Dungeon King: The Hidden Ruler-Chapter 61: [Thrones in Ruin 10] The Patch Corporate Scandal
Chapter 61: [Thrones in Ruin 10] The Patch Corporate Scandal
The respawn plaza of Ironmoss Citadel buzzed with furious energy.
Thousands of players crammed into the polished stone square, shouting, venting, pacing in circles. The usual lightness of the capital—the bright banners, the clean air, the sunlight dancing off marble—felt wrong. Discordant. Like laughter in a funeral hall.
Fairyblade stood among the crowd, her shield still strapped to her arm, her sword still bleeding illusionary gore. She turned slowly, her eyes wide, taking in the sea of anger and disbelief.
Zone chat screamed around her.
[Zone Chat] [Grimsteel]: "WHAT THE HELL WAS THAT?"
[Zone Chat] [Blazecast]: "Mid-fight! They yanked us MID-FIGHT!"
[Zone Chat] [VineWalker]: "IMMA ON ROLL IN A 10 KILLING STREAK!"
[Zone Chat] [Knightfall]: "Refund Throne War players or riot."
Zone Chat] [BoneCaller]: "We couldn’t even summon! Half my skills are dead!"
[Zone Chat] [WildTamer]: "No beasts, no summons, just standing there swinging like idiots."
[SpiritHerald]: "Patch killed summoners. Was the whole point to erase our class? Throne War was a joke for us. A massacre without our tools.
[Zone Chat] [ShadeTamer]: "I spent half a years building my beast roster for this. Five months. And now it’s useless."
[Zone Chat] [BoneCaller]: "Half a year is six month you idiot. I’m thinking of uninstalling after this."
The anger wasn’t just digital.
Players stomped through the plaza, some swinging their weapons idly, others hammering emotes into the air. A group of archers reenacted their final moments, laughing bitterly as they collapsed into dramatic deaths on the polished stones.
Someone hammered the ’/cry’ emote on repeat until it echoed through the plaza. Others lay prone on the polished stone, their characters frozen in dramatic death poses. A group of mages floated tiny ’glitch’ icons above their heads, mocking the shutdown silently.
Fairyblade just watched.
They fought for the throne, for pride, for the stories they would tell. And the system had yanked the world out from under them without warning, without apology. Fairyblade tightened her grip on her shield, feeling the ache in her fingers. The game she had trusted her memories to—was it even the same anymore?
It wasn’t supposed to end like this.
No victory.
No closure.
Just silence, and a void where triumph should have been.
In the real world, Raven’s capsule hissed open.
Cool, recycled air from CloudSpire Lounge washed over him as he sat up, muscles stiff from the tension he’d carried for hours. The marble floors gleamed under soft lights, reflecting polished chrome booths and muted conversations.
He pulled himself out of the capsule with a grunt, rolling his shoulders. His limbs felt heavier here—more real, more reluctant.
He crossed the lounge on quiet steps, weaving between half-dazed players emerging from their own pods. Some wore identical expressions of disbelief; others barked into their comms, venting rage.
Raven slid a crumpled bill into a vending machine tucked into the far wall. The machine blinked twice, its screen flickering uncertainly before displaying the available options.
He didn’t bother to choose. He simply pressed the first drink highlighted—something carbonated and vaguely citrus—and the machine clunked heavily before coughing out a chilled bottle.
Before he even opened it, Raven caught faint, muffled sounds leaking from the nearby private rooms. Sharp curses. A thud—something lightweight hitting a wall. Fragments of players’ anger, barely contained by the polished veneer of CloudSpire Lounge.
The walls might have been thick, but rage had a way of bleeding through.
Raven tilted his head back against the sofa, letting the chaos brush past him like distant thunder.
He cracked his can open, took a slow drink, and slumped onto one of the minimalist sofas lining the lounge’s perimeter.
Only then did he pull out his phone.
The forums were already on fire.
Thread after thread scrolled by, blinking so fast he barely had to touch the screen.
[Top Thread] - "Throne War Robbery! We demand a redo!" (26,941 comments)
[Meme] - White Mansion Energy Drink: Now With Extra Downtime! (14,902 comments)
[Top Guild Leader Rage Quit Stream - Clip] - "If Titan Corp can’t handle PvP, they shouldn’t sell it." (35,968 comments)
Summoner mains—tamers, necromancers, spirit heralds—raged across every page.
[ShadeTamer]: "Six months building my army. Deleted in one patch. You killed my class."
[WildTamer]: "We weren’t players to you. We were trash to sweep away."
[SpiritHerald]: "You spit on the players who BUILT your world."
The call was loud, furious, and unified: Delete the patch. Restore the classes. Or watch the game burn.
Streamers exploded.
Footage from the shutdown flooded every major feed.
One showed a caster mid-ultimation spell—a brilliant sunflare of magic—cut off just before it hit a Fold commander. The caster’s scream echoed through the footage before the feed shattered into system errors.
Another showed a rogue laughing in triumph as they landed the final strike on a siege beast—only for the rogue to freeze, mid-lunge, mouth open in a frozen cheer as the emergency shutdown screen slammed over their model.
Raven watched without expression.
A small, tired smile ghosted across his lips.
His mission was accomplished. The outrage swelling through the forums guaranteed it now—Titan Corp would have no choice but to roll back the patch. The pressure was too loud. Too unified. Summoners wouldn’t just be restored.
His own special class—the Dungeon Sovereign—would be fully functional again.
Not through sabotage. Not through hacking.
Just by letting the system tear itself apart.
Sinister satisfaction pulsed quietly under his skin—but exhaustion drowned any celebration.
He leaned back into the sofa, tipping his head against the wall, letting his muscles relax one fraction of an inch at a time.
Memes piled up.
Someone had photoshopped a White Mansion Energy Drink logo over a flaming dumpster sailing down a river.
Another showed an in-game billboard ad glitching mid-frame, replacing "Victory is Inevitable!" with "Server Error: Please Try Again Later."
Comments roared below.
[ShardBreaker]: "You ruined Throne Wars. Pay up or shut down."
[DeepRootDruid]: "My guild trained weeks for this event. WEEKS."
[AzureVex]: "Refund when?"
[GhostPiercer]: "Never drinking White Mansion again, lmao."
The rage was bright and sharp.
It needed no help to spread.
Raven scrolled slowly, letting the heat of it soak into his skin.
Not gloating.
Not celebrating.
Just... watching.
They didn’t even need me to tear it down, he thought, setting the water bottle down on the low table beside him.
I just had to show the cracks. The system did the rest.
He turned off his phone with a click.
He leaned back into the sofa, tipping his head against the wall, letting his muscles relax one fraction of an inch at a time.
His fingers twitched once, involuntarily. Too many hours spent holding tension like a blade across his back. The sofa’s cushions barely registered under the thrum of residual adrenaline. He let it bleed out, one slow breath at a time.
Outside the lounge’s tall glass windows, the city moved on without noticing. Taxis slid past. Office workers hurried home. The world didn’t care about digital wars fought and lost inside chrome capsules.
For now, that was fine.
Raven closed his eyes.
Somewhere else, in the heart of Titan Corp headquarters, a capsule hissed open.
Elara blinked against the cool, sterile lights of the VR testing center. For a moment, she remained seated inside the capsule, her mind still clouded from the sudden disconnection, from the broken battlefield she’d just left behind.
Fairyblade.
Her character’s name still echoed faintly in her system logs.
Slowly, she stood, letting the gravity of the real world settle into her limbs. Her breathing steadied. Her mind—disoriented from the chaos—began to sharpen.
Her phone vibrated sharply against her palm. A message flashed across the screen. From her manager.
"Elara, meeting room 7. NOW. Sponsors and execs. You’re needed."
Half panic. Half fury.
She stared at the screen a second longer than necessary. She could already feel the shift—the sudden weight of expectations dragging at her shoulders.
Her first major assignment. Her first real entrance into the circle where decisions were made—and unmade.
A QC checker newbie fresh graduated. A small voice among executive titans.
She tightened her grip on the datapad tucked under her arm.
Stay calm. Stay objective.
She had told herself that from the beginning. Be the player’s advocate. Remember the shoes she once wore—as a normal player point of view, as a community voice, as someone who cared about more than quarterly revenue charts.
But now...
Now she was Titan Corp.
A cog in the same machine players now cursed.
Her stomach twisted. Doubts gnawed at the edges of her resolve.
What would you do, Elara?
She scratched the back of her head, a frustrated, childish gesture.
A deep breath shuddered from her chest.
Just be honest, she told herself.
Objective. Fair. As much for them... as for yourself.
She grabbed her datapad, adjusted her jacket, and finally pushed herself out of the capsule pod. Her legs felt stiff, muscles still protesting from hours inside the simulation, but her mind—clearing with every step—pushed her forward.
Behind those locked conference room doors, another war already begun.
Titan Corp’s executives barked over each other—accusations, blame, threats, denials.
Screens flashed real-time user engagement spiraling downward. Heatmaps of rage spreading like wildfire. Sponsorship withdrawal alerts stacking by the minute.
And into that storm walked Elara.
She paused just inside the glass doors, surveying the chaos with a calm, detached eye.
Her reflection flickered against the polished surface—steady, unbroken.
She tucked her datapad tighter under her arm.
And stepped forward into the fire.
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