Necromancer Dreams of Mechs Chapter 23: Chapter 28

Read chapter 23 of Necromancer Dreams of Mechs by Magic on NovelPedia.

Chapter 23: That's Not Right The Real World | Mage Gaming Headquarters "Is he allowed to do that? Didn't you already make the gods?" Nathan asked, turning back to his father, who was shaking his head. "I have no idea what is going on. That achievement, or any of the ones he has earned so far were never added, according to the team in charge of them," James said with narrowed eyes. "And yes, all 6 gods had been designed, but according to the text I just received, there will now be 8 gods according to the 8 part achievement Allen received. Still, that isn't what is worrying me." Ciara's eyes were glued to the myriad of screens, but she spoke up. "I think Rngallia is pretty, and while it is a mecha god in a fantasy world, I think the character design is very original, and the sound of her voice is magical! I think having Allen in there will improve the game, and things might be better for us when we are finally able to log in." At the last comment, Nathan burst out laughing, and his father facepalmed with a long drawn out groan. "What?" Ciara asked, turning back to look at Nathan and his father. "That is not what will happen, mark my world. I will eat my shoes if Allen doesn't turn that world on its head. I saw the look in his eye when he created that Goddess. You could see the gear cranking at high speeds behind his eyes, and that is never good. He acts like a noble when he plays mech games, but he always plays an evil aligned character in fantasy games unless he needs to be good for an achievement," Nathan explained, and his father James nodded, his hand still holding his face. "I know he won't intentionally try to ruin the game, but now that he has left his area, I am worried. I have seen some of the replays of him doing some pretty radical things in games, which were mechanics made available. When he created that goddess, Allen understood that his actions had serious effects. My biggest worry is that he is going to upset the balance of the story, and force it to change from everything that we have carefully planned over the last few years," James explained, but Ciara still didn't see the problem. "But what if it makes the game better?" She asked, but James shook his head. "We have certain things in place to prevent either side of the war from ever winning or losing to keep the game eternal. The first issue is that both these high mythical class artifacts are magic generators used to power the cities and defenses for humans and the monster races. The next problem is that unlike the cities, the artifacts are already spawned in, but the cities haven't even started their rapid development yet. The NPC levels will all start at 1 and rapidly grow to the intended number, but it will only look that way to us," James explained, and Nathan spit his drink out. "Oh, you have got to be joking! That is insane! All the monsters Prismatic Hearts and the humans Prismatic Core are already there?!" Nathan exclaimed, and his father nodded, a frown forming. "Yes, because there should be 4 level 3000 guards stationed around each of them, and the characters have a level 200 max, or it should. The problem is that if he gets over that level by building a 40-80 foot tall mech and just steps on them, the max level will rise. If that happens, the game will take longer to load, and Allen will stay in for longer as the game tries to exceed his level. After stealing some prismatic artifacts with his mini horde that is tearing across the map with him on that bone palanquin. You know what he will do after that," James explained, and Nathan had to nod. "Yeah, he will make his mech and just go nuts," Nathan said, and James nodded. "The same way he did with his first ARMMORPG. He made the biggest, craziest mech he could, and then just started blowing everything away. Then he abducted all the nobles, and tried ransoming them before getting banned," James recalled, and Nathan clearly remembered the destruction and chaos he was talking about. He had been there hel