All My Roommates Love 10 Now

Medium: Web Serial / Visual Novel / Micro-Drama (hypothetical) Genre: Slice-of-Life, Psychological Thriller, Queer Subtext, Dark Comedy Episodes/Chapters: 24 (Season One) Verdict: A brilliant, uncomfortable, and strangely heartfelt exploration of how an arbitrary number becomes a household god. Premise Summary The setup is deceptively simple. An unnamed narrator (let’s call them “Jay”) moves into a shared six-bedroom house. The other five roommates—Milo, Sage, River, Alex, and Casey—seem normal at first. Quirky, yes. Millennial/gen Z stereotypes, perhaps. But within a week, Jay notices a bizarre pattern: every single roommate is obsessed with the number 10.

The roommate group has developed an unspoken, almost religious devotion to “10.” They rate every experience, every meal, every emotional interaction on a scale of 1 to 10—and they refuse to settle for anything below a 9.5. A bad day is “a 3.” A perfect cup of coffee is “an 11, which is illegal, so we call it a 10+.” They don’t just love the number; they worship the architecture of the decimal system. 1. The Number as a Character The genius of “All My Roommates Love 10” is that the number 10 is never explained. Is it a metaphor? A trauma response? A cult? The show refuses to answer, and that’s its power. 10 becomes a Rorschach test. For Milo (the athlete), 10 is the perfect score—gymnastics, diving, beauty. For Sage (the artist), 10 is the golden ratio, symmetry, the unattainable ideal canvas. For River (the programmer), 10 is binary completion, the end of a loop. For Alex (the overachiever), 10 is the GPA killer, the job review, the parent’s approval. For Casey (the hedonist), 10 is the ultimate high, the perfect party, the peak experience that always fades. All My Roommates Love 10

Below it, five different handwritings have written variations of: “Agreed.” “Keep it.” “7 is real.” “7 > 10.” And Jay’s handwriting: “1 is not the enemy. Neither is 10. The lie is the scale.” Medium: Web Serial / Visual Novel / Micro-Drama

Then, the final shot: a post-it note on the fridge. Handwritten. It says: The other five roommates—Milo, Sage, River, Alex, and

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