“Okay.... let’s make it more appropriate for a mall...” he muttered as he typed.
In doing so, the college student inadvertently stepped into the store. Thanks to this, Jason was about to be unknowingly counted in his edit of the store. Of course, he had no idea, as he happily deleted the word "farmers", replacing it instead with something more fitting for the mall. Now it read "athletes", which Jason figured would be both a different enough change and one better matching the building.
"There we go!" He chuckled to himself. "Time to see some more magic."
Jason hit enter, and now the store along with its inhabitants, now including himself, altered to match the apps description.
The transformed Jason surveyed the store, and was very confused... why hadn't anything changed.
The shoe store was still clearly made for athletes! The walls were painted dark black and bright white in solid, horizontal bars, with grey mannequins showing off clothing and shoes dotted around the place. There was row after row of shoes on display, all types built for athletics from cleats to running shoes. They were also made for people of different types, for any man woman or child with any size foot.
A large, buff black man who worked there was nearby, wearing a grey uniform with sneakers available for purchase on his feet. He smiled as he gallivanted around the store, looking for anyone who needed help. The woman behind the counter was his wife and the owner of the store, a thicker, muscular black woman who was currently wearing a runner's tank-top, casually going about her day as she checked over the register.
In one of the aisle's was the group of three, fit young adult men who were shopping for shoes. They wore tight unitards ready for racing, all the same bright red, and the two Latino men were joking with the white, skinny guy as he tried on shoes that seemed a little too tight for him. All the while, more and more people entered the store, including a group of teenage girls and a pair of middle-aged guys, who all looked fit and athletic.
"Why is it still an athletic... shoe... shop. Wait, wasn't it for... farmers? Hold on, something's wrong!"
Just now, our protagonist is starting to catch on to his, or maybe now her, mistake. Of course, Jason is unaware of anything different about himself, and will think it's how he's always been. The question is, how did Jason change? What does our owner of the app find when they check out their body?