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<p> *Contains gender-bender content </p> <p> Rio White is a peculiar-looking teenage boy with seemingly no redeemable traits. He lived his ordinary life away from the horrors from afar, the truths, and the atrocious cults... or it appeared to be so. </p> <p> After encountering a rare phenomenon by "chance," Rio gains the Affinity [The Fool]. He goes on to learn about Highborn, Affinities, Corrupteds, Berserkers, gods and churches, secret organizations, and finally gets the opportunity to explore the ever-intriguing gray fog. </p> <p> Past lives, mystical gates, a fallen empire, and the mysteries of its downfall—under the crimson moonlight, we bathe in the glow of ignorance. </p> <p> Unaware of the shadows that creep behind them—unknown of the forgotten history that recorded the glorious and the darkest era. A span so unimaginably long, a world where many believed that that prosperity would last for eternity; that was until the calamities had struck. </p> <p> Trapped in the millennia encasing fog, it fuels them with an undying desire to seek outwards. In the pursuit of truth within the deep abyss, there lies terror and demise to all those who dare to step on the Sacred Land. On this buried path, they know best to proceed steadily and discreetly. </p> <p> This is an ambitious story about world-building, but with excessive dialogues. This is a touching story about growth, but with an obnoxiously setting too considerable to follow. </p> <p> This is the tale of The Fool. </p> <p> ---------------------- </p> <p> Additional section from the author. </p> <p> Note: Volume 1 is a prologue. The prologue will serve to introduce this strange world (obviously), and by doing so, it will convey writhing sensations. I will be shoving some adverse perceptions of this twisted world down your throat to the point of making you gag. Your skin will tingle with goosebumps as you watch our protagonist act in childish manners, but like everyone else, masking himself with a persona. Their dialogues may possess significance, but they could only allow us to peer at their surface levels. </p> <p> As this prologue represents his new beginning, emotional instability is at hand—we can view the protagonist and his siblings with clear insight. </p> <p> You will question to yourself why in the first place were you reading this, but if hereafter you find yourself with fleeting interest, still begging to unravel the reason of this world—or for whatever motive—I can ensure you that you will not be disappointed. </p> <p> This is one hell of an ambitious story, one that I probably won't see the end with. </p> <p> This is a work inspired by Lord of the Mysteries and Bakemonogatari. </p> <p> (Huh, I'm not raising the bar, am I?) </p>
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