The party moved like a half-oiled machine.
Briggs, the tank, barked orders with practiced arrogance, confident that his armor would carry any mistakes. Layla, the fire mage, threw spells faster than strategy demanded—a hammer looking for nails. Kain, the rogue, vanished and reappeared with each dagger strike, never once trusting anyone enough to cover his flank.
And then there was Arven, the healer—the only one who smiled when Raven joined.
Five players. Four connected. One ghost among them.
Raven played his part perfectly.
He stayed near the rear, his summoned bone wolf weaving quietly between the others, offering just enough support to be useful without drawing attention. His hands stayed loose at his sides. His posture spoke of hesitation, beginner's nerves. Nothing worth noticing.
In truth, his attention wasn't on the goblins they fought.
It was on the dungeon.
Spawn timers. AI behavior loops. Resource nodes. Pathing glitches near the eastern tunnel—all logged silently in the back of his mind.
The Goblin Nest wasn't just a dungeon. It was an engine. Waiting to be hijacked.
They pushed forward, deeper into the winding tunnels.
Briggs held aggro like a wall of iron. Layla and Kain cut down goblins with mechanical efficiency. Arven hardly had to lift a hand—the run was clean.
Raven's role stayed quiet, supportive. He healed his summon. Dropped the occasional minor curse.
Every action small. Every footprint buried beneath the team's noise.
Perfect.
At the heart of the dungeon, the Goblin King waited.
A hulking figure with a rusted cleaver, standing guard before the throne of broken stones. Its red eyes stared blankly, locked in passive AI mode until aggroed.
Standard behavior.
Raven's gaze sharpened.
He needed to time this precisely.
Briggs roared and charged.
The cleaver clashed against shield. Spells and daggers tore into the boss from all sides.
The Goblin King's health dropped steadily.
65%. 50%. 30%.
Raven waited.
His bone wolf prowled at the edges, eyes gleaming, awaiting his signal.
At 15%, he moved.
His summon lunged, striking a weak point exposed by Kain's last slash—a joint in the goblin king's armor.
The Goblin King staggered.
[Boss Defeated!]
The system logged the kill under the full party's credit—standard fair division. No red flags. No special notices.
Exactly as planned.
Briggs whooped in triumph, Layla muttered about "taking too long," and Arven patted everyone's backs with cheerful blessings.
One by one, they scooped up their loot.
One by one, they filed out.
Raven lingered.
He paced slowly, pretending to scan for extra drops. Waiting for the final player to disband the party.
And then—silence.
He was alone.
The Goblin King's corpse began to dissolve into mist.
Dungeon reset sequence engaged.
Raven watched the swirling energy with detached calculation. Respawn timers weren't random. They were coded, predictable. Primordial Abyss preferred clean loops.
And just as expected, the mist condensed, reforming the Goblin King's hulking figure.
A new instance.
A new opportunity.
[Dominion Chain Activated.]
The cursed chain unraveled from Raven's arm, flashing across the space between them with predatory speed.
The Goblin King snarled in confusion, instincts battling programmed behavior.
[Abyssal Pact Attempting Subjugation...]
For a heartbeat, the boss resisted, muscles straining.
But it was alone. Vulnerable.
No party noise. No rescue.
Only Raven's chain, tightening around its core.
The Goblin King shrieked—a sound closer to desperation than defiance.
It fought for three seconds.
Maybe four.
Then it dropped to one knee, chains binding its will.
[Subjugation Successful.]
Raven let out a slow, measured breath.
Not a victory cheer. Not satisfaction.
Just confirmation.
Another node secured.
Another wheel turning.
He glanced around the cavern. Already, the dungeon responded. The torches burned a darker hue. The goblins at the edges—respawning—turned toward him with faint, mechanical deference.
[Hidden System Alert: Goblin Nest has been claimed.]
[Dungeon Sovereign Detected: Adjusting Spawn Patterns.]
Raven flexed his fingers once, feeling the dungeon's pulse through the chain wrapped around his arm.
Bone Ruins had been the prototype.
Goblin Nest was the proof.
Together, they formed his first true machines—the silent, tireless engines that would mint his fortune.
Not dungeons for glory.
Factories for gold.
The foundation of survival, built not on power, but on quiet, relentless profit.
And no one even knew he was here.
For now, that was survival.
All he had to do was stay low, buried beneath the noise of millions of players. One mistake—one anomaly in the wrong log file—and the company, the GMs, even the AI overlords that governed the world's balance could turn their gaze toward him.
If they noticed, they wouldn't just reset his dungeon.
They would erase him.
And this time, there would be no lazy intern hesitating to push delete button. No bureaucratic delays. No appeal. No second chances. If they found him, it would be deletion—swift, clinical, and absolute.