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Myriad Heavens: Rise of the Rune God-Chapter 128: The Reward That Wasn’t 2
Two to five milligrams.
His current cultivation—just maintaining the partial ring halo around his heart at 15% completion—consumed approximately 50 milligrams of exotic energy per day. That was just maintenance. Not growth or progress. Just keeping what he already had stable.
To actually make progress on his cultivation, he’d need grams per day. Eventually tens of grams. As he advanced to higher stages, the requirements would increase exponentially. Tons per day wouldn’t be unusual for high-level cultivation.
He did the math quickly:
For basic daily maintenance: 10-25 square meters of growth area (a small room)
For moderate cultivation progress: 100-250 square meters (a large greenhouse)
For rapid advancement: 1,000-2,000 square meters (multiple industrial greenhouses)
For commercial production or supplying multiple cultivators: tens of thousands of square meters (multiple football fields)
"Acres," Orion said aloud to the empty conference room. "I’d need acres of glowing algae to cultivate at a reasonable speed. Football fields covered in modified plants. That’s the system’s ’synthesis method’?"
The disappointment sat heavy in his chest. He’d worked so hard. Three months of intense focus. Designing revolutionary fusion technology from knowledge that was centuries beyond Earth’s current level. Managing a company. Cultivating his body and mind. Studying constantly. Pushing himself to exhaustion every single day.
All to receive a biological farming method that produced exotic energy only slightly faster than manually extracting it from Earth’s thin atmospheric concentrations.
It wasn’t useless. He could make it work. But it wasn’t the breakthrough he’d been hoping for. Not the game-changing reward he’d imagined.
"I worked three months for a farm," Orion muttered, leaning back in the chair. "The system gave me a glorified farm."
He sat there for several minutes. Just processing. Feeling the frustration. Acknowledging the disappointment.
Then his mind started working differently. Analyzing instead of just reacting.
Okay. This isn’t what I wanted. But what did I actually receive? What can I do with this?
Orion reviewed the synthesis method again. This time looking for opportunities. Weaknesses to exploit. Information the system had given him that might be more valuable than the method itself.
KEY OBSERVATION #1: The system provided complete genetic sequences and modification procedures. But it didn’t explain the fundamental mechanism. Those three novel organelles—Alpha, Beta, Gamma—were essentially black boxes. The knowledge showed how to create them. What genes to insert. What proteins they’d produce. But not the actual physics of how they converted energy into exotic energy.
KEY OBSERVATION #2: The "unknown biological mechanism" suggested this was beyond Earth’s current scientific understanding. But it was still biology. Biology could be studied. Cells could be dissected. Organelles could be isolated and analyzed. If it worked through biological processes, those processes could be mapped. Understood. Reverse-engineered.
KEY OBSERVATION #3: If a living cell—limited by biological constraints, metabolic inefficiency, cellular maintenance requirements—could convert energy to exotic energy, then the underlying physical principle must exist. And if the principle existed, it could theoretically be replicated artificially. Without biological limitations.
Orion sat up straighter. The frustration was transforming into something more productive.
"I don’t need to use plants," he said slowly, thinking it through step by step. "Plants are just the proof of concept. A working demonstration. The system gave me an example of something that functions. Now I need to figure out how it functions. Map every metabolic step. Identify the actual mechanism happening inside those organelles. Understand the physics. Then engineer artificial systems that replicate the same effect—but faster, more efficiently, at industrial scale."
The biological method was slow because biology was inherently slow. Cells divided at biological rates—hours or days. Metabolic processes operated at enzyme speeds—milliseconds to seconds, but still limited. Growth took time. Harvest took time. Everything about biology was constrained by evolution’s tinkering.
But if he could understand the core principle—the actual quantum physics or exotic energy physics that occurred inside those organelles—he could design mechanical or electronic systems that weren’t limited by biology.
"This isn’t just a farm," Orion said, his mood shifting from disappointment to determination. "This is a blueprint. A working model of something that shouldn’t be possible. And I have all the tools I need to reverse-engineer it."
He pulled up a mental checklist, organizing his thoughts:
THE PLAN:
Phase 1: Create the Organism
Follow system method exactly Produce functional Qi-generating organisms Establish baseline performance data
Phase 2: Study the Mechanism
Map complete metabolic pathways Isolate and analyze novel organelles Determine energy conversion mechanism Document every cellular process Identify the fundamental physics involved
Phase 3: Reverse-Engineer
Extract core principles from biological system Determine if mechanism can be replicated mechanically/electronically Design artificial exotic energy synthesis systems Remove biological limitations
Phase 4: Industrial Scale
Build mechanical generators Achieve yields in kilograms per day, not milligrams Supply personal cultivation needs Enable commercial exotic energy production
It would take time. Months of research. Possibly longer. The biology alone was incredibly complex. The physics behind exotic energy synthesis was completely unknown to Earth science.
But it was achievable. Difficult, but achievable.
"Alright," Orion said to the empty room. "I can work with this. It’s not what I wanted, but it’s what I have. And it’s better than nothing."
He took a deep breath. Let the frustration go completely. Focused on the path forward.
IMMEDIATE OBSTACLES - ANALYSIS
Orion thought through what executing this plan would require.
Problem #1: Technology Gap
The genetic engineering required was beyond current Earth capabilities. The system had provided complete genetic sequences for the 47 custom genes. Complete blueprints for the three novel organelles. Detailed modification procedures.
But actually implementing those modifications required unique and advanced equipment that didn’t exist yet.
Current gene sequencing was accurate to single base pairs, but slow and expensive. Current CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing was effective for simple modifications but had off-target effects—sometimes cutting DNA in unintended locations. Current cellular engineering was limited to inserting a few genes at most, not completely redesigning cellular organelles.
None of Earth’s existing technology was sophisticated enough to create organisms based on the system’s specifications.
"I’ll need to design everything myself," Orion realized. "Advanced gene sequencers. Enhanced CRISPR systems with perfect targeting accuracy. Cellular assembly chambers that can build organelles from scratch. Metabolic pathway analyzers. Exotic energy detection instruments that don’t exist yet."
Problem #2: Simulator Limitations
The Starr Simulator—powerful as it was—couldn’t help with completely unknown physics. It could model known chemistry. Simulate known biological processes. Test engineering designs based on established principles.
But the exotic energy synthesis mechanism was unknown. The Simulator had no data on how exotic energy actually formed. No equations to model. No physical laws to reference.
He’d need actual experimental results first. Real data from living organisms actually producing exotic energy. Only then could the AI begin to understand and model the process.
"Physical experiments first," Orion said. "Can’t skip that step. I need real data before the Simulator becomes useful for this."
Problem #3: Equipment Requirements
Creating organisms with the system’s specifications required specialized equipment:
Next-generation gene sequencers (atomic-level precision) CRISPR-X enhancement system (zero off-target effects) Cellular assembly chambers (build organelles from components) Metabolic pathway mapping systems (real-time analysis) Exotic energy detection instruments (measure at cellular level) Specialized growth chambers (precise environmental control) Biosafety level 4 containment (prevent modified organisms from escaping)
All of it would need to be designed from scratch. Built using the replicators. Tested and calibrated.
"Weeks of preparation," Orion estimated. "Maybe a month before I can even start the actual genetic engineering work."
But he had other rewards to explore first. And those might change things.
Orion pulled up his BCI connection to Rene. "Rene, I need comprehensive research on current genetic engineering capabilities. Best available equipment worldwide. Most advanced techniques. Everything you can find."
"Searching now," Rene replied instantly. "May I ask what this research is for?"
"New project. Biological engineering. I’ll explain the complete details later. For now, I need to know what technology exists and what I’ll need to design myself."
Data began flowing through the BCI connection. Rene was efficient as always.
Current gene sequencing technology: accurate but slow, expensive, limited throughput.
Current CRISPR systems: effective for simple edits, ~60% accuracy for complex modifications, significant off-target effects.
Current cellular engineering: limited to introducing 3-5 genes maximum, no capability for designing novel organelles.
Current metabolic analysis: requires destroying cells to study them, no real-time observation possible.
None of it was remotely sufficient for the system’s genetic specifications. 𝒇𝓻𝓮𝓮𝙬𝙚𝒃𝒏𝓸𝙫𝒆𝙡.𝓬𝓸𝒎
"Complete custom design required," Orion confirmed. "I’ll need to build everything from the ground up."
"Shall I assist with equipment designs?" Rene asked.
"Not yet."
"I received a knowledge package from the system—Complete Genetic Engineering Codex. I need to absorb that first. Then we’ll work together on designing the laboratory equipment."
"Understood. Shall I notify Dr. Okafor that you won’t be attending the celebration dinner?"
Orion had completely forgotten about that. The team would definitely want him there. It was their moment. Their achievement.
But he had so much to process. So much to learn.
"Tell them I have urgent business to handle. Personal research that can’t wait. Send a message congratulating everyone on the incredible work. And authorize a bonus—200,000 credits to every team member who worked directly on the reactor project. They earned it."
"Message sent. Bonuses processing. Is there anything else you need?"
"Privacy for the next few hours. I’m going home to study."
"Understood. I’ll handle any urgent matters that arise."
Orion stood up from the conference room chair. Unlocked the door. Checked the time on his phone.
5:23 PM.







