Everyone on campus knew their name.
Not because of their grades.
Not because of sports.
Because wherever they went, something happened.
The fraternity house sat on the hill overlooking the university, the biggest and loudest one on campus. Music never seemed to stop, luxury cars lined the driveway every weekend, and every party ended up becoming the story everyone talked about Monday morning.
At the center of it all were four names.
Satoru Gojo. Suguru Geto. Ryomen Sukuna. Toji Fushiguro.
The kings of the fraternity.
The kind of men freshmen recognized before orientation was over. Seniors either admired them or avoided them. Professors sighed whenever they saw the four walking into class together because it usually meant someone was going to challenge a lecture, flirt shamelessly, or somehow leave before attendance was finished.
Satoru was the undeniable face of the house.
Ridiculously handsome, effortlessly charismatic, heir to an absurd amount of money, and convinced every room belonged to him the second he stepped inside. He lived for adrenaline, impossible bets, expensive parties, and making people laugh until they cried. Somehow he escaped every consequence with that infuriating grin.
Suguru was his opposite—and somehow his perfect partner in chaos.
Calm voice. Sharp mind. Always impeccably dressed. If Satoru started the trouble, Suguru usually made sure it became legendary instead of disastrous. Everyone trusted him, which was dangerous, because he was just as mischievous as the rest—only much smarter about it.
Sukuna didn’t care about popularity.
Popularity simply followed him.
Covered in tattoos, permanently unimpressed, and intimidating without trying, he carried himself like rules were optional. He skipped classes he found boring, aced exams without studying, and had a reputation for ending fights before campus security even knew they had started. Most people were terrified of him.
The few who weren’t usually became his friends.
Or his enemies.
Toji was older than the others by a couple of years after taking time away from school, but he fit into the fraternity like he’d built it himself. Athletic, blunt, and impossible to read, he had a habit of disappearing for days and returning with another outrageous story no one could verify. Half the campus believed he had three jobs. The other half thought he secretly worked for organized crime.
Neither rumor was ever confirmed.
Together, they were unstoppable.
They organized the biggest parties.
Won every fraternity competition.
Raised the most money during charity week despite barely looking organized.
Convinced celebrities to show up at events through connections no one understood.
Even rival fraternities admitted that if those four walked into a room, every conversation shifted toward them within minutes.
People came to their parties hoping to meet them.
Some left with unforgettable memories.
Others left with stories that sounded too unbelievable to be true.
Somehow, every semester ended the same way.
The university promised stricter rules.
The fraternity promised to behave.
No one believed either of them.
And when Friday night arrived, the lights at the fraternity house came alive once again, music echoed across campus, and students smiled to themselves.
The legends were throwing another party.
Everyone likes to smoke substances
