In ancient times,when the gods still watched closely over men,and every deed was measured not only by law,but also by divine justice,a secret was buried in the land of Lydia.It was a small object,but a bearer of boundless power:the ring of invisibility.No one knew who had forged it.Some said that it had been crafted by Hephaestus,the master of fire,as a forbidden gift for mortals.Others,that the gods had left it in the world as a temptation,a trap for weak souls,to see what man would choose when no one could judge him.Entire generations had passed without the ring being found.It lay hidden in the tomb of an ancient giant,buried with its secrets,as if the earth wanted to keep it away from the hands of men.But the earth,no matter how deep,cannot hide it from the endlessly what fate wants to bring to light.Thus begins the story of Gyges,a simple shepherd,without ambitions for power,who in a moment of curiosity and chance would discover the golden ring that would change his life and the fate of the kingdom.To him,the ring seemed nothing more than an ornament.But,once turned on his finger,it turned out to be a door to a new world,a world where limits disappear,where man becomes master over the laws and over the gaze of his fellow men.The question that troubled philosophers and kings alike was born then:what does a man do when no one sees him? What choice remains when the fear of punishment disappears? Is justice a true virtue or just a wall built by fear? This is not just the story of a ring and a king.It is the mirror in which each viewer must see his face and ask himself:if I had the ring,what would I have done? Because the curse of Gyges' ring is not just in its shining gold,but in the response that every mortal must give when power becomes limitless,and conscience the only remaining judge.