Nova handed her jacket to Burner, took a deep breath, and patted her T-shirt
down. Slightly faded due to the countless times she’d worn it, the T-shirt displayed
the slogan SOLOS FTW. The word ‘Solo’ had been appropriated by fanatical players
of Solarversia to describe themselves. Similar to the word ‘solar’, it also played on
The Game’s tagline, There Can Be Only One. The second word, ‘FTW’, was the old
internet acronym ‘For the Win’. The phrase communicated the common belief that
while it was theoretically possible for anyone to win, it would most likely be a Solo,
someone dedicated to studying the Gameworld and all it entailed.
The deluxe chairs were positioned on pneumatic arms capable of tilting thirty
degrees in any direction. Joysticks were situated at the end of each armrest, and
the footrest had pedals that made avatars run, jump, roll and drive. Nova climbed
into the chair and flipped down the built-in headset, which had a technical spec
that could induce drooling in the most hardened of gamers. In front of each chair
was an industrial fan, which activated at pertinent moments.
She entered Solarversia for the second time. The Corona Cube was unchanged,
though the resolution of the headset, which was even better than her new Booners,
made the plasma effect on the walls look more real, and more mesmerising. She
had to make a conscious effort to turn her attention to the constellations on the
ceiling. As her finger touched the last star, the plasma walls turned transparent to
reveal the very spot on Alpha Island she had left the previous night.
She exited the cube and checked the map. In order to properly explore the world,
she’d need her vehicles, starting with Flynn. Cars were stored at the garage, on the
other side of the Forest of Fun, just over a minute away at her current running
speed of one percent. In other words, a snail’s pace. As soon as she completed
some more quests her speed would shoot up. In the meantime she ambled toward
the forest, her chair rocking in time as she moved. It sure beat sitting on the sofa
at home.
Around her thousands of avatars were headed in the same direction, running,
shouting and jostling for position. Some of them, like her, were using their Normal
Avatars, the ones created by scanning the real-world head and body of the player
with a camera. Nova had updated hers several times since her final sleepover at
Sushi’s, most recently in December, after a rigorous month-long exercise regime.
The Normal Avatar transformed into the player’s Super Avatar as the year
progressed. The player didn’t need to do anything to make the transformation
happen — it occurred automatically, through a series of indistinguishable changes
that were applied each day they were still in The Game.
Nova hadn’t done anything too radical with her Super Avatar. She’d added a
couple of inches to her height, toned up here and there, and performed a spot of
minor plastic surgery on her avatar’s neck and nose, but it was nothing compared
to the people who would transform into cats, dogs, and all manner of weird and
wonderful beings if they lived long enough.
Bobbing alongside the Normal Avatars were a smattering of Generic Avatars,
ones players could switch on to hide their everyday appearance. These avatars,
whose male and female versions had come to be known as ‘Marty’ and ‘Smarty’,
looked like plastic Duplo figures, and were identical to one another.
Players were constantly speculating as to which celebrities were masquerading
as Marties and Smarties, although they were also used by people who didn’t want
to have to confront the realities of their body in their moments of escape, and also
by people who simply fancied being anonymous for a while.
Nova pulled down the stats feed in her visor to check the latest figures. More
than ten million people had now left Castalia and were somewhere within the
confines of Solarversia. A guy from Chile appeared beside her as she ran and held
out his hand for a high-five. “Hey, Nova, we’re both in ring 359.” Staring at his
head for half a second caused his profile square to appear hovering above him, a
feature that players could turn off and on at will. Scanning its contents, she saw
that he was right: his grid shortcode was S359, meaning his square was located in
the Spades quadrant in the top right of the Player’s Grid.
The high-five unlocked one of the items on her March Bucket List, a feature
created by Spiralwerks to help ensure that The Game was fair. Each month had
an associated list of actions players needed to perform. A life was automatically
lost if the list wasn’t completed by the end of the month. It deterred people from
spending the whole year hiding out in their Corona Cube. Any Bucket items ticked
off on the Leap Day automatically rolled into the March list.
When she made it to the forest, her headset chimed again: another item ticked
off the Bucket List. Despite the crowd of avatars, there was an eerie quiet in the
woods, punctuated by the snapping of twigs, the rustling of trees in the wind, and
the occasional sound of laughter. The leaves on the trees contained jokes that had
been submitted by players.
She looked skyward, held out her palm, and caught one as it floated toward the
ground. “I organised a threesome last night. There were a couple of no-shows, but I
still had fun.”The ‘ta dum tss’ sound of a rimshot went off as she read the last word.
She shared the joke on her feed, resulting in another tick on the Bucket List, and
four additional points on her speed. All too easy.
She brushed past the last couple of ferns and found herself in a clearing. A
large tyre, which bore the words ‘The Greasy Wrench’ around its circumference,
was propped against three stacked cars. Behind it was a multistorey garage
made of thousands of square bays, where cars were being jacked-up, spraypainted
or waxed by a multitude of arkwinis. According to her datafeed, nearly
sixteen thousand players were currently collecting their rides. That was a lot of
grease.
An arkwini in dirty overalls and a matching cap waddled up to her. Speaking
in a high-pitched voice, he said, “Hello, Nova, you must be here to collect Flynn.
Follow me, please.” He bowed, and then toddled off without waiting for a reply.
She caught up with him and joined him in a battered metal cage attached to the
side of the building.
“Your player number, please,” he said, motioning toward a sturdy black box
affixed to the front on the cage. As she went to punch in her digits, a disembodied
voice chanted, “We really wanna see those fingers!”
She had Catchphrases switched on, which meant that specific movements,
actions and behaviours were greeted by recorded phrases that The Game’s
algorithms deemed relevant. Players could provide feedback on catchphrases, add
them to their favourites or select them to sound at given moments. In this way they
acted like an in-Game user-generated commentary. She punched her digits in and
the cage shuddered into motion, climbing the side of the building. She leaned over
the side to look down on Alpha Island, shaped like a capital ‘A’.
The track she’d raced in the Karting heats traced the shoreline. She could see
the roundabout where she’d pulled off the Wall of Death stunt, the Fire Demon’s
Obstacle Course, and the Forest of Fun. Above her, Castalia floated high in the
sky. As far as her brain was concerned, she was here, in Solarversia, rather than a
gaming cafe in the real world, a concept the VR geeks referred to as Presence, the
illusion that a mediated experience was real. Whatever you called it, she was fully
immersed and loving it.
The cage slowed to a halt beside a bay that matched her player number. She
smiled at the gleaming car within, one she’d spent many hours customising.
Although she’d used him for the Karting heats before The Game had even begun,
and raced in him regularly, it was still exciting to officially collect him like this.
“Good to see you, Flynn, old buddy, this time for real. Kind of real, anyway.”
She held out a hand and stroked his bonnet. Flynn was a dune buggy. A bare
chassis exposed his motor, lots of wiring and some fat suspension. The flaming
artwork that adorned each side proclaimed Doors Are for Bores. Holding onto the
chassis, she swung herself into the driving seat and gripped the steering wheel
tight, impatient to get going already. The arkwini toddled up to her, clipboard in
hand.
“A few things before you get on your way. Speed. Although you only start
with one point, for every ten miles you drive without incident, you’ll gain a point.
Navigation. Once on the road it’s impossible to get lost, just consult your Route
Planner. The exit. You’ve been credited with a Turbo Boost. Use it.” He kicked the
This story has been stolen from Royal Road. If you read it on Amazon, please report it
front tyre and inspected the chassis. “OK, you’re good to go.”
As she grabbed the twin joysticks, a stereophonic collection of voices chanted,
“Ladies and gentlemen, start your engines!”
Flynn growled into life. The wall in front of her swung down to create a ramp
and the turbo boost icon started flashing. Accelerating from nought to sixty in half
a second, she hit the ramp at speed, cruised through the air and landed on the open
road of Alpha Island, calling “Yeeee-ha!” In Fragging Hell, the fan blasted her with
air.
Within a few seconds the Route Planner menu appeared in her headset,
exactly like the arkwini had said it would. She could input how much time she had
available, and which Bucket List items she wanted to tick off. It would combine
that information with her current speed score, and the items she owned, to suggest
some optimal routes. She chose a route through Lotus Bay, the town that ran along
the eastern edge of the island.
The seafront was lined with hundreds of exhibitions and mini-quests, enough
entertainment for the entire year. The first exhibit on the route, Conga World, was
dedicated to creating the world’s longest virtual conga line. It was a hectic flurry of
confusing movement as members swerved one way, then the other, kicking their
legs out to their sides as they congaed along the coast, their hovering profile squares
jigging along in time. The exhibition’s datafeed was being constantly updated itself
as new players joined the end, and others, somewhere in the middle, dropped out.
As she viewed Conga World’s billboard, the exhibition’s starting point and
virtual homepage, it updated to display information relevant to her. It told her that
GoodGert from Namibia — player 23,154,832, who held the record for longest time
at the front of the line — was only seventeen squares from her on the Player’s Grid.
The Russian guy who had just this second joined the back of the line? Only ten
squares from Burner. It was a small world, the Solarverse; a frothing sea of happy
coincidences and shared relationships.
Nova joined the line and tried to look as cool as possible while doing such an
inherently stupid dance. When she left the line she was rewarded with topped-up
speed and her first teleport token. Hearing the dinging sounds that accompanied
these updates reminded her of the joy she used to feel as a young child, dropping
coins into her piggy bank. Further progress. Sweet.
Instead of rushing to do something else straight away, she took a moment to
take everything in. There was activity anywhere she cared to look, a sea of pulsing,
throbbing motion so intense it felt quite dizzying. Even the ground she stood on
— an object so dull and lifeless in the real world — was animated in a way that
made it look like it possessed consciousness. The tessellated hexagons changed
colour as she trod on them, and, as her datafeed now informed her, had also been
programmed to react to certain commands.
She dragged her foot along like she was collecting autumn leaves and watched
a wave of colour fan out from under her until it met hues flowing in the opposite
direction, kicked, scuffed or punted by another player. The colours collided,
rebounding and fracturing into a dozen new streams, giving rise to a chorus of
chimes and jingles.
As she stared at the ground in awe, wishing pavements were like it for real, the
datafeed informed her about several dozen variations of hopscotch that could be
played, as well as a rumour — which had gone viral two hours ago — that certain
combinations unlocked prizes. She found a list of patterns that were affiliated with
charities and picked one.
Tapping out the sequence unlocked a red cross and sounded a jingle — the
company sponsoring the pattern had just donated ten pence to the British Red
Cross. There were thousands of partnerships like it across the Gameworld, and
exercises varied in complexity. Small tasks like that one were usually linked to
minor monetary contributions, but she’d heard of other ventures that required a
lot more commitment.
A short way in front of her, a couple were gazing upwards, pointing and smiling.
The sky was violet, rather than blue, and cast a surreal, diffuse glow over the land.
Following their line of sight, she quickly spotted what they were looking at — giant
puffs of white cloud, shaped like faces. Far beyond them, numerous aircraft —
miniscule from her vantage point on the ground — performed aerobatics, looping,
rolling and spinning.
“Did you get your plane yet?” the guy called out to her.
“I only got my car a short while ago,” she said with a proud nod in Flynn’s
direction.
“You’ll need to do fifty miles without crashing before you can collect your boat
from Dockingtons. Once you have your boat, you’ll be able to cruise to Tristan da
Cunha to collect your plane. If you can complete the flying sequences, you can
make a cloud in the shape of your face. The one that drifts furthest wins a prize!”
Nova smiled. She thought of herself as a Solarversia expert, yet the world was so
large and complex that she learned something new about it all the time. She focused
on the exhibitions around her again and plumped for one she’d heard lots about:
the Tweel of Fate. As she crossed its boundary, the players around her disappeared.
It was a phased zone; numerous people could inhabit it simultaneously, but it
would appear to them that they were there alone.
Like Corona Cubes and Teleport Machines, Tweels of Fate were everywhere.
They were modelled on Banjax the Dodectopus, and looked like the kind of
roundabout you might find in a children’s playground.
Nova grabbed hold of the tentacle nearest to her — which, rather than tapering
to a point, ended in a bulbous sphere — and gave it a big push.
The Tweel spun round its axis for ten seconds or so, then came to a shuddering
rest. The turquoise tentacle that landed closest to her began to squirm and writhe,
like it been rudely awoken, and then looked up at her. Its spherical end, which had
the face of a wizened old man, opened its puckered mouth and spoke.
“Your fate for today is to receive three teleport tokens. Use them wisely.” The
tokens registered immediately in her headset, while the tentacle lowered its face
and solidified once more. It wasn’t a bad outcome for her very first twist of fate .
Pleased with her progress, and keen not to use too much of her birthday credit
in one go, she volleyed an eye back to Fragging Hell and glanced around until she
spotted Burner back in the main room hunkering over a plate of a chips and a
burger. Realising that she was pretty hungry too, she located the nearest Corona
Cube, logged out, and sauntered over to join him.
“I picked up Flynn, a handful of speed points and four teleport tokens. Pretty
good, huh?”
“Still miles behind me then. Not that a mere mortal like yourself should ever
compare themselves to the Master of the Solarverse.”
“Whatever; it’s a marathon, not a sprint,” she said, trying hard to feign
nonchalance. “How’s your revision going, anyway?”
“Maths and further maths should be alright. I could probably do computer
studies with my hands tied behind my back. Electronics is awesome — did I tell
you, Jono’s asked me to send him the aerial drone I built for my coursework,
reckons his professor wants to take a look? Physics, on the other hand. Don’t talk
to me about bloody physics. What about you?”
“Let’s just say I’m doing enough to get a place at Hull. Nottingham’s looking
unlikely. Sometimes I wish I was a total geek like you. Although revision’s a bit
overrated, don’t you think?”
A better poker player than Burner would have spotted her bluff a mile off — the
brush of the hair behind her ears, the lack of eye contact, and the try-hard laugh.
She hadn’t even opened her books.
****************************************************
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Chapter 7 coming soon!