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Now reading: Chapter 120 - 116: Game Over from Luck Stat Broken: Rise of the Khan, a Fantasy novel by GenghisKhanII.

The ambient temperature in the Tactical Suite plumted into a biting chill. Terrifying yellow bioluminescence bled through the dead monitor screens. The massive displays cast a sickly, jaundiced light over the shattered room.

​Vance made no move to trigger a hidden trap. The Ga Master reached up with trembling, bloodstained fingers. He grabbed the knot of his immaculate grey silk tie. Ripping the expensive fabric violently, he pulled the collar open to expose his throat. The pristine corporate uniform served as a useless prop now. He discarded it. Leaning heavily against the glass desk, he sared dark crimson across the flawless surface. He fought a brutal, losing war just to keep his lungs inflated against the rising psychic pressure.

​Don’s finger slid off his sidearm’s trigger. The cynic recognized the posture of a dead man walking. He lowered the heavy pistol a fraction of an inch, staring at the bleeding executive.

​A few feet away, Tyson remained locked on his knees. The massive Goliath-Plate arm dragged the big fighter toward the floor like a boat anchor. Without the System’s ambient mana feed to power the internal servos, the grafted artillery turned into dead weight. The heavy iron gears locked tight. Tyson ground his teeth. He stared at the man who orchestrated their suffering, waiting for a villainous ambush that refused to trigger. Maddie lowered her halberd. Its enchanted edge lost the neon-pink glow, reverting to dull steel. The sheer mass dragged her arms down, forcing her to plant the rusted haft against the carpet just to stay upright. Ash flashed a brilliant, blinding gold before violently fizzling out of existence. The dead zone banished the Mythic Solar-Avian familiar completely.

​Will stepped forward. The lted plastic of the Faction jacket fused to his blistered arm throbbed with a white-hot agony. Burnt polyr dug into his raw muscle fibers with every heartbeat.

​"Tell the grid to reboot," Will rasped, raising his scavenged combat knife. "Turn the jamr back on before it crushes us."

​Vance coughed. He spat a mouthful of dark, clotted blood onto the plush carpet. "I had to play the monster perfectly. If I flinched, if I showed an ounce of rcy, the real monsters would have noticed the anomaly. The grid is gone. The jamr is dead."

​The sputtering hum of the Silo’s secondary life-support vents filled the silence. Distant, chaotic screams of upper-sector elites echoed through the shattered mahogany doors. The massive, hand-drawn map of the 365-floor ga-city flashed in Will’s mory. The architecture made terrifying sense now. It was never a luxury bunker. The structure operated as a massive, engineered lightning rod plunging into the deep earth.

​A shaking, bloody finger pointed toward the dead monitors. Vance forced himself to speak through the blood filling his throat.

​"Aris didn’t grow genetically optimized strawberries while the lower rings starved out of greed," Vance wheezed. "He did it because the hatred from the working class functioned as a localized thermal blanket. Abyssal Leviathans hunt by psychic resonance. Joy, hope, and community radiate a distinct, bright frequency. Misery mutes the human signal. You thought you were fighting a class war. You were acting as the cooling rods in a psychic nuclear reactor."

​Allison pushed her shaking hands against the carpet. She forced herself up onto one knee. The realization hit her like a physical blow. The vibrant, defiant community in the Hopepunk maintenance vents wasn’t a well-kept secret.

​Vance knew Maya’s father and the chanics were stringing hammocks between the kinetic gears. He watched them roast un-engineered at and share canteens of recycled water. Their hope and camaraderie acted as a blinding beacon to the deep earth. Vance sent Corporate drones to suppress them constantly, but he never authorized a full liquidation. He didn’t want to kill them. He needed them miserable and desperate to keep the Silo invisible.

​"You starved a hundred thousand people," Allison gasped. "You let the Praetorians butcher the lower rings."

​Vance rested his sweating forehead against the cold glass of the desk. "I built a society of sociopaths to mimic the bedrock. The Leviathans ignore dead stone. You think I built this place to save the elites? I built it to rot them. They were the loudest targets. I packed them at the top to act as a heat-shield for the rest of you."

​Three hundred miles beneath the foundation of the Alpha Silo, the subterranean ocean shifted. The Leviathans woke from a centuries-long torpor. The abrupt death of the frequency jamr acted like a flare gun fired in a pitch-black cave. Massive, bioluminescent yellow eyes opened in the deep earth. The absolute, crushing weight of the deep earth swallowed the Hopepunk chanics alive down in the maintenance vents. The vibrant neon-pink moss faded to a dull, dead gray. Localized thermal vents sputtered and died.

​Vance pushed off the glass. His legs shook violently. He grabbed a heavy paper ledger off the pristine desk and threw it onto the plush carpet. It landed directly at Will’s feet. The crisp white pages fanned open, stained with fresh red fingerprints.

​Will looked down. He saw his own bloody, desperate victories explicitly itemized in the columns. The brutal Friction Ward prison break did not exist as a heroic rebellion. His Warlord class progression lacked any grand destiny. The corporate math logged his entire journey under a single, sterile heading. Acoustic Distractions. The columns tracked his kills next to percentage increases in stealth-ward coverage. Every move the Vanguard made was a sanctioned smokescreen engineered to mask the subtle hum of the frequency jamr.

​"You weren’t a rebel leader," Vance said, his voice a jagged rasp. "The LitRPG progression system rewards loud, explosive growth. I manipulated the algorithms. Whenever the deep earth began to stir, I unleashed you on a new sector. The raw progression magic you produced was just localized static. I threw you into the gears to keep the real predators looking the wrong way."

​The Leviathan three hundred miles below focused its gaze directly on the Tactical Suite.

​A deafening, structural boom rocked the ga-city. The Sector 1 Armory collapsed under the sheer psychic pressure. The yellow bioluminescence bleeding through the dead screens grew blindingly bright. Shadows in the office warped and stretched toward the floorboards, pulling the ambient light down with them. The gravity spiked with bone-snapping force. Will dropped to his knees. His cracked ribs scread against the kinetic compression. Tyson went flat against the carpet, unable to lift his chin off the floor. Elizabeth curled into a tight fetal position in the corner. She clutched her bleeding ears as the psychic static tore through her skull.

​The high-pitched screech of digital feedback echoed inside Will’s head. Outside the analog dead zone of the Tactical Suite, the LitRPG System attempted to reboot to identify the source of the crushing gravity. The strict digital frawork was designed to quantify the world into manageable numbers and readable stat blocks. It could not quantify an Abyssal Leviathan. The entity’s raw power infinitely exceeded the mathematical paraters. Attempting to parse the data caused a fatal, violent crash.

​Massive, blinding red error ssages overwrote Will’s vision.

​[Requirent Not t]

​[Entity Unrecognized]

​[Fatal Overload]

​The blue neon UI crashed. Blinding red error ssages bled out like violently spilled black ink. The dark, jagged liquid stained their retinas. It swallowed the glowing text before the interface physically broke. The ntal mutilation caused imdiate physical trauma. Elizabeth scread. Her shadow affinity ripped away, leaving her clutching her temples. The agonizing sensation of physical glass carving trenches through the gray matter of the brain dropped her to her knees. Violent, uncontrollable physical seizures racked her body under the raw ntal voltage. The overload threatened to permanently lobotomize every human in the room.

​The LitRPG confines shattered completely.

​A guttural roar of pure, insulted disgust drowned out the corporate silence. The spectral entity of Genghis Khan violently tore himself out of Will’s biological soul-mark. No longer a quantified class feature, the ancient warlord anchored his massive, rusted-iron form in the physical room. The ghostly clatter of a thousand steppe horses and drawn steel bled into the quiet office. He stepped directly between Will and the crushing floor.

​Genghis Khan heard his brutal legacy reduced to a middle-manager’s spreadsheet.

​The warlord stood tall against the impossible gravity. He roared pure, unrefined defiance into the dark, mocking the Leviathans. His brutal intervention buffered the load just enough to keep Will and Allison from suffering permanent brain death. The heavy scent of ancient steppes and rusted iron overpowered the sll of synthetic pine. His iron shield violently buckled. Khan fought the Leviathan’s kinetic compression, but his own wounded, volatile ego fractured his defensive stance. A terrifying wave of localized gravity slamd into the room.

​Don dropped his useless sidearm. The gun hit the floorboards with a heavy thud. "You didn’t fight us. You steered us. We were a controlled burn."

​Will took a heavy, violent step forward. His combat boot planted directly on the open ledger, crushing the crisp paper into the carpet. He kept the rusted knife raised. "I watched my people bleed for every inch of this building. You sat here and balanced a spreadsheet."

​Vance closed his eyes. He refused to flinch. "And the spreadsheet kept you hidden. Until you pulled the plug on the leyline."

​The wet tear of ruined fabric interrupted the execution. Will stood within striking distance. His muscles coiled to drive the blade ho.

​Vance did not retreat. He reached up and ripped the remaining buttons off his ruined shirt. He pulled the fabric wide.

​The pristine executive exterior died right there. Vance’s torso was a nightmare of blackened, rotting at and weeping cosmic burns. The skin over his ribs was stripped raw, revealing the wet, yellowed bone beneath. Ugly, festering sores tracked up his collarbone. The pungent stench of cooked flesh overpowered the sterile pine of the office. He hadn’t been hoarding health potions. The System lacked the mathematical capacity to heal cosmic trauma.

​He acted as a human grounding wire for a decade. Holding the localized dead zone and manually managing the frequency jamr outside the LitRPG System required a physical conduit. The cosmic radiation from the Leviathans bled through the bedrock and straight into his chest. The lted plastic on Will’s arm looked like a papercut compared to the radioactive rot eating the Ga Master alive.

​Vance dropped his hands to his sides. His breathing grew impossibly shallow. He looked up at Will. He was not a god—he was a very tired warden.

​"Go ahead," Vance whispered. "Use the knife. You’d be doing a favor. The ward is broken. My shift is over."

​A massive, jagged crack split Khan’s rusted iron chest plate. The warlord groaned under the impossible load.

​Will stared at the floor. The Faction remained trapped at the bottom of the ocean with a broken flashlight and a bleeding hull.

​The monsters were coming.

​Vance dropped heavily to his bleeding knees. He did not reach for a hidden drawer. He crawled under the pristine glass desk and ripped away a false synthetic panel near the floorboards.

​The action exposed a massive, crude piece of industrial deep-earth iron. It was bolted directly into the bedrock foundation of the ga-city. The heavy chanical lever violently clashed with the sterile, noise-canceling aesthetic of the Tactical Suite. Red rust flaked off the handle. It looked like a piece of scavenged junk ripped from the Hopepunk maintenance vents.

​Vance wrapped his rotting fingers around the cold iron. He prepared to trigger the analog fail-safe that the Leviathans could not detect. Thick rust locked the iron gears in place. It would take an impossible, life-burning amount of kinetic force to break the friction.

​"The ga is over, Will," Vance said. He hauled his ruined body against the rusted lever, gripping it with his dying strength. "You wanted the throne. Now you have to carry the weight."

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