The best.
The prodigy.
The future.
How many of you could have such titles?
For Taejong, it was sothing he had grown accustod to since he joined the professional league.
Addicted to playing since middle school, he dedicated half of his life grinding the ga "Rise of Legacy."
At the age of 16, he was one of the top players in the world.
At the age of 17, he was the youngest scouted player to join the professional league.
At the age of 18, he joined his first tournant.
Taejong thought that a golden road was ahead of him.
The plan was simple.
He would join the professional league, win his first championship title, earn the Rookie of the Year award, and receive an invitation to one of the biggest international competitions of the ga.
However...
He didn't accomplish any of that.
With a flawless 7-0 run, everything was going smoothly at first. They were the favorites. They were unstoppable.
Everyone expected them to win.
Everyone expected him to win.
"You're killing it out there, Tae!" his teammate once laughed, slapping him on the back. "Don't jinx it, hyung," Taejong had replied, smiling quietly, though part of him believed it too.
However, a hand injury happened midway through the tournant, just weeks before the playoffs.
A sharp, twisting pain surged through his wrist. He tried to ignore it, pushing himself harder, thinking it was just temporary.
"I'll be fine," he told his coach after one of their practice sessions. "Just a strain. Give two days."
But it wasn't.
The pain grew worse, flaring up every ti he played. For a mont, painkillers beca his lifeline.
"I need it," he told the team dic one night, his voice low, ashad. "Just one more dose. I can't feel my hand again."
However, in the most crucial match of the playoffs, his wrist gave out completely.
They lost. They were even the first team to be eliminated in the playoffs.
The prodigy's fall.
The future's failure.
A big joke.
Their loss was splashed across every headline.
Taejong locked himself in his room for days. He rewatched the match over and over, searching for sothing, anything he could have done differently.
"Why... why didn't I stop when I had the chance...?" he whispered to no one, clutching his aching wrist.
Still, he was determined.
He tried to recover. He visited doctors, specialists, anyone who promised even the faintest hope of healing.
But the damage was done. His grip weakened. His reflexes dulled.
The doctors said he needed rest. Months of therapy. Maybe even longer.
"You're young. Your body just needs ti," one doctor said kindly.
"I don't have ti," Taejong replied, jaw clenched. "You don't understand."
However, Taejong couldn't wait that long.
The professional league moved fast. There was always soone younger, hungrier, and stronger. He watched as his teammates moved on.
The roster changed and his na was left out.
At the age of 19, he was considered the youngest retired player.
The ga he had once dedicated his life to beca nothing but a distant mory. A reminder that he was a failure.
He blad himself. He carried endless regrets. Countless what-ifs.
He clearly had a bright future...
But what happened?
And so, one day, while he was crossing the street, a speeding car crashed into him.
The impact was brutal. His bone was crushed. His body was in pain and the cold pavent soaked in his blood.
Yet, in that fleeting mont before everything went dark, Taejong felt sothing he hadn't felt in years.
Relief.
It felt like rcy.
For once, he was happy.
"...Finally," he muttered, as his vision blurred. "It doesn't hurt anymore."
And so, at the age of 21, he died.
Or did he?
A term of respect used by n to address older male friends or family mbers.
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