Darius woke up the next day and headed to the library once again. The pursuit of knowledge was paramount to everything else, for the educated man was the most powerful man in the world.
He met the chipper young miss on his way there after he had taken his bath and breakfast, courtesy herself and some other servants. Portia had her own studies to attend to, so her ability to care for Darius was reduced as the days went by.
This pleased Darius and depressed Portia, but she rejoiced in the fact that they spent the whole day together discussing a wide range of topics. Portia quickly found that Darius was far more mature than anyone she had met, his insight into many things making her pause.
As for Darius, he first used his daily CP to make some more valuable conversions.
[Would you like to change the blank paper into a House Portal scroll? This will cost 0.5 Conversion Points.]
Darius changed 8 of them, making a loss of 4 CP. He also converted one his empty books into another spell manual, which took 5.9 CP as well.
Just like two days ago, he was down to 0.1 CP!
However, Darius was unbothered as he had now settled down and was in no rush to execute phase 3. Today, he continued what was leftover of History and combined it with Geography to fill in the blank spots he had encountered in his previous readings.
Darius was partially speechless to find out that the Valkyrie race were not even a big deal in Elysium, merely the exotic foot soldiers of Odin's church. From what Portia told him, the first founder of Fraterina was a high ranking warrior who had discharged herself well during the war and was granted leave to explore the world.
Why did this sound like a slave owner releasing a hardworking slave as a reward for their suffering, mostly in order to motivate the other ones? Portia made it sound like that Valkyrie meant something to Odin, but that was what the history books wanted her to think.
Darius found himself slightly more intrigued. Now that he was aware of the history of Andrato and the various continents around the world, he next needed to discover the system of power in this world.
It was imperative, crucial, and important that he did. As such, he first read through the combat theory books as well as corroborated his findings with Portia to see what she knew.
Apparently, Caesar hadn't been pulling the wool over his eyes. In the world of Faust - not just Fallon or any specific continent - there were the same Ranks the Artificial Intelligence mentioned.
Amateur, Journeyman, Adept, Master, and Grandmaster. There were legends of a level above that one, but the people of Faust had no idea what it was called. It seemed that for now, only Darius knew about the Supreme stage, which was a great advantage.
They did not have the concept of 'levels', that level 1-20 was Amateur and level 21-40 was Journeyman, and so on. How they did differentiate was by the life level of the target.
Darius scrunched his forehead when he heard the term. It seemed a bit strange for a world like this, but he continued reading to find out more.
Life level simply meant the quality of power, lifeforce, and acuity any being possessed. This made Darius raise his eyebrows, for it sounded like they had a way to sense/measure the Strength, Endurance, and Intellect of any person and used that criteria to measure their power.
Darius thought that calling it 'power level' would be cleverer than 'life level', but he decided to keep his opinion to himself.
As it seemed, the denizens of Faust were not able to raise their stats or strengthen themselves in a way that allowed them to become stronger. It seemed that a person needed to undergo a special occurrence called a 'Spark'.
When their 'Spark' occurs, they would then climb into the Amateur stage and be a different type of organism from those who haven't. They would be able to explore dungeons and kill the monsters within to strengthen themselves through the passive absorption of life force from slain foes.
Darius raised an eyebrow once more. Wasn't that basically killing monsters to gain experience points? Darius felt like he was beginning to understand how things worked in Faust, but continued to read on.
Faustians shared this same system of power no matter where they resided. However, the book made no mention about how one became a deity, only that the Gods and Demons/Devils had existed long before man could first write.
There had never been any new Gods or churches, as it was believed that they were a different form of life. Gods and Demons could reproduce with lesser species, but not with each other, making their pure-blooded members finite permanently.
This rang a bell in Darius' mind as some data he had absorbed from the history books finally made sense. Why the Gods and Demons had fought what was a proxy war using their descendants.
Of course, they wouldn't dare to fight, they were limited in number! One gone was one dead for eternity, with no hope of replacement!
This also answered the question Darius had, which was; 'is the Supreme stage the same as being a deity/god?'
The answer - as far as he could verify - was no. Gods were born at the pinnacle of the Grandmaster stage and existed somewhere between Grandmaster and Supreme.
The book didn't know about the name of the Supreme stage, but there were some writings that described this ultimate stage as such: "The highest of the highest, the God of Gods and the Demon of Demons. The greatest existence in the history of, and for the future of, Faust."
This excited and depressed Darius, for once he became a Supreme, the whole world would be his for the taking.
Naturally, on the flip side, becoming a Supreme would likely be more difficult than what Caesar hinted at.
Darius was excited by the rate at which he was patching the holes in his knowledge and the filling of his Database. To others, what he was doing might seem tedious and boring, but this was the action that separated a genius pragmatist from the average bloke.
Besides, Darius was past the age of his youth where he was in a hurry to see things develop. He had gone through old age, where the lesson every elderly learned was patience and to take life slowly.
The next day, Darius spoke to Portia slowly. "Today will be the last day I follow you to the library. After I read up on magical theory, I will have to return to my experiments as they are of paramount importance."
Portia's excited demeanor as she walked with Darius shriveled, but she mustered an understanding smile and nodded. "If that is what Master Darius must do, then I support you."
Darius chuckled and patted the young lady on the head, which was quite strange since they were about the same height and age. However, Portia responded positively to his pampering, mistaking it for a different kind of affection.
Darius entered the library with her and began reading up on the magical theory that was actually the most prevalent type of book here. It seems Shanks had hopes that his little girl could spark and become a mage.
Whatever the case, he found himself engrossed in the many books about magical theory, learning how the magical profession worked, how mages ranked their power, and how they progressed.
Surprisingly, a lot of it was what Darius predicted when he first unlocked the Magus class and began using spells.
Firstly, spells were separated into their own ranks. Basic, Intermediate, Advanced, Master, and Grandmaster. Seeing as his Lancer Arts were also prefixed with 'basic', it seemed as if this criterion held true for all skills as well.
In the list of known spells mentioned, Sparks was present, and so was Ember. He also saw Ice Lance, Water Shot, Wind Blade, and Earth Spike among others for the basic spells.
It seemed that each element only had one basic spell, but their numbers ballooned above that Rank with many versatile combinations. The books here did not teach the spells, as that would require a spell manual.
They just had general knowledge regarding how magic worked. Mages created spells through a process called the magical method. Most spells were not given to them by deities or were a heritage from an old era.
Minus the basic spells that existed as a sort of law of the universe, everything above that was created by the hands of various mages over the years. The lower the rank of the spell, the easier it was to create, but it required great talent still.
Darius did not pursue this, but rather checked more on basic spells as he wore a deep frown. Something had been bothering him ever since he acquired Sparks, and it became even more serious as he created Ember.
This was the power and growth of basic spells or spells in general. As far as Darius could read, spells were locked to the stage of the mage. An Adept mage cannot cast a Grandmaster spell and an Amateur mage certainly cannot cast an Intermediate one.
Basic spells were only used to guide Amateurs and help them raise their magic and mental power. Apparently, they had extremely horrible utility in battle, with Ember only being able to singe foes while Sparks only acted like a taser at best.
In fact, the basic spells had a more unofficial name that many who were into fantasy magic like Darius on Earth would know: cantrips.
They were just a form of simplistic magic, on the same level as party tricks. That naturally begot the question, why were Darius' Sparks and Ember so potent in comparison?
Darius formulated three possible answers:
The first was that the Magus class, as a Supreme class, passively increased the power of all spells.
The second was that Sparks had been enhanced to the Supreme rank by the system as it came as a freebie when he first got it. Ember was meant to be average, yet got boosted by the effects of the transmuted spell manual.
The third was that the system passively enhanced all his skills and spells to the level they were at.
Despite the first answer seeming the most sensible and reasonable, Darius was inclined to believe the second. Not because he enjoyed being oblique and contrarian, but because of what had been bothering him about Ember's creation.
The Unused Spell Manuals created by his Transmutation ability were not average. Under the hands of the elitist ability, they were raised to the highest possible quality, and inspecting them through the system told him that the spell had an extra 100% chance of being learned as well as having its power boosted by 500%.
Yet when he learned the spell, it had the description of dealing 5% fire damage. So exactly where did that 500% boost for the spell disappear to?
Darius' theory was that Ember - and the original Sparks - were supposed to deal 1% damage when learned by a normal mage, yet his spell manual had raised Ember to 5%. One might miss this detail because Sparks and Ember seemed to start off with the same power, but it was not so!
More importantly, Darius believed that it was strange for Sparks and Ember to grow by 5% damage per skill point allocated. He had been positively surprised when he first leveled up Sparks and it went from 5% to 20%, but that was when his doubts also deepened.
After all, just look! Sparks at level 20 did 100% damage! If a basic spell was able to become so powerful when maxed out, then mages should be invincible within their stages.
50 damage per cast was amazing at the Amateur stage if Darius was to use himself as a gauge. He currently had 150 HP even with 15 Strength and 10 Endurance, meaning that should a clone of him appear, he could be killed in three casts!
You may also Like
Paragraph comment
Paragraph comment feature is now on the Web! Move mouse over any paragraph and click the icon to add your comment.
Also, you can always turn it off/on in Settings.
GOT IT