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Sothis is excruciating.

Like, I get that the VR experience is vastly different from any other gaming experience, and it's important to 'crawl before you roundhouse kick' or whatever that saying is, but seeing as I'm not a literal baby, this is torture.

For my first Foundation Skill Quest, I'm running around the village posting "Lost Tanuki" fliers.

Most of the tengu huts are essentially treehouses, so I'm pasting fliers to the bare tree trunks beneath the houses. The market, post office, and school are at ground-level, built into giant hollowed-out trees like those Redwoods you can drive through in California. I slap fliers onto the doors of each, not bothering to ask the owners.

It's not that I believe it's easier to ask forgiveness than get permission. It's more that I believe it's easiest to do neither.

If you don't get caught, you don't get bothered.

I do take note every ti I pass a tengu NPC with an orange-glowing na, so I won't have to search long for the next task. Anything to finish these painfully simple quests faster.

Finally empty-handed, I race back to Little Jojo, the teary-eyed tengu kid who's lost his pet.

"Thank you, Hero!" he cries, flinging himself at my waist in a grateful hug.

"Uh. No worries," I reply as I awkwardly try to pry him off . He has a surprisingly strong grip for such a tiny brat.

I'm fairly concerned I'm going to take damage.

The chi of a system notification alert grabs my attention, so I give up and just leave the kid attached while I two-finger swipe to turn on Visual Notifications.

(Too many people in the beta died due to ill-tid notifications popping up in the players' sight lines during battles or while traversing dangerous terrain or whatever, so they added the toggle function for players to choose when notifications auto-appear and when they simply chi and a red exclamation point is added to your status window.)

[Quest Complete! You completed {Help Little Jojo} in 02:48. Pass Ti: 09:00]

[Quest Success Rating: S Unlock Chain Quest!]

[Quest Reward: You have gained Foundation Skill: Sprint (Basic)]

[Sprint (Basic): Like jogging, but faster. Allows you to move at maximum land speed, based on Agility and equipnt bonuses. Consus Stamina.]

Weird. Sprint wasn't a skill in the beta, it was just a thing you could do, like walk or jump. It always consud stamina though. Maybe now that it's a skill, leveling it up can decrease how quickly it uses SP? That would be convenient.

"Great news, Hero!" Little Jojo exclaims, little arms still locked tight around . "Soone saw the flier and brought info on Neko! Will you go save him?"

His oversized eyes, filled with hero-worship and awe, stare up at with all the hope and optimism of childhood.

"No."

I flatly refuse, then flick him in the forehead.

Gotta squash that navet early.

A system alert chis.

[Chain Quest {Save Neko} Activated!]

[Warning: Failure to complete this mandatory quest will result in penalty.]

Oh, c'mon! This counts as an official chain quest? I know you can't opt out of chain quests in this ga, but for fuck's sake, the kid nad his raccoon dog 'Cat'!

The tanuki's probably suffering from an identity crisis and couldn't take it anymore. I doubt the poor bastard wants to be found!

Chain quests are supposed to be rewards for above-excellent initial quest completion, but honestly, this feels more like punishnt.

"Fine," I growl.

Little Jojo cheers and attacks my leg with such an intense hug my pants lose another precious point of durability.

I wonder if the quest would cancel if the kid mysteriously died.

---

Little Jojo drags to a dark section of the forest and points out a trail of will-o'-the-wisp fires, smoky electric blue flas that seem to emit a low-key aggro-pulling effect.

To my surprise, I feel like I could break the aggro-pull if I wanted. I'm curious whether it's a racial perk, since the fires are tengu magic, or if it's a willpower effect of the Windflower Emblem's Fortitude 1 hidden attribute.

Either way, I don't bother dispelling the aggro-pulling, since I want to follow the lights anyway. I ditch the kid and start using my brand-new Sprint skill to zip through the ferns and trees. As I near the last visible blue fla, another appears further into the woods, then another as I near that one, until I'm playing a bizarre ga of tag with magic fireballs.

It's kinda fun, to be honest. Especially since I can finally feel the speed effects of the Emblem and my base Agi racial bonus; my max speed is already as fast as it was a month into the beta.

For the first ti since I fell on my ass this morning, I'm smiling.

My ever-present HP and SP bars glow in the top left corner of my vision. While the blue Health bar stays full and happy, my green stamina bar rises and falls constantly as I manipulate my movent speeds.

Stamina is a complicated beast in Viren's Refuge. I'm more familiar with its intricacies than most, since one of my long-term beta assignnts involved testing dozens of stamina-maximizing techniques.

Sprinting consus SP, while Agi and equipnt determines how rapid the rate of consumption. Jogging, walking, and standing replenish SP at different rates, so there's an art to alternating movent speeds to run most efficiently without depleting your SP and entering a Weakened state.

Combat also consus stamina. lee skills use more SP than non-magic ranged attacks, and magic skills generally consu the most SP, just like magic consus mana in other MMOs. The stamina burn during combat isn't unreasonably fast, though; by Level 10, if you're decently efficient, an average player can fight for 5-10 minutes without needing an SP recovery item or spell.

What's really cool (for expert players, anyway) is that combat skill proficiency and accurate combo delivery greatly influence SP consumption.

Essentially, fighting well allows a player to also fight longer.

With my badass racial perk, hitting 95% proficiency with a blade or martial art skill will not only deal double damage, but it will also consu half the SP the base skill consus. Basic-Level skills only operate at 60% efficiency if you simply let the System Assist perform the skill for you.

In no ti at all, I've gotten back into my zone, and my optimized running pace makes faster than the will-o'-the-wisp lights can generate. I end up running in the dark for a bit, and I realize I'm still easily avoiding hazards and weaving in between trees and branches at full speed.

Holy shit, I can see in the dark.

HIDDEN RACIAL PERK FTW OMG.

It's not perfect night vision or anything, but I can definitely differentiate shadows and make my way through the gloom without much extra effort. I'm gonna have to experint later, soplace truly pitch-black, to see the full limits of this, but I'm currently feeling as excited as if I'd found a legendary treasure chest when I expected a purse of coppers.

A ring of bright blue flas suddenly appears around , so I stop. A weird squeaky-honking sound draws my attention to a hollow log. I peer inside.

"Ah, poor Neko-chan. You are one freaky-looking critter, my dude."

The tanuki squeak-honks at again, clearly agreeing with but also peeved I called him out like that.

The ga artists apparently couldn't decide whether they should go for realism or stray into the Japanese folk art design, so they did a bizarre combination of the two. So now we're dealing with real tanuki noises, natural raccoon-like face and pointed nose, a cartoonish overly-round fluffy body, hind legs/paws normal, front paws more like cartoon hands...

...and poor dude is completely balls-out.

We're talking real low-hanging fruit, here.

Pair of pears damn near dragging on the ground.

I legit don't know how I'm supposed to carry this thing back to Jojo without accidentally skirting second base.

I'm not even sure I should; is this an okay pet for a kid?

Maybe whichever tengu created the will-o'-the-wisps was trying to protect Jojo's innocence.

Neko squeaks indignantly, and I guess he's right. What do I know about child developnt? My sister gave a book about Zeus turning into a golden shower to impregnate a princess when I was eight.

"Fine, but you're walking on your own. I'll be your guide, but I'm not getting up close and personal with Neko nuts, cool?"

The tanuki honks in agreent, and my first official chain quest ends a ten-minute jaunt through the forest later.

If I have to pick up the tanuki a couple tis to help the horribly-proportioned creature over huge fallen trees, and if there is the teeeensiest mont when perhaps one absurdly oversized testicle barely grazes my arm, well.

If I successfully repress a mory, it never happened, right?

You are reading Humanity Online: World Sanctuary Chapter 11: A Dog Named Cat on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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