
My small hands trembled as I paced nervously from one tree to another, my mind struggling to process what had just happened. The world had ended.
Don’t freak out. Please, John, don’t freak out. Something had gone horribly wrong, but Lucas could fix it. Didn’t he say there was some kind of ‘unfreeze’ thing once in a… blue moon or whatever?
With a long sigh, I sank down, leaning my back against a pine tree. Status. A translucent blue menu popped up instantly, and I mentally navigated to the friend’s tab.
[You have no friends.] |
Very funny game. Very funny. Thankfully, finding Lucas wasn’t hard, and I lucked out—he was online and accepted my request.
[Lucas] Who are you? [Princess] It’s me, John. [Princess] Wait… my name is Princess? What the hell? |
Panic set in, and I quickly opened the character menu:
|
[Lucas] Wow, that’s awesome! [Princess] No, it’s not. I’m a girl—and a Priest. Can you check on that? [Lucas] Sure, let me log out. |
My heart pulsated faster and faster as the panic attack clouded descended. I loudly breathed in and out and tried not to think about it. Instead, I tried to picture Veronica’s red outfit, but it was useless to even try. Thankfully Lucas’s icon tuned green soon. Wait! It was so fast. Had he logged out at all?
[Lucas] Sorry John, but there was another Charlie. [Princess] Another Charlie?! Don’t you dare to make fun of me! [Lucas] Yeah, same as the dude, but she was a girl. [Princess] So, can you change me back? Should I go to your apartment for the scanner? [Lucas] That’s the thing you can’t. It’s too late, this ID is you. At least she is hot! [Lucas] Sorry, tell me if you want to do some dung later. Priests are awesome healers! |
The thing I feared most had happened. Well, I could deal with being a girl in the game. It wasn’t like gender mattered when it came to building strength. No, that wasn’t the real problem.
The actual issue—the warrior in the glass room—was the Priest class! How was I supposed to grind if I couldn’t fight? At least mages could switch to being magic swordsmen, which was halfway decent.
But the poor Priest? Priests were the weakest combatants of all; they weren’t made for solo play. And soloing was my thing. In QA, they’d pay you a bonus if you found a bug, but if multiple testers found the same one, we had to split the reward. Going solo was always better.
It felt like my life was slipping through my fingers. I looked up at the beautiful, hyper-realistic forest—it felt more real than reality itself. But then again, reality was fake anyway. Was any of this even worth it? Maybe that punk should’ve just let his father kill my simulation, so I wouldn’t have to deal with this mess at all.
No.
Standing up, I solidified my resolve. Hopeless? Hardly. Nathan had said every class mattered, that it all depended on the player’s skill. I’d be the ultimate priestess in the realm! With a determined step, I set out on the path to become a battle legend.
[Congratulations! You unlocked the STAMINA stat.] |
The system kindly reminded me that every hero’s first task was to exhaust themselves. Herself, whatever. Ouch! A sharp, needle-like pain shot up from my feet. Wait, why was I barefoot? I checked my [Inventory] and discovered my character’s sorry excuse for gear:
|
|
Katherine’s guru voice echoed in my mind: Imagine a lake without end. Let your mind flow like a calming river into the lake. I took a deep breath and tried picturing it. No luck.
This “robe” barely covered my shoulders and hands; it looked like someone had cut holes in an old sack and attached a flimsy patch over the thighs, just long enough to reach my knees. Of course, almost-naked clothing for girls—classic. Whatever.
Looking around, I recognized the enchanted forest where Elf players spawned. If I remembered right, this part was the Woodland of Dreams. The plan was simple: head north, exploit the Boss, and level up fast. No one was in sight, which was good. But it was also bad, because Priests needed party support. Maybe I could solo, though. After all, I was an exploiter.
A rustle in the bushes made me spin around just as pain flared in my foot—something was biting me!
“Ahhhh!” I yelped. This insane “Princess” character must’ve set the reality filters to 100%! The only way to adjust it would be to spam support and wait. Thanks, Nathan. That’s why everything felt so painfully real! A strange creature—a cross between a rabbit and a small bear—was gnawing on my leg.
[Congratulations! You unlocked the HP stat.] [You lost 1 HP.] |
[Bearbit Lv.1] Type: 1-common Normal | HP: 8/8 |
“You’re gonna regret that!” My voice sounded oddly melodic, but my warrior instincts kicked in, and I kicked back with my free foot.
[Congratulations! You unlocked the STRENGTH stat.] [Due to low strength, Bearbit ignored the damage.] |
Great, this is just great! I gripped my staff and aimed straight for its head, taking some satisfaction in the dull thud as it connected.
[Critical hit! Target lost 3HP.] |
Yes! I tried various types of smashing until I had a complete victory and the weird, weak monster released me. If I was a warrior, I would just rip the sword through its head for x4 damage and one-shot it. Whatever.
[Bearbit has been defeated. +1XP] |
Of course, at the start, the blue screens were numerous. With time, they toned it down with patches to not annoy readers. Readers? Oh, players reading the blue screens, whatever. That wasn’t the current problem.
|
My good mood vanished as soon as I read my miserable stats. Low HP, pathetic strength, and barely any stamina. How was I supposed to fight with this nonsense? Whatever.
After a quick rest, my stamina recovered, and I trudged north. Bearbits were everywhere, as if Nathan had designed them just to level me up at least once. Frustrated, I kicked a pine tree, knocking off bits of bark. Having to rest after every fight was driving me insane.
Up ahead, I spotted a thief fending off at least three Bearbits at once. “That bastard!” I muttered, a string of curses slipping out. I considered joining him, but he was a stranger—and it wasn’t worth the risk. Better not.
“Come at me, Bearbits! I’m a master of this big stick!” I taunted, my melodic voice ringing out. Two of them lunged at me; I dodged the uglier one and swung with all my strength, decapitating the other. After the dust settled, the sweet tone of a level-up chimed.
[Congratulations! You are now level 1!] [Spell Heal unlocked. Mana unlocked.] [You found a recalling scroll.] |
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Wait—Recalling Scrolls were still a thing? I guess Irwen was still out there, slumbering somewhere. Anyway, I’d finally hit level one! Now the game could truly begin. But first… a well-earned rest.
***
In the eastern part of the same forest, Lucas was attempting his first spell. He scowled at a strange symbol—Chinese-looking, according to the help window—and tried to trace it in the air. But as he finished the shape, the gathered energy fizzled and vanished.
What the hell am I doing wrong? He thought, frustrated. That was the right symbol, okay?!
Just as he was about to analyze the intricacies of this frustrating system, a message from John popped up, requesting to form a party. Sure, why not? He accepted and sat on a nearby boulder, feeling his mana slowly trickle back after his failed attempts.
Suddenly, a loud rumbling shattered the forest’s peaceful silence, reverberating like something heavy crashing through glass. The wind whipped around him, making the pine needles tremble and rustle.
“What’s going on?” Lucas sprang up, scanning the grass. Just next to his boulder, the ground was marked by a strange, glowing circle, filled with symbols similar to the ones he’d tried to draw moments ago.
Boss battle? Heart pounding, he clutched his staff and prepared himself. A few steady breaths later, the circle flared with a blinding light, forcing him to shield his eyes. As the light faded, he lowered his hand—and the sight before him drained the color from his face.
Not a Boss. No monster. Instead, a girl he knew all too well stood there. Her pale blonde hair tumbled over her shoulders, and the virtual reality’s detail enhanced the slim, graceful shape of her waist. Even her slightly more-than-average chest appeared a little fuller, but her legs… her legs were just the same length as in real life—she’d be disappointed.
She’d always wanted longer legs and a smaller nose, and he remembered how she’d get adorably furious at her reflection in the mirror. But he’d loved her exactly as she was.
Her long, pointed ears, the hallmark of an elf, framed her face beautifully. Memories of those late nights in the park flooded back, when they’d talked about the future, about exploring this world together. That was before he’d made a mistake. Before he’d lost it all. Before she was taken from him.
She waved, flashing her perfect white teeth, and his heart twisted painfully. He knew she was gone, knew she’d never come back, knew this was only a trace. But he couldn’t stop the smile that crept across his face as he waved back at his Charlie.
Ah, John, he thought, a heavy ache settling in his chest. What have I done?
Author's note: What a way to end the chapter, right? I hope the transition line between different POVs was clear enough to expect it. Should I create more space between the lines? What about the blue screens?
i hope lucas isn't the ship. forgetting the whole yaoi debate in gender bender, the fact that john is taking over the identity of his dead lover just seems super creepy to me.
you have total reason
And ppl should be afraid of the field medic, cuz they know body anotomy than any battle maniac idiot out there :v
Tsk tsk..... Healer decide who lives & who die in a MMO.... They are basically god!
I afraid the day that the mmorpg creators make the sub class of priest/healers that they can heal themselves, they would be hulk with infinite hp
Lol, Lucas is really stupid. He loved someone and she died, so what to do ? Change your friend so he looks like her
It requires 15s of interrupted channeling -> shouldn't that be UNinterrupted?
A man behind female avatar? Since the game uses real body scanned avatar, won't he be in big trouble?
I thought that the novel art was how the main character looked in the game, but Lucas described 'Princess' as having blond hair ?
I gonna be honest, I don't denounce what Lucas did as much as others do, yes, what he did is wrong, and although you may argue that his decision will only bring more pain to him, and that he should learn to live without the love of his life, this is only easy to say for someone who never was truly madly in love, this kind of decision may bring more harm than good to him, but I simply cannot bring myself to condemn his actions, it's indeed selfish and dumb of him, but I hope when John finds out he many have the heart to forgive his friend.
Btw, I loved the plot twist, people with lots of wit might have already figured something was off, but for a dummy like me, it was a surprise
I have one question. Why the f*ck do you need to unlock what are essentially CORE stats?!? That’s like the absolute worse game design ever, just after game devs stealth-nerf’ing the hell out of everything just make the game grindier or to force people to use cash shops.
If that’s where game development goes in our own world, I do not want any part in it. 😆
Of course, at the start, the blue screens were numerous. With time, they toned it down with patches to not annoy readers. Readers? Oh, players reading the blue screens, whatever. That wasn’t the current problem.
I see you.....