Starlit Variables: The Probability Experiment Arc
Starlit Variables: The Probability Experiment Arc
Mio Hoshizora rubs the bridge of her glasses as she walks through the crowded school yard. Her friends wave, but this day, Mio is wrapped up in thought. Have you ever wondered if a tiny choice could flip your fate? It’s the day of the White Crow Student Science Fair, a once-in-four-years event at Aurora Academy. Stage lights glow behind plastic beakers. Every student is on edge.
Mio’s science team wants to enter the fair. Each year, the winning group gets funding for one dream experiment. This time, it’s the Probability Experiment. Mio isn’t chasing trophies — she hopes science can give sense to what luck and life bring. Her closest friend, Riku (loud, scatter-brained, kind), jokes as he flings erasers across the room. ‘Mio, if coin flips made life fair, I’d become the king of the galaxy!’ Riku declares. Ayumi, reserved but sharp, rolls her eyes: ‘No one would even vote for you.’
They debate, heads together, about setting up an experiment: can pure randomness outpace tired old planning? Or does effort always win out? Ayumi doubts luck wins, but deep down, she fears chaos. Can you relate to someone always counting risks? They mix in subtle rivalry, longing, and doubt with school tensions. 
When judge Reiko arrives—an ex-astronaut now famous for string theory talks—everyone hushes. Reiko’s legendary, but she’s quirky. She tells them, ‘In my shuttle, nothing is truly random, except my coffee order.’ Students realize that even tiny variations shift results. Mio copies notes behind her math textbook, caught between letting Riku’s wild ideas run loose and Ayumi’s precise step-by-step.
A group from another class, led by dark-eyed genius Kazunari, taunt them. ‘Gonna let randomness do the work? You may as well cast dice and wish for a miracle!’ Kazunari holds a device he claims manipulates luck itself. Is he bluffing?
Science fair day. Booths line tables like rival war camps. Lights flicker above half-finished posters and spinning coins. Their setup is simple: students bet on where random marbles will land on a board—totally fair, no trickery. But as experiments run, Kazunari’s results look too neat. Ayumi expects the curve to zig-zag, but his chart is flat as a pancake. Suspicion rises. 
Mio suspects Kazunari of rigging outcomes. She scans the room. Are the judges fooled? With Riku’s wild side urging them to call out the cheat and Ayumi’s nerves making her freeze, Miyazaki (fellow science club, ace junior coder) suggests, ‘Let’s run their data through my diagnostic algo.’ Do you peek at odd results for flaws, or let them slide around you?
Their honest numbers show smooth randomness. Meanwhile, Kazunari’s perfect spread can’t be real, right? Tension pushes Mio to confront Kazunari. A short showdown unfolds under glowing banners. ‘No device can control pure chance,’ Mio says. Kazunari grins with a cool facade, flicking hidden switches. At that moment, Reiko spots primed magnets in Kazunari’s marble track. School staff swarm the booth. How far would you bend rules for recognition?
The teachers debate disqualification. But Kazunari, lips tight, begs for a rerun. He admits cheating pressures. Oddly, Mio relates: her urge to trust the process almost let fraud go unchecked.
An emergency courtyard experiment is held at moonrise. Everyone has to reproduce their work outdoors, with fair, shared kits. As sleepy kids gather, reality shows its hand. Random drops curve wild, bouncing away from early predictions.
Dawn rises, and it’s Riku—the wild card—who blurts, ‘Did we just see fate flip before our eyes?’ They didn’t win first prize. Instead, Reiko rewards them with a lab visit and signs their paper: ‘Science, Not Illusion.’ Afterward, Team Mio realize science isn’t only about answers—it’s about having the grit to chase facts, deal when things look odd, and rally as a team.
Last scene: Mio stands on the school roof under the stars, string theory flyers flapping with the night wind. She closes her logbook, wondering if tightening the rules will ever show all the strange beauty that real life serves. Will she believe in luck, order, or both next time?
Who decides if it was luck—us, or the universe?
Cliffhanger: Mio wakes as strange, coded patterns show up on the club computers the next morning. Did their random logs spell a message? Ayumi calls in shock, Riku wants to scan for hidden files, and Reiko arrives, more serious than before… If they’re about to crack open science—or fate itself—who’s really testing who? 