1: The First Quest
The sun hadn’t even risen when Titus woke up to the incessant buzzing of his phone. His eyes, still heavy with exhaustion, flicked open to the dim light filtering through the blinds of his cramped apartment. He groaned, grabbing the phone from his nightstand, half expecting another pointless notification from a social media app or a spam email trying to sell him something he couldn’t afford.
But the screen wasn’t showing anything familiar. His groggy mind took a moment to register the strange display in front of him.
Welcome, Titus! Your stats have been initialized by the Lifeline System.
- Level: 1
- Health: 100/100
- Stamina: 50/50
- Mana: 10/10
- XP to next level: 0/100
“What... the hell?”
Titus rubbed his eyes, convinced he was still dreaming. He sat up in bed, his heart thumping a little faster than usual. He tapped the screen, expecting it to disappear like some glitch, but the display remained stubbornly fixed.
“Mana? XP?” he muttered. “Is this some kind of game?”
The soft chime of another notification interrupted his confusion. The screen shifted to display a new message.
New Quest: Break the Cycle
Objective: Find a stable source of income.
Reward: 100 XP, 100 coins.
Titus stared at the message, dumbfounded. It had to be a prank. Some elaborate, twisted joke someone had played on him. But then again, who would bother? He didn’t have any friends, not anymore. His social circle had shrunk to almost nothing over the years, a casualty of bad luck and worse decisions.
Just as he was about to swipe the app away and go back to sleep, another chime rang out. This time, the screen displayed a map—his map. It showed his location within the city, a little blue dot marking his dingy apartment. Only a few blocks away, a red circle pulsed, indicating some sort of destination.
Curiosity gnawed at him. He couldn’t shake the feeling that there was something more to this. What harm could it do to follow it? After all, his days were already monotonous—another round of failed job searches, more disappointment, more wondering if he’d ever escape the quicksand he was sinking into. Maybe this was something different.
His stomach growled, the empty fridge in the kitchen confirming his desperate need for income. He sighed, tossed on a hoodie, and grabbed his worn-out sneakers.
“Alright, Lifeline System. Let’s see what you’ve got.”
He followed the directions from the map on his phone, heading down the stairwell of his building, each step creaking beneath his feet. The cold morning air bit at his face as he emerged onto the street. It was eerily quiet for the early hour, the city still rubbing the sleep from its eyes. As he walked, the pulsing red circle grew closer on the map, leading him toward a small café nestled on a corner he rarely paid attention to.
Titus stopped at the door. The café was nothing special, the sign above the entrance barely readable from years of neglect, but a simple handwritten note taped to the window caught his eye.
Help Wanted. Immediate Hire.
“No way…” Titus muttered. He glanced down at his phone again, the map glowing with a soft, persistent pulse. Was this what the system had led him to?
Pushing open the door, Titus was greeted by the scent of fresh coffee and the quiet hum of morning conversation. The café was small, only a few tables, with a woman behind the counter wiping down the surfaces. She was older, probably in her late 40s, with tired eyes and a warm, if slightly worn, smile.
“I saw you looking at the notice. You here for the job?”
Titus blinked. “Uh… yeah. I saw the sign.” He nodded awkwardly toward the window.
“Great,” she said, setting the rag aside. “We’re short-staffed. You got any experience?”
“Not much,” he admitted. “But I’m a fast learner.”
She gave him a quick once-over, then shrugged. “Well, we need the help. If you can start today, we can see how it goes. Pays minimum wage plus tips, but it’s something, right?”
Titus couldn’t believe it. He’d been applying to jobs for months—online, in person, anywhere he could—and nothing had come through. Now, here he was, a few minutes after some weird system sent him on a quest, and he was being offered work.
“Yeah, I can start today,” he replied, his voice a little steadier now. “Thanks.”
She handed him an apron and gave him a quick rundown of the tasks. The job was simple—cleaning tables, making coffee, ringing up customers—but as Titus got into the rhythm of the work, he found a strange sense of satisfaction. For the first time in what felt like ages, he wasn’t just drifting. He had something tangible to hold onto, even if it was just a low-paying café gig.
By the end of his shift, the morning rush had died down, and Titus wiped down the counter for the last time. He felt an odd lightness in his chest—something that wasn’t quite happiness, but a step in that direction.
His phone buzzed.
Quest Completed: Break the Cycle
Reward: 100 XP, 100 coins.
Level Up!
Lifeline System Activated.
Titus stared at the notification, his heart skipping a beat. This was real. The Lifeline System wasn’t some prank. He had completed his first quest, and the system had rewarded him for it.
A new set of stats appeared on the screen, this time with a flashing indicator next to his level. His XP had gone up, and the words Level Up were emblazoned across the screen. But that wasn’t all. His health and stamina had increased, and beneath them, a new number appeared next to Mana.
“What the hell is going on?” Titus whispered, looking around to make sure no one else could see what he was seeing. The café felt too ordinary for what was happening. How could something this game-like exist in real life?
Before he could process everything, the system chimed again, displaying a message that sent a shiver down his spine.
New Quest: Upgrade Your Living Situation
Objective: Improve your apartment or find a new place to live.
Reward: 200 XP, Skill Unlock.
Titus took a deep breath, staring at the screen. It wasn’t just one quest. It wasn’t going to stop.
The game had just begun.