Chapter 12: Specialization
I kept the status window open all the way to the adventurer’s guild.
I was in dress pants and a striped long-sleeve button-down shirt.
I never knew Garth had such gear, but he wore chain mail and had a sword by his waist.
“Did my mother get you the chain mail too?” I asked.
“Yeah, did she tell you?”
“No, it’s my first time seeing it.”
“Nice, isn’t it?”
“Sure.”
I stopped talking to him because I had decisions to make. If the specialty wasn’t bad enough, I have to choose what job we’ll be doing as well. I could go for the best paid, but money wasn’t an issue for me right now.
The adventurer’s guild was quite big. It was 3 stories tall. On the 1st floor, there was the reception desk and office, a bar, and a few shops. If I’m remembering correctly, the second floor was for VIPs, and the 3rd houses the guild master’s office.
We walked straight to the reception desk, where a young man with the name tag: Malachi; looked up at us from his swivel chair.
“How can I help you?” He asked cheerfully.
I decided what job to choose right then and there. “We’re F-ranks, and we’ve decided to go to a dungeon.” Many dungeons were guarded by knights and couldn’t be freely entered. You needed a permit.
“Okay, let me see your card. Will the man be coming with you as well?” He asked, looking over at Garth.
“Yes, he’s my butler.”
“Oh, are you a noble? Or perhaps a merchant family?”
“A noble, but the 3rd daughter. So think nothing of it.”
“Oh, I see. Okay. The 4th daughter of the house of Appleby came yesterday, do you know her?”
“No.” I had no idea who he was talking about.
“She tried to hit on me,” he said as he took out some papers, “but she wouldn’t listen to anything I said. Wouldn’t even do me one measly favor, can you believe it?”
“Right?” He shook his head. “It’s unfortunate, really.” The unspoken context that both of us understood, but didn’t need to say aloud, was that this Appleby must be desperate and unable to do favors. She must be having such a terrible time that she’s been reduced to clowning around in hopes of a pity fuck. While I was thinking of the hidden meanings behind his words, he finished creating our permit. “This should get you into any of the dungeons in the capital. Remember, since you’re F-ranks, don’t go below the 3rd floor. If you’re caught up in something below the 3rd floor, the guild won’t take any responsibilities nor help out in any way. I want to make that very clear. We have had idiots who thought the 3rd floor was easy and-”
“I understand.” I took the permit from his hand. “Thanks.” I understood all this very well and had no desire to listen to him anymore.
“Okay.” He said.
When I turned around and left, leaving Garth behind. Garth quickly thanked the receptionist, “Yes, thank you.” And caught up with me.
“So we’re going to a dungeon? I guess that’s good.” Garth said.
From the way I studied the jobs on the bulletin board, he must’ve expected something different. Dungeon exploring was a job given out by the guild and was always available. Getting monster cores, mana crystals, and the occasional dungeon treasure was always in demand. There were monster-hunting requests, expedition assistant jobs, carriage guard, etc. Available on the bulletin board. The expedition assistance quest intrigued me, but it was a job that’d take weeks, maybe months. And I had too many things I needed to do in the capital to go on an expedition to the Leylor mountains.
The dungeons were also a good way to meet new people. A lot of newbies will be there, especially on the first floor. Some might already have parties, but a lot of them won’t. Up to the 3rd floor, a single person could explore it. You could solo the entire dungeon if this was still a game, but the methods I used in the game wouldn’t be recommendable in real life.
“We’ll go up to the 3rd floor since both of us are over level 10. And since that might take us a few days… here, take this.” I handed Garth a money pouch. “There’s 20 silver and 1 gold in there. I don’t think you’ll need that much, but… anyway… Ah, go buy enough food for 5 days and put it in here.” I handed him the space expansion bag. “And give a few silvers to the innkeeper too, so that they won’t toss our stuff out if we’re a little late.”
“Ah…” He looked at the money and the space expansion bag.
“I’ll wait over there.” I pointed at the cafe across the street.
“Oh, okay.” He looked at the money again, “So, I have to go back to the inn.”
“Yes, is there a problem?”
“No. I’ll go.” And he sulked off.
***
I went into the cafe across the street, ordered a cup of coffee, and sat down beside the window.
I was staring at my status window again. “I’m not going to get off this seat till I choose,” I told myself. I wanted to choose a specialty before the dungeon. I looked over the options again. The problem was the list was almost endless. I could keep scrolling for hours. It was important I chose the right specialty; it’d determine what choices I’d get later on. At level 50, I’d be able to specialize even further, and then at level 100. I’m not sure what comes after level 102 since the experience needed to level up after that was just so big I never crossed that line.
I scrolled through the options again. [Elemental Magic, Space Magic, Mechanical Magic, Alchemic Magic, Body Magic, Chaos Magic, Alien Magic, Dark Arts, Divine Magic, Destruction Magic, Creation Magic, Illusionist, Shamanism, Healing Magic, Anti-Magic Magic, Curse Magic, Dimension Magic, Dragon Magic, Dream Magic, Energy Magic, Entropy Magic, Fairy Magic, Mysto-Telekinesis, Faith Magic, Frequency Magic, Forge Magic, Mirror Magic, Force Magic, Luck Magic, Lust Magic, Mind Magic, Defense magic, Matter Magic, Law Magic, Mystic Arts, Blood Magic, Quantum Magic, Nano Magic, Sin Magic, Summoner, Necromancy, Spirit Magic,…] Were just some of the options in the long list.
It was hard to tell the difference between some of them in terms of application. Space Magic and Dimension Magic were almost identical in the beginning stages. They both offered pocket space, which was somewhat tempting. But choosing it just for the pocket space didn’t sit well with me. That isn’t to say they weren’t good magic routes to go down; they were, but what I wanted was something more of a jack of all trades type of magic. As your level increases, that’s almost impossible, but I wanted my skills to be as diverse as possible. “I want to be as rounded as possible.” And, now that I have [envy], as long as I see someone using [pocket space] or [pocket dimension], I’ll be able to learn it.
Elemental magic was pretty good in terms of roundedness, and it’s pretty popular too. Alchemic magic is also popular.
The problem with Alchemic Magic is that half its rewards were secret knowledge, and I already have all that secret knowledge. I’d memorized it a long time ago. Of course, the other half were spells that couldn’t be gained without specialization. But specialization for 50% of the rewards just wasn’t worth it. Though having the power to convert everything around you into weapons and stuff was pretty cool.
It’ll have to be Elemental magic, Alchemic Magic, Alien Magic, Energy Magic, Fairy Magic, or Matter Magic. They were the best options if I’m looking for magic that’s well-rounded.
The thing is, a lot of the not-so-popular magics were really cool; that’s why I couldn’t just pick willy-nilly. Sin magic, for example, was incredibly tricky to deal with for a magician. It was like trying to fight while drowning. At least that was the case for a magician vs. magician fight. A martial would beat a Sin magician in a heartbeat. If a Sin magician and a Knight with a similar level fought 100 times, the Knight would win 99 out of 100.
So I can’t just pick something cool like in an RPG kind of way. I need to pick something good in combat with magicians and martial artists.
Luck magic was powerful against both and also very cool. It had all kinds of weird dice roll-type magic, but I wouldn’t bet my life on rolling dice! When one bad dice roll means an early trip to the grave, I say, ‘no, thank you.’
Anti-Magic magic was terrible against martial artists. I remember I had to quit the game and restart it because of how much I hated playing as an Anti-Magic magician.
Body magic was pretty cool. You could do all kinds of transformations and stuff.
Summoner was worth considering since I would need to go to war in 4 years. With it, in the later stages, you could raise an army of summons to fight for you. But, the number of strong summons you could have even at high levels was limited. It was certainly a good route, but it was no substitute for a good team. Also, if the summoner dies, it didn’t really matter how many summonses she could bring out. It’s a well-known strategy to focus attack on the summoner when facing one.
After all that deliberation, I decided to choose Energy Magic. It’s powerful and well-balanced when fighting both archetypes. Of course, there were problems with it, but there were problems with all of them. From what I know from the game, there wasn’t any great secret class that was superior to everything else by all standards. That didn’t exist. They all had their strengths. Even an Illusionist became very powerful later on, able to make their illusions real and so forth.
As soon as I chose Energy magic, I felt energy flow into me. In a matter of seconds, I felt that my entire body had changed. I felt different: stronger. This feeling wasn’t something I’d ever felt while playing the game. It probably wasn’t possible to feel this way in the game. It was another reminder that this was reality.
Spells of the Energy magic class were automatically added to my status window. The three spells: [energy manipulation, energy perception, energy understanding] were now part of me.
Energy manipulation, as you’d expect, allowed me to manipulate energy. Perception allowed me to sense living creatures and the energy around me. At its highest levels, I’d be able to perceive the energy of everything around me for 100s of kilometers. Energy understanding was something I’d never seen before, so I tried it out. Everything around me suddenly became strange…
It was indescribable. I could see the energies around me. The energies holding the table together; that made the people walk; that made coffee stay in the cup; that made the rising vapor; that made the sunlight bounce… how everything was…
“Aaa!” My eyes hurt and I suddenly felt drained. I looked at my mana pool and realized I was almost empty. “Wasn’t it full?” Just using it for a few seconds had taken a huge toll on my mana. But I got something of a sense of the real world. I’d learned so much and so little in a matter of seconds. With that, I knew so much more about my powers and how to use energy manipulation much more effectively.
This was never available in the game, and I could understand why just by using it once. The only thing comparable was a spell from the alchemy branch allowing you to learn secret knowledge, but this was different. I realized I’d have to slowly use it to get a better understanding. “Did others in this world get this spell easily as well?” Then I hadn’t really gained any advantage. “Maybe, I should get some books about energy magic from the library.” The free spells were always foundational, so it wouldn’t be that rare. “Aw, it doesn’t matter. Let’s worry about this later.” I took a sip of the coffee.
There was still the 4th spell to pick. The options that came up were: [give, imprisonment, boost, fireball].
“I’m still getting fireball, though it’s the Energy version.” The fireball would probably be blue, but it didn’t matter. I wasn’t going to choose it.
Imprisonment, as the name suggests, imprisoned the opponent with energy.
Boost was something worth considering though it was shit in the game. It shouldn’t even be called [boost]; it should be called mind-boost or something… It was like pausing the game. Everything slowed down when you activated [boost]; at least that’s how it’d appear to the caster. In reality, it allowed you to think faster, but that didn’t mean your body was fast. No, it only made your mind fast. It could be useful in real life for an indecisively slow thinker like myself. But [give] seemed like the best option.
Give was a kind of healing magic. It allowed you to [give] energy/mana/health. It’ll be useful in a group. I want a healer in my group, but very few specialize in healing magic. It simply wasn’t that popular. And even if they chose to become a healer, they certainly wouldn’t choose to become an adventurer. Even in the game, it was difficult to find healers. The alchemist usually took care of that part of the job.
So, with that in mind, I chose [give].
Then seeing Garth hasn’t returned, I went to the counter, paid for my coffee, and said to the waiter, “If a young man comes around looking for Sherrie, can you tell him to wait here? He’s the same age as me.”
The waiter behind the counter said, “Oh, let me write that down.” He took out a pen and pad and asked me to spell my name.
“S. H. E. R. R. I. E.” I spelled out for him. “He’s the same height as me and has brown hair. Just let him know to wait here. I’ll be right back. I might even come back before him, but you know, just in case.”
“Sure. I’ll let him know. If anyone asks for Sherrie, I’ll be sure to tell them.” The waiter said.
“Alright, thanks,” I said and walked out of the cafe.
The library wasn’t far away, and I wanted to borrow a book. Also, I needed to hire and schedule things out with a rickshaw.