042 Immersion
I excused myself as soon as I could, leaving behind the Elders and Ren Jin before they could question me further. Their curiosity would have to waitâI had something
far
more urgent to deal with. Something I shouldn't be delaying.
The moment I was clear of the city, I ran. Not casually. Not cautiously.
Full sprint.
Physics aside, I managed to escape them without a commotion and it helped that they left me alone, probably to convene between themselves.
I dashed into the nearest forest, weaving through trees and undergrowth, finally coming to a stop in a secluded clearing. Taking no chances, I pulled out every defensive scroll I could stack upon each other and activated them in quick successionâMagic Reflection, Fortified Sanctuary, Arcane Warding, Divine Aegis, even some obscure ones like Barrier of the Unseen and Heavenâs Embrace.
I then cycled through every defensive skill and spell in my arsenalâArmor of the Indomitable, Sacred Bulwark, Shield of the Eternal. By the end of it, I was glowing like an overbuffed raid boss.
Only
then
did I allow myself to exhale.
ââŠAlright,â I muttered, adjusting my stance. âCome out.â
Summon: Holy Spirit~!
The air shimmered, and a figure emergedâa paladin was kneeling before me. Except, he had a face this time. Holy Spirits didnât normally have⊠a face⊠not to mention an identity.
âMy Lord,â he greeted, voice calm and reverent.
I stared at him for a moment before sighing. âCan I call you Dave?â
He lifted his head slightly. âIf it pleases you, My Lord.â
ââŠOkay, Dave.â I crossed my arms. âLetâs talk.â
Dave remained kneeling, awaiting my words as if they were divine scripture.
I wasted no time. âWhat do you know of
Lost Legends Online
?â
Dave blinked. âI am not familiar with that term, My Lord.â
I frowned. âDo you know what a video game is?â
âI do not.â
A chill crawled down my spine. I shifted gears. âAre you aware that youâre a game character?â
Dave looked at me with mild confusion. âI am your servant.â
âThatâs not what I asked.â
He hesitated. ââŠI do not understand what you mean, My Lord.â
I narrowed my eyes. This wasnât making sense. âThen why do you serve me?â
Dave lowered his head again. âBecause I worship you.â
I stared at him. âWhat.â
âYou are my Lord,â he said, as if it were the most obvious thing in the world. âThat is enough.â
My thoughts came to a screeching halt.
Back in
LLO
, the Gods were our
enemies
. Instead of worshipping them, Paladins and Priests devoted themselves to the
Lost Gods
âheroic NPCs or personified concepts that had ascended to godhood through sheer mortal will. That was how it worked.
And yet, Dave was here. Worshipping
me.
That didnât fit.
And it
really
didnât fit because, as a Paladin, I hadnât chosen the
Divine Descent
skill. That meant 'David_69' technically didnât have a God to worship. The whole
point
was freedom of faith, where players could pledge themselves to a cause rather than a deity.
So why was Dave acting like this?
I inhaled, forcing myself to focus. ââŠWhat do you know about this memory synchronization thing?â There was a time when my memories synchronized with David_69 and I was immersed in the life experiences of a game character.
Dave tilted his head. âNothing, My Lord.â
That was an even bigger mystery.
Because if
he
didnât know, then that meantâ
I shut my eyes, thinking.
This wasnât just a weird mechanic. This wasnât just some lore discrepancy.
Something was
wrong.
I had a
bad
feeling about this memory synchronization.
And the more I thought about it, the worse it got.
I stared at Dave, still kneeling before me. His unwavering devotion didnât sit right with meânot because I was against having a follower, but because of what it
meant.
Memory synchronization.
I exhaled, rubbing the bridge of my nose. Should I go for it? Should I synchronize my memories with him?
What would even happen? Would I lose myself?
Last time, it had happened naturallyâI had been performing a sword dance, reminiscing about the game and my past life. The memories had aligned, and suddenly, something inside me had
clicked.
Did that mean synchronization could also be completed if I
slept
? My gut told me yes.
I didnât like that.
I folded my arms. âDave.â
âYes, My Lord?â
ââŠWhat do you think I should do?â
Dave lifted his head slightly, his hood shadowing most of his face. âI am uncertain of your dilemma, My Lord. If you seek clarity, then I will pray for your guidance.â
âThatâs not helpful.â I sighed. âIâm asking if you think itâs a
good
idea for me to synchronize with you.â
Dave was silent for a moment. Then, slowly, he spoke.
âI do not know what it would entail, but if it brings you closer to understanding yourself⊠then I believe it would be wise.â
I frowned. âAnd if it
changes
me?â
Dave tilted his head. âWould that be a bad thing?â
I hesitated.
Would it?
Would I
still
be me?
A creeping unease settled in my chest. I didnât have an answer to that.
Divine Sense had always been a miraculous skill. It wasnât just an extension of my perceptionâit was something deeper. A connection to the unseen. A way to
feel
the truth of things beyond just sight or sound. I've been researching and grinding it since I realized the flavor text could be manifested into reality in a manner impossible to translate in a game mechanic.
And right now? Divine Sense was warning me.
I didnât know
how
exactly, but the moment I even
considered
synchronizing my memories with Dave, my instincts screamed at me. The feeling wasnât one of outright danger, but more like I was about to step past a threshold I couldnât return from.
Still, hesitation wouldnât get me anywhere.
I clenched my fists. âFine, letâs do this.â
Dave remained kneeling, watching me with unwavering devotion.
Should I try replicating the sword dance from last time? It had worked before.
Or maybe I should just fall asleep? That seemed like the more
natural
method, butâ
I had a better idea.
It should be possible since a Holy Spirit had its own spell slots, allowing the summon to use a weaker version of my Ultimate Skills.
I extended my hand toward Dave.
"Dave, use Divine Possession on me."
A rush of golden light erupted between us. Unlike my usual skills, this one didnât feel externalâit felt like I was
shifting.
Falling.
And thenâ
I wasnât
me.
I was
him.
And I was inside
LLO.
But not as a player.
Not from my comfortable chair, not through a monitor or a headset.
I was
inside
the storyline.
The world around me wasnât rendered in crisp game graphics or bound by game mechanics. There were no UI elements, no glowing quest markers, no safe respawns.
It felt
real.
So guttural.
So raw.
IâI was in a war.
Flames raged around me. The battlefield was soaked in blood. Screams tore through the air. The scent of burning flesh filled my nose. My hands gripped a weaponâa greatsword, chipped and worn from endless combat.
I felt pain.
Pain like I had
never
felt before.
Not the controlled, calculated damage from a game battle. Not the dulled pain of a status effect.
Real pain.
Something hot ripped through my side, and I gasped, staggering back. A spear had pierced me. My vision blurred, but I gritted my teeth and pushed forward.
Enemies surrounded meâdemons. Twisted beings with eyes like burning coals, their claws dripping with corruption.
I cut them down.
Again.
And again.
And again.
My body ached. My breath was ragged. My legs trembled.
But I
kept fighting.
Because that was what I had
always
done.
Because I had
no other choice.
I was a knight.
A Paladin of the Lost.
And I would
not
fall.
It was strange.
What had Dave
thought
when he was fighting these wars?
What had been going through his mind while he cut down demon after demon, while he bled, while he suffered?
Because from where I stoodâinside his memoriesâthis wasnât anything like what Iâd experienced playing
Lost Legends Online.
It didnât look
fun.
Not at all.
Yet⊠what was this feeling?
Through Daveâs perspective, I could
feel
it.
His devotion.
His sincerity.
His unwavering belief inâ
A voice.
A presence that tugged at his consciousness, whispering commands in the heat of battle. It told him what skills to use, how to position himself, how to destroy his enemies, and how to protect his allies.
The guidance wasnât intrusive. It wasnât controlling.
It was
trusted.
He
believed
in it.
He
relied
on it.
And he followed its will with absolute conviction.
Dave
enjoyed
the battlefield. The chaos, the struggle, the weight of every decision. And while war was a necessity, it wasnât the only thing he lived for.
The
World Arena.
That was where his passion truly lay.
The endless clashes with his peers, the thrill of battle, the challenge of adapting to different opponents.
Here, in these memories, I could hear him laughing.
Grinning as he exchanged blows with rival warriors.
Calling out to them as if they were old friends.
And thenâ
Familiar voices.
Familiar words.
â"So youâve finally caught up, huh?â A rivalâs smirk, a greatsword resting on his shoulder.
â"Donât think you can beat me just because I lost last time!â The fierce declaration of a young warrior, fists raised, flames dancing around him.
â"A duel between heroes is a conversation of blades.â An old knight, his stance perfect, his eyes filled with knowing respect.
â"The world will know my name!" A brash challenger, reckless but determined.
âI even heard my own past words.
"Tch, youâre getting predictable."
A taunt, thrown carelessly before a sudden counterattack.
The memories werenât just static images or hollow echoes.
They were
alive.
They were
real.
And they made me realize something.
What the hell had I been doing all this time, just playing
LLO
as a game?
Because to DaveâŠ
It had
never
been a game.
I was starting to develop a certain level of understanding.
Lost Legends Online
wasnât just a game.
I didnât know what it was exactlyânot yet. But this? This was something else.
It felt too
real.
Not in the way people usually said it, like
âOh, the graphics are so realistic!â
or
âWow, the AI is amazing!â
No.
This was
meta.
LLO wasnât just a game. It was either a
representation
of something, or worse, a
medium
that facilitated the lives of the so-called âNPCsâ in it.
Was it their reality?
Were they just
as real
as I was?
Or was it that LLO connected to something
outside
of itself?
I didnât know.
And the more I thought about it, the worse my headache got.
So what was next? The game devs were actually the
Lost Gods
?
No, that was stupid. Right?
Right?
I groaned, rubbing my temples.
This was too much. If I thought too hard about it, Iâd go insane.
But I couldnât help it. The questions
kept coming.
And thenâ
I remembered.
Not the usual nostalgic memories of playing LLO.
But
that
moment.
The one time I had actually felt
something was wrong.
A hidden boss fight. A bugged-out nightmare of an enemy.
â
It was late at night. I was supposed to log out. But there I was, deep in an abandoned dungeon, following vague clues from old forum posts about a secret encounter.
The name?
[??????????]
Yeah. Thatâs what it looked like. The nameplate was just glitched text.
And the boss?
It wasnât normal.
It wasnât
meant
to be in the game.
Its attacks didnât follow any logical pattern. It didnât move like an enemy was
supposed
to move.
It phased in and out of existence. It rewrote reality around itself.
The damage numbers didnât make sense. The status effects werenât listed.
And worst of allâ
It spoke.
Not in proper dialogue. Not like an NPC.
It
typed.
In the in-game chat.
Random, fragmented messages.
"Whoâ"
"You do notâ"
"This is notâ"
I should have logged out.
But I didnât.
Because I was me. Because I was greedy for the loot. Because
someone
on the forums said there was a legendary drop.
So I did the only thing I could.
I kited mobs to it like crazy.
If I couldnât beat it normally, Iâd use the environment against it. I had entire waves of elite enemies chasing me, and I kept weaving them into the eldritch bossâs attack range.
It
worked.
Sort of.
The thing reacted. It
hated
being interrupted.
And for a while, it looked like I could cheese my way through.
Thenâ
It
adapted.
The glitches changed.
The boss began
absorbing
the mobs.
It
rewrote
its own abilities.
It was
learning.
Thatâs when I panicked and started calling in favors.
Every friend I had online at the time, every high-level player I could think of, I sent out emergency messages.
Most ignored me.
A few laughed.
But a handful took the bait.
They came.
They saw.
They regretted everything.
Even in a full raid group, we were barely managing. The bugged-out abomination was wrecking everyone with unbalanced,
nonsense
mechanics. It was erasing people from the fight in ways that didnât even make sense.
No death animation. No grave marker. Justâ
gone.
And thenâ
I got the
last hit.
A stroke of luck. A final critical strike.
I barely even processed what happened before the screen froze.
Then the game crashed.
Then my PC crashed.
Thenâ
Thenâ
My
entire room
flickered with light.
My PC
sparked.
And the last thing I saw before my consciousness fadedâ
Was that bossâs
glitched-out, broken text name
appearing one final time.
And then I woke up.
Not in my room.
Not in front of my PC.
But
here.
In this world.
In my characterâs body.
I exhaled slowly, feeling the blood drain from my face.
Shit.
Had that
thing
done something to me?