Font Size
15px

Chapter 75

Shattered Lake Prison.

"If hurt enough, slash open with a pair of hands, curse yesterday..."

Ashe looked at the recharge page on the light screen, lost in thought.

Yesterday's virtual world exploration didn't yield much. Ashe barely found an "worth a visit" area, but discovered there was a Slicing Fish Dragon inside.

He and the Swordswoman fought hard against it, but still couldn't kill the Slicing Fish Dragon in the end. That Slicing Fish Dragon cunningly pretended it would die with them, then dove into the water and escaped after farting out two spells - spells in the bubbly diarrhea.

So Ashe and the Swordswoman could only very humiliatingly catch the Slicing Fish Dragon's farts, watching it disappear into the white fog.

The damage was low, but the insult was extrely strong.

Ashe was taught another good lesson by the virtual world - the survival environnt of sorcerers was so harsh, no wonder the death row inmates didn't feel anything about not being able to enter or leave the virtual world - the virtual world was a place where you might not succeed even if you tried hard, but would definitely feel very relaxed if you gave up.

The difference between reality and the virtual world was that reality was a garbage ga dominated by pay-to-win players, while the virtual world was a garbage ga dominated by lucky players. The average sorcerer's gaming experience was to first get beaten up badly in reality, then get ravaged in the virtual world, fully experiencing the disparity of the world.

The two spells farted out by the Slicing Fish Dragon were not great either, so they were naturally taken by Ashe to recharge, as a tortured player like him who started out in hell difficulty in reality could only change his fate by recharging.

The problem ca when Ashe was recharging the Sorcerer's Handbook - he suddenly realized the price of a single-wing spell was only 8 points!

It was clearly still worth 10 points a few days ago!

What was going on, ga system, did you fix the Apple paynt channel and are now charging

Apple tax?

The five spells only recharged 40 points, a full 20% less!

However, Ashe had no way to complain or inquire, not because the ga system hadn't fixed the complaint module, but because their company's ga simply didn't have a complaint module...

But Ashe also had so vague guesses - it was probably related to his own strength.

After crossing the vortex, his Silver Wings were also more than halfway condensed. As his arcane energy grew, the power of his spells naturally also increased. For him and the Swordswoman, the difficulty of exploring the virtual world decreased linearly - the most obvious manifestation was that the number of "worth a visit" and "a bit troubleso" areas increased a lot on the virtual world map, and "suicide zones" only occasionally appeared once.

When the Silver Wings spread open, Ashe was afraid he could achieve spell freedom, harvesting seven or eight spells every night, bursting the ga system, and the first thing he did every morning was a ten pull to test his luck.

But this was obviously impossible.

Even if Ashe's brain lost imagination after working as a corporate slave for a few years, with his daily computing power only used on lunch choices, he also knew the ga system must have problems and would not leave such an obvious loophole for himself.

Clearly, in order to prevent value collapse, the ga system's thod was: reduce returns.

Or rather, taxation chanisms.

Ashe guessed that after advancing to two wings, the price of single-wing spells would drop to 5 points or even lower. When he spread three wings open, the price of single-wing spells would even drop so low that he would be too lazy to pick them up off the ground.

Ashe strongly suspected that the selling point of this ga might be "free spells for all

You are reading Sorcerer’s Handbook Chapter 75 on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading
No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.