\\[Ding\\~ Congratulations to the host for a total of 5,000 units of the ga sold, generating 100 million ryō in revenue. Based on local prices, this equals approximately 33.33 million RMB. Due to this sales explosion, the mission has been completed ahead of schedule.]
\\[Ding\\~ Congratulations to the host for receiving the highest-tier reward. The system has officially been activated. The shop and emotion point exchange system are now open.]
\\[Ding\\~ Congratulations to the host for obtaining: 1 Platinum Chest, 1 Gold Chest, and 1 Silver Chest.]
\\[Ding\\~ Congratulations, player, for perfectly passing the novice trial. The system is now officially open. Please continue working hard to beco the world's greatest ga developer.]
\\[Please spend the next three days preparing. The mission system will reopen after that.]
Such were the ssages delivered by the system.
A mission originally ant to take a month had been completed instantly, all thanks to the overwhelming demand.
The initial 500-unit limited run priced at 100,000 RMB per copy had now sold ten tis that amount. And the total revenue? 333 tis more.
This kind of overachievent shattered the system's mission cap and triggered an early evaluation and the highest level reward.
The reward? A series of treasure chests containing randomized items of varying quality—just like a loot box system.
Damn it. Isn't this just a gacha system?
Seriously, I transmigrated and the Goose Company's shadow is still chasing !
Uchiha Kei took a deep breath. While part of him was thrilled that the mission was complete, another part felt constipated with dread.
Still, completing the mission was good. He imdiately examined the new system functions—the shop and emotion point exchange.
These were part of the official system launch, a reward for clearing the novice phase.
Which made sense. Back when the system issued this mission, Uchiha Kei had already guessed that all his previous tasks were just introductory training.
Now, he had finally completed a full series—and even overachieved.
It proved that his decision to rely on support from the Uchiha clan and hold a product launch was the right one. The Earth-style marketing techniques he used had made the ga a smash hit after the event.
After the presentation, representatives from all major clans imdiately approached Uchiha Fugaku to purchase the genjutsu ga.
After all, that "Gift to Konoha" ssage was emotionally devastating. A textbook case of "If you don't buy it, you don't love the village." Any shinobi who wanted to show love for the Hidden Leaf *had* to pay up.
And the effectiveness of the genjutsu ga was already confird by Minato Namikaze's demo. For the sake of self-improvent and strengthening their families, friends, and clans, no one hesitated to buy.
Even though 20,000 ryō wasn't cheap, compared to the resulting power-up, it was practically a giveaway. So of course, people were buying like mad.
No deposits needed—everyone paid in full. The Uchiha hadn't prepared enough ga scrolls in advance, but taking pre-orders wasn't exactly rocket science. Uchiha Kei went ahead and used that thod without hesitation.
Even rchants visiting Konoha were interested and wanted to stock up to resell elsewhere.
Though those rchant orders weren't factored into the imdiate sales numbers, the local shinobi alone were more than enough to exhaust the supply.
Each official ga scroll could only be used by a single person through blood-binding, so shinobi clans tended to place bulk orders based on total ninja count. The system tracked this accurately, assigning sales volu based on how many users the scrolls were truly for.
In this aspect, at least, the system's intelligence was competent. It didn't just assu one buyer ant only one user.
Even if the available scrolls weren't that nurous, as long as paynt was made and pre-orders placed, the system counted them toward the total sales.
Wait—how did the shinobi world's ryō convert to RMB?
Well, the ryō wasn't silver currency like in ancient China. It was just the general currency of the shinobi world.
Using the benchmark of a bowl of char siu ran costing 60 ryō, the system converted ryō to RMB at a 3:1 exchange rate, hence the final sales amount being calculated as 33.33 million RMB.
Of course, this was just what the system counted up to. It stopped tracking once the mission cap was blown past. The actual final revenue would be much higher.
Uchiha Kei estimated the final sales would exceed 200 million ryō.
That's almost ten tis Asuma's bounty.
Pure profit!
No question—it was insanely profitable!
Even though the sealing scrolls were expensive, bulk orders brought the price down to below 5,000 ryō each. Production cost per scroll hovered around 6,000 ryō, so the rest was all profit.
Such a huge margin would make even the Uchiha clan green with envy.
All told, setting up the venue, running the launch event, hiring a ton of shinobi and laborers—it had only cost the Uchiha clan a little over 100 million ryō. Labor costs were dirt cheap in this underdeveloped world.
Purely in terms of revenue, this was a massive windfall.
Just look at Uzumaki Kushina—this sealing technique researcher had beco a franchise partner in the genjutsu ga. Along with Minato Namikaze, the lifelong brand ambassador, the two of them held a 5% share. And right now? They were gleefully counting their money.
Don't scoff at 5%. The profit wasn't monopolized by the Uchiha. Even Uchiha Kei, the creator, only held 10%.
The remaining 85%? The Uchiha clan kept 35%, and the other 50% was allocated for alliance-building with other shinobi clans.
Uchiha Fugaku was already negotiating with representatives, announcing that the genjutsu ga would enter true comrcial operations. They had even ford a guild: the unassuming-sounding "Konoha Ga Association," which would handle ga operations moving forward.
The Uchiha would not hog all the benefits. They welcod other forward-thinking clans to join. All it took was an investnt and so family resources to help the guild promote products across the shinobi world.
Every major clan agreed instantly.
Anyone with half a brain could see the ga's vast potential—and its profits. The fact that the Uchiha clan was willingly sharing only improved their image.
Hyūga, Nara, Akimichi, Yamanaka—all joined. Even the Senju clan, which had given up their surna to rge into the village, joined in. Sarutobi, Mitokado, and Homura's clans too—all generously offered funding.
As for Shimura Danzō...
Well, let's just say his family had terrible luck. Thanks to Danzō's reputation, the Shimura clan had long fallen into obscurity and beco commoners. Ruthless to enemies—and even crueler to their own.
In short, a ga-profit alliance encompassing most of Konoha's ninja clans had been ford.
Most saw only the profit and the promising future. So even believed the Uchiha had truly changed. That they'd willingly share such a lucrative, long-term enterprise stunned everyone—and boosted the clan's reputation imnsely.
Only a few sharp minds like Nara Shikaku saw the deeper implications. This wasn't just a business alliance. It was a power bloc that could sway the entire Hidden Leaf.
Even the village leadership couldn't oppose them now. Their own clans were involved. Any move against the Uchiha would an going up against their own families.
This was...
Pulling the rug out from under them.
Nara Shikaku, who had orchestrated the Ino-Shika-Chō alliance, couldn't help but admire the one who guided the Uchiha into this grand sche.
Sure, among daimyo and nobles, this kind of maneuver was standard. But in a village where most shinobi were taught to solve problems with fists, this was a dinsional-level play.
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