Alex looked a little stunned. "I was the reason? Wait, what? How can that be?" Alex asked.
"Tell me exactly when you ate the Yang source," the girl demanded. She seemed furious, but it didn't look like she was going to harm him.
"Uhh… it was early in the morning 5 days ago," Alex said.
"It is you, then," the girl said. "You ruined everything!"
"No," Alex said. "Why would I ruin everything by simply eating something? That doesn't make sense. Also, what did you mean by destroying a system? I don't understand."
"Goddammit! This was why I told him not to get mortals to do it," she said in a soft voice.
"How did you even survive eating that Yang source? It was so powerful that it traveled back through your connection and destroyed all of our systems," the girl said.
"I… just did. Wait, did you say YOUR system?" Alex asked, his eyes narrowing in suspicions.
"Yes, our system," the girl said.
Alex had a thought occur in his mind that he wasn't sure if he wanted to be true. Still, he decided to ask.
"Were… were you the one that sent us to this game?" he asked.
"No," the girl said. "That's my master. He's the one responsible for all of the artifacts and formation. My job is just being his voice for the mortals."
"Wait, wait, wait. Artifacts? Formations?" Alex asked in surprise. "You don't mean in our homeworld, do you?"
"Obviously I'm talking about that. What else would I be talking about?" the girl said.
"Huh?" Alex exclaimed in surprise. "But our homeworld is a world without Qi. Even if someone managed to gain the knowledge to make artifacts and formations, there is no way they could run it without Qi."
The girl stared at him for a bit before rolling her eyes and saying, "Your home is not without Qi. It's just lacking Qi."
Alex looked at her without a single change in expression. "That's the same thing I said," he said.
"A little different. Saying your home is without Qi is wrong because that insinuates that it never had Qi. But that is wrong. It used to have Qi long ago, but it no longer does due to a terrible battle," she said. "Since it once had Qi, it's easy to use Qi if you get a hold of it."
Alex looked surprised. He couldn't believe what he was hearing. 'There was Qi in our homeworld previously? So why is it absent now?' he thought.
He then remembered a certain piece of information that was tucked away in his brain.
His eyes went wide as he asked, "does it have anything to do with the apocalypse our homeworld went through 600 years ago?"
"What?" the girl asked. "Of course not. Your home hasn't been without Qi for over a few millennia."
"Oh, so I was wrong," Alex said. "Wait, getting back on topic. So our home-world is still without Qi. So how would artifacts and formations even work?"
The girl looked at him with a face that said that it was obvious. "You can't think of anything?" she asked.
Alex shook his head in response. He couldn't figure out where his home-world would even get Qi from.
"Have you earned money from the game?" the girl suddenly asked.
"Yes, I've earned a few," Alex said, a little proud of himself, even though it wasn't really him that earned it.
"What did you sell to get the money?" she asked.
"That's obviously the—" finally, the realization hit his mind as his eyes went wide.
"The spirit stones," he said. "The spirit stones that we sell are sent to our homeworld?"
Alex's eyes were full of surprise with this thought. He never thought that something as simple as selling spirit stones in the game was what was actually running the system back in his homeworld.
"Yes, we use the spirit stones that you players send back to us. That is the only way to keep the formations running," the girl said.
"Wait, does that mean I could've cultivated back in our homeworld if I ever got spirit stones?" he asked.
"Yes, that's possible," the girl said. "Also, please stop calling it your 'homeworld' that makes it sound so distant. Just call it home."
Alex was confused again. "What do you mean? It is distant."
"I mean, yeah it's far. But it's not that far," she said. "It's just an ocean's flight away."
Alex's heart started beating as he looked at her with more confusion and suspicion. "Umm… what are you trying to say?"
The girl looked at him with a bit of confusion as well. "Oh, right. You don't know," she said. "You home, or as you call it, your homeworld is just a small land hidden inside the Central continent."
"WHAT!" Alex exclaimed with surprise and shock very much apparent in his voice.
"Wait, wait, wait, wait! A-are you s-saying… that the central continent that is said to be devoid of life… is actually our homeworld?" he asked.
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