By the next morning, every C-rank gate in Mythal was surrounded.
People pressed against barricades just to see the gates up close, and the blue electricity crackling around each entrance was enough to keep them back without doing it forcefully.
The gates themselves carried a new quality that had not been there yesterday.
Not dangerous exactly.
Just different, like sothing had changed inside them and the change was still settling.
Kai stood on a rooftop overlooking one of the larger gathering points downtown and watched it happen below him.
Guild banners hung from buildings that had been bare yesterday. Temporary camps were already going up around the gate periters. Speakers mounted on vehicles cycled through recruitnt offers in three different directions simultaneously. The overlapping recruitnt calls carried all the way to the rooftop.
"C-rank clear teams needed, priority rewards split seventy-thirty!"
"I need support classes imdiately, all levels considered!"
"Only taking D-rank cleared and above, contracts available on site!"
People moved between all of it.
Everyone understood ti mattered.
Nobody knew how much.
So looked thrilled, and so looked like they had not slept. A younger hunter near the barricade grabbed another by the arm hard enough to stop them mid-step.
"You should sign with soone before the slots fill up," the first one said.
"I’m still thinking about it—"
"You think independent players are surviving this?"
The second one didn’t say anything. The first let go and walked off, and the second stood there looking at the gate for a mont before he went after him.
Kai watched him go.
It wasn’t fear that had moved him. It was just the numbers, laid out plainly, with no good counter to them. Independent players suddenly looked fragile.
The offers never stopped.
This was a demonstration of what the next forty-eight hours were going to do to everyone in this city who was still deciding.
He looked at the ninety gates across the skyline and started thinking.
...
The player coordination office was louder than the hall outside, the noise trapped inside a room too small to hold it. People were arguing over each other at the intake counters, asking questions that the staff kept not being able to answer. Soone near the back had been awake all night with a theory and wanted everyone to know it.
"What happens when the C-ranks are all gone?"
"Nobody knows yet."
"That’s the problem!"
A hunter near the front slamd both hands on the counter. The staff mber behind it went still for a second, then straightened and said nothing useful.
By mid-morning, the forum threads had made it in. Soone in the corner had pulled up a forum thread on their phone and was reading it aloud to the three people standing near them.
"If B-rank ergence raises overall dungeon pressure... It might affect F-rank and E-rank gates too," the person reading said. "The lower ones get harder, making it so people who are already struggling can’t progress. The gap between top players and everyone else becos permanent."
The room fell quieter.
A woman sat against the wall, her arms wrapped around herself. Her gear was D-rank, the kind that had taken real ti and real runs to put together. "If C-ranks disappear and the lower dungeons get stronger," she said, "how do we catch up? How does anyone catch up?"
Nobody laughed or dismissed it.
Nobody tried to answer it, because the answer was the thing they were all afraid of.
Soone near the entrance muttered, almost to themselves, "Maybe joining a guild really is the only move left."
Nobody argued with that either.
That silence made Kai trembled more than the shouting had.
...
The top guilds in the city had understood this before the sun ca up, and they had moved accordingly.
GaleWing was already everywhere. Victor’s guild had set up recruitnt tables at six gate locations at once, the kind of operation that takes weeks to plan.
Titan Forge moved like a military occupation. Their armored hunters were posted outside the three largest C-rank routes.
Silver Bloom looked like a hospital preparing for war. They had the longest lines of anyone, longer even than the dungeon queues themselves. Support builds had been an afterthought for weeks, the kind of role you filled last.
Black Tide didn’t bother pretending this was legal. The rumor going around was that they had already locked down three routes by sending people there in the middle of the night to stand on the ground until it was theirs.
Eden Veil hadn’t said a word publicly, which was normal for them. But the forums were full of posts saying they were moving on specific gates, the ones with strange readings on the dungeon monitors.
All five guilds were moving faster than they ever had.
...
Sora’s stream had been running for six hours straight, and her viewer count had not dropped once.
She had a live map of Mythal pulled up behind her with the ninety blue dots and a second overlay showing confird guild territory claims, the map filling in faster than she could keep track of.
"Look at this," she said, pointing at the territory overlay. "The guilds are not treating this like a temporary event. This is not scrambling for resources." She looked at the cara. "This is territory control. This is them deciding right now who owns what when B-rank cos."
Her chat moved too fast to read individual ssages.
She slowed down on her own after a mont, reading sothing that had co through, and her expression shifted.
"Soone in my chat just said they’re never going to beco a player now." She looked at the cara seriously. "And I don’t think that’s dramatic. For top hunters, this announcent is the best thing that has happened since the system went live. More dungeons, higher rewards,the gap between them and everyone else turning into a wall they get to stand on top of." She paused. "For everyone still in the lower ranks, it might be the last morning catching up was even possible."
Her chat split imdiately, so people pushing back, so agreeing, so just expressing fear in capital letters.
She watched it for a mont and did not try to resolve it because it was not resolvable. Six hours into the stream, Sora had finally stopped sounding excited.
The numbers were extraordinary, and she was watching history.
"The city is restructuring itself in real ti." she said quietly. "And it’s moving faster than last ti."
Then a comnt caught her eye.
A woman in her chat had typed. I started three weeks ago. I’ve been working every day. What do I do now?
The chat slowed for the first ti.
And even Sera didn’t have an answer for that one either.
...
Kai watched the ninety blue pillars across the Mythal skyline and felt the distortion shift faintly in his chest. The distortion sharpened with the pressure. He had felt it before, in the dungeon with the second-stage Ironjaw, in the corridor with Ironpact’s layered trap, and in the boss room with Crane.
Pressure sharpened things.
His phone buzzed.
A ssage from Mina. Please don’t do anything reckless.
He looked at the ssage for a mont.
She had not asked where he was or to co ho now. Just that one line, which ant she already knew where his mind was. Mina already knew asking him to stop wouldn’t work and had settled for this instead.
’Please don’t do anything reckless.’
From Mina, that was practically good luck.
Then he looked at the skyline.
He thought about what "sothing done about it" would look like if one person decided to optimize for that specifically.
Not to survive the transition.
Not to find a safe place in one of the five guilds spreading across the city.
But to do what nobody else had realized was available yet.
He put his phone in his pocket and looked out over the city. Ninety points of light marked the skyline, one for each active gate.
The city looked surrounded by its own future.
Below them the whole city was in motion, guilds moving resources, staking out gates, everyone trying to stay ahead of whatever ca next.
All of them doing the math on how to stay alive. He had stopped thinking about survival around rank forty-nine.
Rank one was a different kind of problem.
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