100% DROP RATE : Why is My Inventory Always so Full? - Chapter 294
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Chapter 294: Chapter 294 – Planet
The moment Lucien stepped beyond the Obsidian Tower’s threshold, the world unfolded before him.
He stood at the center of a vast wound in the land.
A crater stretched outward in a perfect, brutal ring. Its edges were scorched and vitrified by heat that had briefly rivaled the sky. Jagged rock jutted upward like broken teeth.
Far below, fractured stone still radiated residual warmth, the aftermath of a descent that had rewritten the terrain in a single moment.
Mountains rose in the distance.
Lucien took in the scene in a single breath.
Then he moved.
The Obsidian Tower vanished, drawn inward and sealed within his Divine Energy Core as if it had never existed. The air where it had stood collapsed inward with a faint distortion, and Lucien was already gone.
He felt it then.
Presences.
They were not all close, but they were close enough. Some were curious. Others were wary. A few carried the weight of strength that did not belong to beasts.
This world was inhabited.
Lucien did not test that fact.
He withdrew at once, slipping into the shadowed depths of a nearby mountain face.
A natural fissure opened before him. He moved through it without sound. He sealed his presence behind layers of barriers.
Only when stone and silence closed fully around him did he stop.
Lucien sat cross-legged upon the cold rock.
He exhaled slowly.
More than a year had passed since Lucien last stood upon solid ground.
Measured against worlds, a year was insignificant. It’s just a single orbit, a brief alignment.
In the scale of open space, it was less than a grain of dust drifting between stars.
And yet, much had changed.
Carried by the convergence current, Lucien had not allowed himself to stagnate.
He had learned.
Lucien had grasped two new Laws. Not through shortcuts but through sustained effort and repeated confrontation with his own limits.
The Law of Stillness no longer felt distant or conceptual. It had settled into his awareness as discipline.
The Law of Inversion followed a different path. It sharpened his perception rather than his power. Cause viewed through consequence. Motion understood through its reversal. Every action carried its shadow and Lucien had learned to read that shadow before committing to the act itself.
Both laws had reached a depth of understanding that could no longer be called superficial.
Ten percent.
For a fundamental law, that was already profound.
His other laws had progressed as well, though unevenly. Some deepened through direct insight. Others advanced only after being tested repeatedly under pressure. Growth was never uniform, and Lucien no longer expected it to be.
Lucien had also taken the time to tame the monsters that had reached the Metamorphosis Realm.
His connection with them deepened. Though they could not yet speak, he could sense their intent clearly.
With that understanding established, Lucien issued a single directive.
They were to farm drops in the dungeons within his core.
They labored tirelessly within the dungeons. Drops accumulated continuously. Skill Cards emerged among them from time to time.
With that, Lucien granted the tamed monsters access to these new skills.
The monsters learned skills far beyond the limits of their original species.
A creature born of flame could wield frost without contradiction. A beast shaped for brute force could master precision and control.
The monsters had moved beyond the ordinary. Their versatility made them unpredictable. They would be able to strike in ways enemies could not anticipate.
…
Space had also taught him something deeper.
Creation itself was strange.
It was vast beyond comprehension, yet governed by simple principles repeated endlessly until complexity emerged on its own.
Stars did not form because the universe desired them. They formed because enough matter failed to escape collapse.
Life did not arise because it was intended. It persisted because conditions aligned and endured.
Even anomalies… the Echo Zones, the convergence currents… were not acts of will. They were scars. Places where laws overlapped imperfectly, where causality folded and failed to reconcile itself cleanly.
Creation was not careful. It was persistent.
And within that persistence, meaning was not granted.
It was carved.
Lucien opened his eyes.
He stood at the ninth stage of the Transcendent Realm.
And still, his growth felt slow.
The thought surfaced naturally. He did not reject it.
The Law of Creation lay at the core of his integration, yet his understanding of it remained shallow. He grasped structure, emergence, and continuity, but origin itself remained distant. Genesis still eluded him.
If he wished to advance further, he needed more enlightenment.
He needed deeper knowledge of creation itself.
This world might provide it.
Lucien extended his senses beyond the cave once more. The presences still lingered. Some edged closer. Others withdrew, uncertain.
For a moment, his thoughts drifted to the Big World.
To what might have changed. To who might have grown stronger… or fallen.
But he did not linger there.
That was not where he stood now. He was beneath an unfamiliar sky.
Lucien rose to his feet.
A faint smile touched his lips, vanishing almost immediately.
“Let’s see,” he murmured to the silence, “what kind of world this is.”
Then he stepped forward—
•••
Lucien moved.
He slipped through stone and shadow with his presence folded inward. His steps left no imprint.
He did not know this world. That alone made it dangerous.
So he observed.
As he traveled, something unexpected made him slow.
Within his chest, the fragment of his Origin Core stirred.
It was… recovering.
Lucien focused inward for a breath, careful not to disturb the balance. The sensation was unmistakable. The fragment was drawing nourishment from the world itself, siphoning thin threads of foundational resonance and knitting them back into coherence.
Lucien frowned slightly.
“So it isn’t limited to one world,” he murmured.
That realization carried weight. It meant the Origin Core did not rely solely on the Big World’s framework. Worlds themselves could sustain it.
His divine energy too was replenishing at a steady, natural pace.
Then came the limitation.
Lucien extended his senses again, measuring the ambient flow.
Mana density was present but shallow.
It lacked depth.
Compared to the Big World, it was thin.
“At best,” he judged quietly, “this is no stronger than the small world I lived in.”
It was not ideal. But it was sufficient.
Recovery did not need abundance. It needed continuity. As long as the flow did not collapse, time would do the rest.
Lucien continued on.
The terrain grew stranger the farther he traveled.
Mountains dominated the horizon. There are layers upon layers of them, rising like frozen waves. Some were jagged and raw, others smooth and weathered, but many shared a common trait that unsettled him.
They were empty.
Entire ranges bore the scars of extraction. Caverns were gouged deep into their spines. Veins were stripped clean.
Stone collapsed inward where something valuable had once been removed.
Lucien was too familiar with this sight.
Mining. On a massive scale.
He slowed. His senses probed deeper.
There were no monsters.
Not even traces.
It was not that they had been wiped out. It felt more like they had never taken root.
That absence made the presences he had sensed earlier all the more significant.
Lucien adjusted his path, angling toward them.
He reduced himself further, compressing his aura.
The presences resolved as he drew closer.
They were clustered.
Organized.
Lucien halted at the edge of a ridgeline and peered down.
What he saw made him still.
People.
Lucien’s gaze sharpened.
The figures below were humanoid in outline, but their bodies told a different story.
Their skin was layered stone and mineral plates, veins traced with faint metallic sheen. Joints flexed with the grind of crystal against crystal. Some bore jagged growths along their shoulders or backs as if the mountain itself had learned to stand upright.
They were not constructs.
They were alive.
Lucien searched his memory once… then again, more thoroughly.
Nothing matched.
No entry among the Thousand Races. No recorded offshoot. Not even a failed lineage.
His breath slowed.
‘Natives,’ he realized. ‘Born of this world.’
This world had produced its own people.
Just then… he noticed their faces.
The way their mineral brows were drawn tight, the rigidity in their posture, and the subtle fractures spreading along their stone-like skin…
Something was wrong.
Lucien lowered himself further into concealment and leaned closer.
He listened.