Translator: EndlessFantasy Translation Editor: EndlessFantasy Translation
The first thing he saw upon returning home was his mother Li Yun hard at work in the kitchen.
Knowing that Yu Luocheng would be returning home that day, sheâd gone on a shopping spree through the supermarket, buying a bunch of stuff in order to give him a warm welcome home.
Not counting those two years heâd run away, going to university was his first time being away from home for an extended period of time. Somehow, whenever he wasnât around, Li Yun found herself feeling profoundly anxious, always worrying that he might suddenly vanish from contact like beforeâexcept this time for good.
Many times sheâd wanted to apply for leave to travel up to Shanghai and visit him, but heâd managed to dissuade her from doing so.
Luocheng wasnât a little boy anymore. Running away from home was no longer something he would even consider.
After helping him bring in his things, Li Yun bustled right back to the kitchen.
His father Yu Jing was sitting on his revolving chair, watching TV. It was always news, current affairs, and politics. Luocheng didnât fuss over why his interests were always so narrowly constrained.
When Luocheng took a seat, his father glanced at him once, indifferently.
But not a minute later, Yu Jing spoke up: âHow are your grades? What are your marks? Whatâs your placing?â
âDad, thereâs no placing in university, alright? And I donât keep track of my marks, as long as I pass everything.â
Truth be told, Luocheng was still nervous that he might have failed something. And then, if a copy of those results was mailed home⦠next semester, there would no longer be any hope of fooling around like heâd planned. Kiss that notion goodbye.
He owed so much to the lady Bai Feifei.
âOh. I see.â Having never been to university himself, Yu Jing had no idea what things were like there. He couldnât think of how to carry on the conversation.
Luocheng was similarly taciturn. Conversations with his father never went beyond inquiries about his academic performance, conduct at school, tutelage from his teachers, and advice to focus on âpractical concernsâ⦠topics of this nature.
It was hard to blame Luocheng for never saying much to his father. He was a dinosaur, moments away from being rendered obsolete by the modern world, and Luocheng had no idea what there was he could say to him.
It felt like entering a game to find one of your teammates hollering that the enemy had gotten First Blood by having the entire team prepare an ambush in a bush along the Top lane. You were farming in the Bottom lane when this occurred, but they shriek something like this at you: âWhy didnât you come and help? We could have gotten First Blood!â
Times like those, you could only say that not everyone plays the same game the same way.
Luocheng didnât expect his father to be savvy about the internet and gaming. There were still a great many people like his old man, who looked upon an internet-based job with deep suspicion and contempt.
âWhereâs that girl, Yu Yu?â Luocheng asked.
âShe came back a few days ago. Said sheâd managed to apply for something really important.â
Bringing up Yu Yu caused a smile to appear on Yu Jingâs face. She was a well-regarded girl, and even the neighbors had been talking about her, saying that the Yu family had produced a rising star.
Yu Jing had colleagues at the factory who regularly kept up with sports news. At work, some old friends had come up to congratulate him. Even the foreman had clapped him on the shoulder. Heâd remained stoic as always, but his heart had been singing with joy.
Reminiscing on this, Yu Jing unconsciously reached for a smoke. As he patted around for the lighter, Luocheng got to his feet and pocketed it himself. âA sick man shouldnât be smoking,â he muttered coldly.
âSmoking is about the lungs, not the liver,â Yu Jing retorted with a scowl.
âYeah. Letâs not having something going wrong with your lungs, too.â Paying no heed to Yu Jingâs displeasure, Luocheng withdrew to his room.
Turning on his long-neglected computer, he logged on just in time to see Lin Dong doing the same. Heâd sent Luocheng a message, lamenting about something.
âWhatâs going on? Shouldnât you all be training right now?â Luocheng asked.
âDa Luoâs computer crashed.â
âTell him to watch less pr0n.â
âThatâs not it. How could he get taken down by a virus while I, Lin Dong, am here? His motherboard is fried, and the rest of it isnât looking good. Repairs would probably set us back a thousand bucks or more.â
One computer short, how would they train?
Luocheng felt a powerful migraine coming on. The LPL was just around the corner. They only had to hold out for another two months or so, and then theyâd be good for cash. And yet Da Luoâs beaten-up old fossil had tapped out before they made it there.
Then again, considering the PCs Team Skycrown was using⦠They were already barely a step up from toasters, making it difficult to pull off intricate techniques. As each game began, Zhou Yanâs computer would lag for five or six seconds before his champion could actually start moving, which was a serious impediment to Level-1 team fights.
In the LPL, theyâd be facing formidable opponents. The slightest vulnerability could easily be the beginning of the end. If their training was constantly being bogged down by technical difficulties round after round, it would definitely show during a real game.
It looked like they would have to resolve material issues sooner rather than later.
âHow much cash does everyone have left?â Luocheng asked.
âBarely enough to cover everyday living expenses. Buying a computer will be a stretch. My ideal professional-quality gaming PC would command a price tag of around four thousand RMB. The specs would be considered above average, at best. I donât recommend going lower.â
(Translatorâs Note: Iâm sure he means a PC for playing âLeague of Legendsâ, not âCyberpunk 2077â.)
Lower specs noticeably affected performance. As pro gamers, they needed response times measured in split-seconds. A few milliseconds too slow, and it could cost them the whole game. Computer specs werenât a matter to compromise on. The best thing would be to get machines similar to what theyâd be using during tournaments.
However, Team Skycrown still had four other computers which also needed upgrading. Four thousand apiece meant sixteen thousand in all. Where would they find that kind of money? There had been no other competitions going on anywhere lately, so that wasnât an option.
The prize money Luocheng had won from the LOL University League, heâd already given it all to Lin Dong as sponsorship funds, and it had only been enough to allow them to subsist on instant noodles every day.
If the five men of Team Skycrown ate regular meals, the bare minimum would still cost a total of 150 RMB every day, coming up to 4,500 RMB monthly. Rental, utilities, broadband, and a substantial electricity bill combined to demand an additional 2,000 RMB.
That was to say, if the members of Team Skycrown did nothing every day besides play âLeague of Legendsâ, never buying clothes or toiletries, never drinking or going out for a night on the town, and skipping all forms of public transport⦠theyâd still need 6,500 RMB every month!
Lin Dong still had about ten thousand RMB left, which would require many more days of a ramen diet if they hoped to survive these next two months or so.
If they sprung for a new computer worth four thousand RMB, they would really be in danger of starving to death.
âWhat Iâm saying is, weâll all have to get out there and pick up some odd jobs, so weâll be able to get a new PC for Da Luo as soon as possible.â
âOut of the question. Your priority should be training. Nothing else on the side,â Luocheng sternly decreed.
What nonsense was this? The LPL was less than three months away, and Team Skycrown was nowhere near ready. They already didnât have enough time to prepare, and they certainly didnât have the time to hire themselves out as coaches. Were they really going to settle for last place in the LPL this year?
âIâll have the CPU for this computer delivered over to you. Use it in the meantime,â Luocheng said. âAs for buying a new computer, Iâll see what I can do about it, these next couple of weeks.â
âWhat are you gonna use, in that case?â
âQin Ying has partial ownership of the Dragon Rising Cyber Café now. Using their computers is practically free for me.â
âHmm⦠alright, then. Actually, our situation should improve after Chinese New Year. Iâm expecting to be contacted by sponsors.
âOh yeah, Jian Feng and Li Meiqi have set up a public Weibo account for us, saying that our team has been steadily gaining attention. Iâve sent them replays from our Ranked games, so they can clip them up into highlight reels and garner more publicity for us.â
Lin Dong continued. âThe other LPL teams all have their connections, including direct links to the people behind the official website. Theyâre building up a lot of hype for themselves, but we havenât been doing anything like that.â
âAre those two seriously going to manage our team for us?â
âThey seem sincere enough. You know, if we make it past a hundred thousand followers on Weibo, one sponsored ad from a hardware brand and we could earn over a thousand bucks. Meiqi says sheâs got a friend named Hu Yue whoâs an expert on this sort of thing. Meiqi is consulting with her, and feels certain she can set up a real online presence for us.â
âThatâs great. Theyâre really going to a lot of trouble for us.â
âAnd get this: Weâll have to make sure to court YY and QT as well. You can live-stream from both those platforms, Iâm sure you know. If we can set up our own accounts there too, we could be like Team Daemons or Team Sky, with tens of thousands of active viewers every day. That sort of outreach alone could already pay for various everyday expenses, and weâd have a more stable source of revenue.â
âIâm not actually that good at this sort of thingâ¦â Luocheng admitted.
âJian Feng and Meiqi are all over it. Recently, theyâve been researching the management procedures of established entertainment agencies.â
âLi Meiqi is honestly throwing in with us?â Luocheng asked again.
Team Skycrown was planning to be in this for the long haul, so they would need committed managers and advertising staff. They were starting from zero, with nothing to their name. If they didnât give it their all, theyâd never rise above the throng.
âShe doesnât sound like sheâs kidding around. Remember that she handled all sponsorship matters for the Shanghai University Gaming Society. She says that when the new semester begins, sheâll be able to lure those same sponsors over to Skycrown. Thereâs not a lot of money there, but they could eventually help us to draw in bigger sponsors.â
âWhat are you getting at? No matter how you slice it, sheâs still just a third-year university student.â
âIâm suggesting we take her on as our manager. Certainly itâs beyond the five of us. Concerning her studies, she told me that her family lets her be, so sheâs free to do as she pleases. I admit Iâm not certain how long her motivation will hold out, and whether sheâll keep doing her best all the way.â
âThen donât rush into anything. Letâs wait and see.â
âYup. Do it right, or donât do it at all. A short-lived spurt of passion will ultimately leave us in more awkward straits.â
***
Luocheng ended the voice call, and rubbed his temples.
Declining to sign on with an agency, and trying to strike out on their own instead⦠it seemed to involve a lot more than just five people practicing together all day and taking part in tournaments. It was hard to say how many more obstacles theyâd encounter along this path.
In any event, theyâd take things one step at a time. For now, that meant getting a functional computer for Da Luo.
Luocheng had forbidden them from taking up any jobs on the side, and yet gamers like them were most suited to earn money through online coaching servicesâ¦
Over in the United States, strict measures had been taken to curb the practice of âELO-boostingâ1. As a player of professional integrity, Luocheng himself frowned upon pro players disrupting the balance of the game like that.
But times were toughâ¦
Luocheng found his way to the LOL forums, browsing quickly through the threads in search of ways to make some money.