Prime System Champion [A Multi-System Apocalypse LitRPG]

Chapter 307 - 307: A Civilization Built for War



Creating a cosmic delete-button is surprisingly tedious work.

I stood in the center of the Cradle's heavily reinforced, primary meditation chamber. The air hummed with layers of kinetic and magical shielding that I, Jeeves, and Leoric had aggressively established over the past month.

It still wasn't enough.

I extended a single finger, focusing purely on the fragile, newly-forged conceptual skill nested uncomfortably within my Soul space. I channeled a minuscule drop of mana — roughly equivalent to lighting a candle — into the construct.

"Spark," I murmured.

A small, pathetic burst of grayish-black energy, looking more like an asthmatic cough than a spell, popped from my fingertip. It traveled three feet and harmlessly splashed against a heavily enchanted titanium dummy, leaving a soot mark.

[Skill Created: Mana Burst (Uncommon) (Altered)]

[Description: Expels unrefined mana from the user's core to produce minor kinetic trauma. Variable Input Capacity scaling functionality detected. Efficiency scaling curve active.]

I smiled, though my hands were shaking slightly from the profound metaphysical strain of forcing a System skill to accept an open-ended variable. The 'Altered' tag was everything. It meant the System acknowledged my customized, resonant editing based on the Sylvari principles I'd painstakingly studied from the [Vault].

I didn't want an intricate, beautiful spell that wove elements. I wanted a garden hose attached directly to a fire hydrant, and then strapped to a volcano. I wanted to dump liquid essence from the [Void Star] through a funnel so frictionless it bypassed the concept of capacity completely, magnifying the impact force geometrically instead of linearly.

The math was theoretical insanity, and my brain felt like a squeezed sponge just from maintaining the internal architecture to support it. But it was a start.

Over the next two months, 'Sparky' became my obsession, blending aggressively with the general, manic prosperity spreading across Ferra.

I wasn't completely a hermit, though. Governance demanded a face, even if that face preferred reading apocalyptic engineering manuals.

I walked out into the crisp, high-altitude air of the Bastion courtyard one afternoon, catching a sparring session in progress. The skies were permanently clear, with perfect weather free from mana storms, thanks to the new [Atmospheric Scrubbers] deployed across the major continental Nexi.

In the designated ring, Anna was engaged in a high-speed blur of motion against Silas and his evolved, Tier 5 Wyvern partner, Rin. I thought about Lia, Rin's nest mate, who I haven't seen around for a while now. Last I heard she was quite busy taking care of three new hatchlings in their Sanctum.

Anna wasn't shooting any arrows. She was practically just dancing on air, utilizing the terrifying localized spatial-bending of her new [Whisper-Silk Carapace] combined with [Chrono-Weaver's Step]. She flickered through the timeline, literally sidestepping Rin's aggressive, lunging bites seconds before they connected.

Silas struck from the Wyvern's blind spot, plunging dual frost-daggers aimed perfectly at Anna's shoulder.

She never drew [Final Word]. Instead, a massive, thick, iron-hard wooden root erupted from the solid stone floor between them, instantly intercepting the strike. 'Mini-Grover,' perched serenely on Anna's shoulder, gave a small, woody salute.

Simultaneously, a tiny burst of pure, condensed golden light shot from Anna's other shoulder — Tink the Sprite, firing a focused, microscopic beam of radiant mana directly into Silas' eyes, temporarily blinding the assassin.

Anna flipped backward, drawing an arrow made of solidified air, pinning Silas' cloak to the arena wall with a localized stasis field before he could blink.

"Dead," Anna declared cheerfully, landing lightly.

Silas sighed, dissolving his shadowy form to free himself from the pinned cloak. "The amount of utility you carry around is disgusting, Anna. Fighting you is like trying to swat a heavily armed swarm of angry bees in the dark."

"She is definitely cheating," Rin let out a chuff of agreement, smoke billowing from his nostrils as he nudged Silas playfully.

I clapped slowly, approaching the ring. "Coordination is pristine. But Silas, you telegraphed the drop by a half-second because you synced your attack entirely with Rin's. Be careful, to a perceptive opponent, these kinds of mistakes could prove fatal."

"Yeah, you're right. To be fair though, most opponents don't literally force their own decisions onto reality…" Silas grumbled good-naturedly, sheathing his daggers. "I don't have eyes that read the underlying code of the universe. Lia, Rin, and I are improving our synergy significantly though, integrating the Shadow and Frost has been a great boon. A month at Zenith also sharpened their instincts considerably. Have you spoken with Freja? She's trying to build a construct cannon made of lightning or something."

"I'll leave the property damage to her," I chuckled, pulling out a pouch.

"Good work, both of you." I tossed them each a cluster of refined Tier 6 Void-cores I recently hunted with Zareth to boost their ambient recovery.

The casualness of it all was… disconcerting.

Six months ago, people in the camps cried when they lost a Tier 2 Uncommon iron sword or missed a day's rations. Now, Silas is casually complaining about perfectly syncing magical dragon assaults and laughing about being shot with solidified time-mana.

As I wandered through the expanding mercantile districts of Bastion later that evening, the vibrant reality of this normalization hit me harder.

The "Monthly Void Feast" had grown from a practical morale-booster into a continent-spanning, week-long festival. Caravans from every corner of Ferra, utilizing Leoric's new solid-light bridge networks, poured into the capital.

Tents and colorful pavilions covered the craters outside the walls.

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Musicians played instruments forged from rare monster bone that amplified emotion rather than just sound. Guild adventurers swapped highly exaggerated tales of clearing Level 40 Dungeon floors over steins of aggressively potent Dwarven ale.

The central event — the Merit Rewards — was a spectacle.

I watched from a low balcony as Lucas, wearing surprisingly intricate formal mayoral robes that didn't look entirely awful on a man built like a brick wall, announced the top earners.

"To Vanguard Squad Seven!" Lucas' magically amplified voice boomed across the roaring plaza. "For consistently clearing the most corrupted zones in the Eastern Regions and rescuing thirty supply caravans from a Beast Wave… Three Top-Tier Void Meals crafted personally by Grandmaster Masha, and guaranteed admission slots into the Advanced Tactical Seminars at the Void Star Academy!"

The crowd screamed their approval. It wasn't fearful subservience. It was raw, highly energized enthusiasm. The people of Ferra were thriving on conflict and progression. They had completely adapted to a reality defined by grinding strength, slaying horrors, and being rewarded for measurable violence and utility.

It was the very model of the Prime System's mandate realized in terrifying perfection: a populace deeply indifferent to the horrifying realities of endless, brutal war, entirely because they were focused so intently on the shiny prizes won from fighting it.

"Is this what they wanted?" I muttered quietly, watching a group of teenagers animatedly discussing which element was most optimal for incinerating goblin hives. "An entire civilization of battle-hardened veteran warriors treating existential dread like a sports league?"

"It ensures planetary survival when the Veils fall, Master," Jeeves materialized quietly in my shadow, his voice carrying zero judgment. "A populace terrified of the dark will inevitably perish when the Great Crucible introduces billions of other hostile actors. They must hunger for the challenge to overcome it."

I knew he was right. Logically, functionally right. But observing the militarized optimism of an entire world I had essentially hammered into shape felt… dystopian.

"Survival is a low bar," I replied grimly, turning back to my private Sanctum. "I intend to give them real peace. Even if I have to break every single System creating all these endless wars."

The pressure mounted. And so, the theoretical tinkering intensified drastically over the ensuing weeks.

I gathered the 'Brain Trust' — Jeeves, Leoric, and Anna (who insisted on providing 'grounded tactical input') — around the central holographic table in my secure workshop.

I projected a heavily fluctuating, constantly altering diagram of my entire Skill Loadout and projected combat models.

"Right," I began, highlighting my primary four legendary abilities. "[Void Walk], [Void Perception], [Vault of the Void], and [Apex Mana Authority]. My immediate priority remains successfully initiating an epiphany-level merger of these four into my Fifth Mythic. I've laid the groundwork using the Sylvari resonant runes I absorbed into the conceptual boundaries of my Inner World through the [Symphony] connection, acting as the synthesizing bridge."

I brought up a failure simulation, showing the resulting explosive chaotic backlash of combining teleportation, pure omniscience, creation-pocket storage, and localized dictatorship.

"The [Symphony] keeps the attempt from physically vaporizing my lungs anymore," I explained. "But I am missing a core catalyst to truly, structurally weld them into a cohesive singular Act."

"What is the end goal of the specific amalgamation, Master?" Jeeves analyzed the failure loops. "A domain of pure control?"

"A Domain of optional, controlled Removal," I stated softly, a dangerous light glinting. "If I synthesize them, I shouldn't just be walking into the Void to travel or observing reality strings or placing constructs within it. I want to aggressively force reality to enter the Void on my immediate command. An active, weaponized, perfectly coordinated Null-Zone where I observe, detach, and overwrite spatial existence instantaneously without moving a muscle. The Ultimate Home Field Advantage. Permanently and remotely."

Leoric scratched his chin, staring at the complex mana models. "The conceptual density required for that… you'd essentially be trying to emulate a localized presence millions of times greater than an active Black Hole, Master, but directing it surgically rather than blindly. The Prime System hates paradoxes. That's why the combinations keep fracturing. It fundamentally rejects deleting and existing simultaneously since that in itself, especially since the skill's Concept itself requires both the Void and Flame."

"Hence the need to push it anyway," I smiled grimly. "But while I bang my head against that wall, assuming I succeed, merging four skills into one opens up three massive slots in my repertoire."

"Options are critical," Anna pointed out pragmatically, summoning a spectral bow to fidget with. "Your customized generic blast spell is… honestly terrifyingly unstable when you pump a small amount of your Core into it in the training hall. You want to use the Void Star's reserves too… that would be… explosive… Please be careful. What else are you missing defensively? Or were you thinking of something for utility?"

"I'm still thinking. But I definitely want at least one more clone," I said.

I brought up a localized feed showing my heavily reinforced, sigil-empowered [Echo] relentlessly executing a massive Void-Centipede deep in my dungeon on floor 55. The Clone had essentially automated my personal wealth generation perfectly, running independently like a slaughter-machine fueled endlessly by my deep [Void-Star] connection.

"The Echo is perfect for generating revenue and acting as a terrifying stand-in," I explained, crossing my arms. "But… it's only one."

I swapped the display to show the vast, expansive globe of Ferra and the dozens of newly active territories.

"If the Crucible starts and ten empires decide to breach our orbit simultaneously, being the most powerful entity in existence is entirely meaningless if I can only punch one Ascendant in the face at a time while the others carpet-bomb our cities on the other side of the planet. The new defensive wards are phenomenal, but a dedicated Ascendant, with their vast resources, will chew through static defenses eventually."

"You wish to copy yourself again, Master," Jeeves synthesized immediately, a hint of concern entering his tone. "An army of one."

"I want at least one more," I corrected. "Dual Proxies. If I can sustain two perfectly combat-capable, independent [Echoes] holding my Domain's Authority and the new Sigils… I can feel a lot more safe about leaving the planet to pursue whatever objectives I need to ensure we survive the upcoming war."

The issue wasn't generating another body of mana. I had the power for it in spades.

The overwhelming problem was raw cognitive processing capacity and the Spirit.

The [Echo] didn't have its own soul; it ran heavily on parallel sub-routines from my own consciousness, maintained directly by my deep mental intent and split-focus. Currently, the massive strain of passively controlling one overdrive Clone aggressively running difficult dungeons, fighting 100 floor bosses occasionally while I governed, strategized, read complex tomes, ate dinner, slept, and violently sparred locally was already heavily pushing my high Spirit stat entirely to its absolute theoretical limits.

Trying to command two simultaneously would effectively, completely fry my nervous system into useless slag, eventually. I tried manifesting two simple clones once while just doing basic training stances; after a few days, I suffered a devastating migraine that incapacitated me for an hour and I lost sight of my real physical legs for a confusing ten minutes as my perception of 'self' shattered severely.

"I am biologically and Conceptually bottlenecked," I admitted frustratingly to the brain trust, highlighting the failure nodes. "It's like having an impossibly large river but only one faucet to pour it out of."

I rubbed my temples, staring blankly at the complex diagrams. I had the raw, cosmic juice. I just didn't possess the mental architecture to field the army I needed.

"Jeeves, I am going to have a meeting with Grandpa," I finally decided, blowing out a long breath.

If anyone comprehensively, expertly understood the absolute metaphysical agony and structural management required to smoothly run multiple autonomous bodies simultaneously across incredibly vast, unforgiving distances… it was the old Soul-Clone master who practically ran the administrative communications network across a quarter of our known galaxy prior to our rise.

It was time to learn how to properly split my mind without breaking my reality.

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