Home / Fantasy / The Stick and the System / Chapter 1: A Gamer’s Log-In
The Stick and the System
The Stick and the System
Author: NB LMO
Chapter 1: A Gamer’s Log-In
Author: NB LMO
last update2026-02-26 12:00:14

“A wooden stick?”

Caspian’s voice was flat with disbelief. He watched as the shimmering, human-sized portal before him spat out the object. It was a simple length of wood, as long as his forearm, slightly knotted and rough-barked. It clattered onto the stone platform at his feet.

The reaction from the crowd in Oakhaven’s town square was instant and merciless.

A snicker came first, then a loud guffaw from a burly blacksmith’s apprentice. Soon, the entire gathering was roaring with laughter. Caspian stood frozen, the heat of a fierce blush crawling up his neck. This was the grand event of his Consecration? This was his weapon?

In the world of Aethelgard, every person was born with an inner energy called Aether. It was the fuel for everything—magic, technology, the very strength of the realm. On your eighteenth birthday, you placed your hands on the Consecration Orb. It measured the depth and quality of your Aether, and then the Consecration Portal would manifest, gifting you a weapon that would become the conduit for your power.

Your entire destiny was decided in that moment. This bond was absolute and singular. The weapon the portal gave could have only one owner in its entire existence, and a person could only ever receive one weapon in their lifetime.

It was a bond for life.

Or, as the town elders somberly noted, until death. If a Hunter fell in battle during a quest or met their end in the wilds, their weapon would vanish from their grasp and respawn inside the eternal Consecration Portal, a silent tombstone awaiting a future where it might never be claimed again. This ultimate bond was sealed in blood. Immediately after receiving it, a Hunter had to place their own blood upon the weapon—a simple cut on the palm pressed to the hilt or the blade—for it to truly recognize its master and channel their Aether properly. Without the blood bond, it was just an inert object.

With strong Aether, a simple sword could cleave through stone. A basic gun could have unlimited ammunition and extraordinary strong bullets, but that all depended on the amount of Aether you possessed. The weapon was a reflection of your soul and your potential.

And Caspian? Oh, he wasn’t from Aethelgard. Last week, he’d been Caspian Vance, a college senior with a killer GPA and a signed offer letter from NovaSoft Interactive, the world’s largest gaming company. His future was a sleek desk, triple monitors, and coding the next big hit. He lived and breathed games.

Which was why, on a nostalgic whim, he’d picked up that ancient DVD from the dusty back shelf of a rental store. Chronicles of Aethelgard: Realm of Steel and Sigil. The box art was hilariously outdated. He’d popped it into his laptop just to see how bad it was.

When the menu loaded, a single, clean prompt appeared, stark white on a black screen.

“Would you like to experience our latest update?”

Y / N

A gamer never says no to new content. He clicked ‘Y’ without a second thought.

And worse of all? He chose the Hardcore level.

The sensation was like being shoved through his own screen. There was a lurch, a whirl of blinding light and sound, and then… silence. The smell of pine and damp soil. The feel of moss under his fingertips.

“What the— What is this? Where am I?” he’d yelled, spinning around in a dense, unfamiliar forest. His mission?

"DEFEAT THE GAME TO EXIT AETHELGARD"

The game instructed.

It took three terrifying, hungry days of applying survival-game logic to real life—don’t eat the weirdly glowing berries, avoid the growling in the bushes—before he stumbled upon the frontier town of Oakhaven. And through confused conversations, he pieced it together. He wasn’t in a Kansas farmhouse anymore. He was in the game. The stupid, old, supposedly single-player RPG was now his very real, very dangerous reality. A sci-fantasy world where laser rifles could sit next to spellbooks, and monsters roamed outside the city walls.

His first obvious quest? Get to the town square. Every new 18-year-old was receiving their Consecration today. Different Guilds—the Iron Vanguard, the Arcanum Syndicate, the Trade League—had representatives lining the edges, their eyes sharp. They were scouts, waiting to snag the talented ones. The stronger the weapon, the stronger the person is, and the better the signing bonus.

When it was Caspian’s time, his stomach was a knot of nerves and a tiny shred of gamer’s hope. Maybe I’ll get something awesome, he’d thought. Maybe my outsider status means I’m special.

He stepped onto the broad platform carved with glowing, silvery symbols. Before him hovered the Consecration Orb, a sphere of swirling opal light. He took a deep breath and placed his hands on it.

It grew warm. It lit up with a faint, yellowish light that flickered uncertainly for about three seconds. A murmur ran through the crowd. The light sputtered and died.

The portal ripped open beside the orb, a vertical tear in reality. Caspian held his breath. "Give me a sword. A cool energy blade. A plasma cannon. Anything."

The portal gurgled. It shuddered. Then, with a sound like a dismissive cough, it ejected a single, unremarkable wooden stick. It bounced once and lay still.

“A wooden stick?” Caspian said, his voice hollow, as the laughter erupted around him.

He was a cosmic joke. The ultimate noob. The guy who min-maxes his character only to roll a critical failure on his very first loot drop. Humiliation washed over him, cold and thick. He stared at the stick, the dreams of gaming glory he’d secretly harbored turning to ash.

But then, as the Guild recruiters turned away and the crowd’s mockery reached its peak, a familiar blue screen materialized in the center of his vision. It was crisp, clean, with the perfect UI scaling of a top-tier game. It hovered there, visible only to him, blocking his view of the laughing faces.

Two words glowed with a gentle, inviting light:

[Player Chosen]

Caspian’s breath caught. The laughter around him faded into a distant buzz. The heat of shame vanished, replaced by a jolt of pure, electric excitement that shot down his spine. A grin, small at first, then wide and unstoppable, spread across his face. He looked down at the stupid, simple, wonderful stick in his hands.

That’s when Caspian Vance’s gaming career took its most exciting turn.

Continue to read this book for free
Scan the code to download the app
Next Chapter

Latest Chapter

  • Chapter 74: The Morning After

    Kaelen woke to sunlight streaming through her window. Not the grey, filtered light of the road—real sunlight, golden and warm, slanting across her bed like a promise. She lay still for a moment, listening to the sounds of the tavern waking up around her.Below, she could hear Sage moving in the kitchen, the clatter of pots and pans, the sizzle of something cooking. Finn's voice drifted up from the common room, already in the middle of a story despite the early hour. Grenda's deep laugh followed, then Sera's quieter one.Home.She dressed slowly, took a moment to braid her hair, and headed downstairs.The common room was busy. Travelers sat at the tables, eating breakfast, talking in low voices. Locals stopped by for their morning bread. The guild had claimed their usual corner—the table near the fire, where Boris's chair still sat empty, reserved for memory.Finn was telling a story about a merchant who had tried to cheat him and ended up cheated himself. It was probably exaggerated.

  • Chapter 73: The Road Home

    The journey back to Oakhaven took two weeks.They weren't in a hurry. There were no emergencies demanding their attention, no rifts tearing open the sky, no failsafes threatening to erase the world. Just open road, changing seasons, and the quiet pleasure of returning home after months of wandering.The painter walked with them. Her name, she had finally remembered after several days of quiet conversation, was Lyra, another coincidence that felt like something more than chance. She was still quiet most of the time, her pale eyes always moving, always studying, always seeing things that the others couldn't see. Sometimes she would stop in the middle of the road, pull out her small sketchbook, and draw something that had already vanished.Finn watched her with curiosity. "What are you drawing now?"Lyra didn't look up from her page. "A bird. It was sitting on that branch a moment ago. But it flew away before I could start.""The bird or the memory?""Both, I think."Finn nodded slowly,

  • Chapter 72: The Painter Who Painted What Wasn't There

    The road north from the cobbler's village took them through a forest of birch trees, their white bark glowing in the grey light like bones scattered across the hills. The path was narrow and winding, barely wide enough for Grenda to pass, and the silence was complete—no birds, no insects, no wind. Just the crunch of their boots on fallen leaves.Jace had heard about the painter from a merchant in the last town. "She lives in a cabin deep in the woods," the merchant had said. "She doesn't come out much. Doesn't talk much. But people say she paints things that shouldn't exist.""Things like what?" Finn had asked."Things from the war. Things from before. Things that no one else remembers.""Sounds like a memory keeper.""Maybe. Or maybe something else."-They found the cabin at the end of a trail that seemed to appear only when they were looking directly at it. It was small, built of logs and stone, with a chimney that released a thin curl of smoke. A garden surrounded it, but not a no

  • Chapter 71: The Cobbler Who Made Shoes for Ghosts

    The road east from the pond led them through a landscape that seemed stuck between seasons. Not quite autumn, not quite winter, just grey and waiting. The trees had lost their leaves weeks ago, but no snow had fallen yet, and the ground was hard with frost that crunched underfoot.They walked for a day without seeing anyone. The farms here were abandoned, their fields fallow, their buildings crumbling. Whatever had driven people away had happened a long time ago, but the emptiness still felt fresh."The trader mentioned a cobbler," Jace said, consulting his notes. "Someone who still lives out here, even though everyone else left.""A cobbler?" Finn raised an eyebrow. "Shoes?""Apparently. The note says he makes shoes for people who don't have feet.""That's... cryptic.""Most of my notes are cryptic. That's why they're interesting."-They found the cobbler's shop at the edge of a small village that had clearly seen better days. Most of the buildings were empty, their windows boarded,

  • Chapter 70: The Pond That Held Too Many Tears

    The road north from the orchard wound through hills that grew steeper and more rugged with each passing mile. The soil here was thin and rocky, better suited for goats than crops, and the few farms they passed were small and struggling. The people they saw watched from doorways, their faces wary, their hands never far from tools that could serve as weapons.Something had happened here too. Not a single event, just years of hardship, of loss, of slow decline. The kind of decline that didn't show up on maps but left its mark on every face.Jace had heard about the pond from a trader in the last town. "They say it's cursed," the trader had said. "People go there to grieve, and they don't come back the same. Some don't come back at all.""Cursed how?" Finn had asked.The trader had shrugged. "You'll see. If you go. But I wouldn't."-The pond was at the bottom of a narrow valley, surrounded by weeping willows whose branches trailed in the water like long, grey hair. The water was dark—not

  • Chapter 69: The Orchard of Forgotten Fruit

    The road east took them through country that had once been beautiful. Rolling hills, gentle streams, meadows that would have been perfect for grazing. But the hills were bare, the streams were low, and the meadows were overgrown with weeds that had no business being there.Something had happened here. Not recently, years ago, maybe decades. But the land remembered. The land always remembered.They found the orchard at the end of a long dirt track, hidden behind a ridge that had shielded it from view. The trees were old—ancient, even—their trunks thick and gnarled, their branches twisted into shapes that seemed almost deliberate. They were apple trees, Kaelen realized. Hundreds of them. Maybe thousands.But there were no apples.The trees were bare, their leaves brown and curled, their branches reaching toward a sky that offered no relief. The ground beneath them was cracked and dry, littered with the remains of fruit that had fallen years ago and never rotted."It's like the orchard i

More Chapter
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on MegaNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
Scan code to read on App