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This is a Beta Test?! - A Literally Broken System

"Why ship a game that isn't even complete!?" *I don't know! Why don't you at least tell me what to fix so that we won't die?!* *** Moriya didn't even think getting sucked into a different world was possible. Whether being a realist or being a straight-up pessimist, he never believed that the day when he'd be warped into a world entirely unlike his own would even happen. After all, why should it, right? But then... It actually happened. Finding himself inside the setting of an upcoming game, Moriya wandered in awe at the sight of strange environments, the various state powers vying for supremacy over the vast expanse of the seas. Hell, even infinite worlds and stars, [The Seams] seemingly had it all. Unfortunately, there was just one problem: the game was literally broken right from the start. Joined by a colorfully dysfunctional cast and the game world's actual developer, watch as Moriya struggles with bugs and glitches as he navigates this new world. Witness our valiant hero deal with the most infuriating and rage-inducing aspects of gaming in real life. And what if... Just what if, he actually learns how to wield these ridiculous errors to his advantage? UPDATES: Whenever Twitter: @ChellyArks

ChellyArks · Games
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321 Chs

47.1 Meaningful Choice?

Choice... Was it even a reality? As someone that believed more in luck than hard work, the concept of choices struck me as something you do only to increase your chances of success. There was no such thing as guaranteed success in this world. Hell, even if you somehow did everything right, that you somehow prepared for every single possible scenario that could possibly go wrong, you still had a one percent chance that something ridiculous was going to happen. It might be as small as a forgotten screw, or it might be that an earthquake suddenly happened, but the end result was always the same. There was simply no feasible way to make sure that your efforts will be rewarded. At best, you get a decent payoff, and even then it might not even be worth it.

Then again, that was just me. I did say that choices increased the odds of success, so that also means that one could stack the odds so heavily in one's favor that the one percent scenario would be inconsequential even if it did happen.