The Outcast Sage: Reborn to Save a Dying World

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The Outcast Sage: Reborn to Save a Dying World

Fantasylast updateLast Updated : 2026-07-09

By:  CHICHIUpdated just now

Language: English
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Richard spent his life being called worthless. Without power, status, or talent, he endured ridicule while quietly devouring every book he could find. History, engineering, medicine, agriculture—knowledge became his only refuge. When an accident ends his life, he awakens in a magical world where strength determines everything. But while warriors chase glory and mages pursue greater spells, Richard notices something no one else does: the world is unraveling. Crops fail, monsters evolve, kingdoms crumble, and magic itself is fading. Armed with the knowledge of another world and a mysterious relic that transforms understanding into supernatural power, Richard begins solving problems others believed impossible. Each invention changes civilization. Each discovery reveals a forgotten truth. And each victory draws the attention of an ancient force that has spent millennia ensuring humanity never advances far enough to challenge it. To save an entire world, Richard must prove that the greatest power was never magic—it was the courage to learn, create, and inspire others.

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Chapter 1

CHAPTER 1 — THE POOR BOY

The first kick drove the air from Richard's lungs. He hit the rain-soaked ground with enough force to splash muddy water across his face and shirt. Before he could gather himself, another boot slammed into his ribs, sending sharp pain through his entire body.

Laughter erupted around him. It was the kind of laughter that carried no warmth, only cruelty sharpened by privilege. Students wearing the polished blue uniforms of Westbridge Academy stood beneath the stone archway, watching as though his humiliation were the afternoon's entertainment.

Rain drizzled steadily from the grey sky, soaking everyone's clothes. Most hurried toward shelter.No one stopped.No one objected. Richard curled slightly, protecting his stomach as another kick landed against his shoulder."Look at him," one of the boys sneered. "He still won't learn."

Another student crouched beside him with a mocking grin."I told you not to come back here."Richard wiped blood from the corner of his mouth and slowly lifted his eyes. The boy standing over him was Damian Cross, heir to one of the wealthiest merchant families in the city. At only nineteen, Damian possessed everything society admired: wealth, influence, remarkable magical talent, and the confidence that came from never hearing the word no.

Richard possessed none of those things. Damian reached down, snatched the worn leather satchel from Richard's shoulder, and weighed it in one hand."So this is what you treasure?"

He opened the flap. Instead of coins...Instead of magical artefacts...Books spilt onto the wet stone pavement. Old books. Some were patched together with thread. Others had pages held together by careful stitching . Every single one bore signs of being read countless times. Damian blinked before bursting into laughter."Books?"

His companions joined him."I thought he'd finally saved enough money to buy a mana crystal."Another laughed so hard he nearly doubled over."He wasted everything on paper."

Damian picked up one thick volume. Its title had nearly faded from age. Fundamentals of Mechanical Design. He frowned."What even is this?"Richard slowly pushed himself upright despite the pain radiating through his ribs."Please."

His voice was calm."Give them back."The request only amused Damian further."For someone with no mana, you certainly have confidence."He flipped through several pages. The margins were packed with handwritten notes. Entire diagrams had been redrawn. Corrections filled almost every blank space.

Richard hadn't merely read the book. He had studied it.Obsessively.Damian's expression twisted with contempt."I finally understand."He tossed the book into a nearby drainage canal, where rushing rainwater immediately began carrying it away."You actually believed these useless things could change your life."

Richard's pupils contracted . For the first time that afternoon, genuine panic crossed his face."No!"Ignoring the pain in his body, he stumbled toward the rushing water. Another book followed. Then another. Within seconds, years of careful collecting floated through the muddy current.

Damian folded his arms with satisfaction."Books won't make you powerful, Richard."His voice carried across the courtyard."They won't earn respect."They won't give you mana."And they certainly won't stop you from dying exactly as you were born."He smiled coldly."Worthless."

Silence settled over the watching crowd, not because they disagreed, but because no one felt the need to challenge him. In their eyes, Richard's humiliation was simply the natural order of things. Westbridge Academy celebrated magical talent above all else, and Richard possessed none.

He had entered the academy through an academic scholarship, ranking first in every written examination despite having almost no magical affinity. For a brief moment, he believed intelligence might earn him a place among the gifted.

He had been wrong. Every practical lesson became another public embarrassment. While his classmates summoned flames, manipulated wind, or reinforced their bodies with mana, Richard could only watch and take notes. The instructors praised effort in private, yet in public they always measured worth by magical strength.

Knowledge earned polite applause. Power earned genuine respect. Richard stepped into the freezing drainage water without hesitation. The muddy current reached his knees as he chased the floating books. One by one, he gathered them. Some pages had already begun dissolving. Ink blurred beneath the rain. His fingers trembled as he pressed damaged pages together.

Behind him, laughter slowly faded as the students lost interest and walked away. Only Damian remained for another moment. He watched Richard clutch the ruined books as though rescuing priceless treasure. Then he shook his head."I almost pity you."Richard did not answer.

There was nothing he could say that would matter. Eventually, Damian left as well. The academy gates closed behind the departing students. Rain continued falling over the empty street. Richard remained kneeling in the cold water until the last book had been recovered.

His rented room occupied the attic of an ageing boarding house on the edge of the city. The roof leaked whenever storms arrived. The bed creaked whenever he moved. The single window barely kept out the wind. Yet every wall overflowed with handwritten pages.Maps.Engineering sketches.Agricultural experiments. Medical observations. Historical timelines. Astronomical charts.

Shelves built from discarded wooden crates held hundreds of carefully repaired books collected over many years. Most people decorated their homes with paintings. Richard decorated his with ideas. After changing into dry clothes, he carefully spread each damaged book across the table near a small oil lamp.

His fingers moved with practised precision. Blot excess water.Separate pages. Apply homemade adhesive. Press beneath weighted boards. Hours passed without him noticing. Outside, thunder rolled across the city.

Inside, Richard quietly restored the only treasures he truly owned. As he worked, his gaze drifted toward a notebook resting beside the lamp. Its cover simply read: Questions No One Asks. Inside were hundreds of observations. Why do bridges fail? Why do crops die despite fertile soil? Could disease spread through water? Can mathematics predict structural collapse?

Would civilisations advance faster if knowledge were freely shared? Each question had pages of notes beneath it.No teacher had assigned them.No examination required them. Richard pursued answers because understanding the world gave meaning to a life that otherwise felt invisible.

He closed the notebook and looked toward the rain-covered window."Maybe..." he whispered to the empty room, "...I'm weak."His reflection stared back at him through the glass. Bruised face.Split lip.Tired eyes.A young man whom the world had already judged.

A faint smile nevertheless appeared on his lips."But nobody can steal what I've learned."At that exact moment, lightning split the heavens. Except...It wasn't lightning. A pillar of radiant white light descended from the storm clouds, stretching from the sky to the earth beyond the city walls.

The room trembled . The bookshelves rattled violently. Every candle in the neighbourhood was extinguished at once. Richard rushed to the window. Across the horizon, the beam widened until it seemed to tear the sky itself apart. The clouds did not simply part. They fractured. Thin cracks spread through the air like shattered glass.

The world groaned beneath an impossible pressure."What... is that?"Before he could step back, the light changed direction. It was coming toward him.Fast.Far too fast. The entire room disappeared beneath blinding radiance.

Richard instinctively shielded his eyes, but the light passed through his hands as though they were made of smoke. The floor vanished beneath his feet. Gravity ceased to exist. The walls dissolved into countless fragments of shimmering white. Then, somewhere beyond sight, an ancient voice echoed through the endless brilliance. It spoke only a single sentence."At last... the one who seeks knowledge has been found."And Richard fell into the light.

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