Daily Chaos

My Neighbor Made My Porch Light the Delivery Signal

Packages kept landing at my door. Then I found out my porch light was the signal.

Fictional case Interactive webtoon 8 panels

This is an original fictional interactive webtoon case about daily chaos. Read the story, inspect the details, pick a side, and see the split.

Nia walks through an apartment corridor with similar doors.
Nia's building was confusing.

Same doors. Same hallway.

Gut pick

Pick your first lean.

One tap now. You can flip after the story.

Optional. Final pick comes later.
Tension meter
Gut check
Panel 1 / 8
Stop itstory pull
Helpful markerstory pull
Shared spotstory pull

First take: No first take yet. Story pressure only.

Receipt layer
3 receipts waiting.
Nia installs a bright teal porch light beside her apartment door.
So she added a teal porch light.

For her own door.

Ben notices Nia's teal porch light while carrying a package.
Ben noticed the shortcut.

The teal light was easy to spot.

Ben sends a building chat message using the teal light as a delivery marker.
He shared it as the signal.

Drivers. Neighbors. Everyone.

Nia finds several packages stacked under her teal porch light.
Then packages piled up.

Not all hers.

Nia and Ben discuss the teal porch light delivery signal in the hallway.
Ben said it fixed the confusion.

Nia said it made her door the drop spot.

Apartment neighbors split over using Nia's porch light as a delivery marker.
The building split.

Helpful marker or home boundary?

Nia and Ben stand near a possible shared delivery shelf.
So where do you stand?

One light. Three takes.

Evidence

Check the details.

Light purpose

Nia installed the teal porch light for her own doorway, not as a building delivery marker.

Ben's message

Ben told neighbors and drivers to use the teal light as the easiest way to find the building.

Delivery result

Packages for several neighbors began landing on Nia's mat under the light.

Pick your side

Should Ben stop using Nia's porch, was the light a helpful marker, or should the building create a shared drop spot?

Three takes enter the chat.Claim a lane before the split shows.
Three takes are live. Tap a lane.
Open the receipts
  1. Nia's building was confusing.
    Drivers mixed up the units often enough that everyone had a delivery story.
    Another mix-up?
  2. So she added a teal porch light.
    It made her entry feel warmer and helped her friends find the right place.
    Now my door stands out.
  3. Ben noticed the shortcut.
    To Ben, it looked like the perfect way to explain the building to drivers.
    That is the easiest marker.
  4. He shared it as the signal.
    Soon the teal light was the unofficial landmark for the whole building.
    Tell them to use the teal light.
  5. Then packages piled up.
    Some were for neighbors she had only waved to in the hallway.
    Why is this at my door?
  6. Ben said it fixed the confusion.
    Ben saw a helpful landmark. Nia saw her doorway turned into a building service.
    You used my door without asking.
    It helped everyone find us.
  7. The building split.
    Some neighbors loved the easy direction. Others said a person's doorway cannot become the building's default without consent.
    Stop using her door.
    We needed a marker.
  8. So where do you stand?
    Nia and Ben have to decide whether the signal stops, stays useful, or moves to a shared drop spot.
    What should the building do?
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