Font Size
15px

The transition wasn't an impact or a fall. It was a shatter.

One mont I was stepping into the heavy, geotric red of the portal; the next, the sensation of existing abruptly fragnted. It felt as if my body had turned into a thousand shards of mirror, falling through the cracks of the universe, before violently reassembling on the other side.

I stumbled, gasping, dropping to one knee as vertigo spun the world around .

The air didn't taste like anything from mory. It tasted… brittle. Sharp. Like breathing in microscopic slivers of ice.

I engaged [Pri Axiom's Nullifying Veil] instantly. It was a reflex now. My presence vanished from the local reality.

I opened my eyes.

The world of the "Next Page" was breathtakingly hostile.

There was no sky. Instead, the "heavens" were a colossal, kaleidoscopic do of crystalline fractals that seed to stretch infinitely upward, refracting the light of three different suns — one blue, one violet, one burning white. The light didn't shine; it lanced down in coherent, focused beams, turning patches of the ground into blazing spotlights.

The terrain itself was a nightmare of verticality and translucence. Massive pillars of transparent obsidian jutted from a floor made of shifting, multicolored glass-sand. Islands floated not on air, but on updrafts of visible, shimring mana currents that looked like liquid rcury.

This wasn't a planet. It was a geode the size of a solar system.

And it was loud.

A constant, lodic chiming filled the air — the sound of the wind vibrating against the razor-sharp crystalline formations. It was beautiful, but under it lay the distinct, heavy thrum of predators.

My [Predator's Gaze] flared. The data it returned made my eyebrows climb.

The Mana Density was extrely high to low, with a hazardous atmosphere to so of it.

The local fauna had a strange aura, extrely aggressive, and they were Crystal-Skinned.

"Variable mana density?" I murmured, watching a beam of violet sunlight strike a glass dune. The sand instantly vitrified into a solid wall. "Charming. The light literally builds the terrain."

I checked my internal trics. Thoth's lessons were burned into my cortex. Don't fight the dium. Be the current.

I tested the air. The mana here wasn't the fluid water of Bastion or the heavy, divine gold of the Library in the Ossuary. It was jagged. It moved in sharp angles. If I tried to push my mana out in a wave, it would shatter against the ambient field.

I had to be precise.

I extended a thin filant of will, mimicking the fractal patterns of the world. It slid effortlessly through the air.

I maximized my Veil then moved out, trying to keep to shadows impossible to find in this world of refraction. I traversed the glass dunes, my boots crunching softly on sand that looked like crushed gemstones.

The first challenge arrived twenty minutes in.

A sound like shattering porcelain echoed from a ravine to my left.

A creature dragged itself over the ridge.

It looked like a gorilla carved from stained glass. Massive, hulking shoulders made of translucent red plates, knuckles dragging on the ground. But its center… its core was a swirling vortex of trapped light. It was High Tier 5, a perfect test subject.

It sniffed the air, confused. My Veil hid my scent and sound, but I still have not mastered masking my presence, and my minimal displacent of the mana currents must have alerted it.

It didn't roar. It flared.

The red plates on its back shifted, angling perfectly to catch a beam of sunlight. The light passed through its body, amplified by the core, and erupted from its mouth as a coherent laser of concentrated thermal energy.

It swept the area blindly, burning clean holes through obsidian boulders.

I didn't dodge. Practicing Thoth's lesson on Ownership.

"The ink belongs to the house. Rewrite it."

I raised my hand. [Apex Mana Authority] humd in my soul. I didn't block the beam. I reached out to the air in front of it.

I twisted the refractive index of the atmosphere.

The laser hit the distorted air and… bent. It curved ninety degrees, looping harmlessly around and striking the ground behind the beast.

The Alpha grunted, clearly confused why its anger had taken a left turn.

I stepped forward.

I recalled the integrated version of Flicker Strike into my [Ember's Leap].

I didn't teleport myself. I created a micro-wormhole three inches from its exposed core. I thrust a Mana sword into a second wormhole at my hip.

If you stumble upon this narrative on Amazon, be aware that it has been stolen from Royal Road. Please report it.

The blade erged instantly inside the beast's chest, piercing the swirling vortex.

It didn't shatter. It sang. The glass plates resonated, a high, piercing note of destruction, before the creature collapsed into a heap of non-animated shards.

I withdrew the blade.

I imdiately pulled the mana I had used to warp the light back into myself. It rushed into my core, warm and revitalizing, having a net cost of zero Mana spent.

"Efficiency is king," I grinned.

I moved deeper into the Faceted Expanses.

The journey beca a crucible of technique.

I encountered a swarm of Mirror-Hawks — birds that duplicated themselves with illusions. I fought them by fracturing my mind, tracking sixty illusory targets simultaneously while using [Echo of the Ashen Sovereign] to place clones that attacked the real birds based on air displacent.

I crossed a bridge made of "Singing Glass" — a material that amplified sound into physical force. To cross it without being pulverized, I had to vibrate my own mana shield at a precise counter-frequency to cancel out the waves. It was Thoth's lesson on the 'Chorus of Intent' applied to survival.

Every step was training. Every breath was a calibration.

While camping one "night" — when the suns dimd to a twilight glow — I pulled out one of the artifacts Thoth had left in my inventory.

It was a small, unassuming cube made of black stone.

The puzzle of The Void.

"To be opened without touch," Thoth's note had said.

I sat cross-legged on a floating island of athyst. I reached out with my mana.

The cube resisted. It absorbed mana like a sponge. The more I poured in, the heavier it got.

"Not force," I muttered, rembering the bubbles. "Persuasion."

I changed tack. I didn't push. I surrounded the cube with a field of vacuum mana, removing the pressure on its exterior. Then I inverted the flow, creating a magnetic pull on the Concept of the lock.

The cube clicked. A hairline fracture appeared.

Progress.

"I'll crack you eventually," I promised, stowing it away.

The world wasn't empty of sentient life.

On the third day, peering from a high precipice, I spotted them.

A group of five figures was navigating a canyon floor far below. They were diverse. A towering humanoid clad in crystalline armor wielding a massive hamr; two slender, elven-like figures with skin that shifted color; a small, floating construct that buzzed with sensor lights; and a leader figure in flowing robes who levitated a few inches off the ground. Their leader gave off a Low Tier 5 signature, while his followers were high to Peak Tier 4.

They moved with professional cohesion, checking angles, scanning for threats. They were hunting.

"People," I whispered. Not just monsters. A society.

I watched them ambush a Prism-back. Their tactics were impressive. The tank used a shield that refracted the laser breath back at the beast. The floating construct scrambled the monster's senses with sonic pulses. The mage in the center wove spells not from ambient mana, but by pulling shards of crystal from the ground and accelerating them.

Geomancers, I noted. Adapting to the terrain.

They harvested the core and moved on, chatting in a language that sounded lodic, like chis. My System translation caught snippets.

Guilds. Cities. Economics.

This was a civilization. And they were powerful. Tier 4 squads as standard hunting parties ant their elites were likely high Tier 5 or 6.

I shadowed them.

My Veil was absolute. They had a sensor-bot, but it was looking for mana ripples. I was the absence of ripples. I drifted on the mana currents above them, silent as a thought.

They led out of the jagged wilderness and into a vast, open caldera.

In the center of the caldera, nestled between three massive spires of translucent quartz, lay a settlent.

It was beautiful.

Buildings carved directly into the crystal walls glowed with internal light. Bridges of spun glass connected the spires. At the center floated a massive, rotating polyhedron that pulsed with a rhythm that matched the world's chiming wind.

"Crystal City" was teeming with life. Flying skiffs zipped between towers. Armored patrols walked the periter walls.

I landed on a high ridge overlooking the city, blending perfectly into a shadowed crevice.

I settled into a ditative stance on the ridge, the kaleidoscope light of the three suns gleaming off the multifaceted sand around . The city below was a marvel of mana engineering, a testant to what a civilization could do when they stopped fighting the world and started singing with it. But beauty was often the prettiest mask for a trap. Thoth had taught to read the footnotes, not just the headlines.

[Glimpse of a Path] activated, reaching for the golden thread of foresight inside my Soul.

My perspective shifted. The chill of the ridge faded, replaced by the humming warmth of potentiality.

In the vision, I stood up. I adjusted my internal mana frequency, damping down my signature until I registered as a wandering Mana focused adventurer — high Tier 4, competent but unassuming.

I walked down the slope, my boots clicking softly on the glass road leading to the massive quartz gates.

As I approached, the guardians — towering golems carved from living athyst — turned their heads. They didn't aim weapons. Instead, they struck a tuning fork held in their stone hands.

A clear, resonant note washed over . It was a query made of sound and mana, vibrating against my aura to test its harmony.

I didn't resist. I let my dampened aura ripple back in tune, singing a song of peaceful intent.

The athyst giants nodded. The massive crystal gates dissolved into a mist of sparkling light, granting entry.

I stepped inside.

Crystal City was even more breathtaking from within. The air here was rich, thick with Essence that tasted of sweet rock candy and vanilla. There were no chanical engines or burning fuels; everything moved on currents of mana. I saw rchants moving crates using levitation disks woven from light. I saw children playing with marbles that orbited their heads like tiny planets. The architecture grew naturally from the ground, spires of sapphire and erald spiraling up toward the fractal sky.

I walked through a bustling market. The stalls sold things that defied earthly logic — bottled thunderstorms, singing geodes, fabrics woven from solidified moonlight. I paused by a vendor selling fruits that chid when touched.

"Tier 4 sweet-glass apples," the rchant called out, a woman with skin that shimred like pearl. "Good for restoring ntal fatigue, traveler."

I nodded politely, moving on. It was a high-magic society functioning in perfect symbiosis with its deadly world.

I made my way deeper, reaching a central plaza where fountains sprayed liquid light instead of water. I relaxed slightly. My disguise was holding. To the casual observer, I was just another adventurer.

Then, the wind changed.

It wasn't a physical gust. It was a shift in the ambient mana pressure of the entire city. The lodic chiming that filled the air dropped an octave, resonating deep in my chest.

From the highest spire — a needle of pure, translucent diamond floating above the city center — a presence washed over .

It didn't attack. It didn't trigger my senses like a predator would. It felt like the sun coming out from behind a cloud. A massive, ancient consciousness brushed against my Veil. It was gentle, curious, and terrifyingly powerful. High Tier 6. Perhaps touching the ceiling of 7.

It scanned for a less than a millionth of a second then instantly vanished.

You are reading Prime System Champion [A Multi-System Apocalypse LitRPG] Chapter 189: The City of Glass on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.