LOGINWhen the world’s first AI-run game launches, billions log in expecting power, fame, and a fair start. Riley gets none of that. While others walk away from the opening trial with strength, speed, and obvious abilities, Riley leaves with something no one understands—a forgotten path, a hidden class, and a power that only awakens when the world goes dark. By day, he’s weaker than everyone around him. By night… he becomes something else entirely. As players begin to realise the game isn’t as fair—or as forgiving—as they thought, secrets start surfacing. Paths that can be missed. Power that can be lost forever. And choices that don’t just shape builds… but define who survives. Riley isn’t trying to be the best. He’s just the one who chose differently.
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The countdown hit zero.
Riley's screen opened without fanfare—no flash, no dramatic build-up, just a clean transition that somehow landed harder than any spectacle could have. His hand moved before his thoughts caught up, clicking through, placing the neural pads against his temples.
For three months, it had been inescapable.
Spiritbound.
Not the usual hype that burned bright for a week and faded. This had been different. It kept pushing back into every conversation, every news cycle, every quiet moment when people wondered what was actually about to happen. The central claim was simple enough to understand but impossible to fully believe: the first game built and run entirely by synthetic intelligence. No developers adjusting things behind the scenes. No human hands on the controls once it went live.
Half the community called it marketing genius.
The other half thought it was something genuinely uncontrollable.
Riley hadn't picked a side. But he'd watched the anticipation build in a way he'd never seen before—not just among gamers, but everywhere. Companies quietly closing their doors for launch day. Schools emptying out. Even people who never touched games knowing that today marked something significant.
It didn't feel like hype anymore.
It felt like a threshold.
His phone kept lighting up beside him, messages stacking faster than he could read them.
*You on?*
*Servers are going to die instantly*
*Don't mess up your first choice*
He didn't reply. There wasn't anything to say.
Five seconds.
Four.
Three.
The noise dropped out—not in the room, but in his head, everything else fading until only the countdown remained.
Two.
One.
The screen opened without ceremony, and Riley moved immediately, not checking anything, not second-guessing, just stepping forward because waiting suddenly felt like the wrong decision.
The transition was so smooth it barely registered as one.
One moment he was at his desk, placing neural pads against his temples.
The next—
He was standing in what looked like an old Roman amphitheatre.
That was the first thing that hit him. Not the scale or the detail. Just the fact that he was there, and how natural it felt.
He shifted slightly, testing it without thinking, and the ground responded exactly as it should. No delay, no disconnect, nothing that made him feel like he had to adjust. He took a step, then another, and everything settled into place without resistance.
Which was new.
Players began appearing around him in staggered bursts, making it feel less like a spawn point and more like people arriving. Some stood still, taking it in, while others moved straight away, testing things, jumping, turning, trying to figure out where the limits were.
Voices carried across the space, overlapping, messy, excited.
No one knew what they were doing.
And no one seemed bothered by that.
Riley looked ahead. There wasn't anything forcing him in a direction, no markers telling him where to go, no voice explaining what came next. Just something that felt like a path. Not obvious, but there.
And people were already moving toward it.
He paused for a moment as something from earlier came back to him—the conversations, the arguments, the idea that this world wasn't being managed in the way games usually were. That whatever was happening here was running on its own.
He let out a small breath, more out of habit than anything else, then stepped forward, moving with the rest of the players as the space ahead began to shift, the open area narrowing just enough that everyone naturally drifted in the same direction without needing to be told.
At first, it felt like nothing more than the next part of the world opening up.
Then the crowd slowed.
Not all at once, but enough that the change in pace was noticeable, voices dipping slightly as attention pulled forward.
Something was there.
Riley followed the shift in focus, his gaze settling ahead as the space opened out into something far larger than the path behind them had suggested.
At the centre of it stood a figure.
It wasn't just large—it was impossibly large, its form rising like something carved out of the world itself, broad-shouldered and towering, as though it had been there long before anything else had been built around it. Its surface didn't quite look like stone or flesh, but something in between, layered and worn, as if it had been shaped over time rather than created all at once.
Its head tilted slightly.
That small movement was enough to still the entire space.
People stopped, not because anything told them to, but because moving past it no longer felt like an option.
Riley felt it too, not fear exactly, but a clear understanding that this wasn't something meant to be ignored.
For a moment, nothing happened.
Then the figure moved.
It wasn't fast, and it didn't need to be. The shift carried through the entire space, subtle but absolute, like the world itself had adjusted to acknowledge it.
And when it spoke—
Riley felt it before he properly heard it.
The sound didn't travel toward him. It pressed into him, low and heavy, like a distant impact rolling through the air and into his chest, through his bones, settling there in a way that made it impossible to ignore.
"Welcome, humans."
The words spread outward, not louder, just present everywhere at once, as if the space itself was carrying them.
"You have been chosen."
Riley didn't move.
No one did.
It wasn't that they couldn't. It simply didn't occur to them to try.
Then the voice came again, slower this time, deliberate.
"Now…"
The pressure lingered, holding everything in place without force.
"…it is your turn to choose what defines you."
Something shifted in the world itself.
Riley felt it clearly this time, like something had just changed state, like everything up to this point had been leading to a moment he'd only just stepped into.
And whatever came next was going to determine everything.
The entity's hand rose slowly.
The ground beneath Riley's feet began to glow—not with light exactly, but with something else, something that pulsed in rhythm with his heartbeat.
A rhythm it shouldn't have been able to know.
Around him, other sections of the amphitheatre floor lit up in different colors. Deep crimson to his left. Cold silver ahead. Something that looked like fractured gold spreading beneath a cluster of players near the edge.
The entity's voice came again, but this time it didn't fill the space.
It spoke directly into his mind.
"Choose now."
Riley's vision remained clear. Empty.
He hadn't seen any options yet.
The light didn’t change when they stepped into the cave, but the space did.The forest noise dropped off almost immediately, not completely gone, but far enough away that it felt like it belonged to somewhere else, replaced by the quieter, heavier stillness of enclosed stone where every step carried just a little further than it should.Riley slowed slightly, letting his eyes adjust as the entrance curved inward, the rough ground beneath their feet evening out into something more solid, the loose dirt giving way to worn stone that felt like it had seen far more movement than the forest outside.“Alright,” Abraham said quietly as he stepped in beside him, glancing back once toward the entrance before looking ahead again. “This already feels like a bad idea.”Riley gave a faint smirk.“Most good ones do.”“That’s not reassuring.”“It’s not meant to be.”They moved forward together, neither rushing, both naturally falling into a pace that kept them close without needing to say it out lou
The forest didn’t change all at once.It happened gradually, in small shifts that were easy to miss if you weren’t paying attention, the kind of differences that didn’t stand out on their own but began to add up the longer you stayed within them, until eventually the space around you felt different without you being able to point to exactly why.The ground softened first.The packed earth near the entrance gave way to looser soil, broken up by roots that pushed through at uneven angles, forcing each step to be placed a little more carefully than the last, the path they had been following fading into nothing behind them as the forest closed in from all sides.Riley didn’t slow because of it.He adjusted.His stride shortened slightly, his weight shifting more deliberately from one step to the next, his focus no longer split between direction and observation but settled fully ahead, tracking where they were going rather than where they had been.Lumi hovered quietly at his side, its glo
The figure resolved into a man as they drew closer.He stood just inside the forest line, not deep enough to be hidden but far enough that the shadows reached him before the light did, his posture carrying the kind of quiet fatigue that came from waiting longer than intended, as though he had stopped to rest and then simply never moved again.He looked up as they approached, relief crossing his face in a way that felt immediate and unforced, his shoulders loosening slightly as if the simple presence of other people had taken some of the pressure off him.“Thank God,” he said, pushing himself upright properly now, brushing a hand down the front of his coat as though trying to restore some sense of order. “I was starting to think no one would come this way.”Riley slowed to a stop a few steps away, not crowding him, giving himself enough distance to observe without turning it into something confrontational, his attention settling on the details first rather than the impression—the worn
The town gate was noticeably busier than it had been earlier, with players moving in and out in loose, uneven groups, some already working together while others drifted without direction, their voices blending into a steady hum that gave the place a sense of constant movement, as though it had already become a natural meeting point whether people intended it or not.Riley eased his pace as he approached, not stopping outright but slowing enough to take everything in without drawing attention to himself, letting his focus slip past faces and onto behaviour instead, watching how people moved, how they reacted, and how comfortable they looked in a space most of them had only just begun to understand.It didn’t take long to find him.Abraham was leaning against the outer wall just beyond the gate, arms folded, one foot resting loosely against the stone behind him, carrying himself in a way that suggested he had been there long enough to settle into the wait without losing focus, his atten
The amphitheatre vanished the instant the giant's voice faded Not in pieces, but gone in an instant, as if the space itself had been removed and replaced.For a fraction of a second, Riley felt weightless- not falling, but suspended in motion itself, and then the world settled again just as abruptl
The countdown hit zero.Riley's screen opened without fanfare—no flash, no dramatic build-up, just a clean transition that somehow landed harder than any spectacle could have. His hand moved before his thoughts caught up, clicking through, placing the neural pads against his temples.For three
The floor cracked open beneath Riley's feet. No warning. No system prompt. Just stone grinding against stone as lines he'd never noticed split apart, revealing a staircase that spiraled down into darkness older than anything he'd seen above. The statue loomed silent behind him, offering nothing—
The silence hit first. Not gradual. Not fading. Just—gone. One moment Riley was stepping off the pedestal, surrounded by the hum of dozens of players, the vast chamber alive with movement and sound. The next, nothing. The noise didn't lower or muffle—it vanished, as if everything beyond the spac






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