I wrote the navigator as a player who sees everything happening in the town as just part of the game. He doesn't care about whatever happened to the town’s inhabitants, because he sees the townsfolk as NPCs. However, as a player, sometimes someone can feel disgusted by a story quest, right? that's just his honest reaction as a player.
Hello, author here. Just to let you know, the first 25 chapters were written about three years ago while I was in college, but I didn’t publish them until this year, without making any changes. The chapters that follow were written this year. I apologize for any inconsistencies in writing style or typos, as well as any language that might make some readers uncomfortable. I’m confident that the story will remain consistent in updates and plot development, staying true to the original rough idea I had three years ago. Thank you to everyone who took the time to read this novel.
I got pulled into the game that I’d dominated for five whole seasons, holding the number one leaderboard spot without a break since launch. How many people could say they’d pulled off a feat like that? A Free-to-Play player ruling a Pay-to-Win game? Probably just me.
Eventually, it all got stale, and I decided to quit.
But one night, while I was sleeping, I suddenly found myself inside the game, Astral Point, where the Administrator asked me to beat the game for real—not just from behind a computer screen.
So, I agreed to the request, thinking it was all just a vivid dream. But as it turned out, none of it was a dream.
I’m actually here, in the world of Astral Point, facing off against players from other dimensions who call themselves the Pay-to-Win (newbies).
Extra Tags
- LitRPG.
- No Harem.
- Historical & folklore figures as gacha units.
- System to manage and upgrade gacha units and base.
In the depths of despair, Arche, a prince who had lost everything, stood amidst the ruins of the castle that was once his home. Torrential rain soaked his frail body, and for the first time in his life, Arche had decided to give up. He no longer believed in hope, nor in the goddess Oriana, whom he had once worshipped daily. Everything seemed futile—his kingdom destroyed, his family gone, and he had failed to find any trace of his siblings.
"Where are they?" he whispered to the dark sky, his tears mixing with the rain. "Where was Goddess Oriana when we were slaughtered? Am I always alone?"
Massive wolves emerged from the rubble, their eyes glowing red, ready to strike. But then, the world stopped. Time froze. The pounding rain hung still in the air, and the wolves halted mid-leap. In the eerie silence, the statue of Goddess Oriana, still standing tall, emitted a mysterious aura, and a soft voice—full of regret—echoed directly into Arche's mind.
"Forgive me, Archemidas. I am sorry for everything that has happened…"
Stunned and filled with anger, Arche lashed out bitterly. "Where were you when everything fell apart?! You stood by while my family died! When my father and mother were murdered, when my siblings vanished?!"
"I could not stop that fate," the voice replied, laden with sorrow. "I could only watch from afar, bound by the limits of this world. But I am here now because you are on the verge of giving up. And I cannot let you go."
Arche wept harder. He had spent his life searching for his family, but all he had found was destruction and disappointment. "I'm tired... I can't search any longer. I don’t even know if they’re alive..."
"They are alive, Archemidas. You must hold on, because they need you, just as you need them."
For the first time in what felt like ages, a faint glimmer of hope ignited in Arche's heart. Despite the overwhelming pain and doubt, he realized that giving up was not the answer. There was still so much left to discover. And though his faith in his goddess had been shattered, one truth remained—his family was still out there.
With tears in his eyes and a trembling heart, Arche finally accepted that reality. "Alright... I will keep going. For them. For myself."
Under the frozen sky, Arche rediscovered his purpose—to survive, to fight, and to find the ones he loved most.
The story about a NEET who, against his will, is forced by his parents to undergo military training and become a soldier. He ends up dying in a war against demon forces from Hell.
Then continues as he is reincarnated as a kid named Archemidas, in the same world but 2,000 years in the future. A lot has changed since his reincarnation, and he now has two distinct personalities that don’t quite match each other. His mission is to uncover what happened in the world during those 2,000 years and to fulfill the requests of the angel who reincarnated him.
I wrote the navigator as a player who sees everything happening in the town as just part of the game. He doesn't care about whatever happened to the town’s inhabitants, because he sees the townsfolk as NPCs. However, as a player, sometimes someone can feel disgusted by a story quest, right? that's just his honest reaction as a player.
Astral Point: Summoners Dimensional War
Games · USBlueMoon