His world was black.
Or was it white?
He experienced a range of colors that beggared all things previous. He had seen them before, but he had never stopped to consider them as a spectrum. As the world around him was written into existence by strings of unseen, unknowable code, Jimmy froze. His own flesh in the moment of transfer was rent from bone and sinew, and he was transcribed into data; but he felt no discomfort. Ambient sound filtered through his HUD and the gentle background music pulled him away from the comfort of his home. This was a different place than he knew. He was in his room- or his body was, at least. His mind was somewhere worlds away.
His fingers moved reflexively, in the same way an infant struggled to comprehend motor functions for the first time. The confusion written on his face quickly evaporated into awe. While the explanation of VR was simple enough, putting it into practice was another thing entirely. Jimmy had never been a gamer. He avoided things like games, which detracted from his studies or the time he could spend with friends. Jimmy had done those things, but Erick didn't have to.
In this world, he wasn't a failure.
Erick was similar, yet not the same. He could have been anything, and for a few hours he had considered it, but human was what he knew. To learn the subtleties of another race would have been far too great of a setback. He wanted every advantage. He wanted to thrive, and to be successful. His first steps surprised him, because they felt no different from what he knew. Erick decided to walk, and so, his legs moved. He felt the sunlight that filtered through treetops and the humidity of the air carried on the breeze. It felt cleaner than the dank, dirty, dustiness of his dark room. "This is unreal."
He heard his own voice come through the avatar, but it was completely foreign to him. The game had allowed him to decide on how he wanted to sound, either his own voice or some variation of presets, but when he heard it, he blinked. "Really unreal," he muttered, and for a moment he stood in a daze. Erick looked over his body and at the various commands listed across his HUD. The inventory menu, the character menu, his vitals... this was the perfect opportunity to familiarize himself, before anything crazy happened. His clothing looked unassuming, whereas his expectation was fantastic armor or voluminous robes. When he thought about "roleplaying games," Dungeons and Dragons came to mind. This felt different from that, somehow- or at least, different from what little understanding he had of that.
The menu flickered open immediately as he touched the air in a predictable pattern. His skills now visible, he tried to wrap his mind around what he had chosen. "This is... a lot," he murmured aloud as he struggled to process an overabundance of information in a short span of time. "Am I going to be able to handle something like this?"
Doubt settled onto his shoulders and jeered him. His brow furrowed and he closed his eyes. "Settle down," he told himself. "One step at a time..."
Most players might have begun their adventure within minutes of their login, but Erick was not most players.
"Terrasphere for Dummies" was now in session.
Or was it white?
He experienced a range of colors that beggared all things previous. He had seen them before, but he had never stopped to consider them as a spectrum. As the world around him was written into existence by strings of unseen, unknowable code, Jimmy froze. His own flesh in the moment of transfer was rent from bone and sinew, and he was transcribed into data; but he felt no discomfort. Ambient sound filtered through his HUD and the gentle background music pulled him away from the comfort of his home. This was a different place than he knew. He was in his room- or his body was, at least. His mind was somewhere worlds away.
His fingers moved reflexively, in the same way an infant struggled to comprehend motor functions for the first time. The confusion written on his face quickly evaporated into awe. While the explanation of VR was simple enough, putting it into practice was another thing entirely. Jimmy had never been a gamer. He avoided things like games, which detracted from his studies or the time he could spend with friends. Jimmy had done those things, but Erick didn't have to.
In this world, he wasn't a failure.
Erick was similar, yet not the same. He could have been anything, and for a few hours he had considered it, but human was what he knew. To learn the subtleties of another race would have been far too great of a setback. He wanted every advantage. He wanted to thrive, and to be successful. His first steps surprised him, because they felt no different from what he knew. Erick decided to walk, and so, his legs moved. He felt the sunlight that filtered through treetops and the humidity of the air carried on the breeze. It felt cleaner than the dank, dirty, dustiness of his dark room. "This is unreal."
He heard his own voice come through the avatar, but it was completely foreign to him. The game had allowed him to decide on how he wanted to sound, either his own voice or some variation of presets, but when he heard it, he blinked. "Really unreal," he muttered, and for a moment he stood in a daze. Erick looked over his body and at the various commands listed across his HUD. The inventory menu, the character menu, his vitals... this was the perfect opportunity to familiarize himself, before anything crazy happened. His clothing looked unassuming, whereas his expectation was fantastic armor or voluminous robes. When he thought about "roleplaying games," Dungeons and Dragons came to mind. This felt different from that, somehow- or at least, different from what little understanding he had of that.
The menu flickered open immediately as he touched the air in a predictable pattern. His skills now visible, he tried to wrap his mind around what he had chosen. "This is... a lot," he murmured aloud as he struggled to process an overabundance of information in a short span of time. "Am I going to be able to handle something like this?"
Doubt settled onto his shoulders and jeered him. His brow furrowed and he closed his eyes. "Settle down," he told himself. "One step at a time..."
Most players might have begun their adventure within minutes of their login, but Erick was not most players.
"Terrasphere for Dummies" was now in session.