Bonus Episode
The full manga story: homework overload, rubber-stamp brain fog, Solar Sensei, and the public campaign for 18 commissioners.
Read First
Start with the flagship bonus episode: the fictional monopoly tries to bury commissioners in homework, and the people answer with 18 commissioners. Then explore the original SolarPanic universe of rooftop rebellion, batteries, peak rates, blackouts, and paperwork goblins.
MegaWatt Monopoly Utility Co. discovers a boring but powerful tactic: overwhelm public oversight with homework. Solar Sensei gets the ear of the people, Proposition Sunlight rises, and the commission expands to 18.
The monopoly wanted rubber stamps. The people brought more desks, more readers, and more questions.
This is the lead storyline for SolarPanic.com: fictional utility paperwork overload meets public sunlight.
The full manga story: homework overload, rubber-stamp brain fog, Solar Sensei, and the public campaign for 18 commissioners.
Read First
Dump trucks of filings, appendices, charts, and “simple explanations” turn public oversight into paper survival.
Read Chapter
When the homework wins, the stamp starts moving before the questions do.
Read Chapter
Inside the fictional monopoly’s strategy room, the old delay playbook starts falling apart.
Open PageThe original SolarPanic episodes build the fictional universe: rooftop solar, batteries, peak rates, blackouts, paperwork chaos, and consumer-owned power.
A homeowner installs solar, and the fictional utility boardroom realizes the roof has become productive.
Battery Boy refuses to surrender when peak rates and blackout drama arrive.
Madame Peak Rate sweeps in with a calculator, a cape, and an expensive mood.
One more correction. One more form. One more tiny chaos creature in the margins.
Rooftop solar spreads across the city, and MegaWatt Monopoly calls an emergency.
The bill gets smaller, the customer gets smarter, and the boardroom starts smoking.
The grid gets dramatic, but the properly designed solar battery home still has a plan.
The fictional monopoly’s greatest fear becomes a punchline: the customer owns useful equipment.
Each episode has its own manga poster art from the approved SolarPanic image collection.
For solar, batteries, critical loads, backup design, permitting, and serious installation planning, contact ABC Solar Incorporated.
SolarPanic.com is fictional manga satire. The utility company, characters, and exaggerated scenes are imaginary. The story comments on public policy, consumer-owned solar, batteries, paperwork overload, and transparent energy regulation.