Chapter 211: Slime Lord
Added 2025-01-26 15:00:05 +0000 UTCMato Mato sat uncaring on the slimy fungal creep, totally wrecked. Fighting for an extended period without mana had left him mentally drai
Mato
Mato sat uncaring on the slimy fungal creep, totally wrecked. Fighting for an extended period without mana had left him mentally drained. He took a deep breath to steady himself and looked inward to examine the end-of-battle notifications inscribed on the tree in his mind garden.
Your group has defeated Mana Eater – Plant Aberration – level 53
Your group has defeated Devouring Consumption – Ooze – level 1-3 x3
Bit of a cheat that the Devouring Consumption still counts as a level three kill, he thought, eyeing the notification with suspicion. It had been nearly sixty when they defeated it. It was done though, so he let it go and read on.
Druidic Shapeshifter has reached level 65.
+10 attribute points.
He immediately spent his points: five on vitality, three on endurance, and the final two boosting his wisdom by a little. After such a nasty brawl, it was satisfying and even cathartic to see his own development.
Swipe has reached level 39.
Bear Form has reached level 34.
Bestial Combat has reached level 33.
Natural Prowess has reached level 28 (+2).
Survival Instinct has reached level 30.
Battle Trance has reached level 20.
Identify has reached level 13.
Cooking has reached level 16.
Herb Gathering has reached level 10 (+2).
Your actions have increased the reputation of your patron.
Azryet’s blessing was surprisingly powerful. He didn’t get blessings when he increased his patron deity’s reputation like Calen did, but if he could earn more, perhaps he could trigger that ridiculous void damage more frequently. That, he decided, would make him very happy.
Good fight though, he decided. He hadn’t expected a plant to put up such a challenge. Painfully, he shifted back to his Beastkin form, his eyes studying the small inconspicuous-looking blue form of their little ooze companion with a new respect. Naia had saved his life when he couldn’t be healed – he had been on the verge of summoning his chewable recall potion to his mouth when she had covered him with ooze ‘armor’. By the end of the fight, her attacks had been overwhelming.
Ali, you picked a good friend. Plus, he had a newfound respect for the power and versatility of slime, usually the butt of adventurer jokes. Hail the Slime Lord!
Aliandra
Ali breathed a little easier as she examined the scorched battlefield. She had survived the fight with a single drake, three Acolytes, her Fire Mage, and her Hellfire Imp. Everything else had been killed. She gazed at the crazy Mana Eater lying slumped in a great pile in the center of the chamber, wondering where such a horrifying plant had come from in the first place.
Mato limped over slowly, and one of her Acolytes topped him up with a restoration spell.
“You doing ok?” she asked.
Mato just grunted.
We all need a bit of a rest after that, she thought, and glanced through her notifications.
Your group has defeated Mana Eater – Plant Aberration – level 53 (Nature / Death)
Your group has defeated Devouring Consumption – Ooze – level 1-3 (Nature / Death) x3
Grove Warden has reached level 69.
+10 attribute points.
Ali pulled out her notes, did a few calculations, and then spent four points each on wisdom and intelligence, reserving the final two for perception.
Arcane Insight has reached level 38.
Barrier has reached level 50.
Grimoire of Summoning has reached level 35.
Martial Insight has reached level 46.
Empowered Summoner has reached level 34.
Minion Teleport has reached level 25.
Inspiration has reached level 14.
Imprint: Mushroom updated to Imprint: Fungus.
Variant: Creep Spore added to Imprint: Fungus.
Variant: Fungal Creep added to Imprint: Fungus.
Imprint: Borer Beetle completed.
“Well, that was certainly harder than I thought,” Mato said, thumping down on the ground beside her with a grunt of discomfort and an expression of disgust as he felt the damp fungal creep beneath him, but he didn’t get up again.
“I agree,” Ali said. She had gained only a single level for a boss monster, most likely because she outleveled it by quite a bit. However, it had been vastly more challenging than she had expected. The combination of the mana-drain spores, the full reach across the room with the thorny whip-vines, the explosive Creep Spores, and the healing reduction had all contributed to making the fight a nightmare. The addition of the Devouring Consumption had added an unimaginable surprise in the middle of the fight – one which had nearly wiped them out.
“I vote Naia for MVP,” Mato said. “Thank you for saving me, little one.”
“What is ‘MVP’?” Naia asked, wobbling curiously in Mato’s direction.
“Most valuable person for the fight. You really turned it around at the end,” Ali said, explaining the term to her. And she really had, she had suddenly pulled a new ooze out from who knew where, protected Mato when he was immune to healing and Ali herself was out of mana, and then she had summoned the terrifying Devouring Consumption and flattened the Mana Eater with it.
“I just help,” Naia said.
“This is a very difficult dungeon,” Ali noted. “It’s no wonder you were struggling with it, Naia.” It seemed more than difficult, and it left her with a rather daunting challenge – how to help Naia stay safe down here. Even if it had not been a boss, the Mana Eater would have been a challenge for her on her own, but a major part of the problem was that whatever this dungeon was, it could create bosses and Naia could not. Which meant they were not evenly matched.
But I wonder, she thought, staring at the corpse of the boss, its thorny vines crumpled around its burnt and decayed wooden shape.
“Naia, do you think you can eat that?” she asked, pointing at the corpse.
“Naia can eat anything,” she replied, bobbing up and down.
“You don’t want the domain magic skills?” Mato asked, a look of surprise crossing his face.
“I think it just has an attribute enhancement and summoning, which I already have. I’m hoping Naia learns them and that triggers the advancement, giving her the ability to make bosses.” If she was right about that, then at least she would feel happier about Naia being able to look after herself.
“That’s not a bad idea,” Mato said, a thoughtful look on his face. “Let me just gather a few of those flowers for Eliyen to look at before you eat it.”
Ali got to her feet and followed as they all walked over to the corpse. Mato quickly plucked several of the strange blue flowers and stored them and then stepped back.
Naia called over her giant Devouring Consumption and merged with it, and then her enormous dark mottled green and black body flowed over the aberrant plant, drawing in everything, even the vines. In a matter of less than a minute, there was an enormous pile of ooze covering everything and Ali recognized the magic as similar to her own deconstruction. The entire thing shimmered and flared, visible through the semi-translucent slime and there was a giant surge of mana, and the Devouring Consumption gained several more levels and nearly doubled in size.
I have to figure out how it’s doing that, Ali thought.
“What is domain magic?” Naia asked.
“Those are skills you can give to bosses,” Ali explained. “Which ones did you get?”
“Summoning, and Strength.”
If she were honest, Ali would have been more than a little jealous if Naia had gotten Vitality – it was the only one she was still missing. Still, it seemed good, but it didn’t seem quite enough to trigger the advancement.
“Oh,” Naia said, wobbling in a way that somehow matched the surprise in her voice. “I got something else.”
Ali waited in suspense for what seemed like ages while Naia examined her notifications and then a chime rang out and her mind filled with the bizarre prickling of her mana senses and the feeling of complex vibrations she had come to associate with ooze perception. It took a few moments of Sage of Learning gobbling up mana before her mind translated the sensation into intelligible sounds– a little voice that sounded a lot like Naia’s reading a skill description to her. Is that how Naia sees her notifications?
Slime Domain – level 28
You can lay mana trails with your ooze monsters. The trails will grow, merging to form your domain. All your perception skills operate throughout your entire domain.
Mana: Permanently attach an Ooze to your domain. Attached minions propagate denser domain mana more quickly and can only move with your domain. They may be further enhanced with Domain Magic. Range: Domain.
Water, Mastery, Domain, Intelligence
“I got something for domain magic, should I accept this?” Naia asked. “It also had your name on it.”
“That’s the one that lets you make bosses,” Ali said, suddenly excited for Naia. “You should definitely take it.”
Ali studied the skill closely – Naia’s Slime Domain skill seemed quite similar to her own Domain Mastery, but it was the differences that she found most intriguing. Naia was unable to transmute or reshape matter – presumably the reason she had been unable to free herself from her cave. Instead, the skill implied she could actually move her domain, even after she had laid it down, and her perception skills were enhanced to include the full extent of her domain. Her new advancement had not included respawn, but Ali’s respawn skill seemed to be mostly a convenience for when she was away from home – it was the boss skill that had really increased her power.
“Ok, I will take it,” Naia said, vibrating with new excitement. “Oh, I got some more magic.” Several more notification chimes sounded as she began to share her gains.
Class Domain Magic acquired.
You have learned the Domain Magic: Attribute Enhancement – Intelligence.
You have learned the Domain Magic: Attribute Enhancement – Wisdom.
Mentor Domain Magic acquired.
You have learned the Domain Magic: Affinity Aura – Arcane, Nature, Fire, Death.
You have learned the Domain Magic: Minions.
Unique Domain Magic acquired.
You have learned the Domain Magic: Ooze Transmogrification.
Suddenly, Ali was delighted she had offered Naia her mentorship enchantment. Not only had it been part of the skill’s advancement, but Naia had learned two of her domain magic skills – and they were ones she had used often – and Affinity Aura had transferred with every affinity she had collected so far. With seven domain magic skills, Naia should be able to create some decent bosses. It was not just a step forward for Naia, it was a huge leap and it underscored why dungeons were regarded with such fear and loathing out in the world.
“What is Ooze Transmogrification?” Ali asked, her curiosity burning. Unique Domain Magic?
Naia immediately shared the description with them.
Ooze Transmogrification
Requirements: Ooze minion. Mimic Slime race.
Source: Race.
Your ooze can assume the form of any ooze you know. Transformation takes thirty seconds to complete and costs 25% of maximum mana.
Skill – Domain Magic
“Holy… wow!” Mato said after Ali translated Naia’s bizarre notification for him.
“Naia is… strong?” Naia asked.
“Yeah, that’s ridiculously strong,” Ali said. Half of the oozes she had were immune to their mana affinity, which meant that this ability allowed Naia to swap whatever boss she made with one immune to something major any attackers brought to bear. It was expensive, taking a quarter of the total mana pool, and a domain magic skill slot, but then again, it granted an effectively selectable immunity in the case of oozes. Given how pivotal immunity had just been in their fight, she could see just how easily this skill could be used to make a real challenge.
If only I could get something like that for elementals, and the ability to summon all of them. A dungeon can dream, right?
“How do I use it?” Naia asked, bobbing up and down in excitement.
“This is a good spot to try it out,” Mato said.
Nodding, Ali said, “Why don’t you fill this cave with your domain first? Then I can help you make a boss here.”
It was a good chokepoint and the reason the dungeon had been such a pain for Naia, and she was certain Calen would approve of the strategic location. Once again, her mental acuity seemed to have sharpened in perceptible ways, her question concise and brimming with curiosity.
While Naia grew her ropy domain mana into the chamber, Ali met Mato’s gaze.
“Fire, for sure,” he said, answering the unasked question without hesitation.
“Yes, that’s probably right,” Ali said. The new slimes Naia had earned had some substantial immunities against the nature and death dungeon, but fire burned plants and so her first boss should probably be that.
“What now?” Naia’s slimes were still busy laying her mana throughout the cavern, but it seemed strong enough to start.
“Make a Lava Lurker, and then use your ability. I would give it Affinity Aura and then either Minions with some more Lava Lurkers or give it the ability to summon them.” It would be a very one-dimensional boss, but it would act as a hard stop for any plants or beetles or even the fungus things that they had fought. There would be more options if Naia eventually unlocked the ability to make raid-level bosses or unlocked more domain magic spells.
“Ok,” Naia said, beginning her unique summoning process. The Lava Lurker spawned, separating from her main body, and then Ali had the unique opportunity to watch the domain mana twisting into a domain enhancement as Naia walked through the process of creating a boss in her domain.
The lava-affinity ooze swelled to more than twice its normal size and a wave of heat rolled out through the cavern, setting the fungal creep alight. Cracks appeared in the ground and lava flowed from the much denser fire-affinity mana billowing from the empowered ooze.
“Oops,” Ali said, as they scrambled to retreat from the room, her Acolytes throwing healing magic around as Naia’s new boss set everyone alight. While the Lava Lurker technically had a lava affinity, it was compatible enough with fire affinity to work with the aura, but the specialized mana had certainly changed the manifestation of the aura. When she was done, Naia had a room full of lava and a monster of an ooze. Anything that wasn’t resistant to fire was going to have a hard time in there.
As they gathered in the hallway, Naia began making a few new oozes. “For you,” she said, pushing them toward Ali. There were three each of the new oozes Naia had learned. Ali lost no time adding them to her repertoire.
Variant: Rotting Ooze added to Imprint: Ooze.
Variant: Devouring Consumption added to Imprint: Ooze.
“Thank you, Naia.” Ali’s curiosity had been burning on a slow simmer in the background, and now it suddenly sprang to the fore. She summoned one of each of the two new oozes and studied their skills.
The Rotting Ooze was straightforward, having a dual nature and death affinity, manifesting as ‘rot’ being the most interesting feature. It was immune to both affinities, and it had a classic combat-support skill that imbued all its physical attacks – its pseudopod strikes – with additional rotting damage. Other than that, there was nothing particularly remarkable about it.
Surprisingly, her Devouring Consumption – and the three that Naia had summoned for her to consume – were all very low level. Level two in this case. She immediately noticed that the strange ooze was not immune to death or nature, just poison and the usual deafening, drowning, and blinding granted by its innate ooze biology. Its skillset was unremarkable for an ooze: basic ooze body morphology, physical attacks, strange tremor senses, and such. But it did have one skill that really caught her attention.
“Hey, Mato, look at this.”
Consume – level 1
Mana: Consume a fully engulfed corpse to gain at least +1 temporary class level and grow larger [Greater growth and level gain for higher level corpses]. All temporary levels and growth are extended for +10 minutes per use. Duration: +10 minutes.
Death, Nature, Buff, Wisdom.
“That’s insane!”
“I agree,” Ali said, still marveling at the skill, and what she had seen during the fight. It really was an insane ability as Mato had said. Granted, it seemed like it would have been quite difficult to use in most of their fights so far, but against the demonic horde from the abyssal realm, it would have been devastating. Even just consuming all the Toxic Slimes her Spitter was generating at the height of that battle would have pushed the Devouring Consumption to some incredibly high level – that was assuming it didn’t have a cap.
She had a mind to add one to that area as soon as they got back home. It was immune to poison, so that wouldn’t be a problem. The only thing was it probably only gained size, class level, and the associated attribute points – which was an incredible boost – but it probably didn’t gain skill levels with the increase.
Still. She shook off a vision of a monster slime burying all of Myrin’s Keep beneath a quivering mountain. Yes. More investigation needed, I’d say.
“Healing is important, isn’t it?” Naia said, interrupting her study of the new ooze, bobbing about thoughtfully. “How can I get healing?”
“I’m not sure,” Ali answered. “I just learned to make the Kobold Acolytes when we found them in the library.” She couldn’t imagine how much different her progress would have been without them. “I suppose you would have to find a holy slime?” That thought sent a sudden rush of ideas cascading through her head. “Naia, how does your mutation thing work?”
“If my slimes get hurt enough there is a chance to mutate. I never got to use it much because they usually die, but you healed my slimes a lot, so they got hurt a lot more than normal and then one mutated.” She bobbed about a little. “It gets better with wisdom, and I just got more wisdom from my skill advancement.” She wobbled excitedly at that.
Damage… She knew of only one source of holy damage, and that was Havok.
“Naia, would you like to meet some more friends? Some people at the guild could come visit you here and test your new bosses for you. And maybe their magic could help you grow. What do you think?” She knew also that she would feel a lot better having some friendly adventurers available to give Naia a hand if things got bad.
“Oh, that’s a great idea, Ali,” Mato said, grinning.
“Ok?” Naia seemed a little hesitant at the idea but cautiously willing to give it a try, so they trekked back up to the upper cavern where Ali set about inscribing two circles. One teleportation circle, she keyed to her private locus in the library, and the other was a locus for returning which she would link to a new teleportation circle in her collection. The total mana cost was not insignificant, but she knew the reservation was a small cost to keep the passage to visit Naia open.
“Try not to eat these, Naia,” Ali said. Whenever she inscribed her runic circles in the domain of another dungeon, the hostile mana would erode the integrity of her spell over time, eventually destroying it. She was just guessing, of course, but if there was some way for Naia to avoid that, it would be so convenient. If not, she could always return by way of Volle’s locus.
The little blue ooze poked the runes gently, looking for all the world like she was tasting the mana. “I’ll try.”
“Ok, through here,” Ali said, pointing to the teleportation circle she had just finished. Mato stepped into it first and vanished. Naia quivered quietly, but then she blobbed over to the circle and vanished too. Then, finally, Ali followed with her remaining minions in tow.
“Tree!” Naia exclaimed, rapidly wobbling over to the enormous Elder Tree, prodding it with a protrusion.
“Ooh, wisps!” she exclaimed excitedly as one flitted down and circled her before flying back up the tree.
“Runes!” Naia bounced excitedly about in every direction, examining everything.
“Bosses! Poison!” Naia exclaimed, growing visibly excited at the sight – or perhaps scent – of Ali’s Toxic Spitter boss outside in the jungle, visible through the protective barrier. Naia clearly had the usual ooze Tremor Sense, but Ali had long concluded the little mimic had some way to sample mana at a surprising range.
“Come, let me show you the upper floor,” Ali said with a laugh, summoning a barrier to levitate them all up to the top floor of the Grand Library. Naia’s obvious excitement was delightful, and it reminded Ali that Naia had never really left her caves.
The moment Naia touched the landing, she froze, quivering, and instantly turned into a flagstone.
“It’s ok, little one,” Mato rumbled. “They won’t hurt you.”
“Come, let me introduce you,” Ali said, guiding her over to the couches. “This is my aunt, Lira. Lira, this is Naia.”
“Hello, dear. It’s good to meet you,” Lira said.
“Lira,” Naia said, reaching out tentatively to touch her leg with a pseudopod before instantly transforming herself into a perfect, scaled-down replica of the nearest couch, and it was only when Lira laughed gently at her antics that she transformed back to normal, and her natural curiosity reasserted itself. “Aunt? Friend?”
“Yes, Lira is friend,” Ali explained, trying to put it in terms that Naia knew.
“Aunt-friend.”
“This is Ryn,” Ali continued the introductions as she made a mental note to explain kinship to Naia later. “She’s the librarian here.”
“Friend?” Naia asked.
“Yes, she’s a good friend too.”
“Book?” Naia said, flowing up a chair to examine Clarence lying open on the table. She reached out with a pseudopod toward the book, but Clarence slammed shut and scooted out of reach.
“Not friend?” Naia asked, turning to Ali.
“Clarence is a friend, he’s just a little grouchy sometimes. He likes playing fetch.”
“What is fetch?”
“Here,” Ali said, picking up the ball and handing it to her. “Throw this out over the railing.” As soon as she touched the ball, Clarence perked up, bobbing about in anticipation.
Naia held the ball in a pseudopod for a few moments, as if puzzled by the strange device. “Throw?” she asked.
“Yes, make it fly toward the tree,” Ali suggested.
The slender pseudopod drew back and then whipped across the table and the ball flew off, sailing over the railing and down into the atrium. Instantly, Clarence took off, shooting after it, with a sudden flight of golden dragonets chasing after him. Naia’s body stretched outward as if peering over the railing in curiosity.
A few moments later, Clarence flew back up over the railing with the ball held between his covers, having beaten the golden dragonets – with some egregious magical cheating – and dropped it on the table where it rolled up and bumped into Naia.
“Again?” Naia asked, seemingly getting the hang of the game intuitively. She extruded a new pseudopod to grasp the small ball.
What followed was a long series of excited exclamations, bouncing, flying, and trails of glitter and motes from the little dragonets following in Clarence’s wake as Naia took to the new game with extreme delight.
“Ryn, would you mind getting Aiden or Teagan?” Ali asked, watching the antics with amusement.
“Sure, Ali,” Ryn said and promptly vanished.
The game of fetch was still enthralling to both Naia and Clarence when Ryn returned with both Aiden and Teagan.
“Hey, Ali, Ryn said you wanted to talk with us?” Teagan said.
“Yes, this is Naia. She’s a friend and a dungeon that lives right outside of Volle in the kingdom of Toria. I made a teleport circle to the top of her dungeon, and I was wondering if you guys would check in on her now and then? She’s just learned bosses and it would be great to have you guys test them and give her feedback. Maybe you can earn some experience, and she can advance her skills?”
“That sounds like a pretty convenient arrangement,” Aiden said, nodding carefully. “I’m game for some more practice.”
Ali proceeded to brief them both on the details surrounding Naia’s dungeon and the challenges she faced before introducing them to her.
“Ali, I love your library,” Naia said, bobbing up and down happily while Clarence rested quietly on the table beside her. “I have a book, too. Somebody dropped it in my first cave a hundred and thirty-six years ago.”
Her body twisted, extending a pseudopod that immediately swelled up, beginning to glow brightly as its form changed from Naia’s blue to the brilliant yellow-white of a Luminous Slime, suddenly detaching from her with the remains of the connecting pseudopod snapping back and making both slimes wobble under the recoil. Naia reached out and pulled something out of the Luminous Slime and offered it to Ali.
It was a small, battered, leather-bound book. Carefully, Ali wiped some of the glowing slime off the spine and cover, realizing that Naia had used her bizarre teleportation skill to bring the Luminous Slime all the way from her dungeon near Volle to here without her runic circle, as easily as walking.
How to cook a dragon. Callista Merriweather.
“Gift for you,” Naia said. “For the library.”
“Thank you, Naia,” Ali said. Mato is going to love this, she thought, glancing through the unusual and, all things considered, surprisingly well-preserved cookbook.
“Hey, Ali,” Mato said, a strange note in his voice. “Calen just messaged me with a Sending. He said he needs us in Ciradyl. It’s urgent.”
Vivian Ross
Vivian knuckled the small of her back, trying to ease up the stress knot that was beginning to form as her eyes contended with the red pushpins dotted all across the wall-sized map of Myrin’s Keep.
Who the fuck are you?
Every single pin was a calling card, a corpse found, a mark of the Silent Assassin. The guild had had its unfair share of deaths due to the elusive killer, but the more information Mieriel unearthed, the more Vivian realized that this person was sowing unrest and terror across the entire town. People compulsively glanced over their shoulders, checking the shadows when they whispered the name ‘Silent Assassin’.
The worst part was there seemed to be no discernable pattern. And no leads. Vivian could feel the hand of Mori behind it, but she had no proof. Just gut instinct. And the fact that scared people buy protection insurance. Just that minor detail.
A sharp knock broke her concentration. “Come in.”
The door swung open, and Mieriel walked in, carefully shutting and latching it behind her. “Vivian…” she said, with a grave expression on her face.
“Another one?”
Mieriel dropped a familiar card on the table. “Merchant this time. Right beside the South Gate.”
“I was hoping for good news,” Vivian said, eyeing the blatant advertisement of the Silent Assassin’s reign of terror. With a sigh, she retrieved another pin and pushed it into the map at the appropriate spot.
“I have a name,” Mieriel said, locking eyes with her as her head snapped around from regarding the map. “Tala Kane.”
“Tala…” Vivian said, the name pricking her memories for a moment before she placed it. “Wait, the Town Watch girl who did her trial with Mato, Malika, and Calen? The Dagger Rogue?”
“Yes,” Mieriel said. “That’s the one.”
“Are you sure?” If true, this information was the link she needed to prove Mori’s involvement.
“She finally made a mistake,” Mieriel said, producing an extremely expensive set of novice boots and placing them carefully on the desk before her, rotating them to display the spell-thread embroidered monogram ‘D.A.’ on the outside edge of the upper, beside the laces.
Vivian recognized the boots immediately. There was a clearly scuffed section of distressed leather where the Asterford House crest had been removed, likely with a sharp knife.
“She secretly sold these to a Kel’darran merchant destined for an out-of-town black market, and she killed the witnesses as usual. But she left the Kel’darran alive…” Mieriel said. “It was a simple matter to unravel the thread from there.”
“Did she…”
“Kill him?” Mieriel asked, completing her question. “I believe so – these boots show several months of wear, and Tala was wearing brand-new ones. At least, when the Kel’darran merchant last saw her.”
“This… this changes everything,” Vivian said, the implications slamming into her. Bastian believed his son had died in an unfortunate accident on his trial, like so many before him, but for all his haughtiness and rigid adherence to the crown law, the man had loved his son. He was not going to take this news quietly.
“Are you going to tell him?”
“Oh, yes,” Vivian said, allowing a grin to curve her lips. “We’re going to pit Bastian against Mori and get rid of our assassin problem in one stroke.” Bastian may not have the power to oust Mori, but the Town Watch couldn’t make a move on the noble without dire consequences either. But making them enemies would hamstring both in so many ways. “Tomorrow’s Town Council meeting?”
“Perfect,” Mieriel said. “It will be tight with the meeting being so soon, but I will make the necessary preparations.”
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Comments
I feel like Ali should have apologized to Naia for not believing her when she told Ali she (Ali) was a dungeon.
Tim Burget
2025-03-18 16:53:07 +0000 UTCSo I reread Naia's introduction, and she's shown knowing how to speak Elvish, presumably from the elves who used to live in the forest before she was captured. Does Ali teach her common at some point?
Alexix
2025-02-28 18:09:23 +0000 UTCThank you for the meal. Great to see Naia learn new things. I am so looking forward to Mori and Tala getting whatever is coming to them.
Alexix
2025-02-24 19:20:49 +0000 UTCI love how the people of Volle think there dungeon is unchanging and weak. But on the other side of that wall, Naia has a much stronger version and is far more deadly. Speaking of Volle, are people now starting to learn that they have a competitor for the mana enthused water? That will hit their economy hard, and it will be interesting if they do anything underhanded. Are any of the adventurers taking water from Ali’s lake as part of their dungeon exploration?
Antony Claughton
2025-01-27 02:22:18 +0000 UTCIt’s a real shame due to a number of factors that Ali and Naia couldn’t farm that boss. Ali if she got it as part of her tree options would have a healing debuff option to defend her dungeon. Which is an incredibly powerful debuff.
Antony Claughton
2025-01-27 02:17:20 +0000 UTCI like Naia. She's cute <3
Chyre
2025-01-26 21:51:53 +0000 UTCtyfc
Ulsar
2025-01-26 15:40:01 +0000 UTCSecond comment, sorry for spamming; From what i recall the liquid Mana damage people, so what happen if Naia does have some Slimes absorb it??? And what happen if she does it with all her Slimes, would they earn a "second" Affinity (Nature or Light) or would all change into the "same" Nature/Light Slime??? Also with Havok and his Blessing how long till we see some "Void Slime"???
Azgaroth
2025-01-26 15:29:38 +0000 UTCThank for the chapter. Can't wait for the shit show to begin.... Also the Devouring Ooze, against Undead.... This would super useful, even more if the Boss/Undead have Skills to summon more "Lesser Undead".... Can't wait for a Level 150 Ooze rampaging inside the Dungeon.... But i hope Naia will grow strong enough with both the Lava Lurker Boss and the adventurer coming into her dungeon.... Perhaps she became strong enough to "break away" from Volle, or at least that she "dictate" the relationship going forward instead of the City.... Also, does Naia has a Shrine??? Because between the Shrine from "Necro-bastard", the Shrine from the Rot Dungeon, perhaps they can count on the Fire Dungeon (if Ali become Friend with the Drake, no need to kill someone that "gentle/friendly".....), and some study (without Deconstruction...) of the Keep's Artificial Shrine, to upgrade her own and/or to earn an advancement to "seed" Shrine in dungeon..... (Bonus for those that delve Naia's, and perhaps as "Export", if Ali can grow multiple Shrines often enough, and they are "better" than the Artificial Shrines....)
Azgaroth
2025-01-26 15:17:28 +0000 UTCWhat would happen if Ali gave a boss a summon that she herself can't summon, For example a bone mage boss which could summon a bone elemental, her mana can't bring it to life but it's resivation is to the mage who does have bone affinity???
Charles Hughes
2025-01-26 15:15:43 +0000 UTC