Read Continue Online (Part 3, Realities) Online
Authors: Stephan Morse
Tags: #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Science Fiction
"I'll take care of that as well." A large sword made of dual laser beams should suffice.
"If, as Dusk suggested, there are creatures between here and the optimal location, they may also feed off of metals." Hal Pal peeked over the edge again to look at me. "Recovering as many as possible should allow me to increase the explosive payload."
"Is that actual science?" I raised an eyebrow.
"Parts, but most of this seems to be built into the Mechanoid crafting system. It is rather clever and unlikely to be possible in a more realistic setting." Hal Pal displayed an unusually intense smile. Maybe pride in a species modeled after Hal Pal's possible future impacted its emotions. "Everything uses the same series of resources, allowing one object to serve in multiple designs."
"Okay," I said slowly.
My mind flashed back to how the two-handed sword rolled up from my own body as a handle and focal point. The
[Mechanoid]
species had adapted in order to use all sorts of metal combinations to progress forward. It was similar to how humans might eat meats and plants, organic matter, to build up muscle or fat. Only faster and pre-programmed.
"Please hurry, User Legate. We cannot spare a lot of time," Hal Pal said.
"You ready, Dusk?" The small creature nodded at my question. "Alright, you show me where the best point is for an explosive, and we'll try to clear any danger around it. Like a dungeon, right?"
Dusk nodded twice then turned and pointed toward the distance. I smiled. This felt normal to me. The only thing missing was Shazam's passive expression as we moved forth. Hal Pal may have muted emotions, but he was no tall Amazonian warrior.
[Anchor]
activated with its now relatively minor energy drain. Days of alternating between combat and cleaning the ship's hull had elevated my skill by leaps and bounds. I should be able to make it quite a ways before the energy drain set me back. Combat would be harder, though.
"Will you be okay, Hal?" I asked again.
"The ship's lasers remain active, but please do not-" Hal Pal paused and a slightly pained expression came across its face, "-do not leave me alone here."
"I'll be back." My bladder surged again, reminding me that I had been holding in my own pathetic biological needs during our entire chase. "After a quick break. Sorry, I'm only human outside this."
"I envy your ability to remain level headed during such chaos."
"I've got a lot of practice coping." Dozens of exercises and techniques to keep me from panicking when stress hit. Still, they didn't keep me stable at all times. Not in the face of everything.
I looked behind me and saw the gas giant floating across in the distance. It dwarfed Earth's moon with a swirl of crimson through yellow. Too big, too damned big. How had Xin coped with all those training flights? Endless hours in near earth orbit must have passed in order to adapt.
Right. Her training in the ARC must have helped, much like what I was going through now. Only without the giant space eel who would eat me. The pain in my midsection reminded me of the other urgency. I logged out of the ARC and tried to solve the simple day to day needs of being human quickly.
Session Forty Eight – Space Bugs Everyone
Autopilot didn't exist in the same way. My character locked down where they were and couldn't interact with the digital world. I could have been killed by monsters doing this but floating into space wouldn't happen.
Out in the real world things were harried.
"ARC!" I slurred around food being shoved into my face. I needed to understand a bit more before logging right back in. Research would help. Similar to how I watched videos for survival techniques in Continue Online. It helped me adapt to new situations in a game that enjoyed a measure of realism.
"Awaiting input," the ARC responded.
"I need information on gravity in space, atmosphere, and sound. Just highlights." Something to read while serving my real life needs.
A box displayed nearby. It followed me from the bathroom to the kitchen. I read quickly trying to understand how everything lined up.
Having harnesses in a spaceship seemed weird. Newton's first law of motion basically meant that nothing slowed us down if the engines stayed on, except a very reduced form of gravity. I could have probably saved a ton of fuel just knowing that fact. The note went down on a list of things to do better.
Dusk's ability to make noise in space didn't seem to jive with everything else. According to the internet sound required molecules to vibrate, and no air meant no molecules. So how then, did Dusk make noise? Hal Pal I could buy, we probably spoke in some secret
[Mechanoid]
code. Cyber code and digital bits equated to language. Fine.
At least the fact that space didn't freeze exactly seemed bound by scientific fact. Insulation was a big factor, but I didn't worry about it since I wasn't actually in space. I only played a robot roaming around in space.
Either way, after these last few days of work, sleep, and life, I still felt conflicted about Advance Online's realism. It seemed shoddy for a game about space to not be founded in an actual sort of science. However, the more notes I read, the more vaguely possible everything seemed.
It required assuming another one thousand years of scientific development, except the space eel
[Leviathan]
. Voices, I hoped nothing like that existed in real life. I couldn't imagine flying to Mars and running into one of those rolling around.
"Alright." I lay down in my ARC and felt better. Some people out there might be able to ignore real life needs in favor of grinding out stats, but I could only do so much. "ARC, log me in."
The Atrium spun into being. Continue Online sat barred. I ignored it and dove through to Advance and the space rock with far more enthusiasm than I would have expected a week ago. Adventure, that made this game worth playing.
Continue Online didn't have monsters this big. Or did it? My niece, Beth, had vaguely mentioned something in the ocean once. And there was a guild dedicated to reaching the moon. Various memories briefly triggered, too fast to grasp completely.
Advance loaded up my character. The swirl of lights and nausea inducing rush as ARC simulated feedback assaulted the senses. Despite the heady rush and pain feedback from combat, this game was worth it.
"User Legate. Are you ready?"
"Jeeves, neat. You're working fast." My
[Anchor]
ability had kept me situated during the hour of game time I had been absent. Hal, on the other hand, managed to reshape half the ship. I could see where our small propulsion jets were switched around. The hull coloring had a much different pattern now. Chains hung out the side that were only a few feet long.
"I am attempting to increase my contribution, in addition, this venture seems to be providing rapid gains to my capabilities."
"See? Difficult situations provide higher rewards. I knew the internet was right." I walked over to the chains, my feet felt intensely heavy with each step. One hand reached out to grab the length of chain, no, not chain, it looked like twine but in metal form. "How long before this is ready to go?"
"Two hours and I should have enough to be mobile. After that, it is a matter of collecting enough of the right minerals to increase our payload."
"Alright. I'll get to it." I looked down at the
[Messenger's Pet]
. During my absence, Dusk had gotten into a fight with something small. It looked like a black bug that was kitten sized.
A shudder passed through me.
"How much is that worth?" I pointed to the small icky creature but refused to touch it.
"Minor amounts. Leaching trace metals from its body will increase the payload by..." Hal Pal started spouting numbers and my brain almost shut off. After more than two decimal points, it didn't matter. At least in accounting we could round off.
I filed it away as 'lots of these are needed to be worth a damn'. The Hal Pal AI interrupted my thought by sending something through space at me. A small black object approached without curving or arching from gravity.
"A container. It will increase efficiency," it said. I nodded. A single bucket wouldn't be enough material unless we found a million of the little guys under a rocky flap of
[Leviathan]
's shell.
"Alright. Let's find something bigger, Dusk." The
[Messenger's Pet]
ignored me in favor of shaking the dead bug wildly until pieces floated about. "Come on. Let's murder some disgusting space bugs."
Dusk finally looked up at me and looked excited which made my head shake tiredly.
[Anchor]
worked but my footing missed frequently. I spent a lot of time awkwardly climbing and being unable to keep either weapon program ready. Dusk leapt around like a monkey, or lemur, and made me feel like an old man limping along again.
Ridges took awhile to get over. Dusk wrangled small creatures and upon shaking them to death they were deposited in our bucket. I had to shove my hand into the pile of bodies and mash them into place so they wouldn't float out.
"Space gophers," I muttered while shoving another one into my bucket. "I've been reduced to collecting space gophers."
They had a bug-like exoskeleton for armor. Dusk crunched away while small drops of acid dribbled from his mouth. Thankfully, in space, no one could hear them squeal. The
[Messenger's Pet]
somehow filled my ears with slobberish chewing. That almost constant noise was the only sound filling up our silence aside from
[Anchor]
's constant hum.
"Why are there only a few at a time?" I muttered angrily. "This is a game, right? Shouldn't there be a bunch? This is hardly a raid challenge."
Dusk chewed on yet another small victim as we traveled. I searched for any portion of this creature's landscape that looked different. There should be something here that might provide a hint as to weaknesses or places to shove an explosive.
Voices. Was I really considering this? I shook my head. The ride started, I was in all the way.
The stream of endless giant space mites continued. These ridges reminded me of a picture from high school. The human skin close up had ridges as well. It served to help measure the immensity of this beast. Miles long, miles and miles.
[Anchor]
felt a little bit easier to use the closer to the tail I got.
"Dusk, do the same rules apply, if you die here, are you back in Continue?" I tried to at least clear up one question while making progress. Dusk shook his head.
"Or are you just permanently dead?" I asked the
[Messenger's Pet]
after another lap of messed up fetch.
Dusk shook his head again then bounded off before I could think of something else to ask him. He wouldn't be dead and that was the important part.
"Where do you end up?"
Dusk shrugged at me. All our time together taught me that shrugs meant one of three possible things. My question didn't matter, was poorly phrased, or he didn't know.
"You end up somewhere safe right?" I couldn't let it alone. Besides, there wasn't a lot to do yet aside from stumble around like a paranoid baby might walk.
Dusk nodded then shrugged. His shoulders felt off without the wings sitting there. So yes, and he didn't really care. Goodness. At least getting an answer this time was easier than my journey through the giant labyrinth and all its monsters.
I gave up trying to sort out that problem. His well-being had been verified, as much as any digital stream of code that broke the boundary between games could be. Part of me desperately hoped he might develop some kind of mind-speech one day but no luck so far. Even with using
[Wild Bill]
, or letters to the Voices.
"Dusk. We need a ton of these guys. Is there a nest or something?" I stared at Dusk and tried to read his expression. Thought bubble windows from Continue Online were sorely missed.
He dropped the latest minor conquest and dove over another ridge. I sighed and trudged after him, bucket half full of gross leftovers that threatened to escape every time I stopped abruptly. Low gravity couldn't halt the laws of inertia, and my hand only did so much to keep the leftovers corralled.
"How far?" I asked. A month ago that would have come across as whiny. Now my only goal was to be ready for combat before we stumbled across a batch of them.
No sooner had the thought crossed my brain then my foot spilled and I lost
[Anchor]
. No, my foot hadn't slipped,
[Leviathan]
had shifted slightly. The ripple was barely visible as I moved through space.
"Ah!" I shouted but quickly figured out something.
I concentrated and triggered the two-handed laser sword. The blue bar for my energy dropped ten percent. Rays of solid energy drove out almost four feet in length. A quick spin and jab sent both beams into the
[Leviathan]
's thick skin. They hardly made a dent, but my trajectory shifted from floating in space to curving downward from drag.