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Drake: Divine Creator Reincarnated as the King of Earth

AR10_JR
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Synopsis
Drake was not reborn because he was defeated. He was not punished. He was simply… tired. Once, he was the Divine Creator, the being who shaped gods, demons, angels, and the laws that bound existence itself. He ruled concepts, forged worlds, and watched civilizations rise and fall. But as his creations drowned themselves in pride, war, and meaningless worship, Drake chose something no god ever had. He chose silence. Sealing his authority, he abandoned divinity and was born again as a human commoner, determined to understand the one thing gods never could—what it means to live a fragile, finite life. In a world where mana defines worth, where nobles rule by blood and strength, and where academies exist to separate the powerful from the forgotten, Drake enters as nothing more than an ordinary boy. He hides his true power, suppresses his overwhelming mana, and lives by a single rule: Power should only be used when there is no other choice. But even restraint has consequences. Mana behaves strangely around him. Monsters hesitate. Fate bends subtly. And as Drake steps into the brutal world of magic academies, assassins, nobles, and hidden conspiracies begin to move—unaware that the quiet commoner they overlook is the very being who created their gods. This is not a story of instant domination. This is the story of a creator learning humanity, of trust earned, not demanded, and of a world that will one day realize— The King of Earth was never crowned. He was reborn.
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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1: The World Before Time

Before existence learned how to breathe, it waited.

There was no sky to look upward into, no earth to stand upon, no stars to measure distance. There was only awareness—vast, patient, and unchallenged.

At the center of that awareness was Drake.

He did not arrive.

He did not awaken.

He simply was.

Reality curved around him without instruction. Time did not flow; it listened. Space did not stretch; it aligned. Concepts such as light and darkness, beginning and end, cause and effect—none of them existed yet, but all of them were already understood.

Drake observed the nothingness and found it… empty.

So he filled it.

A single thought fractured silence, and with that fracture came motion. Time unfolded forward, hesitant at first, then steady. Space expanded to give motion somewhere to exist. Light emerged not as fire, but as clarity—something to be seen by.

Stars ignited like punctuation marks across an endless sentence.

Worlds followed.

They formed naturally, effortlessly, because Drake allowed them to.

Creation was not difficult. It never had been.

But order required delegation.

And so, Drake created gods.

Not as equals.

Not as rivals.

But as administrators.

Time was entrusted to one who could perceive eternity. Space was shaped by another who understood distance and form. Life was guided, death restrained, fate threaded loosely enough to allow choice.

They were given power.

They were given purpose.

They were not given authority over Drake.

They knelt instinctively, not because they were told to, but because existence itself remembered who came first.

Demons were created next—not as evil, but as resistance. Where gods imposed structure, demons introduced pressure. Chaos was necessary. Without it, order stagnated.

Angels followed, precise and obedient, carrying out divine will without hesitation. Devils came after, crude but tireless, built to labor where others would not.

And finally—last of all—came mortals.

Humans.

Elves.

Dwarves.

Dragons.

Beings who would live briefly and feel deeply.

Drake watched them more than any other creation.

They struggled. They failed. They adapted. They lived without eternity, and because of that, every moment mattered to them. Their joy was loud. Their grief was devastating. Their love was irrational—and yet sincere.

Gods ruled concepts.

Mortals lived meaning.

At first, Drake observed closely.

Then from afar.

Then only when something broke.

And eventually, he noticed a pattern.

The gods argued.

They questioned one another's authority. They demanded worship—not as gratitude, but as validation. Demons grew hungry, not for balance, but for dominion. Angels enforced laws without understanding them. Devils multiplied endlessly, dull and violent.

Wars followed.

Not wars of necessity.

Wars of pride.

Mortals were caught between them—used as proof of righteousness, fuel for belief, collateral for ideology.

Drake did not feel anger.

He felt tired.

Creation was repeating itself.