Emperor of Solo Play Chapter 3

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Chapter 3. A class you can play alone (1)

2010 was the era of smartphones. They changed the lives of millions of people.

But technology continued advancing, and in year 2030, the smartphone era came to an end. It was now the new era of virtual reality. Peach Corporation’s virtual reality connection device, V-Gear, gave way to the beginning of this era. For just 20,000 dollars, any household could dive into the world of virtual reality.

The smartphone era was nothing in comparison to the VR era. Virtual reality did not just absorb the technologies of the real world, as new content developed just for the virtual world.

Among them, virtual reality games were the most popular.

Game companies didn’t hesitate to invest millions or even billions of dollars into developing this new technology. As a result, they could release higher quality content than any other business in the world.

At the same time, it was the start of a war.

Due to their investments and preparedness, their games had similar quality, and none stood out as the best.

It was the beginning of a warring era.

Game companies experimented with new methods of raising their market shares, and many went bankrupt as a result. The one that put an end to this warring era was not a game company, but an AI developing company called Tobot Soft. It was with their AI program that Warlord was created.

Warlord.

With a typical fantasy setting, the game was not too different from the other games in the market. In fact, it was much tamer compared to games where the players battled in space or flew in the air with wings.

It was the scale of its world and its stability that made it unsurpassable by others.

Tobot Soft’s secret lied behind a management artificial intelligence program called M.I.

Simply put, the game wasn’t controlled by the company but an artificial intelligence program. Its initial development cost was huge, but the management cost was ground-breakingly small. At a time when the price of VR game programmers was soaring to the sky, the method proved to be especially efficient. A.I.s didn’t need a salary.

Plus, it was easy to copy and mass produce an A.I. Hiring a thousand professional programmers took at least six months, but obtaining a thousand copy of an A.I. took only about a month.

Countless A.I.s worked to control and manage the server, and as a result, Warlord became a game that surpassed any other game in existence.

March 11th, 2035, a year after the game made its debut, the player base was well over one million. By its 4th anniversary, the number rose to over ten million, worthy of the game’s title as the greatest game to ever exist.

Ten million was not a small number.

To play a VR game, one needed a VR device. Peach Corporation controlled 70 percent of the VR device market and its cheapest VR device, the Level 1 V-Gear, cost 20 thousand dollars.

In addition, one needed 2,599 dollars just to create a Warlord character. Upon creation, one could play the game free for 3 months, but afterwards, there was a monthly fee of 799 dollars.

In Korean standards, it cost 20 million won to buy the gaming device, another 3 million to make a character, and 800 thousand more every month.

There were ten million people who could meet such requirements.

An economist once said,

“If you calculate the average income of a Warlord player, it would be about 80 thousand dollars. A game with over 10 million players and an average income of 80 thousand. That’s enough purchasing power to match a country’s.”

Businesses smelled the money just as easily.

Numerous companies and corporations became sponsors of Warlord players that had fame and influence. Famous rankers, especially the official top 100 rankers, were walking advertisements, and their bodies were worth at least a billion won.

Most importantly, Warlord was fun.

Players with superhuman powers killing monsters with different skills and magic was more exciting than any movie, and the fact that a player could die at any time made the game more thrilling than any sports in the world.

Someone once said,

“The proliferation of virtual reality games had the biggest impact on sports and movie industries. No matter how thrilling a sports is, no sportman puts their life on line, but in the game world, everyone fights with their life on the line. No matter how well-made a movie is, at the end of the day, a movie is a movie. It has a set scenario, while gamers create their own scenario. A game character is one’s second life, and in this world, a movie can never beat a real life.”

In this era, one could gain the wealth and prestige of a professional soccer player or a major league star just by gaming. As a result, countless people sought to become this era’s protagonist.

However.

“Becoming a famous gamer? Only one out of every thousand can do that. Right now in Warlord, there’s only about 3,000 people who make over a 100 million won. Considering Warlord’s player base, that’s less than the top 0.01 percent. Plus, imagine the amount of money you have to spend to maintain your ranking that high. Take any one of these 3,000 people, they probably spent just as much on Warlord as they earned.”

Only a very small minority of players could enjoy the life of wealth and fame.

“Not to mention, VR games are completely different than PC games. You can’t get better by just leveling up. It’s about talent. Even though it’s an RPG game, you can’t become a ranker with just levels and items. If you start playing with that mindset, you’ll end up quiting within a month. You just have to enjoy it. Warlord is the world’s most unfair game. If you compare yourself to others, you won’t win over your inferiority complex.”

Right, virtual reality games were more unfair than any other games.

Even in PC games, there are good players and bad players. In a VR world, where everyone has superhuman powers, the difference was even clearer.

That’s not all.

In Warlord, the best way to earn money was through live broadcasts.

However, only 30 channels were given permission to broadcast Warlord-related content. In the past, when problems began to arise from gambling and swearing in private broadcasts, most countries began to require licenses for broadcasting certain content. In the case of Warlord, only 30 channels were given licenses.

That was how the Top 30 Guilds were created. Guilds that obtained broadcasting channels received no small benefits.

Furthermore, these guilds used the money and influence gained through live broadcasts and live tickets to prevent other guilds from challenging their authority. Although everyone aimed to become one of the Top 30 Guilds in the beginning, the gap between a Top 30 Guild and a non-Top 30 Guild only grew wider over time.

They were in a league of their own.

By the time Warlord entered its 4th year of service, no one could threaten to close this gap.

Except one.

The Hahoe Mask Guild.

Its members all fought wearing hahoe masks. Despite a majority of them having started a year after existing rankers, they showed incredible skills and results. In time, they even started to threaten the positions of the Top 30 Guilds.

And in the middle of this storm was Hyrkan.

His nickname, the Hero Slaughterer.

The nickname was given to him because he effortlessly slaughtered the rankers that represented Warlord.

He was a monster that defied logic.

“Hyrkan? He’s a real monster, the kind that disrupts an ecosystem. He throws a 150 km fastball, then throws a 250 km fastball right afterwards. Plus, he games harder than anyone else. That’s what VR games are all about. No matter how much time you invest, someone without talent can’t beat someone with talent. Even if someone with talent achieves something by investing time, it becomes nothing in front of greater talent. I assure you, Hyrkan is at the top in both talent and effort. If he started just a year earlier, no one would be his match.”

A monster that disrupts an ecosystem.

It was an apt description.

It was also the reason why Hyrkan was ostracized.

“Why Hahoe Mask Guild betrayed Hyrkan? It’s simple. They would’ve been ostracized by the Top 30 Guilds otherwise. At first, they all fought to recruit Hyrkan, but they soon realized it wasn’t going to happen. Hyrkan isn’t the type to bow his head in front of others. A tiger can grow up drinking a dog’s milk, but a tiger is a tiger, a dog is a dog.”

The Top 30 Guilds were already making enormous profit in their own ecosystem.

There was no way they would stand still and watch a monster like Hyrkan ruin it. Even so, they suffered more harm than good trying to take him out.

Hyrkan. Although he was nicknamed the Hero Slaughterer, he never actively sought out to kill others. It was always three or four rankers that attacked him first, and he only retaliated. Hyrkan never wanted to become a “slaughterer.”

So when Stormhunter Guild absorbed Hahoe Mask Guild and declared war on Hyrkan, the rest of the Top 30 Guilds promised their tacit support. It wasn’t anything unexpected.

“Hahoe Mask Guild is probably thankful to Hyrkan, but their inferiority complex must have been equally big. Betraying Hyrkan and joining the Stormhunter Guild or fighting against the entire Top 30 Guilds. The choice was obvious.”

No matter how amazing Hyrkan was, he wasn’t capable fight against the Top 30 Guilds by himself.

“In the end, Hyrkan was too amazing for his own good. That’s why he was betrayed from Warlord.”

Shunned by the whole world, Hyrkan was left with no choice but to quit Warlord.

Of course, all this…

“I can’t believe this is happening to me.”

Hasn’t happened as of now.

“I returned to the past…”

An Jaehyun, he returned to 2036.

With all his memories intact!

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27 thoughts on “Emperor of Solo Play Chapter 3

  1. Wait, if 2035 is a year after the debut and he returned to 2036, does this mean he played the game for a year already?

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    • Me! My life is pretty shit and i dont see it changing much even if i could redo it again..even with 10,000x more drive, motivation and determination…oh and luck and caring.

      Also.

      Well now. I think authors should have an international get together to make a “Trains, Planes, and Automobile Scapegoat Guideline” for all future authors (and poser authors). Truck-chan gets the otherworld reincarnation power, Bus-san gets the timeline reliver power, and Animal Hauler-senpai gets the crack in space&time power (tends to just send someone to another world with their current body, though Gods (and Goddesses) tend to intervene and give a hand(job?) so they dont insta-death it).

      Then all the Jap School Transfer ones can be turned into Planes/Ships and then we can make Drone-obachan the “Die again to try again” consolation killer.

      Serial killers and insane folks can just be leashed to natural causes imo.

      Liked by 2 people

  2. fuck 20 thousen dollar is cheap you son of ………………………………………………799 dollar a month are you kidding me lol

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    • Be interesting, no? Id kill someone for a headset and dispose of the body for an additional month of gametime. Wonder if it can be used in prison?

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  3. I don’t know about you people, but that sounds like a shitty game. The cost, the premise, the pay to win to the extreme, the ranking gap that punishes 99% of its player base, alienating everyone that wasn’t playing from the beginning. The whole concept just sounds like a game that nobody sane would bother with.

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  4. I find it difficult to believe that 10 million people would spend 23,000 USD on what is basically a toy. Especially with an additional $800 per month (a.k.a.: ~$10k/year). Though, if you consider that he spent $10 on a lottery ticket, and very generously assume that it means that inflation has taken a massive bite out of the world economy, inflating the cost of a $1 lottery ticket to $10, then it would be slightly more reasonable, though still not likely. The cost of entry is simply too high for the vast majority of people.

    Also, how would you even make money in a game like that? Anyone playing is already rich and is unlikely to be willing to grind for stuff to sell for RL cash. A game that only has whales dies very very quickly. Too many free-to-play games to count have proven this over and over again.

    I don’t know what idiot said that quote about sports and movies, but they clearly aren’t an expert on sports or why people watch them. Boxers, MMA fighters, racers, American Football players, Rugby players and too many other athletes to mention put their lives and their health (in the permanent sense) on the line for peoples’ amusement every single day. And its not something virtual where the stakes are practically non-existent. Injuries that kill or cripple you are a very real concern for real athletes. Heck, even pro Starcraft players are more likely to hurt themselves than someone in VR.

    Also, the scripting in movies is what makes them exciting. There’s a reason why “reality TV” never shows you reality. Its boring. I’m not saying that there wouldn’t be people who would want to watch the game. I’m just saying that it would never eclipse movies.

    And how would you even fill 30 channels with content on a single game? Especially if each channel limited themselves to a single guild? I could see Youtube channels getting away with that, but if Cartoon Network, MTV, VH1, etc. have taught us anything, its that extremely specialized channels don’t survive. ESPN comes the closest, but even they don’t focus on just one sport, much less just one team in that one sport.

    Also, if you can’t get better just by leveling up and getting better gear, then how did the MC get his ass beat down by people who were inferior to him simply because they leveled faster than him?

    And on that note, why wouldn’t the other 29 guilds jump at the chance to recruit him? He’s obviously stronger than anyone in the guild that hated him, and with a bit of protection and support, he could easily propel whatever guild he joined into the top slot. Its not like the guild leaders would fear what’s-her-face. Their backgrounds would be no less extreme than hers to be able to afford to become a top 30 guild. Plus, his hatred for her would be all the motivation he’d need to join them, especially if they were willing to make his vendetta their own. Considering that at least one guild had to have been warring with her’s on a semi-regular basis, there’s no reason to believe that there wouldn’t have been a guild willing to take him in.

    Heck, even if they didn’t have anything against her before, just her taking in his guild and instantly making her 30th rank guild the strongest contender for 1st would have been more than enough reason for the other guilds to want to suppress her a bit, if for no other reason than to force her to break up his old guild and distribute its players amongst the other guilds.

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    • I would love to play some of these types of games where skill, talent and being a nolife sack of shit gets you famous and wealthy. But then they have these political aspects and whatnot where a single person can ruin a competitive gaming scene because they can throw money around like they got the national budget as lunch money.

      LMS
      Ark
      ESP
      TKA
      Rebirth of the Thief Who Roamed The World (give me a good acronym!)
      etc….

      All these stories have games that have what sounds like amazing combat systems, some way grindier than others but still tolerable imo, and large MASSIVE worlds to play in. Sadly they almost if not all ALSO have large influence on real life cause of VR tech and most people hating atleast one aspect of their real life so willing to throw money at the game. Also have gaming mechanics that allow one person or group of people to influence large sections of the game which can ruin it for a lot of others.

      The only one off the top of my head that isnt insanely priced and such would be Rebirth.

      With that said I still could not see Western Audiences liking these games because of the long grind, the lack of “meta” (unless we just call the peak leveled individuals being at meta), the large death penalties (lose of levels, items, or even inability to play for 12-48hrs) and a fair amount of these games have Item Durability which hasnt existed in a REAL sense in a Western MMO since DAoC and its competition (Real item durability being your stuff breaks and is GONE and its max dura slowly dropping unless repaired properly by good blacksmiths).

      Honestly lets face it. Western MMO audience is carebear compared to Asian markets so the only way we would EVER see a game similar to any of these story ones would be if a company like Unicorn from LMS arrived on scene and said “PLAY IT OR DONT GAME!”. Oh and they would also burn Blizzard WoW Support HQ to the ground with supreme aggression.

      Sorry got a little emotional and irrational at the end. Enough commenting I guess. Back to reading.

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      • This is a very fair point, most people I know would only sink in enough money to buy a game and the system it runs on, and then expect everything you need to win to be in the game or your skill.
        As a western person, most games have very little kill penalties and very easy rewards mixed with more difficult rewards, people wont play a game they are feeling fulfilled in

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