Ver Donghua ⇒

With the help of a sardonic, data-smuggling sparrow (who may or may not be a reincarnated philosopher) and a rogue memory-dealer with shifting allegiances, Lian dives back into the Ver trade. Each recovered fragment reveals a conspiracy bigger than her own past — one that ties Jingtu’s power grid to the harvested grief of an entire erased district.

Ver Donghua unfolds in the rain-slicked, neon-drenched metropolis of Jingtu — a city that never sleeps because dreams are its fuel. Here, “Ver” (short for veritas , truth) is the art of extracting, bottling, and trading emotional memories. The rich relive stolen joys; the desperate sell their sorrows. ver donghua

Fans of Link Click , The Daily Life of the Immortal King , and Blade Runner: Black Lotus . Anyone who likes their sci-fi with a heavy heart and their animation with a sharp edge. With the help of a sardonic, data-smuggling sparrow

Our protagonist, , was once a master Ver-archivist — until a heist gone wrong cost her both her reputation and a crucial memory: the face of the person she loved most. Now scraping by as a black-market memory cleaner, Lian learns that her lost memory has resurfaced as the centerpiece of an underground auction. The buyer? A mysterious collector known only as The Echo . Here, “Ver” (short for veritas , truth) is

Here’s a creative write-up for Ver Donghua — treating it as either an original animated project or a fan-inspired concept. You can adjust the tone depending on whether it’s for a pitch, a review, or a promotional post. Logline: In a world where memories are the currency of power, a disgraced archivist must recover her stolen past before it’s auctioned off to the highest bidder — and before she forgets why she ever wanted it back.

“You are not what you remember. You are what you choose to keep.”

In true donghua fashion, Ver Donghua blends 2D character animation with fluid 3D-background environments. The color palette shifts from cold indigos and magentas (memory extraction scenes) to warm, hazy golds (flashbacks). Fight sequences are choreographed like ink-brush calligraphy — fast, sweeping, and emotionally charged, with memories bleeding into reality mid-combat.