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Young Masters Pov Woke Up As A Villain In A Game One Day Chapter 180

180: alchemy of souls

Young Masters Pov Woke Up As A Villain In A Game One Day Chapter 180

180: alchemy of souls

I sucked a deep breath, genuinely surprised by how Rexerd’s confessions went from nervously worrying about what the Syndicate might do with his help to showing no remorse even after conducting experiments on children.

Someone said it right — curiosity kills more than just the cat.

Push it far enough, and it stops being noble. Stops being brave. It becomes something else entirely.

Obsession.

And Rexerd, according to his journals, had crossed that line a long time ago.

His passion was no longer about discovery. No longer about freeing humans from a predestined fate.

It was now about proving himself right. About feeding the hunger gnawing at his pride and pain.

I closed the journal, feeling a strange mixture of disgust and fascination churning in my gut.

He was a monster.

But he was also… onto something.

And that was the scariest part.

After taking a short break, I started reading through his logs again, this time more solemnly than before.

•••

Entry #72 — Divine Alchemy Theory

“I did it.

…I really did it.

There’s no going back now.

I committed the highest crime an alchemist can commit. I altered a living human.

Two of them, in fact.

With the help of Rusten Flower poison and Syrphid Slug’s toxin, I induced a comatose state in two C-rank Subjects. They weren’t unconscious, just put under a condition where the body forgets to struggle.

Then, I injected them with Shade Hound’s blood to keep their nervous systems hyper-aware, their hearts beating, their organs braced against the trauma. It stilled the bleeding, held their vessels in tension, and kept the flesh alive even as I began carving through it.

To strengthen their bones, I needed more than mere enhancement. I acquired Lunar Vire Roots, a forbidden flora that only grows in the glowfields of the Noctveil Wilds — under the light of no moons and all stars. Without it, the fusing would have shattered them from within.

Then I started cutting them open.

And stitching them together.

I melted their bones and fused them, marrow to marrow, and reshaped the body from its foundation.

Ligaments rewoven, nerves redirected. Joints that didn’t exist before now bent in ways no human spine should.

Many organs I had to replace, and some I had to… improve. Their liver, for example. I swapped it with that of a Titan Ratking, whose monstrous resilience to toxins would grant them an unnatural resistance to failure.

And finally, to force rapid adaptation and survival, I implanted a living Echo Wyrm embryo in the spinal root. Its regenerative factor forced the cells into overdrive, knitting tissue, rebuilding systems before death could catch up.

By the end of it…

Two people…

Two whole humans were fused as one.

I created a new being. A new creature.

I altered humans.“

——-—

Entry #73 — Bad News…

“I… have some bad news. But a good one as well.

The body fusion I attempted between two C-rankers was successful.

But neither survived for long.

I did everything right.

But when I forced ‘it’ — or ‘them,’ depending on how you define that creature’s identity — to summon ‘its’ Origin Card… something happened.

A malformed Card was manifested.

And then… it shattered into particles of light.

Almost immediately, the creature started weeping in three voices and bled from all its eyes.

It spoke only one word, over and over, in one of the languages I knew: “Return.”

Return… to what?

A prior self? The unfused bodies? The original form?

The creature’s brain was barely functional. ‘It’ should have had no memory of ‘its’ past self. So how did ‘it’ remember?

And what were the other languages ‘it’ was speaking in?

Perhaps… perhaps the soul remembers what the mind forgets.

A terrifying possibility.

And yet — an exhilarating one.

Because for a single moment… they fused.

Not only in bodies but also in souls, those two humans were fused together.

Two distinct Wills merged into one.

It means the soul can be manipulated. Can be molded. Can be forced to accept the most profane changes done to the body.

This was failure.

But also… proof.

I have found the first fracture in the shell of the soul.

The place where it bends.

The place where it breaks.

The place where it begins.

This is the dawn.

The first step toward the forbidden path.

The Alchemy of Souls.“

——-—

Entry #77 — Divine Alchemy Theory (Alchemy of Souls)

“Alchemy of Souls.

Its function is not to create gold.

But to create immortality.

And a perfected self.

Step 1. Find the right bodies. This is important. Alter them. Shape them for what’s to come.

Step 2. Fuse the bodies. The more alike the people, the greater the chance of avoiding backlash.

Step 3. Awaken the desired Origin Card. Hopefully.

This… this is the closest thing to divinity. At least, in theory.

This is the only way to mold one’s potential. To twist the threads of fate with your own hands.

This is how we take our destiny back from the heavens.“

•••

I had to take another break at this point.

Because Rexerd had not only begun describing his other human transmutation attempts in all their grotesque detail — but he also started attaching photos to the pages.

Each picture was marked ‘before’ and ‘after.’

And some creatures in those pictures were barely recognizable as humans anymore.

Twisted limbs. Discolored skin. Eyes that weren’t where they should be — or too many of them. Flesh that looked half-melted, half-grown from something else entirely.

But what unsettled me most wasn’t the failures.

It was the ones that looked perfect.

Almost too perfect.

Pale skin without blemish. Muscles so symmetrically aligned they bordered on the uncanny. Faces serene in their coma-like slumber, as if they were dreaming.

But none of those creations survived.

He was basically creating damaged homunculi.

Well, not exactly.

But I finally understood what the Alchemy of Souls really was.

Instead of creating artificial life, Rexerd was fusing human bodies — often while they were still alive. Later, he also started fusing humans with Spirit Beasts.

He was also modifying these fused beings.

And ultimately, he was aiming to manipulate the soul itself — to reshape the Subject’s Origin Card by altering the flesh.

I thought about stopping there. I already had an idea of what I wanted to know.

But some twisted part of me wanted to keep going.

I wanted to see how his experiments failed.

What did he do wrong?

And if he had uncovered something else.

So, I continued.

But the more I flipped through the pages and switched between journals, the more erratic his handwriting became.

Some pages were half-burned or torn.

Others were filled with scribbled nonsense.

Some were gouged with scratch marks, and some were water-damaged like he had clawed at the paper and wept over it.

I kept reading the ones that were still legible.

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Young Master’s PoV: Woke Up As A Villain In A Game One Day

Young Master’s PoV: Woke Up As A Villain In A Game One Day

Score 8.4
Status: Ongoing Artist:

Young Master's PoV: Woke Up As A Villain In A Game One Day

"Now you see?" she shouted in a mix of annoyance and disappointment. "You can't outsmart Scrients! They're the most intelligent beings across the two realms."

"You're right," I muttered, averting my gaze with a heavy sigh. "I made a mistake. I was too arrogant to think that a mere human like me could fool them."

—BOOM!!

"Heik! Wh-What was that?"

"Hmm? I'm not sure. Maybe you should go and ask the most intelligent beings across the two realms. Oh wait, you can't. I killed them all.”

______

My name is Samael Kaizer Theosbane.

On the last day of high school, I got into a fight with a kid I used to bully.

It was a stupid, pointless scuffle, and in the middle of it, I tripped and hit my head on a rock.

That’s when the memories came flooding in - the memories of another life, of a different world.

Suddenly, everything made a twisted kind of sense. I realized two things.

First, I was in a game I used to play in my past life.

Second, I was a villain. A villain!

Not the cool and mysterious kind, either.

No, my destiny was to be manipulated and die a dog's death!

I was the worst type of cliché: an ungrateful, privileged, insufferable young master. The sort you'd find in those poorly written fantasy stories.

The kind everyone hates — a snobby brat from a powerful noble family who thinks he owns the world just because he was born with a silver spoon lodged in his mouth.

You know the type. The one the hero beats to a pulp to prove his worth.

Yeah, I was that guy.

And the hero? The hero was the kid I’d been bullying all this time. The same one I got into a fight with.

He was the supposed savior of this damned world.

A world teetering on the edge of destruction, beset by wars, calamities, and a grim future that only I knew.

And at the end of it all, the final antagonist of the game, the undefeatable boss… the Spirit King, was waiting.

But could I even make it to the end?

Could I conquer a game where defeat was the only certainty?

A game that was now my reality!

“Ah, fuck it.”

I had no idea if I could, but I sure as hell was going to try.

Extorting extras, manipulating main characters, twisting the story to my advantage, stealing the hero’s cheat items, killing villains before they could become threats - nothing was beneath me.

Would the main characters be affected? Who cares!

Would the story change? Even better!

All I cared about was me—my survival, my life, my choices.

“I will live this life with no regrets.”

…But as I soon discovered, fate was not easily changed.

And the price of altering one's destiny was steep.

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