Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 7: Game Start! from I'm a Genius with an Army of Robo Waifus!, a Drama novel by LonelyMrBanana.

Dinner at the ran shop ran longer than I’d planned—not that I minded.

Miyabi and I talked for a good while over empty bowls, the kind of easy, wandering conversation that didn’t need a point to justify itself. Filled with lots of chuckles and giggles. The small, forgettable kind that sohow sticks with you anyway.

Eventually I said my goodnights, thanked the auntie, and headed ho.

The walk back was rcifully uneventful. No ambushes, no gang mbers with fresh grudges, no bullies materializing from side streets to make my evening interesting. Just the streetlights and the sound of my own footsteps.

"I’m ho..."

The words ca out automatically the mont I stepped through the door.

Nobody answered, of course. The apartnt sat exactly as I’d left it—quiet. The familiar ache of that settled briefly in my chest before I pushed it aside.

"Right."

This ti. That was the whole point of being here.

This ti, I wasn’t going to watch everyone around get swallowed up by sothing I was too weak to stop.

And the first step toward that was the ga.

I needed to push my character’s level as high and as fast as possible.

Thankfully, Miyabi had agreed to play alongside , which ant that particular strategy Kiki had ntioned back in another lifeti was actually on the table. I was genuinely glad she’d said yes.

It was still relatively early. I set my phone alarm for 11:30 PM, tucked it beside the pillow, changed into sothing comfortable, and let myself fall asleep before overthinking could take over.

---

Vigilance is the most important thing you can have when the world becos a battlefield.

Living alone ans nobody guards you while you sleep but yourself—and after nearly twenty years of exactly that, I’d honed mine past the point of conscious effort.

Tap.

The mont my phone screen lit up, before the alarm could make a single sound, my hand had already found it. Snooze pressed, my eyes flung open, before sitting upright.

"..."

Still my room. Still the sa cotton shirt and pants. Still the "past."

I’d half-expected to wake up back in the middle of dying, so cruel trick of consciousness snapping back to the mont before the wish. But nothing of the sort happened.

The room was exactly as I’d left it, and so was I.

I stood and stretched—limbs, back, shoulders, neck—working through it thodically. I was going to be lying still for a long ti, and poor circulation during a VR session was the kind of thing that forced an involuntary logout at the worst possible mont.

Getting a cramp mid-dungeon was not sothing I intended to experience.

Once I was satisfied, I sat back on the bed and picked up the VR Dive Ring.

It was the first ti I’d actually held one—the hardware had been far out of reach for during the original tiline, for obvious financial reasons.

It was smaller than I’d imagined, roughly the size and shape of a standard neck pillow, ergonomically curved to sit comfortably whether you were lying down or sitting up. How it actually worked was entirely beyond . The manual existed, so I trusted the manual.

I plugged in the charger and watched the indicator lights blink—red, then green, alternating in a slow rhythm. Then I located the side port and inserted the USB installer for Heaven’s Path.

I settled back against the pillow, let the ring rest around my neck, and closed my eyes.

Per the manual, there were specific words required.

"Ga Start!"

The mont I said them, my vision went dark.

When it ca back a few seconds later, I was sitting on a sofa. Red upholstery, slightly worn.

In front of , an old CRT television screen, the kind that hadn’t been manufactured in decades, its face glowing with patient, antiquated light. Beside it on the floor sat an ancient console, equally dated, with a chunky controller resting on top.

Beyond the reach of the light: nothing. Just darkness, clean and absolute, like the rest of the world hadn’t loaded yet.

"...Oldies style, huh."

I tried standing and walking—discovered imdiately that the darkness wasn’t decorative. An invisible boundary stopped at the edge of the light without ceremony. No explanation, no prompt. Just: you stop here.

Odd design choice. A free-roam lobby would’ve been more welcoming.

I picked up the controller and looked at the screen. A single icon occupied it—a stylized sun with radiating lines, warm and bright against the dark display. The Heaven’s Path icon.

I pressed O.

The screen blood to life—and then, without any loading screen or transitional warning, it felt as though the television exhaled, and I was pulled forward. Not taphorically. The force was physical and unambiguous, a gravity without discretion that yanked through the glass like it had decided I belonged on the other side.

And then I was falling.

Clear sky in every direction, the earth a green and brown patchwork roughly twelve kiloters below, the wind loud and imdiate and real. I wasn’t alone, either—other players tumbled through the air around , scattered at varying distances, so close enough to hear.

"WAAAAHAHAHAH!"

"Woohoo! This is AMAZING!"

"FUCK—I’m terrified of heights—SOONE HELP—"

The reactions covered the full spectrum. So people were absolutely thriving, arms spread wide, faces lit up. Others were in various stages of freefall-induced panic, limbs flailing against physics that didn’t care.

I noticed, testing it quietly, that our trajectories were locked. No amount of movent altered the direction of the fall. We were all scripted to land exactly where the ga intended, and no amount of reaching or paddling or trying to drift sideways changed anything. Even people actively attempting to reach panicking players couldn’t close the distance.

’The prologue.’

I’d heard about this from veterans in the old tiline—the scripted opening that couldn’t be skipped and, apparently, had left a deep impression in them.

Now experiencing it firsthand, I could see why.

Below, a dense forest was rising fast. A few seconds of approach later, a popup materialized in my vision, small and matter-of-fact:

The Lost Forest.

The notorious starting point of Heaven’s Path.

Then the ground arrived—and my body moved without my input, legs dropping into position, impact absorbed cleanly, textbook hero landing executed automatically by the ga itself.

The scripted force released the mont my feet touched earth.

I stood, looked around at the other players dispersing into the trees around , and exhaled.

"Finding one specific person in all of this is going to take a while..."

The thought had barely finished forming when a voice cut through the ambient noise of the forest’s edge.

"A-Ah—excuse , I already have soone to play with—"

"No problem, no problem! Is it another girl? Bring her along, we’ll carry you both~!"

I turned toward the sound, seeing a familiar face.

Since the ga uses your actual appearance as base, it wasn’t hard to recognize her.

But two n had positioned themselves in front of Miyabi—one of them had a hand around her arm, not quite dragging but making the intention clear enough. She was holding her ground, voice polite but firm, which wasn’t doing much to discourage either of them.

I sighed quietly.

’Should’ve seen this coming.’

I walked over at an unhurried pace and draped an arm around the larger one’s shoulders with the easy familiarity of a longti friend.

"Hey," I said pleasantly. "She’s with ."

He glanced over at , sized up in approximately one second, and made a decision he was going to briefly regret.

"You?" A short laugh. "Co on, beauty—you’re really teaming up with this guy? Forget it. Roll with us instead, we’ll make it fun, I promise~!"

His companion, the thinner one, nodded with great enthusiasm.

"Yeah! We’ll definitely take better care of you!"

"..."

They were looking straight at while saying this.

I apparently did not register as a deterrent. Interesting.

I shifted my left arm from his shoulders to beneath his chin, settled my right hand against the opposite side of his head, and in one smooth, practiced motion—

CRACK!

—twisted.

His head rotated a full three-sixty.

Above him, bold red text materialized in the air:

CRITICAL!

100!!!

Every point of HP, gone in a single input.

He dissolved into light particles before they’d finished fading, gone without so much as a sound.

"...Wut."

The thin one stared at the space where his companion had been, mouth open, completely stationary.

First death respawned after a minute—and would double in length after every death. The other guy would be back shortly, probably with a revised opinion of the situation. Which ant this was a good ti to be sowhere else.

"Let’s go."

Miyabi blinked at . "...Huh?"

I took her by the wrist and led her into the tree line before the minute was up.

Honestly. Monsters were easier to deal with than people like that. At least monsters had the decency to attack you directly.

You are reading I'm a Genius with an Army of Robo Waifus! Chapter 7: Game Start! on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.