âNo, nowâs not the time to rest.â
After Anne left, Muen suddenly flipped upright and sat up from the bed. Ignoring the lingering weakness in his body, he moved to the desk nearby.
Following the memories in his head, he reached into a drawer and pulled out a blank sheet of paper, then grabbed a quill and dipped it into ink.
âThe storyâs already completely deviated from the original novel. Which means, from here on out, I have no idea whatâs coming.â
âThe original novelâs no longer of any use. I have to rely on myself now.â
âFirst, I need to set my objectives.â
Muen pinched his chin in thought, then began writing in halfway-decent penmanship on the blank page.
1. Stay alive.
2. Avoid the âDeath by a Thousand Cutsâ ending.
3. Get stronger.
âThese are my three objectives for now.â
Staying alive went without saying. He was, for all intents and purposes, a man whoâd already died twice. To this day, he still hadnât shaken the fear of death.
Even if this world was aggressively unfriendly to him, the yellow-haired villain, he still wanted to live. Seriously live.
âNext is that ending I saw in the prophetic dream...â
Now that the destruction ending had completely fallen apart, the worldline seemed all but fated to head toward the one where he gets carved up like roast duck.
Butâ
Muen hesitated for a moment, then picked the pen back up and added a few notes under the second objective:
â Didnât apologize to the protagonistâmight not trigger the ending.
â Apology theory is just speculation from mysterious guy in dreamânot a confirmed condition. Worldline may already be diverging from the âthousand cutsâ route.
â Black Book is unreliable.
â......â
He stared at the last line, then crossed it out.
He didnât dare bet on it.
âSo basically, Iâm stuck in Schrödingerâs death-by-a-thousand-cuts scenario?â
The more he thought, the more his head throbbed.
âUgh, this is pointless. I donât have enough information. No matter how much I think, itâs just groping in the dark.â
The root of the problem was the Black Bookâs so-called prophetic dream. It had been too vague, and no follow-up hints had appeared.
Muen didnât even know if the prophecy was fixedâsomething inevitable no matter what he didâor if it could shift based on his actions.
âForget it. No use overthinking it. Right now, I should focus on the most immediate goal.â
His eyes landed on the third objective.
Get stronger.
That was the single most urgent task right now.
Even if this world was hostile to a yellow-haired villain like him, it was still, at its core, a magic-fantasy world where power reigned supreme.
Strength was survival.
Without strength, you ended up like beforeâstaring death in the face with no option but to trade your life for someone elseâs.
âAnd most importantly...â
Muen ground his teeth, face twisting in frustration.
âI am neverâ and I mean NEVERâgetting pinned down and ravaged by a woman again!â
His mind flashed back to the memory of being thoroughly dominated by Celicia. Sure, physically, it had felt pretty damn good... but his pride as a man? In absolute shambles.
Even if it was Celiciaâno, especially because it was Celicia!
...
...
âAs for how to get stronger... being a dukeâs son, Iâve got more options than I can count. Problem is, theyâre all way too conventional to bridge the gap with the main cast.â
The original Muen had wasted far too much time. Heâd spent a whole year at Saint Mariaâs Magic Academy and yet the only spell Muen could recall right now was a basic illumination charm.
âAre you kidding me? Did that guy just sleep through every single class?â
How the hell do you even fall asleep at this point in the timeline?!
Muen wanted nothing more than to time-travel back just to slap his past selfâMuen goddamn Campbellâstraight into next week. Maybe then heâd learn what it felt like to get reality-checked.
âThankfully, this bodyâs physical stats arenât too bad. About late-stage First Tier.â
...
In this world, the power system was a little convoluted.
But broadly speaking, it broke down into:
Warrior path: physical fighters who trained in battle aura.
Mage path: magic users who cultivated mana.
Faith path: clergy who exchanged belief for divine power.
Favored by the gods: those born under divine attention and given blessings.
Leaving aside the innately gifted god-favored, the first three were the standard options. Sure, there were many offshoots and hybridsâbut those werenât even on Muenâs radar.
Take that assassin for exampleâheâd performed a sacrificial prayer to a dark god, offering tribute in exchange for power. That made him a Dark Priest.
Thatâs one of the fringe paths: a shortcut to strength. But itâs a deal with a devilâDark Priests donât tend to end well.
Technically speaking, a Dark Priest is just a variant of a Clericâonly they worship evil gods instead of righteous ones.
...
At first glance, the system didnât seem too complicated. In fact, for the sake of clarity and memorization, every power path was divided into Tiers One through Fiveâat least up until the Crowned Rank.
The names varied slightly:
Tier One Warrior: Body Tempering
Tier One Mage: Quicksilver
But those were just labels. Functionally, the difference wasnât that huge.
So then why was the system considered complicated?
Two main reasons:
First: nothing said that the soft, holy-light-casting priest girl couldnât secretly be a physical powerhouse who smashes dragons to death with the holy scriptures.
Nothing said that the frail-looking mage whoâs pew-pew-pewing from the backline couldnât suddenly pull out a club twice your size and beat your skull in.
Exactlyâthere isnât just one path. And people can walk more than one.
That assassin, for instance? Not only did he show off at least Tier Three martial skills, he also used gravity magic and finally revealed himself to be a damn Dark Priest on top of it!
Put simply: power level alone doesnât tell the full story. You never know how far someoneâs progressed down a second path.
Second reason: external factors.
This world had gods.
Righteous gods, evil gods, demonic godsâcountless beings of absurd power.
Aside from granting powers through faith, these gods loved nothing more than picking favorites and throwing divine blessings at them.
Thatâs where God-Favored came in.
Basically, the authorâs way of handing out official cheat codes.
Celicia, for example? She had the blessing of the Goddess of Ice and Snow.
The protagonist? By the late stages of the novel, she was collecting divine blessings in the double digitsâbasically friends with every god in existence. Gender-swapped Son Goku, calling in divine favors like itâs Tuesday.
And the number of gods doesnât even matter that much. For some reason, they canât directly interfere with the mortal realmâat best, they can project a sliver of power.
The real problem is, nobody knows what kind of people the gods favor. Blessings donât have visible effects until activated. Meaning that beggar you just pissed off in the alley might whip out a divine nuke and blast you to kingdom come.