The ceiling was leaking again.
Finn stared at the brown stain spreading across the plaster above his bed, a slow, patient thing that grew an inch a week, as if it had sowhere to be. He should’ve fixed it months ago.
But fixing it ant calling the landlord, and calling the landlord ant paying for the repairs himself, sothing he couldn’t afford. It was bad enough paying nine hundred quid a month for a small apartnt room in london
"Twenty years old, and my most committed relationship is with a water stain."
He rolled off the mattress, grabbed a shirt from the floor, sniffed it, decided it was clean enough by sll alone, and pulled it on.
His phone lit up on the nightstand.
It wasn’t his alarm. He still had forty minutes before his warehouse shift—forty minutes before he got to spend eight hours scanning barcodes and pretending his lower back didn’t feel like it belonged to a fifty-year-old.
The notification was from the Fracture Online forum.
[LAUNCH DAY GATHREAD — Fracture Online goes live at 12:00 GMT!] [1.312M comnts]
"There’s already over a million comnts?" he muttered. "They opened the thread, like, half an hour ago."
He’d been following the ga for two years.
Monolith Studios’ flagship title: a full-dive VRMMO built for the Celestine neural rig, the most ambitious virtual world ever designed.
A planet torn apart by dinsional rifts. Continents fractured and fused with pieces of other realities, forming a seamless wilderness of unique bios, where vast forests bordered frozen wastelands and floating ruins hung above oceans.
The world was crawling with interdinsional creatures, and players were dropped right into the middle of it.
The beta footage had been staggering. NPCs with conversations that never repeated, a combat system that read your muscle mory and punished you for patterns.
He’d watched every leaked clip so many tis he could narrate them from mory.
Had, in fact, narrated them to his coworker Darren, who had since stopped eating lunch near him.
He couldn’t afford a Celestine rig. Couldn’t afford the ga. Couldn’t even afford the subscription. But he followed it anyway, the sa way a starving kid outside a restaurant window follows the als being carried past.
He knew every floor plan the beta testers had leaked. Every bio, every boss, every faction. He knew the lore better than most of the people who’d actually played it.
Fracture Online was the life he wanted and couldn’t have, rendered in light and code and sold to people who didn’t appreciate it.
He scrolled through the gathread, skimming the hype posts and first impressions.
CelestineGod42: LETS GOOOOO
RiftWalkerX: Anyone else’s hands shaking?
I_CanSoloAnyBoss11: See you all in Ashenre.
"Yeah. Have fun in there." He locked the phone and tossed it back onto the nightstand. "I’ll be in a warehouse. Scanning things. Living the dream... Fuck my life."
He squeezed toothpaste onto his brush and started scrubbing, staring at his reflection in the bathroom mirror. Tired black eyes, ssy curly black hair, the kind of face that blended into crowds like it had been designed for it.
The world ended before he finished.
---
There was no warning.
No siren, no earthquake, no slow build of dread.
One second he was scrubbing his molars and thinking about how spectacularly unfortunate he was, and the next every window in his apartnt exploded inward.
He hit the floor.
Glass rained across the bathroom tiles, and a sound tore through the building—not an explosion, not thunder, but sothing deeper, sothing structural, as if the air itself had been ripped open along a seam.
Then the light ca.
It poured through the shattered windows like liquid, gold and white and colours he didn’t have nas for, flooding every room, every corner, every shadow. It passed through walls. It passed through him.
He felt it move through his chest, his skull, his bones—a warmth that wasn’t quite warm, a pressure that wasn’t quite there, sothing rewriting him at a level deeper than muscle and marrow.
"What the f—"
And then the window appeared.
[SYSTEM INITIALISING...]
The words hung in the centre of his vision, translucent, blue-white, perfectly legible—every bit as real as the blood running down his forearm where the glass had cut him.
[GLOBAL INTEGRATION EVENT IN PROGRESS]
[PLANET DESIGNATION: EARTH-7741]
[STATUS: UNRANKED]
He scrambled to his feet. His toothbrush clattered into the sink.
The bathroom mirror was cracked but still hanging, and in it he saw himself, sa face, sa tired eyes, sa uneven stubble, with a glowing notification floating six inches in front of his reflection.
[Scanning host... complete.]
[Na: Finn Morrow]
[Level: 1]
[Race: [Human (G) – lvl 1]
[Class: Unassigned]
[Profession: Unassigned.]
[HP: 100% | MP: 100%]
[Stats]
Strength: 8
Agility: 9
Endurance: 9
Perception: 9
Intelligence: 8
Willpower: 9
Free points: 0
Titles
N / A
Skills
N / A
-
[You have been registered as a Participant in the Integration. All Participants will receive a starter allocation. Please select your class within 24 hours or one will be assigned to you.]
He stared at it.
Read it again.
Then a third ti.
His hands were shaking, and he wasn’t sure whether or not he had finally lost it, because....
"No," he said quietly. "No, this can’t be..."
He recognised the interface.
The font. The colour—that exact shade of blue-white. The whole entire layout was completely identical to Fracture Online’s interface.
Every pixel, every line break, every design choice ripped straight from the beta footage he’d watched a hundred tis on his phone in the back of the warehouse during lunch.
"This is a joke," he said, but his voice had gone thin. "This is soone’s running a prank. So kind of AR overlay. So—"
He walked to the window and looked outside.
The last of his doubt died in his chest like a candle pinched out between wet fingers.
London was burning.
The sky above the city had split open, a rift stretching from horizon to horizon, and through the wound an inverted landscape hung above the rooftops, mountains pointing downward, forests clinging to a ceiling of rock, rivers falling upward into nothing.
The Riftlands.
"Oh, you have got to be kidding ."
It was the starting zone of *Fracture Online*. The fractured dinsion that hung above the Ashenre city like a second sky, leaking monsters, resources, and chaos into the world below.
He’d once watched a strear fly a wyvern through the gap during a beta event and thought, ’I’d give anything to see that in person.’
Apparently, the universe had a sick sense of humour.
Through that rift Finn could see dozens of shapes falling from the gap.
They tumbled through the tear and hit the city like teorites, smashing into rooftops, cratering streets, punching through the facades of office buildings.
He knew what they were before they landed.
Rift Stalkers.
Wolf-like creatures with backward-jointed limbs and jaws that opened sideways, their levels ranging from three to five in the ga. They were starter-zone mobs, ant to teach new players the basics of combat.
They weren’t a threat for geared players.
Finn was not a geared player, nor were the several Londoners outside facing those creatures.
He looked back at the status window.
"Strength eight, agility nine..." His voice trailed off. "These stats are all below average."
A Rift Stalker slamd into the building across the street.
Finn watched it peel itself out of the crater, shake brick dust from its angular skull, and start loping down the road toward the screaming.
’Right... I can save the existential crisis for later. Right now, I should focus on not dying.’
[Would you like to select your class now?]
The notification pulsed. Six options unfolded in front of him.
[Warrior — Strength-based lee specialist]
1
[Ranger — Agility-based ranged specialist]
[Mage — Willpower-based arcane specialist]
[Healer — Willpower-based support specialist]
[Warden — Perception-based survivalist and tracker]
[Artificer — Perception-based crafter and engineer]
They were the standard starter classes. All of them had been properly docunted in the forums and all held solid progression paths. He’d written tier lists for three of them.
’Huh?’
Sothing flickered at the bottom of the list—a seventh option, faint and almost translucent. It was there for a heartbeat, then gone before he could read it.
He frowned and tried to scroll down, but there was nothing.
"That’s not— There wasn’t a seventh class in the beta. What was that?"
The building groaned around him, a deep, splintering moan that ran through the walls and up through the floorboards.
Outside, sothing roared, loud enough to shake dust from the ceiling. The screaming in the street was getting louder.
Finn dismissed the class selection.
It was too soon to decide. If this was really Fracture’s system—and every scrap of evidence said it was—then class choice was one of the biggest turning points in a person’s progression.
The forums had been extrely clear about that.
He wasn’t going to panic-pick Warrior just because a dog monster was three streets away.
’Especially when there’s a chance I can unlock a unique class...’
He grabbed his clothes. Shoes. His jacket. The kitchen knife from the counter with a handle cracked from too many dishwasher cycles. He shoved his phone into his pocket and headed for the stairwell.
If the ga’s geography held, there would be a Safe Zone sowhere nearby.
In Fracture Online, every starting area had one, a warded sanctuary where monsters couldn’t enter, where players could rest, regroup, and breathe. They were marked by a pale stone obelisk and a field of blue light.
He just had to reach one before the monsters got to him..
"All right, Finn," he muttered as he took the stairs two at a ti. "You know the setting. You know the mobs. You’ve got every advantage except the ones that actually matter."
He pushed through the fire exit and stepped out into the end of the world.
"So let’s try not to die on the tutorial."
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