Epic 234
Added 2025-01-15 10:30:57 +0000 UTCHeyo! Quick question, sometimes it feels like Im writing nothing or taking long breaks but I do write everyday due to my scattered brain, would you like links to updates on various crap I write, not just epic? I don't want to spam you or anything but it might help pass the pauses in updates at times.
Just an idea.
https://docs.google.com/document/d/13s0hSNPJTenqqgLcFWKYGokmu0p3HETbgbWQMcc-pGs/edit?usp=sharing
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Cois was something of an old hand when it came to be underestimated and overvalued at the same time. Most of his generation, the first floor and around, had all changed drastically except Fera and Merry the mouse.
They had decided to change their environments rather than themselves too much, Fera on being the most expensive bar of concoctions this side of Brother, while Merry
Cois didn’t exactly know much about the enigmatic mouse.
So, in a fit of whimsy that would mother proud, he went to visit the little chaos agent in the store room. He recalled the early days when the walls were dirt, the lightning was poor, and it was just them.
He, Fran(other of his name), Billy, Numb, Hob, and God.
Then came the spiders, then came the mushrooms in force, and then came everything else.
“Things are too darn noisy here,” he grumbled as he entered the store room to find it still. Cois frowned, not finding any hint of the mouse in the shelves of utterly random items that decorated the shelves.
What use would a toenail of Jeb the troll from the third floor be worth to anyone? Trolls and open flames only resulted in either troll soup or dead trolls. Trying to turn it into a weapon would be hilarious but sad, and anyone who’d want to eat the nail would be banned from the dungeon, Cois would see to it.
He looked over Luna’s bath water bottles, past ample examples of Mushy’s pots, between bent syringes of that guardgoyle, Doctor, and honestly couldn’t find the mouse so he decided to push through the back, his green hands pushing on the stone which gave way after a slight resistance.
Cois swore that sometimes Maestro kept the passage entrance ajar on purpose in hopes of having a new audience. He stepped inwards and the air instantly warmed with a cloying mix of moisture, wet earth, and something that smelled like the smoke Cois made when his fire spells failed.
A sort of heady smoke that smelled almost sweet.
Cois stomped further down the passage and began to pick up a soft mixture of piano, bass, and a slow inviting saxophone. Together, the instruments made Cois feel like he was walking into a smoky hidden bar that you could only find by way of word and only get access to by the word of someone important.
As he neared Maestro’s throne of power, the edges of the dungeon space frayed to Cois’ senses. He could never get why the musically-inclined mushroom enjoyed living basically over a pit of torn reality where the first floor opened up to the ‘between’.
Cois guessed if someone fell, they might end up on another floor… or in the secret garden. He would need to ask Numb to jump in and test it. The idiot would do it with a smile and be strong enough to survive the fall easily.
Cois had yet to meet an agent of physics that could crack Numb’s skull.
He paused as he fully took in Maestro’s lair, a mix of ancient temple structures that belonged to a deity that demanded blood and sweat and long hanging tendrils that Maestro was connected to.
Cois always wanted to know if Maestro was truly the massive vine growths on the ceiling or the avatar they hooked into that spoke. Both? Neither?
Knowing Maestro, he was likely the sound in the very air rather than anything physical.
Cois began the arduous climb after walking across the long floating road over the between and grunted as he climbed the stairs, passing snoozing mini-Maestro mushrooms that looked harmless in their sleep, maws closed and voices quiet.
One of them rolled on to their side and began to snore with harp music of all things.
At the top, he froze at the sight of Lord Mushy, Maestro, Merry, Jack the Kobold, and Fera playing cards, sitting on the temple’s pinnacle like they were all having a slumber party. Cois stared and they all stared back.
“Illegal backroom gambling?” Cois asked, eyebrows raised at the gathering.
“Not illegal, it’s just not known by Delta,” Maestro corrected with a smile and a curl of a long tendril-linger finger over a card.
“Besides, if anything, we only lose,” Jack added with a frantic nod and some of his cards were backwards, exposing he had a pair at least.
“The rat always wins,” Fera grunted, her longer nails drumming the ground as she eyed her potential hands. Cois looked at the tiny mouse who had size appropriate cards, somehow.
“He’s a mouse, not a rat. Technically, Merry is the king of mice and rats due to recent events,” Lord Mushy said kindly and had constructed a small house out of his cards.
Cois looked at Merry and the being of chaos looked back, his cards ever shifting, ever unpredictable, face down on both sides, unseen by destiny, fate, and all their tools.
“What are you even playing?!” Cois demanded, his voice carrying the sharp edge of someone feeling entirely out of the loop.
“Delta,” they all said in perfect unison, like a well-rehearsed chorus.
“Whoever makes the other players give up in frustration wins,” Maestro explained with a purr and a grin, his voice dripping with delight. The way he spoke made it sound like a game born from pure chaos. He sat back, arms crossed, watching Cois’s reaction like a cat waiting for its prey to squirm.
Cois blinked. He had never heard of such a stupid game in his life. The rules—or lack thereof—sounded infuriating.
“I want in,” he declared, more out of horror than genuine interest.
The cards were quickly reshuffled with an almost theatrical flourish. A fresh hand was dealt, and Cois picked up his cards. He stared at them, expression unreadable.
Two pigs, an IOU, and an inkblot card that, to his surprise and vague pleasure, appeared to depict him blowing up the world. He smirked to himself, already plotting how to turn the absurdity to his advantage.
“So, what brings you this way?” Mushy asked kindly, putting down a card that depicted a chaotic potluck. He explained that everyone now had to donate a card to the discard pile.
Cois grunted and tossed one of his pigs into the pile without hesitation. “Was thinking,” he admitted, bracing himself for the ridicule or teasing he expected. To his surprise, the others didn’t laugh. Instead, they glanced at him with curiosity, as if waiting for him to elaborate.
Fera, the female goblin, didn’t press him. Instead, she flicked out her tongue to moisten her fangs and slapped down a card with a sly grin. The card declared that everyone now had to play with one eye closed.
“Seriously?” Cois muttered, narrowing his eyes. The others complied immediately, either closing one eye or covering it with a hand like it was second nature. He begrudgingly did the same, the ridiculousness of the game settling over him like a heavy cloak.
Cois was going to crush them.
“I was… thinking about my evolution,” he finally admitted, his tone unusually subdued. The air around the table seemed to shift, an almost imperceptible change that Cois couldn’t quite put his finger on. It was like he suddenly had their full attention, not the distracted half-focus they’d been giving the game. The intensity was unnerving, though none of them said anything right away.
Most monsters here were unique in some way—roaming bosses, secret encounters, or creatures with the potential to become event bosses under the right circumstances. Cois, however, was just… a monster. No special designation, no grand title. Just Cois. He hated thinking about it too much, but lately, the idea of breaking out of that mold had been gnawing at the back of his mind.
“You’ve been a pyromancer for a while,” Fera commented neutrally, her tone light but tinged with curiosity. Her sharp claws toyed with the edge of her cards, but she didn’t play right away. Instead, her gaze locked onto Cois, as if daring him to say more. He stayed silent, uncertain of how much he wanted to reveal.
Merry, meanwhile, slammed down a card with exaggerated flair. “Swap hands with the player to your left,” Mushy translated for the ever-silent mouse. The announcement earned groans all around as hands shifted grudgingly. Cois passed his IOU card to Merry and received yet another pig in return. Typical.
Merry glanced at the card she’d received and let out a startled squawk of surprise. The entire table erupted in laughter, Fera’s sharp-toothed grin breaking through her usually neutral expression. Even Mushy gave a quiet chuckle.
They all looked at Cois like he’d pulled off some brilliant, unexpected move. He smirked despite himself, a small flicker of pride rising in his chest. Maybe this ridiculous game wasn’t so bad after all.
“What made you choose the forms you have now?” Cois asked, his eyes flicking between Maestro and Mushy. The mushroom siblings couldn’t have been more different if they tried. Lord Mushy had the air of an old-world noble, his fibered mustache curling grandly beneath his nose, a slightly tilted cap adding a regal flair, and a monocle perched on one eye like he was a scholar preparing for debate.
Maestro, in stark contrast, was unsettling to look at. His wiry frame twisted unnaturally, each movement more like a slither than a step, and his grin—too wide, too sharp—felt carved from a Halloween nightmare. The pair embodied light and shadow, noble and sinister.
Cois hesitated before glancing at Fera and Merry. “Will you two evolve?” he asked softly, his tone almost apologetic, as if he feared overstepping.
“This just felt natural. More of ‘me’,” Mushy admitted, setting his cards down as he leaned back, thoughtful. “It’s like discovering new parts of yourself when you find the correct path,” he explained, his fibered mustache twitching slightly as if in emphasis. His monocle caught the dim light, reflecting a glint of quiet pride.
Maestro, meanwhile, made a card dance between his spindly fingers with unsettling ease. “I was a little brat to Delta,” he said with a sharp grin that didn’t reach his glowing eye, “but then she showed me her music, her passions… she shared a treasure I needed to protect and show off to the world.”
His voice turned almost wistful as the eye in his skull shifted erratically, like a ghostly ember caught in a breeze. “I found music,” he said, his grin softening for a rare moment of sincerity. “And in that music? I found me.”
Cois watched them both, feeling a quiet awe.
Fera snorted, crossing her arms as she leaned back, her sharp eyes narrowing at Cois like she was daring him to challenge her. “I don’t need to evolve,” she said firmly. “I’m tied to my bar. When it improves, I improve. Simple as that.” Her tone carried a hint of pride, her words a clear declaration of self-assurance.
“I’m always going to be me, but I’ll be better every time I get a new drink, a new customer…” She let the words linger in the air, her fanged grin sharp and confident. “I don’t need to physically change to become better.”
There was a brief pause as her gaze fixed on Cois, the unspoken warning crystal clear. If he even thought about sharing this softer side of her, she would make sure he regretted it. The glint in her eyes promised a very specific and pointed kind of goblin vengeance.
Cois quickly nodded, more to himself than to her, resolving to keep his thoughts private. Some battles weren’t worth fighting.
Everyone turned their attention to Merry, who stared back at them with a look that seemed too profound for the small mouse to hold. It was the kind of expression that made you wonder if he was contemplating the universe—or just wondering when the game would end.
Then, with a single motion, Merry shrugged, offering no explanation or insight. That was all the mouse had to say on the matter.
“This is a big deal for you lot,” Jack said, his lizard-like face twisting with visible curiosity. His long tail swished behind him as he leaned forward, studying each of them. Cois blinked, momentarily thrown off. He sometimes forgot Jack wasn’t one of them—a monster born of Delta’s influence.
The bomber fit in so well with the dungeon’s chaos that it was easy to mistake him as part of its natural ecosystem. His wild antics, paired with his unhinged energy, felt strangely organic, as though he belonged here more than anywhere else.
“Evolution is the great unknown,” Mushy began, his tone carrying the weight of a lesson he’d repeated many times before. “No two beings evolve the same way, even if it’s the same path trodden a dozen times over. Look at Cois and his brothers. They all started as simple goblins, and now you couldn’t find three beings more different.” He paused for effect, gesturing vaguely with his stubby hands. “A soul-snatching assassin, a heroic fighter, and Cois.”
The words hung in the air for a moment, and Cois tried not to flinch at the lack of impressive titles granted to him. He clenched his fists subtly, reminding himself that he was still working on it. Titles didn’t just appear out of nowhere; they were earned, and his would come—eventually.
“Do Contracts evolve?” Jack asked, his voice cutting through the chatter. Silence followed, heavy and uncertain, as if no one wanted to be the first to admit they didn’t know—or worse, that the answer might not be what Jack hoped for.
“I think you level up,” Fera said thoughtfully, breaking the pause. “A leftover from being outside.” She shrugged as if the mechanics didn’t bother her much, then placed a Delta Surprise card onto the table. The room grew still as a frothy drink materialized before them, shimmering faintly with magic.
“Plays must drink the nearest liquid possible,” Fera announced with a mischievous grin. The assortment of glasses and mugs on the table made it clear she had planned ahead, her stash conveniently sourced from the bar.
Cois grabbed his drink hesitantly, the liquid inside releasing a sharp, spicy aroma with a tart undertone. It was almost as if the drink itself resented being enjoyed. Yet as Cois took a sip, his eyes lit up, and a slow grin spread across his face. He loved it—the challenge, the complexity, the way it seemed to reflect his own stubborn determination.
“This is just lemon juice!” Jack howled, his face twisting in exaggerated disgust as he gulped it down in one go. His dramatic expression earned a few chuckles, but he wasn’t about to lose over something as trivial as sourness.
Cois, ignoring the commotion, opened his Dungeon window. Every monster had one, though they rarely shared what it revealed. A shimmering panel of text hovered before him, faintly glowing with the dungeon’s signature magic.
Cois the Pyromancer: Level 1
Abilities: Fire. Rune language. Tactics.
It wasn’t much, and Cois couldn’t help the small frown tugging at his face. His abilities were basic at best, hardly impressive. He scrolled down to the section below, where a far larger block of text caught his attention.
Evolution possible:
Grand Pyromancer
A goblin who is part elemental, capable of absorbing most fire-based attacks while wielding absolute control over the element. A fearsome force, though the risk of losing goblin identity looms.
Chief Goblin
A powerful caster goblin who empowers others with sharp orders and strategic cunning. Resembling a hobgoblin in size, the Chief boasts regeneration and physical might to match their magical prowess.
The Bombastic Diplomat
Able to leave the dungeon on a supply of mana, this evolution grants the unique ability to act as the dungeon’s representative. Skilled at negotiations and evading detection by scans and senses, the Diplomat is a rare and versatile path.
Runecaster
Blessed with the knowledge of the Sibling’s coded language that governs dungeons and their monsters, the Runecaster wields infinite potential—provided they can master the cryptic runes. This evolution offers unparalleled growth but requires immense effort to overcome its challenges.
Cois stared at the options, his mind buzzing with possibilities. Each path carried its own allure, from raw elemental power to strategic leadership, freedom beyond the dungeon, or the boundless mysteries of runes. It wasn’t an easy choice, and his chest tightened as he realized that whatever he picked could define the rest of his existence.
The most infuriating part was his own uncertainty. Cois felt like if someone offered him a million choices, he wouldn’t care—so long as he knew what he wanted. But that was the problem, wasn’t it? What did he want?
Cois wanted to be… respected. That much was clear. But the fields before him all promised respect, each in its own flavor. Did he want to be feared, admired, or relied upon? The possibilities pulled at him in different directions, leaving him stuck in place. If Cois allowed himself to be perfectly honest, what he wanted most was to be important to the Dungeon.
Billy seemed content being a spooky tale whispered by those who escaped. Numb, on the other hand, couldn’t hold a negative thought in his head even if you paid the idiot. They both seemed to have found their places, their roles. But Cois?
Cois was burdened with forethought. It gnawed at him constantly, filling his head with questions and doubts. While others lived in the moment, Cois was always looking ahead, trying to predict outcomes, and worrying about making the wrong move. It was exhausting, but he couldn’t turn it off. And that was what made him different.
“Cois, just play a card,” Fera said, cutting through his thoughts. Cois blinked, startled, and realized the game had come full circle back to him. The table was waiting. He glanced down at his hand, where only one card remained.
“Me,” he said simply, flipping over the grinning, smug goblin card. The moment the words left his mouth, several other cards on the table burst into flames. Some shimmered as their text shifted, runes twisting and rewriting themselves mid-air. The glow of the transformations lit up the room, casting a chaotic energy across the group.
Cois’s grin widened, sudden and fierce. “Me,” he repeated, this time with a laugh that broke free like a spark catching fire.
What else did the world need? Cois was enough—enough for four words, and almost enough for a fifth.
“I hate that card,” Maestro muttered, slumping back in his chair with an exasperated sigh.
Cois loved it. The smug grin on the card’s face reflected everything he felt. It was chaotic, unpredictable, and unapologetically him.
Merry folded a second later.
Comments
Me 2.
forwad Nothing
2025-03-20 07:50:00 +0000 UTCAll I have to say is ❤️. Stay strong. And it’s up to you, personally I’m fine either way, just good to know that certain updates don’t get notified.
forwad Nothing
2025-03-20 07:49:49 +0000 UTCI would like to mention that I am addicted to this story.
Hiro Gardenlighter
2025-03-11 04:19:13 +0000 UTCI hope you are alright
Mal_Nightshade
2025-03-01 22:38:49 +0000 UTCWith regard to the note at the beginning: Yes! I worry when online authors go silent for weeks bc anxiety disorders are no fun. Catastrophizing that a three week absence means they died or worse sucks.
BaronFD
2025-03-01 03:18:48 +0000 UTCDid Cois have his choices change because he didn't pick right away?
Jericho Drakane
2025-03-01 02:58:17 +0000 UTCAnyone else kinda want to see how japes would react to visiting maestrom
James Schoon
2025-02-21 14:43:12 +0000 UTCYes I wouldn’t mind knowing what else you write. I totally missed that comment 3 weeks ago. Sry.
forwad Nothing
2025-02-03 15:30:45 +0000 UTCDid his old evolutions get renamed? They were The Rulebreaker and The Tribe of Fire Spirits.
Frederik Gundelund Andersen
2025-01-20 00:05:39 +0000 UTCYeah, I'd love other updates. I loved Aces and Jokers and I was so excited that you finally started on the sequel.
Connor Rodriguez
2025-01-17 04:06:08 +0000 UTCAll the options speak to him because for all his crazy he’s surprisingly balanced. Up until now he always wanted more fire, but he’s grown past that and embracing the rest of himself. If foodie could smash two potential bosses into one, maybe Çois can do the same with his evolutions? And I love seeing the first floor monsters hang out! They all have a really special place in my heart.
D J Meigs
2025-01-17 03:48:21 +0000 UTCPersonally I think that's what declaring "Me" did for/to/with the system and made a class that's him
Michael Phillips
2025-01-16 20:00:12 +0000 UTCseems like it was supposed to be "while merry..." as to make the point of cois drawing a blank when he thinks of merry. there is a typo where gob is God, took me a second to realise he wasn't referring to Delta. I always feel torn between feelings rude pointing out the little things but wanting to highlight it for it to be easily fixed.
PEBZ101
2025-01-16 12:07:30 +0000 UTCSame here, some appetizers between the Epic meals would not be amiss.
HereForHFY
2025-01-16 05:23:28 +0000 UTCTFTC!! Very interested to see how that Evo goes. More chaos!!!!!
Ethan Barrow
2025-01-16 04:31:33 +0000 UTCI do love when the council get together. I wonder why wyin and Fran is not part of it, are they busy with the other floor bosses instead?
Carcavac
2025-01-16 00:10:20 +0000 UTCI feel like runemaster could make him super important to the dungeon, considering it's the entire language that governs monsters and dungeons that would put him on equal level with nu once he gets good at it
Brandon14754
2025-01-15 22:02:31 +0000 UTCThanks you very much!
Tsume Hexed
2025-01-15 20:25:56 +0000 UTCWait, wasn't there an option that Foodie used that merged all options into one that wasn't any yet was all of the above?
Typhoonator
2025-01-15 15:58:26 +0000 UTCIf we are here, we know your update schedule. And we are okay with it. 🙂
Thomas Lawless
2025-01-15 15:49:20 +0000 UTCBurning Rune Master Cois
David Adams
2025-01-15 12:42:11 +0000 UTCI personally do not need updates, i already know you will deliver the good stuff on your own time. Really love the chapter, instead of being a pyromancer he will be a Cois, making a whole new class aspect and path. In the future people will spec into being Cois.
Sardeed
2025-01-15 12:35:09 +0000 UTCI'd be happy to see more of your writings. I just finished rereading epic yesterday and need more. Very tempted to start theory crafting and asking questions in the discord, but I didn't want to be a bother
strainge guy1
2025-01-15 12:15:23 +0000 UTCThey had decided to change their environments rather than themselves too much, Fera on being the most expensive bar of concoctions this side of Brother, while Merry This seems unfinished
Lynn Freeman
2025-01-15 12:11:59 +0000 UTCVery fun chapter. Always like the goings on of the delta’s domain
Kellen Clifford
2025-01-15 12:00:02 +0000 UTCAlways an honor to enjoy your work.
Jeremy Young
2025-01-15 11:43:49 +0000 UTCHe, Fran(other of his name), Billy, Numb, Hob, and God. 👀👀🤣
Saaski
2025-01-15 11:32:14 +0000 UTCI often follow your stuff on spacebattles, and wouldn’t mind seeing that stuff here too.
Saaski
2025-01-15 11:30:27 +0000 UTCThanks for the chapter boss! Hope you're doing alright!
WarStrider72
2025-01-15 11:30:06 +0000 UTCI love your writing always a fun surprise when I see a notification with your name on it ! Post other stuff!
PEBZ101
2025-01-15 10:59:32 +0000 UTCMabey uses the collection or collating option if you do?
Daniel Gesualdi
2025-01-15 10:58:33 +0000 UTCWould read anything ya put on here
pugstg
2025-01-15 10:52:42 +0000 UTCLove it, thank you for the uodate
Antony Wilson
2025-01-15 10:49:09 +0000 UTC