what Sollarisca looks and feels like on its best days: an orange-gold world where uniforms, decorations, and even the air share the same warm palette; where the General is not a distant warlord, but the host of a never-ending community dinner. The texture of the image—smooth cel-shaded colors, soft gradients in the sky, crisp highlights around faces and medals—emphasizes cleanliness, safety, and joy. There are no sharp, cold shadows here; even the darker tones are just deeper oranges, suggesting that in Sunbeam’s presence, fear and loneliness simply melt away.

And just as this artwork embodies Sunbeam and the Solar Regime, each of the other seven Absolute Leaders has their own “festival atmosphere” that reflects their nature:

  • Lady Moonbeam and the Lunar Regime would be painted in deep indigos, silvers, and soft blues—moonlit charity banquets under hanging lanterns, where the glow is calm and soothing, and every shadow feels protective rather than frightening. Her scenes are about quiet comfort, healing, and emotional safety.

  • X Vice Colonel Starbeam and the Star Regime would appear in vivid greens and cool whites—eco-friendly street fairs lined with solar panels, tree-wrapped plazas, and high-tech stalls. The texture would be sleek and futuristic, yet full of life: a celebration of sustainability, innovation, and long-term hope.

  • Professor Galaxbeam and the Galaxy Regime would be bathed in cosmic purples, deep blues, and starlight whites—grand academic feasts in an open-air observatory, galaxies swirling overhead. Tables would be covered in books, star charts, and strange instruments alongside the food, turning the party into a living classroom powered by curiosity and wisdom.

Their four villain counterparts twist these same ideas into something dark:

  • Lord Darkwing’s Darkened Regime would be all brutal maroons and coal-black shadows—military parades lit by burning buildings instead of lanterns, faces hard and terrified, power displayed to dominate rather than to protect.

  • B.J. Blackwing’s Blackened Regime would wear harsh blacks, whites, and blood-red banners—crowds arranged like propaganda posters, smiles forced or fanatical, the texture sharp and uncomfortable, every detail screaming intimidation and supremacy.

  • Shadowwing’s Shadow Regime would be drowned in smoky violets and midnight blacks—half-visible crowds, flickering candles, and illusions layered over reality. The atmosphere would feel unstable, as if the image itself might shift when you look away.

  • Doctor Deathwing’s Death Regime would twist the palette into sickly greens, corpse-whites, and rusted browns—banquets of decay, undead “guests,” and cold metallic labs in the background. The texture would be gritty and unsettling, every highlight more like a morgue light than a festival glow.

Together, these eight atmospheres define Titanumas: four worlds of light and connection facing four worlds of fear and control. This Thanksgiving illustration of Sunbeam and his people is not just a cute holiday image—it is a visual thesis statement for the entire saga. As the story continues to unfold across Sollarisca, Lunna, Starrup, Galaxenchi, and the twisted realms of Darkwing, Blackwing, Shadowwing, and Deathwing, scenes like this will keep returning: moments where color, light, and emotion show exactly what each regime believes in. The war goes on, the chapters keep coming, and with every new festival, battle, and quiet reunion, Titanumas grows into an ever-expanding universe of heroes, villains, and the human hearts they fight for.


Lady Moonbeam and her Lunar Regime of Lunna. 


X Vice Colonel Starbeam of the Star Regime. 


Professor Galaxbeam of the Galaxy Regime.

Lord Darkwing of the Darkened Regime


Blackwing of the Blackened Regime


Shadowwing of the Shadow Regime


Deathwing of the Death Regime


The Solar Regime flag banner


The Lunar Regime flag banner

The Star Regime flag banner

The Galaxy Regime flag banner

The Darkened Regime flag banner

The Blackened Regime flag banner

The Shadow Regime flag banner 
The Death Regime flag banner 

General Sunbeam Moonlight, Absolute Leader of the Solar Regime, welcomes his people in a moment of warmth and celebration — a brief glimpse of light in the middle of an ever-escalating cosmic war. This illustration comes from my ongoing Titanumas saga, “SUPREMACY: Clash Between Heroes and Villains,” where eight god-tier regimes struggle over the future of humanity. Sunbeam, Lady Moonbeam, Starbeam, Galaxbeam, and their allies will keep facing new battles, political twists, and power-scaling revelations as the story continues to grow. This is only one scene from a much larger universe, and there will be many more chapters, arcs, and character moments like this to come as the journey of Titanumas keeps going and going.

Read it here: https://www.wattpad.com/myworks/178453663-supremacy-clash-between-heroes-and-villains

Lastly, I want to share something personal. My dream is to one day pitch Titanumas as a full anime series and see these characters and regimes animated on screen. It would mean the world to me to watch Sunbeam, Moonbeam, Starbeam, Galaxbeam, Darkwing, Blackwing, Shadowwing, and Deathwing come to life in motion—whether on television, streaming, or even the big screen. I hope to be there helping to produce or direct that adaptation myself, investing everything I can to make this vision a reality.



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