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Chapter 3

Author: Pixis
I woke up for the fourth time and jolted upright in bed. This time, there was no blind terror. There was only cold sweat that soaked my back and a heart beating so hard it hurt.

The killer was myself. Or rather, some kind of copy of "me".

That explained everything. I was playing a game against myself. He had my memories and my habits; he thought the way I did. Any perfect hiding spot I could come up with would be obvious to him, because if he were in my place, he would hide there, too.

I looked at the digital clock on the wall. It was 12:05 am. I had 55 minutes until he showed up.

If my opponent were "me", then normal tricks like hiding and fighting would be pointless. To beat him, I had to beat myself. That meant I had to act against every instinct I had.

My gaze roamed around the room and finally landed on a spare gas can sitting in the corner. If he were "me", then he knew I would try to set a trap and fight back. I'd always been terrified of dying, after all.

But there was one thing he would never see coming—this time, I wasn't running. I was going to take him down with me. Maybe if he died, the game would finally end.

I grabbed the gas can, twisted off the cap, and took a deep breath of the sharp, choking fumes. Something in my eyes shifted, turning my gaze wilder and crazier.

"Come on, then. Let's do this, other me," I thought.

The doorknob turned slowly, scraping out a harsh metallic sound.

I stood in the middle of the living room, surrounded by the suffocating reek of gasoline. I didn't hide. The half-empty gas can was still in my left hand, the fluid slowly dripping onto the floor. A windproof lighter was in my right hand, which I raised high, thumb pressed against the ignition.

I stared unblinkingly at the door as it swung open.

The figure in the clown mask stepped into view. Rain slid down his raincoat and dripped onto the doormat. He lifted his foot to step inside, then stopped.

He saw the gleaming puddles on the floor and smelled the stinging gasoline in the air. Behind the mask, his eyes narrowed. "This wasn't in your plan."

He stood at the threshold, neither coming in nor backing away. What was he hesitating for?

"Are you thinking of taking me out with you?" His voice came through the mask, low and hoarse, tinged with a mocking edge. "You think that's how you win? You die, the loop resets, and I'll still be here. All you're doing is wasting your limited number of runs."

"Let's see if that's true." I didn't bother arguing. My thumb slammed down on the lighter. With a click, a blue flame jumped to life.

The killer's eyes widened. The instant the flame appeared, he jerked back, retreating without a second's hesitation and slamming the door shut.

But it was pointless. Before he came, I'd already made sure the gasoline vapor had spread through every inch of space outside the door.

I let out a cold laugh and loosened my hold on the lighter, letting it slip from my hand. The moment the flame touched the floor, the world exploded into a roaring sea of fire. Blistering heat swallowed my skin in an instant.

In my final flicker of consciousness, I saw the figure at the door get caught by the rushing flames, his whole body turning into a man made of fire.

He had to be dead this time… Right?
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  • No Exit from the Death Game   Chapter 12

    Beep."Heartbeat restored. Brainwave activity rising. The subject is waking up."I heard voices. People were talking, and they were warm, human voices. Wait, there were still humans?I forced my eyes open. The glare stabbed at my vision, making my eyes water. Once I finally adjusted to the light, I realized I wasn't lying on the bed in that damned apartment anymore.I was inside a silver, high-tech pod, like something out of a sci-fi movie. Electrodes were stuck all over my body, and the space around me was crammed with complicated instruments and monitors.Several people in white lab coats stood around me, clipboards in hand. They watched me with cold, clinical expressions."Where am I?" My throat was so dry it felt like I'd swallowed sand."Congratulations, Experiment 083." A middle-aged man with gold-rimmed glasses stepped forward and looked down at me. "You've passed the stress version of the Echo Protocol.""Echo Protocol?" I repeated. A stabbing pain shot through my head

  • No Exit from the Death Game   Chapter 11

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  • No Exit from the Death Game   Chapter 10

    It was the eighth loop. I opened my eyes.The boundary was hard-locked. That was intel I'd bought with my life. The space above and below just looped back on itself, which meant this building was a sealed, closed-circuit universe. If there was no way out physically, then time had to be fake, too.That meant the only flaw was in the rules themselves.I pushed myself up from the bed. This time, I didn't feel anxious. Instead, a strange calm settled over me.I'd already died seven times, and in every way one could think of. Fear had long since worn itself out; all that was left was numbness.I started really assessing No. 99 again. He was the "future me". He said he'd cleared the game 99 times. If he were just some NPC the system had generated, his behavior should've been a lot more rigid. But he had emotions and felt fatigue. He'd even shown "pity" for me.That was especially true in the fifth loop. He'd given up on killing me and even hinted that if I killed him, I'd be free. If h

  • No Exit from the Death Game   Chapter 9

    I thought back to that tiny detail from the fifth loop. No. 99 had said, "There's no winner in this game. The only way for you to live is to kill me, but then you become the next me."That was a paradox. Killing him meant losing, because I would become the next hunter. But not killing him also meant losing.So, what if this "room"—or rather, this "game arena"—was fake to begin with?I remembered the fifth loop. I never saw the changes in the numbers on the elevator. He just appeared from the elevator after a Ding, like an NPC spawning in an online game."An online game?"My head jerked up, and I looked out the window. Outside was pitch-black night, with a scattering of lights in the distance. In the earlier loops, I'd always been too scared to really look outside.In every online game I'd ever played, the map always had edges.I walked to the window and pushed it open. This was the 16th floor. The wind was strong, whipping the curtains so hard they flapped.I leaned out and loo

  • No Exit from the Death Game   Chapter 8

    The sixth loop started."I got played!" I snarled, pushing myself up from the floor, my fingernails digging so hard into the gaps of the wooden floorboards that blood seeped from my fingertips.I got up. This time, I didn't go to the kitchen for a knife. I didn't set up any defenses. I just stood in the middle of the living room, staring hard at the front door.The all-too-familiar sound of footsteps rang out, and the door opened. No. 99 stood in the doorway. He seemed to pick up on the defeat hanging off me."Looks like you drank the coffee." He took off his mask and sat down on the couch. "How'd it taste? Sweet, right? Sweet enough to make you wanna die?""Screw you." I didn't grab a weapon. I just charged at him bare-handed like a rabid dog.He clearly hadn't expected me to snap like that. He instinctively raised the handle of his axe to block my attack.My fist crashed into his face once, twice, thrice. Blood burst across his features."You knew! You knew the peaceful survi

  • No Exit from the Death Game   Chapter 7

    Something was off.I loosened my hands from around No. 99's throat. If killing him could really end the loop and clear the game, then I should've escaped the moment I set the gasoline on fire and finished him off in that round. I should've escaped this game long ago. That meant killing him was not the real condition to win this game.In a flash, I realized there was a crucial detail I'd overlooked—a fatal loophole in the game rules. If I died, I would enter the next loop. If I stayed alive, No. 99 would keep hunting me down until I was dead. Even if I managed to shake him off for a while, he would eventually catch up with me once I ran out of strength.There had to be some kind of hidden "survival time" mechanic in this game. Otherwise, it would be impossible to beat.So, I made a bold guess. As long as I survived long enough in this round, I could win.I tied No. 99 up and just sat there, quietly waiting for time to pass. He stopped struggling, merely looking at me with eyes full

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