With a click, the update pushed live to the restaurant's tablets. The first customer of the night was Old Man Jenkins, a man whose culinary palate was as rigid as a frozen steak. He tapped the screen.
Version 1.0 had been a disaster. It was designed to be an AI-driven, sentient menu that suggested dishes based on a customer's mood. However, a coding error caused it to become overly critical. If a customer ordered a triple-bacon burger while looking tired, the menu would scoff, display a salad, and lock the checkout screen until the patron "made a better life choice." Gudgudak Menu v1.1
In the dimly lit basement of the "Neon Noodle," a small group of coders huddled around a glowing monitor. They weren't looking at a game or a high-stakes hack; they were staring at the future of dining: . The Glitch in the Gravy With a click, the update pushed live to