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Athanasia: My Hacker System-Chapter 147: Lanmarโs Worries
"Do you think what Lanmar said earlier is true?" Luke finally asked, his voice low as he watched John work. ๐๐๐๐ฆ๐๐๐๐๐๐ท๐๐ญ.๐ธ๐ฐ๐
John didnโt look up immediately. He was deep into codes of a cannon. After the lunch break, he returned to the cannons with a singular focus. The more he hacked and edited the code lines, the more natural it felt.
"What if it is true?" John asked back, his tone surprisingly detached. To him, since he came here, he had overstepped the realm of being surprised by anything easily.
With his friends by his side and the strong base he was building, he felt a level of security that bordered on overconfidence. He didnโt see a reason to worry about a broken cycle when they could easily crush any danger thrown at them.
"Donโt act so confident," Lanmar interrupted, having overheard the talk. He stepped closer, his massive shadow falling across Johnโs workspace. "If thereโs one thing Iโve learned about this new world, itโs that it doesnโt like someone being lucky. It always tries to challenge you, testing your limits at every turn. Itโs a living hell, John."
"And?" John asked, his mind never stopping, editing the codes. He finished a complex string of edits, watched the new lines of code getting enforced, and stored the cannon in his inventory before immediately pulling up the next one.
"These Fog Seekers arenโt just random monsters for show," Lanmarโs tone grew deadly serious, his usual jovial nature replaced by a grim anxiety.
"The system designed them to test us, to keep us under constant pressure. For example, when I said weโd need three Ogolith cores to clear the local fog, that was just the beginning. You actually need fifty cores to clear the fog from the entire pocket trial.
If we donโt hit that number, the trial will never end. Weโll be trapped in this cycle forever. Fog doesnโt exist in the true Source Code World areas! These creatures have a purpose, and by consuming that core, you might have stalled the entire progression of this world."
Johnโs hands finally paused. The number fifty echoed in his mind. If the trialโs conclusion was tied to such a massive requirement, his accidental depletion of their only core was a much more significant setback than he had initially realised.
"And if you managed to find a way to bypass these challengesโas youโve done here," Lanmar continued, leaning in, "then the world will treat it as if your power level is far above the current difficulty setting. You do know what that means, right?"
John, despite his brilliance with coding, was still slow to grasp the nuances of military terms and experience. He blinked, missing the point entirely. But the others didnโt.
"It means the trial world will retaliate," Elena said, her voice tight with realisation. "It means we should expect a far fiercer challenge next time. If weโve cheated the standard challenge setting, the world will send something even worse to restore the balance."
Lanmar nodded solemnly. "Exactly. The pocket trial doesnโt like being outsmarted."
"Letโs worry about that when the time comes, then," John said, attempting to shrug off the tension. He was determined to stay focused on the immediate task. "For now, letโs continue fortifying our base.
I need you all to stop overthinking and start picking locations for these cannons inside our territory. Weโre going to need them placed on high walls as a secondary line of defence. Think of a layout that strengthens our core, not just the perimeter."
He threw the task at them on a whim, partly to keep them busy and partly to stop the spread of worry. He knew Lanmar had good intentions, but the core was goneโabsorbed into the magical core, and it had already been consumed, lost forever. It was a bell that couldnโt be unrung.
John decided that once they began expanding their territory, they would simply harvest Ogolith cores from every new area they conquered, slowly building their treasury until they hit that fifty requirement.
He returned his attention to the cannons. He had realised something crazy during his latest code dive. The targeting logic for the sensors was a binary value: it either targeted ground units or aerial units, but it couldnโt efficiently do both simultaneously.
Looking at his vast inventoryโthousands of cannons and over ten thousand small motors and sensorsโhe decided to lean into the surplus. He began designing two distinct types of artillery.
One was optimised for low-angle, high-impact ground defence, and the other was a high-velocity, rapid-tracking anti-air killer. He planned to pair them together as a single unit all along the walls, ensuring no enemy, regardless of their nature, would have an opening.
Four hours later, his friends returned, their faces lit with a new kind of excitement. They handed over a tablet containing the final edits to the base layout. John was about halfway through his cannon modifications and was the only one capable of deploying the walls and cannons, so he took a moment to review their work. He was immediately impressed.
"We noticed we had way more wall segments than we actually needed for a simple internal remodelling," Ricky said, his chest swelling with pride at Johnโs reaction. "So we thoughtโwhy just build a fence? We decided to turn the entire area between the outer walls and the internal farm and lake into a massive, multi-layered maze."
"This is brilliant!" John exclaimed, tracing the complex paths on the map. If a ground enemy managed to breach the outer walls, they wouldnโt find an open field; they would find themselves trapped in a labyrinth of carefully designed kill boxes.
"Youโve also created these wide plazas in between the maze sections," John noted, pointing to the open squares. "It ensures we have places to rest and regroup while the enemy is still wandering the corridors. Itโs simply brilliant, guys. Truly."
"Even if the tactical advantage is clear, weโre still going to need to memorise these paths ourselves, right?" Lanmar said, rolling his eyes as he traced the dizzying lines of the proposed maze.
To him, the layout felt less like a sophisticated trap for enemies and more like a gruelling test of his own memory. "And besides that, this thing is massive! Itโs swallowed up a huge portion of our internal base area!"







