As a shady blackmarket programmer, Ivan "Attila" is never short of customers. The gaming world of MMORPG always needs his services: all those knights and thieves, vendors and vagabonds, monsters and the undead populating the dangerous forests and castles of Gryad Online.
For Attila, things are looking up: the God`s Eye, his latest cheat device, is awaiting its buyer. Now Attila can afford a costly virtual suit for a full immersion online experience. Provided the buyer - a burly half-orc Barbarian nicknamed Beast - sticks to his part of the deal.
But how much does he know about Beast, really? And what evil force is playing with Gryad, disrupting its flow and locking thousands of players inside the game? Who is messing with the world`s gears, summoning the spawn of the Dark from their underground tunnels and lairs?
And how can Attila and his reluctant companions stop evil from tacking over their new world?
Lag:
In online gaming, lag is a noticeable delay between
the action of players and the reaction of the server.
(Wikipedia)
Part One
Danger Looming
Gryad Online:
A massively
multiplayer online role-playing game developed and produced by the RussoVirt
Company, the fifth in the Gryad series (not counting the add-ons). Gryad Online
continues to develop the world already familiar to users through the first
games of the series.
The game is set in a world first introduced in the Gryad:
Swords Vs. Sorcery game. Its events take place twelve years after the First
Storm - a global magical disaster that concluded Gryad IV: Breach of the
Magosphere. Despite the game's audience of over 9 mln with an
increase of 100,000 new players each month, currently only two large areas of Gryad's
enormous world are open to the public: the Dead Canyon and the surrounding area
of adjoining kingdoms of Vardis, Selour, Nideria, Cryte, Zygon and the
downfallen Warp. According to the RussoVirt press center, the company is
planning to unveil more large locations shortly, including its own moon Shard.
At the time of writing this article, more definitive information is still
unavailable.
(Wikipedia)
Chapter One
"Die, you bastard!"
Take that! And
again!
The knight wielded
his heavy two-handed sword with remarkable ease. Attila leapt aside. He could
see the enemy's smug face and the disdainful glare behind his slotted visor.
The knight's sword glowed with magic, his scarlet cloak floating behind his
back, the gold of his armor blinding. Next to him, Attila's gray deerskin
jacket and hunter's pants looked decidedly tacky.
The knight's two
henchmen smirked as they rounded on Attila. They loved their fun: to ambush a
lone ranger on a deserted road and chop him to bits, then watch him die. They
probably felt so tough and bold, and they couldn't have cared less that the
victim's blood looked so believably red as it gushed onto the green grass.
The whole clearing
was studded with small pyramids of bones. Apparently, these three scumbags had
been using it for quite a time. A tiny kitten sat by one of the graves miaowing
weakly, his eyes tearful and forlorn.
Attila dodged a new
blow, then parried the next one with a round shield, apparently too light and
fragile to withstand the blow.
The shield didn't
break, protected by a Poisonous Light spell. Normally, you couldn't cast it on
a shield. But Attila could do many things that an ordinary player couldn't.
The fierce flash
blinded everyone with a brief show of colorful runes - everyone but Attila
who'd covered his face with his shield just in time.
In fact, it was a cartoon character on the computer
screen that shielded his face, obeying the gesture of a hand in a sensory
glove. As for Ivan Attila himself, he was sitting at his desk watching the
fight unfold. He could actually see everything from two perspectives: both
through his char's eyes and via a "God's Eye view" from above, as if
soaring high above the fighters' heads.
Attila had been
testing this cheat for a good three hours already and he was more or less
pleased with the result. Having said that, this "God's Eye" could
guarantee him some big problems with the game overseers. To avoid this, he had
to send the cheat to the customer quickly. Within half an hour, he'd be done.
The God's Eye
dropped lower. Where before a green sea of forest lay and the tiny figures of
fighters appeared in the clearing, Attila could now discern a kneeling knight,
his two blinded henchmen and a ranger towering over them: himself.
Himself in a game,
that is.
He twitched his
fingers ever so slightly, then moved his hand slowly to one side. Attila the
cartoon chopped through the legs of one of his enemies. In a wide sweep of his
sword he decapitated another, then buried the blade in the first one's stomach.
Back to your respawn points, noobs!
Two bodies
collapsed onto the grass. Having received the lion's share of the spell, the
knight kept cussing while his life bar shrank. Initially blue, it was now
orange rapidly moving into red. His henchmen lay there dead as dodos. Color
rapidly drained from their bodies until they dissolved into nothing, leaving
behind two tiny pyramids of bones, a pair of boots, a jacket, a sword, a knife
and a money pouch. Dying in Gryad caused you to lose some of your gear and in
some cases could even strip you of up to 10% xp - and once you're level 20 and
above, each and every xp point costs you dearly.
"You wretched skunk!"
the knight's voice rose to a shriek. Skin was peeling off his face; his empty eye
sockets had turned black, burned by the spell. "I'll find you wherever you
are!"
"Die, you
bastard," Attila repeated the knight's earlier words knowing that the
microphone would carry the phrase to the Dead Canyon where his victim would
hear it, whether the char's owner used a sensory suit, a capsule or the good
old butt in chair, eyes on the screen
method. Having said that, few gamers used it these days.
The life bar
blinked one last time, expiring. The knight collapsed and began to fade. Then
he disappeared, leaving behind another bone pyramid. This one seemed even
bigger than the other two - grander and more respectable, so to say.
Ivan Attila
connected his thumb and index finger into a circle, then moved the gloved hand
slowly. Obeying the signal, the "God's Eye" too turned around and
flew over the forest. Controlling his char with his other hand, Attila made him
lift the sword and the wallet. Where the dematerialized knight had just lain,
Attila discovered another pouch, bigger and fatter than the first one. He could
almost hear the beaten player cuss wherever he was now as he picked the pouch
up.
Ding!
the speakers echoed with the clinking of money. The sound pleased his ear.
According to the number next to the icon, Attila had just become 120 gold
richer. Not bad. That would teach those three idiots a lesson, anyway. What did
they expect for assaulting a peaceful passerby?
He crossed the
clearing and switched the God's Eye to float mode to make sure it always stayed
overhead. Amid the trees stood the conical squat rock of a pagan temple, its
doorway blue with the opening of a portal. Such structures styled as ancient
ruins were in fact the portal terminals that allowed you to log out without
losing contact with the game. Naturally, you could always just quit any time
you wanted, but the Gryad world treated such unauthorized logouts as sudden
death, entailing loss of property and xp points.
Attila's doorbell
rang.
He pressed Esc for
the logout window. Still, he wasn't in a hurry to quit the game now that his
char was under the temple's protection. Who the hell could that be? His aunt
was away; he didn't expect anyone in her absence. They were the only two people
living in her apartment, anyway. Could it be the social care people checking on
him? If so, they could always ask the woman next door for the spare keys. She
always kept them in case of any emergency. Attila had special needs, after all.
Cringing unhappily,
he rolled his wheelchair out into the dark hallway, his hands deftly turning
the wheels. Why couldn't they let him do his work in peace!
The cheat was
practically finished but he wanted to improve the image quality some more.
While static, the objects looked perfectly in focus, but the moment you sent
the God's Eye flying, the player's field of vision narrowed, blurring the
peripheral images. And even though the customer hadn't specified any particular
demands to these parameters, Attila still wanted to look into it. This
particular cheat meant a lot to him. And if the deal fell through...
His heart missed a
beat. He shivered. The lack of money meant trouble. Big trouble. Better not to
think about it.
He wheeled himself
to the front door and peered into the peephole cut in the door at a normal
person's chest height. A young man was waiting on the landing with his back to
the elevator. He wore a green overall and a baseball cap. In his hands he was
holding a large box.
Already? Wow.
Attila's wristwatch announced midday. Talk about prompt delivery.
He swung the door
open and wheeled himself aside, letting the delivery man in.
"RussoVirt
delivery service," the young man began with a professional smile.
"That's right.
It's for me. I've been waiting."
Both fell silent -
then both recognized each other.
"Billystick?
It can't be you, surely!"
"Attila? No
way!" his ex-classmate stopped mid-sentence, taking in the wheelchair. His
initial surprise gave way to embarrassment. He looked aside.
"Right, so
what are you waiting for?" Attila's voice sounded ruder than he'd
intended. "Come in," he turned the wheelchair and rolled it into his
room.
The apartment was
quiet. For the last year and a half, Attila had been living with his aunt, a
flight attendant with some international line or other. She must be now in
mid-air halfway to New York. In her absence, Attila never bothered to turn on
the radio or even the television.
Kostia the
Billystick followed him, inconspicuously studying the tall wheelchair that
Attila kept rolling with both hands.
"I did see
your name on the receipt but the way they wrote it I couldn't be sure,
"Billystick said. "I memorized the address but I didn't put two and
two together. You used to live somewhere else, didn't you?"
Attila entered his
room and swung the chair round to face his friend. "We sold that place. I
live with my aunt now. She's away at the moment."
"I see,"
Kostia wanted to continue, then fell silent. He didn't ask about Attila's
parents.
Silence hung in the
air.
"You've done
well by ordering Sensorica," Kostia finally blurted.
He lay the box onto
the table and prepared to deliver his habitual speech: This suit will make your virtual experiences a breeze! You can use it
to walk the vast expanses of the digital world - and not just walk but run,
leap or even fly! We guarantee the authenticity of your experience.
He was about to
blurt it all out when Attila's grim stare cut his sales pitch short. Kostia
lowered his eyes. "We have an anniversary tomorrow."
"What
anniversary?"
"Don't you
know? RussoVirt is celebrating its ten years in business. I could, if you
wish... I mean... we'll have a buffet and some guided tours. I'll be there too.
I could show you in. The only thing is..."
"Why would I
need to go there? Very well, show me how it works."
Assuming his
professional stance, Kostia gave his practiced smile. "Greetings from the
RussoVirt delivery service! We're happy to-"
"Cut the crap
out. I've already ordered some stuff from your bosses: some gloves and a pair
of goggles. So I've heard all this before. Are you new there?"
"Yeah. This is
my third delivery."
"I see. Open
it, will you? I'd like to take a look."
Kostia reached for
the box. His glance chanced on a few pin-ups of a pretty blonde girl on the
wall by the desk. Reaching inside the box, he produced a large oblique helmet
and handed it to Attila. He looked it over and laid it in his lap. Kostia
reached into the box again and pulled out a modest-looking bag. He looked
around him for a place to safely lay the expensive item. Attila nodded at the
couch.
The bag's zipper
whizzed open. The sensory suit glittered in the sunlight which beamed through
the window.
"Sensorica
Super Suit," Attila was leafing through the fat manual. "Why did they
need to call it like that?"
"Why
not?"
"A suit I
would understand, but why all this fanfare?"
"It's to make
it clear this is the latest thing. New generation technology. A special design
for people with special nee- never mind. Basically, they thought that Super
Suit would sound cool. Now," Kostia once again remembered his job
responsibilities, "Now I'm obliged to read the Agreement out to you. The
RussoVirt Corporation hereby informs its users that it has conducted the tests
necessary to establish the safety of its equipment. Any possible malfunctions
may result from..."
"I know, I
know. Do you really think I didn't read the fine print before buying something
as expensive as this?" Attila rolled his chair away from the couch and
reached into the desk drawer, producing a few bank notes. "Here. You've
done your job. I appreciate it."
Seeing his friend
move around the room in his chair made Kostia feel uneasy. While Attila was
just sitting there, you couldn't tell there was anything wrong with him. He was
just a guy in a chair - never mind the chair looked funny. But the moment he
grabbed hold of those big old wheel rims in order to push himself around, you
could clearly see that his ex-classmate was indeed handicapped for life. His
legs didn't move at all... or did they? When Attila had reached into the desk
for the money, Kostia thought he'd noticed his right knee move ever so
slightly.
Attila stared at
him as if knowing what kind of thoughts Kostia was thinking.
"You..."
Kostia began.
"Are you
trying to guess what could have happened? I can tell you. You remember our old
Nissan, don't you? Mom was driving. Dad was sitting next to her. I was in the
back. We were driving along the railway when this girl in a red SUV shot out
from a side street," Attila pointed at the pin-ups on the wall. "An
enormous thing. I still have nightmares about it. It rammed right into our
car. Mom died on the spot. And Dad... the impact was so strong he was thrown
out of the car onto the tracks. Just when a locomotive was speeding past. It...
it sliced right through him. The SUV was fine. Just a dent in the bumper. Her
father was loaded. It was he who got her all these modeling gigs. So their
lawyer pulled all the strings. She was acquitted. Even though she was DUI at
the time."
As he spoke, his
voice was growing hollow. In the end, Kostia couldn't work out very well what
he was saying. He shifted from foot to foot, not knowing where to look, wishing
the earth could swallow him whole.
"Auntie and I,
we sold my parents' apartment," once again Attila proffered him the money.
"To pay for my studies. But it didn't work, as you can see. I quit college
- but I did get some IT training. I work from home now. Mess around with
different programming stuff. The money is good. Auntie is rarely home. Nobody
hassles me. Come on, take it."
Mechanically Kostia
took the money. "What's this for?"
"For your
delivery."
"But... you
paid by card, didn't you?" Kostia faltered. He still had his pitch to
finish. There were lots of things he was yet to tell Attila; then he had to
help him into the suit and make sure he knew how to connect it.
Crumpling the money
in his hand, he mumbled, "Thank you for choosing Sensorica. Super Suit is
our latest gaming accessory that runs our dedicated OS developed to control our
state-of-the-art softwa-"
"Stop
it," Attila said. "I read it all, I tell you. Thanks, Billystick. Off
you go."
"No, wait. I
still have to tell you about the safety regulations..."
"Don't need
to. Thanks. Just go."
"But..."
"Please
go."
Stooping, Kostia
left the room. He remembered Attila from school when he used to be an athletic
type, active and cheerful. Seeing him now hunched up in his wheelchair... no,
he couldn't.
Attila unlocked the
door, letting him out, then immediately slammed it shut behind his back. Only
in the elevator did Kostia remember that Attila hadn't even signed for the
delivery. Still, going back up was beyond him.
Having got rid of
the delivery guy, Attila hurried back to his computer. He walked his char into
the temple and quit. The chat icon was flashing: someone was trying to get hold
of him. Attila chose not to answer. He virtually never used the game chat these
days. Instead, he'd managed to build Skype into the game. It was true that Gryad
hadn't yet joined Skype's latest array of in-game communications, but things
like this never stopped Attila. He simply hacked the code, connecting Skype
Messenger to Gryad.
He hooked up the
Sensorica helmet to his desktop computer and entered Gryad-online.com to synchronize them. Then he turned his attention
to the suit. He already had everything ready: the special energy drink
cartridges and the "gamers' diapers" used by die-hard Net junkies.
All these suits and
helmets were being hacked and modified at a frightening speed. The moment a new
product hit the market, various shady online dealers would start offering
"new improved" gadgets for it. Attila's case was different, though.
Because he couldn't walk, regular sensory suits were no good for him. Medical
specialists shrugged. It's all in your
head, they'd say to him, your nerve
endings have fully restored and all they need is a bit of practice so get a
grip and get working on it...
Attila was doing
his best and still his legs wouldn't obey him. Even the neuromuscular
stimulation therapy didn't help. So when RussoVirt had released Sensorica
advertising it as the first sensory suit for people with special needs, he
didn't hesitate simply because this device would allow him to walk, even if
only in virtual reality.
Sensorica cost an
arm and a leg. Attila had been forced to turn to loan sharks. By Monday he
would have to pay it all back plus the interest. If he didn't, they would
contact some shady debt collectors, and then...
Never mind. Once he
sent the cheat to the customer, he'd have enough to pay it.
The speakers
twinged, reporting the OS's acceptance of the new devices. Attila switched on a
news channel on the Net and reached for the helmet. Glancing at the screen, he
began tinkering with the energy drink cartridge and the tube, attaching them to
the helmet.
He wasn't going to
be in the game long. Four hours max. He didn't even need the energy drinks, so
after some consideration he decided not to install them. The diapers were good
enough. Four hours were plenty to close the deal and test the suit. He was
hungry, too. He should have had a proper breakfast and not just a cup of tea.
Come to think of it, he hadn't eaten anything last night, either. He'd gotten
too carried away with his work and crashed out without dinner.
The news channel
was showing an interview with Sergei Bagrov - a billionaire and the owner of
RussoVirt. He kept blabbing about the Interplanetary Network and the new opportunities
it offered to humanity, mentioning the company's ten-year anniversary and
inviting everyone to this "celebration of their achievements". In
keeping with the corporation's transparent business policy, he announced an
open house day that would allow everyone to witness the inner workings of
Russia's biggest IT colossus, including their newest project about to be
unveiled for its anniversary.
Soon the
conversation turned to the MnemoSensoric helmet - which, according to Bagrov,
could revolutionize their business by making sensory suits obsolete.
"Thank you for
introducing us to the future - both that of the digital world and humanity as a
whole," the anchorman concluded. "The anniversary presentation is to
be attended by several very important guests: a few of the leading IT
corporation CEOs as well as the communications deputy minister and-"
Attila turned the
program off and restarted the game. He put the helmet on and scrambled out of
his wheelchair onto the couch. Gingerly he began to put on the suit. Threaded
with a fine net of wire, the fabric turned out to be heavy and coarse. The
inside of the helmet's visor glowed with two crystal circles. Once the visor
was lowered, the crystals covered the eyes almost touching them, reacting to
the slightest movement.
He lay down and
adjusted the helmet. Cushioned speakers pressed to his ears. He lowered the
visor. Everything around him went dark. He couldn't hear the street noises any
more, not even the whirr of the computer's cooling fan. He pressed the button
on the outside of the helmet, then lay his arms along his body, trying to relax
and make himself comfortable.
The suit clung to
his skin, squeezing it lightly. Endless white columns of numbers and icons
scrolled through the dark before his eyes: Sensorica's boot-up protocol.
A starry night sky
replaced the darkness. A woman's soft voice said,
"Welcome to
Sensorica's initial tests. My name's Sensy. Now I'm going to name your body
parts and would like you to tense the corresponding muscles. You don't need to
move. All you need to do is strain them ever so slightly so I can recognize
their signals. Are you ready?"
A glowing
inscription appeared amid the stars. The voice read it out loud,
"Right hand
fingers."
Attila twitched
them.
"Too
much!" Sensy signaled. "Repeat. Right hand fingers."
This time he barely
moved them but rather visualized the action.
"Accepted.
Right thumb. Right wrist. Right forearm. Right upper arm..."
As he followed the
commands, the suit hugged the respective body part, squeezing it, then becoming
imperceptible. Soon the starry sky disappeared, replaced by a yellow triangle,
a blue square and a red circle.
"Commencing
visual tests. Please concentrate on the triangle. If it is yellow, concentrate
on the square. Close your left eye. Now close your right eye."
"Commencing
verbal tests. Can you hear the rustle of the trees? If you can, say yes."
"Yes," he
enunciated.
"Say no."
"No."
"What is your
name?"
He paused.
"Attila."
"Please repeat
the following clearly. I, Attila, hereby assert that I have read and
acknowledged the safety regulations for Sensorica users."
He repeated it.
"Monitoring
brain activity. You don't need to do anything. The test is perfectly
safe."
A prickling
sensation rose in the back of his head, gradually moving toward his temples. It
felt as if someone was caressing his scalp with a feather. Attila lay
motionless - or rather, he floated because by then, he didn't sense the couch
under him.
"Congratulations!
You've passed the initial tests."
The starry sky
disappeared, replaced by pitch-black darkness which then filled with large
glowing letters,
RussoVirt Presents
His ears filled
with rousing music.
Sensorica Suit. The New Generation Experience
The inscription
faded. A dark foreboding castle towered on the horizon.
Gryad-online.com
Enter:
YES NO
The customer must
have been waiting for him already. Attila concentrated and willed his eyes to
press YES.
* * *
Once upon a time the
seven greatest wizards decided to unite in order to learn the secret knowledge
that no one in Gryad had ever managed to obtain before them. They thought that
their combined power could penetrate the veil of the unknown, giving them
access to where no mortal before them had dared to tread.
The newly-formed
Conclave needed a secluded place to practice their wizardry. They came to the
kingdom of Warp where King Gideon granted them a small principality located on
a wooded plateau in the mountains. Those lands had been deserted due to the
large amounts of deadly beasts and spooky ghosts that inhabited the ruins and
catacombs scattered through the mountainous woods. An ancient castle made from
slabs of black granite rose in the center of the land. Local people called it
the Forest Citadel. And that's where the Conclave of the Seven Wizards made
their home.
The sorcerers were
assisted by their disciples and served by a multitude of servants sent by King
Gideon. Seven years had they spent in the silent woods, practicing magic and
alchemy. Many a wondrous thing had they made; many a great feat had they accomplished
in the solitude of their citadel. Until one day the Conclave had finally
achieved its secret goal by penetrating the Magosphere: the realm of the dead
and yet unborn souls, filled with magic energy.
Still, the wizards had
bitten more than they could chew. Their power games proved too dangerous, their
exercise in magic way too unpredictable. The Conclave's desperate experiments
gave birth to some truly cruel and bloodthirsty creatures. What was even worse,
was that the wizards used to dispose of all their magic waste by dumping it
into the castle's dilapidated dungeons. All the poisonous elixirs and deadly
artifacts, botched homunculi and leftover zombies began to spread and escape
through the ancient system of tunnels, mine shafts and manmade caves that had
allegedly been built by the Titans who'd created Gryad.
Even the wizards
themselves wouldn't be able to explain the nature of the processes that soon
began to brew under their very feet. As time went by, the dungeons filled with
things truly indescribable, the screams emanating from them wild and desperate.
Magic oozed from under the castle's floor tiles. Some of the servants had been
kidnapped by the dungeon dwellers while others bid a hasty escape.
And still, blinded by
their craving for secret knowledge, the wizards persevered with their work.
They thought in their vanity that the spawn of their experiments wouldn't dare
touch their creators. How wrong they were! Finally the day came when some of
the reluctant inhabitants of this underground Inferno had acquired
consciousness: a perverted intelligence devoid of life.
That day, the mountains
shattered and opened up revealing the depths of hell below. Hordes of monsters
flooded the earth, consuming the whole of central Warp. The times of Peril had
come, as people would later call this deadly era. The land itself would receive
the name of Dead Canyon.
Within days, thousands
fell: peasants and artisans, merchants and barons, women and children, fearless
heroes and helpless old men. The monsters spared no one in their insatiable
hunger and fury. The King's army kept retreating, losing its best knights and
legendary warriors. Only the wizards themselves were still safe in their dark
Citadel which rose above the desolate blood-drenched land.
The King's castle was
taken; good King Gideon died with his Queen and their three children. The new
king, a dreadful Lich, sat on his throne. Soon the infernal hordes would pour
into the neighboring kingdoms; the armies of ghosts and the undead,
necromancers and dragon liches were about to conquer Gryad and subject it to
its rule.
Then the mountains
shattered again. The Conclave of the Seven Wizards opened the great Portal that
unlocked the mysterious Magosphere. Magic burst forth, sweeping everything in
its path. Thousands more died that day. But the spawn of the dark perished,
too. The world was saved.
Many a year has passed
since then. But the mountains are still crawling with infernal creations. In
order to prevent them from spreading, people have cordoned the Dead Canyon off
with pickets and outposts. Frontier guards tirelessly patrol the ravaged
kingdom of Warp. The mountains shudder from new magic storms which distort the
fabric of reality, corrupting the laws of magic given to us by the Gods and the
Titans. These distortions create artifacts of unusual and dangerous power
highly sought after by all alchemists and sorcerers, witches and wizards,
druids and mages who will pay any money to lay their hands on the Dead Canyon's
magic creations.
Humans too seek the
magic artifacts. We call these men Pioneers: fearless vagabonds craving
adventure. Hard is their lot; few of them live to see old age. But not one of
them begrudges his fortune. The expanse of the Dead Canyon, grim and abounding
with mystery, is calling their names.
And in the center of
it, the unattainable Citadel still rises its dreary spires.
* * *
The audio was
played to the accompaniment of impressive visuals packed with magic, murder and
gore. Attila had already seen it when he'd run Gryad the first time. Still, he
decided to revisit it now that his suit was making him part of the unfolding
events. Together with the seven wizards he opened the Great Portal; he followed
them down the terrible dungeons and soared, unseen, over the blood-drenched
battlefields.
Game mode alert!
You can choose one of the two following game modes:
IMITATION MODE
FULL IMMERSION MODE
(More Information)
Warning!
Once the game is running, you won't be able to change
the game mode!
The two game mode
inscriptions blinked, inviting the player to click them. Attila pressed on More Information. A window popped up
informing him that All sensory suit users
had the choice of two basic Gryad game modes. It went on to tell him that
Imitation Mode came with a large number of prompts while preserving all the
usual stat bars and menus; the world's map was visible in the right upper
corner of the player's field of vision. Basically, it preserved all the usual
bells and whistles of a standard computer game.
The Full Immersion
mode, however, had none of the traditional interface. As the Information
writers put it, this mode "switched
the gaming experience to the domain of intuitive logic". The idea was,
the player's very own body began to affect the gameplay. Which was only logical
because of all the tiny reactions of his reflexes, muscle memory and other
psychosomatic stuff.
Had he wanted to
use Imitation, he wouldn't have bought the suit to begin with. No. Only full
immersion. He needed to walk again, otherwise he wouldn't have splurged all his
money on the suit.
Attila clicked on
the second button. It went out.
What's New. | Forums | Support | Workshop | Settings
No, not that.
Options | Profile | Last Modified | The Map
He opened the map
and focused on the Frontier Valley icon to click it.
Once again the back
of his head tingled as if stroked by a feather. The world around him blinked
and came back, slowly revealing the insides of a log cabin. Its narrow door
stood open; behind it he could see a stone landing and the ruins of a castle
wall.
The log cabin was a
portal station. The portal's blue circle glowed in the center of its only room.
A column of spark-speckled blue light reached out of it toward the low roof,
disgorging Attila.
He walked out of
the cabin and took in his bearings. A translucent diamond-shaped blue sign
hovered in the air above the roof, sporting the holographic image of a spiral
topped with a skyward-pointing arrow: the portal icon familiar to every player.
Attila looked up at
the grim skies of the Dead Canyon and rearranged the round shield on his elbow,
then ran his hand along his sheathed sword.
His heart missed a
beat. Disbelieving, Attila took another step. And yet another. His heart
pounded now. He beamed, his face lighting up with a wide, happy smile.
He could walk. He really
could walk!
A special
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Release date: October 12 2015
Has anybodyfigured out who wayfarer is?
ReplyDeleteNo, I can't figure it out at all.
ReplyDeleteIt might just be nonexistent and the developer are messing with us. However cureently i think he might be a god?
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