Chapter 878: Foreshadowing
<span style="font-weight:400">The patch was still a week away, which meant that my meeting with Balu naturally came first. After roughly two days of waiting, I received a message from Balu, inviting me to go over to her Admin Room That… honestly, it surprised me. She had always been the oneing to me, so I thought that was just how the Gilded Branch operated.
<span style="font-weight:400">That said, she did make a special note asking me to bring Bihena along with me. It had been a while since the two saw one another, so I didn’t mind taking her over. Once I told Bihena that Balu wanted us to go see her, she quickly changed into a casual outfit with a deep blue, baggy shirt and form-fitting jeans.
<span style="font-weight:400">As soon as Bihena was ready, I braced myself and chose the option to leave the Admin Room. The room seemed to spin around us, faster and faster while colors and shapes faded away to nothing. Soon, we were left with naught but a white void, numerous doors beginning to form in a circle around us.
<span style="font-weight:400">“I… have confusion.” I spoke up, Bihena nodding her head quickly in agreement.
<span style="font-weight:400">“Which door are we supposed to take?” She asked, looking around. There were at least thirty doors positioned evenly around us, each one looking perfectly identical.
<span style="font-weight:400">“Maybe they’re all the right answer?” I suggested in a hopeful tone. Knowing the system, it wouldn’t be that easy. However, given that there were no distinguishing characteristics on the doors themselves, we could only choose at random.
<span style="font-weight:400">I walked straight ahead, choosing the door that appeared directly before us. When I opened it, the other side of the door seemed to bepletely underwater, the shadowy depths visible behind the frame. I could see something moving in the shadows, and quickly attempted to m the door shut.
<span style="font-weight:400">Whatever was on the other side seemed to be just a bit faster, a massive tendril reaching out of the frame and grabbing me. “Wrong door!” I shouted, before being dragged into the water. Whatever was holding me, I felt it growing tighter and tighter, crushing my body.
<span style="font-weight:400">Eventually, I felt the murky waters give way, air returning to me as I dropped on a stone floor. I let out a shocked gasp, quickly repairing my body and standing. When I looked around, I saw Bihena shivering next to me, ayer of frost covering her body.
<span style="font-weight:400">“I-I-I picked the wrong door, t-t-too.” She said, her teeth ttering.
<span style="font-weight:400">“Oh, <i><span style="font-weight:400">that</i><span style="font-weight:400"> one…” Balu’s voice spoke up from not far away. “As a quick note of reference, if you ever get that one again, the best door is directly behind your starting position. That will take you straight to your destination.”
<span style="font-weight:400">I looked over, seeing the anthropomorphic rabbit waving at us from the side of the tform. “Thanks… I’ll make a note of that for the future. Did you get everything taken care of that you needed?”
<span style="font-weight:400">Balu blinked at that, before her eyes went wide in recognition. “Oh! Right, yeah. Everything’s sorted now. I’m just letting my world fast forward until it gets to a good point for me to descend and cultivate personally.”
<span style="font-weight:400">After she said that, she pped her paws together, the room heating up to melt the frost off of Bihena. “Let’s get the two of you inside, and we can talk business!” She smiled broadly, turning and creating a white door behind herself. My eye twitched at the sight of the door, but we walked through behind her.
<span style="font-weight:400">On the other side of the room was… a paradise of soft. Everything seemed to be made of thick, pillowy fur. Honestly, I was regretting that I didn’t bring Udona with me. This reminded me so much of her old pillow fort.
<span style="font-weight:400">“Take a seat.” Balu said, before jumping andnding in a ball of fluff that appeared to be a chair. Bihena and I looked at each other, each going to simr chairs and sitting down. Somehow, it was even softer than it looked, like sitting on a warm cloud. “You were asking about… UpperLevel, right?” She asked for confirmation, ncing off to the side and looking at a menu screen that I couldn’t see. Probably the chat history, in order to remind herself.
<span style="font-weight:400">“That’s right. I know that he’s a part of the Gamer faction, but that’s about all I know right now.”
<span style="font-weight:400">“Great!” Balu beamed a wide smile, reaching out and tapping on a table that manifested beneath her paw. “The boss told me that we have three levels of information about him. Apparently, someone managed to get around his ‘privacy policy’ and sold us everything they got from him. The information is only a couple months old, so it shouldn’t be that outdated.”
<span style="font-weight:400">“The three levels of information are ‘General Knowledge and Noteworthy Systems’, ‘Detailed Information’, and ‘Full Disclosure’. They’re priced at…” Balu nced off to the side again. “Five, ten, and twenty-five thousand points each. If you’re the one attacking, I’d suggest the Full Disclosure package, since it will help your people blend in with his world.”
<span style="font-weight:400">I shook my head at that. “I’m on the defending team, this time. I’ll take the ten thousand point package.”
<span style="font-weight:400">I leaned forward, preparing to shake Balu’s hand to transfer the points to her, before I found something smooth and round in my hand instead. Looking down, I saw an information sphere that Balu had ced in my palm. I nced up in confusion, wondering why she was giving me this before I paid.
<span style="font-weight:400">“It’s fine! You can just pay before you leave. I trust you won’t rip us off! Anyways, you can look over that information while I go y with Bihena!” Clearly, it was the second reason that really exined her actions, Balu jumping to her feet and running over to grab the human Goddess. “Come on, Bihena! I want to show you my room! Oh, not the memory wall, though. That’s private.”
<span style="font-weight:400">There was unmistakable excitement in her voice as she ran off, like a child seeing a friend again for the first time in ages. I shook my head with a soft chuckle, looking down and focusing on the information orb that Balu provided me. As I did so, I felt the knowledge pouring into my mind.
<span style="font-weight:400">UpperLevel was, indeed, a Gamer. In fact, from the information provided, he used a simr theme as the Dungeon World that Fyor was based off of, but on a dimensional level. There weren’t many specific details about each individualyer, but I was able to get the gist of things from the information provided.
<span style="font-weight:400">Eachyer served as a training ground, and was its own entire universe. After someone reached a certain level, they unlocked the ability to fight a boss for their current realm. Should they manage to defeat the boss, they are elevated to the nextyer. Simrly, people could ess their interfaces to move to anyyer that they had unlocked.
<span style="font-weight:400">It was a rather interesting system, and there was a note attached that said this qualified as a ten thousand point world. It even had a detailed list of what systems were required to reproduce it, showing just how much work the Gilded Branch put into their job.
<span style="font-weight:400">Now, as people climbed higher in theseyers, new systems became avable to them. The crafting system might improve, their map might berger, or they might unlock the ability to join and create guilds. ording to the Gilded Branch’s information, there were five main guilds that defending Keepers should be wary of, as they possessed the most powerful individuals from that world. It was one of these guilds that had brought them victory in a previous invasion.
<span style="font-weight:400">Additionally, they hadbined the Keeper Compass with the system itself, giving them a way to track a world’s Keeper without being detected. That was something that I would need to watch out for. Especially since the five big guilds all had information specialists to help them quickly adapt to any world they encountered.
<span style="font-weight:400">Finally, there was information on the divine system that UpperLevel used. Unsurprisingly, this was integrated into hisyered dimensions. One of the uppermostyers of his world was known as the Divine Realm. Every creature that lived in this world, whether man or beast, was a god. Divine monsters were spawned through the system to serve as training for these gods to develop their skills further.
<span style="font-weight:400">If I was going to be facing a serious invasion, it would likely be this information that I needed to concern myself with. Having an entire world of gods meant that they would likely possess domains capable of hiding from whatever powers I use to track them. At the same time, I saw how the people of this world gained new domains after their first. It was… honestly interesting.
<span style="font-weight:400">After defeating a divine monster, there was a chance for it to drop a shard of divinity. If one gathered enough of these shards, they could exchange them for a domain within the system. Their second domain cost ten shards, and then one hundred, increasing by a factor of ten for every domain they wished to exchange.
<span style="font-weight:400">This information, simply put, was worrying to know. With the power of the five guilds, they could have entire farming teams dedicated to harvesting divinity for a select few. It was entirely possible that there would be gods possessing as many as nine domains involved in the invasion.
<span style="font-weight:400">I furrowed my brow in focus, thinking how I could protect my people from something like that. It had already been proven that gods could eradicate entires. Sadly, it wasn’t possible for me to iste my worlds to keep them safe, because they would most likely be spawning on one of those very worlds. Instead, I needed a way to ensure that the worlds themselves would not be caught in the crossfire of the battle.
<span style="font-weight:400">“They have the Keeper Compass, so their first priority should be on reaching my location. Given their level of technology, it’s likely that there will be gods rted to transportation. The battle could be over in as little as ten minutes, or they might bide their time to look for any traps that I might prepare.”
<span style="font-weight:400">Honestly, the worst case scenario was them simply destroying whatever world they spawned on. I didn’t think they’d resort to such measures, given that the majority of their members would be mortals, but it is possible. Next would be them systematically hunting down the most talented people of my world to reduce my abilities as a Keeper.
<span style="font-weight:400">If they did this, they would be potentially revealing themselves, but the entire where they were staying would effectively be held hostage. That’s why I had to make it look like I was an easy target… while at the same time I had to protect myself.
<i><span style="font-weight:400">If I move to another world with Tsubaki and the others, leaving behind the Citadel, theirpass will make it look like I had run away from the fight. </i><span style="font-weight:400">I thought to myself, before shaking my head. <i><span style="font-weight:400">They could see that as me being an easy target, but that would also give them the time to attack my world in my absence. I need a trump card, something that I can use to defeat a horde of gods.</i>
<span style="font-weight:400">As I thought about that, my eyes went wide. There was a trump card in my world, one that I would just need to im for myself. Towers’ Final Boss, the Dragon God of Endings. If I could im his power, then I would be more assured in my fight.
<span style="font-weight:400">As for the question of whether they would chase me or fight my world in my absence… I would need to rely on Chel again. This was going to be a big project, a very big project.