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Chapter 2 - CHAPTER 2: Depths of Despair; A new Hope (Prologue)

Agony.

Pain.

Despair.

None were foreign to me.

After repeating the same cycle millions of times, they became part of my nature. At first, it hurt, so much so that I couldn't bear the pain. I killed myself hundreds of times, desperately trying to escape the endless cycle of regression.

But death was merely a temporary escape from reality. The cycle always restarted.

Eventually, I hardened. I began to view things differently. I tried treating people like pawns, but I always feel short of killing those damnable gods. I then tried cherishing the people around me, but that didn't work either. Its not like cherishing people could ever help me escape from this hellish cycle.

I started to think the problem was me.

So I spent several hundred regressions doing nothing but training. I thought that with enough strength, I could break free. Eventually, I created ten perfect sword techniques across thousands of years. But in the face of divinity, what could a mere mortal ever achieve?

Nothing. It was hopeless.

Eventually, I gave up. I fell into depression. I stopped clinging to the small shred of hope that one day I could defeat them.

After a few hundred-thousand more regressions, I began to live in harmony with the ruin. Somewhere along the way, I gained a true name—something to anchor me to reality: Starless of Gluttony, or just Starless for short. Ironic. Fitting, really, for one destined to destroy the stars countless times.

The title after my name "Of Gluttony" in the ancient language roughly translated to "The Devourer of all". Little frightening huh? My name far preceded my status though, as I likely wasn't going to be devouring anything big anytime soon. 

It took hundreds of thousands of regressions before I learned to invoke names of power properly. The magic of names was shocking—capable of allowing mortals to challenge even the gods. Yet even then, it wasn't enough.

The strongest name I could invoke was Legendary rank, and even that came at the cost of my life.

The naming hierarchy was vast:

Common, Uncommon, Rare, Epic, Legendary, Mythical, Divine

Each tier had sub-tiers: Inferior, Superior, or unmarked—each altering the potency of the name.

Though I stopped keeping track after the millionth regression—my memories often forcibly erased—it must've been around the two-million mark that something changed.

I tore into a new dimension. It was an accident, a minuscule spatial tear formed as I was attempting to create an eleventh perfect sword techniques. It led to a different realm within the universe.

The world I landed on was called Rena, and the kingdom I emerged into was Valemont. I arrived in a border city named Ironvale. It was strange—this world was peaceful. Diverse. I walked through streets where humans, demons, elves, and beastkin traded goods and stories.

On my home world of Roathia, such unity was unthinkable. The races were embroiled in a thousand-year blood war—elves, orcs, dwarves, dragons, dragonkin, giants, and goblins had united against humanity and demonkind.

It was humanity's own fault. Our greed. Our insatiable thirst for power. My own eternal curse was born of that thirst after all.

Still reeling, I ducked into a back-alley tavern—a clear den of criminals—and sat alone, feeling the stares of many drilling holes into my back. It felt like the world itself rejected me. Ignoring the unsheathed killing intent aimed at me, I started by ordering a large beer in a thick wooden mug, to avoid attention. I sharpened my senses, listening in on the murmurs and gossip. I needed to understand this world before diving in too deep.

I also needed to know if there was a way to get stronger here.

My cycle was only four years long, and I had already spent much of it refining my swordsmanship, chasing an elusive eleventh perfect technique. I couldn't afford to waste time.

That's when I heard about Ascension.

Ascension was the process by which a human transcended their limits to become divine. It had seven stages, each tied to one of the seven sins and seven virtues:

Sins: Lust, Gluttony, Greed, Sloth, Envy, Wrath, Pride

Virtues: Chastity, Temperance, Charity, Diligence, Kindness, Patience, Humility

Every human was born with all seven sins and none of the virtues. To gain a virtue and shed a sin, one had to challenge a trial in order.

The right to challenge the first trial came at age fourteen—granted in a dream that transported the person's spirit to another world. If they failed, they'd have to wait a year to try again. The trials were difficult, but fair.

Challengers always earned the right alone, but could face the trials in groups of up to one hundred. The difficulty always matched their collective strength.

Upon passing, one could open a gate within their soul to access the trial at any time. They could also enter the Soul Sea—a vast black ocean within their soul, lit by a dark sun, surrounded by unreachable mountains.

There, they would find the Prestige: towering sentient obelisks and tablets that recorded their sins, virtues, true name, invokable names, combat mastery—and most importantly, their Rank.

Ranks were: Challenger, Master, King, Sovereign, Transcendent, Asura, Faux-Saint, Divine... and one more—Forgotten.

Only I could see that last rank.

At first, I was overwhelmed, sitting at that dark bar, with my eyes closed, the loud sounds of conversations and laughter ringing throughout my ears, but eventually after some time, I learned how to sense for my soul sea and entered it. That's when I saw something strange.

I only had one sin—and all seven virtues. Likely due to my countless regressions. But my remaining sin wasn't one of the seven.

It was... Weakness.

I approached the ancient obelisk bearing the sin and read its brief inscription. My eyes widened in disbelief.

Sin of Weakness

The bearer of this sin bears the fate of the universe.

Forgotten Tier Sin

Cracks lined the stone. Faint, fading words shimmered below the inscription—just barely legible.

As I stepped away, the obelisk glowed faintly. 

The bearer of this sin is beloved by fate.

The bearer of this sin is beloved by forgotten ones.

The bearer of this sin cannot be contained.

The bearer of this sin should be careful what they wish for.

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