Zoomstone
Zoomstone
The Zoomstone looks, at first glance, like an ordinary rock — gray, rough, and solid. However, this is not a normal rock at all. Its surface has tiny glittering specks that shimmer faintly when it moves, and its shape seems to shift ever so slightly when no one is looking. Even though it does not have eyes, legs, or a face, the Zoomstone clearly behaves like a living thing rather than an object. Most strangely of all, there is only one Zoomstone in existence.
The Zoomstone was discovered by a boy named Luke inside a cave in Virginia. Yes, the same Luke that fought for human rights for a human-like apple. While exploring the cave, he noticed a plain-looking rock sitting inside a small box deep in the cave. When he got closer, the “rock” suddenly darted across the box at incredible speed before stopping again as if nothing had happened.
Luke watched carefully and realized that the rock was clearly alive and moving on purpose. His sighting led to the official discovery of the creature now known as the Zoomstone.
The Zoomstone lives in a box inside a cave in Virginia. Luke placed the box in the cave to give his new animal friend a comfy place to sleep. It seems to prefer dark, enclosed spaces where it can sit quietly and remain mostly unnoticed. The cave provides protection, while the box appears to be its chosen resting place.
The Zoomstone is an omnivore, meaning it can consume both plant and animal matter. No one is entirely sure how a rock-like creature eats, but scientists believe it absorbs nutrients through its surface when food is placed near it.
Despite looking completely solid and immobile, the Zoomstone can move extremely fast when it wants to. It slides, rolls, or zips across surfaces in sudden bursts — living up to its name — then becomes perfectly still again, making it difficult to track.
It looks like a normal rock.
It lives in a box inside a cave in Virginia.
It can move incredibly fast (that’s why it’s called Zoomstone).
There is only one Zoomstone in the entire world.
It often moves when no one is watching, allegedly
Scientists are still trying to understand how it works.