Young Master's PoV: Woke Up As A Villain In A Game One Day

Updated: Feb 24, 2026

Settings

Size: 18px
Line Height: 1.5
Transparency: 75%

Chapter Summary

Young Master's PoV: Woke Up As A Villain In A Game One Day• Chapter 352

Chapter 352: The Supreme One [I]The heavens often sent Minor Gods to the mortal realm so they could consecrate young planets and spread their merciful grace on them. They spent vast stretches of time — eons, in some extreme cases — moving from one planet to another, nurturing one species after the next. While most of his fellow Gods complained about their entrusted duty, Vahn was a master of the anvil who found more beauty in the rhythmic clink-clink-clink of a hammer than in the stagnant choirs...

Chapter 352: The Supreme One [I]The heavens often sent Minor Gods to the mortal realm so they could consecrate young planets and spread their merciful grace on them.

It was their divine duty to guide fledgling civilizations toward a path of enlightenment, ensuring that the spark of intelligence did not gutter out in the winds of blasphemy and heresy.

These Gods were usually accompanied by a legion of Angels called the Seravius.

They spent vast stretches of time — eons, in some extreme cases — moving from one planet to another, nurturing one species after the next.

Among these nomad deities was Vahn, one of the Gods of Craftsmanship.

He was a deity of soot and sparks, bearing seven heads and just as many pairs of arms.

While most of his fellow Gods complained about their entrusted duty, Vahn was a master of the anvil who found more beauty in the rhythmic clink-clink-clink of a hammer than in the stagnant choirs of the high heavens.

His task was to oversee the first beings of early civilizations across countless worlds and teach them the foundations of innovation and technology.

So when he was assigned to the world of Traviscaris, he did exactly what he had always done.

He taught those three-eyed mortals how to cut stone, how to fold steel, how to temper glass, and how to build things that lasted longer than their own brief heartbeats.

It was nothing he had not done before.

It was nothing he had not seen before.

Vahn had watched this cycle repeat a thousand times on a thousand different worlds across the endless cosmos.

He had seen the first flicker of fire ignite in the primitive eyes of cave-dwellers, and he had seen those same flickers grow into the blinding white light of nuclear flame.

He had seen sleek skyscrapers rise where crude rock ziggurats once stood.

He had seen every civilization believe they were unique, favored by the heavens.

But the heavens were fair to all.

And Traviscaris were no different.

To their credit, Vahn never gave them blueprints.

He never gave them ideas, only a push start.

For example, if he handed them a hammer, he would not tell them whether to crush a skull with it or forge metal.

Thus, a species’ failure and success were entirely their own.

On the distant world of Xacau, he taught them the secret of the gear, and within three centuries, they automated their own extinction.

On the now destroyed plains of Aethelgard, he showed mortals how to harness the wind, and they used that knowledge to build ships that carried plagues to every corner of their globe.

So, yes.

He had truly seen it all — the spiral into greed, the inevitable misuse of the gift of technology, and the sickening way mortals turned tools of creation into instruments of suffering.

It had stopped having any effect on him long ago.

To a deity, the rise and fall of civilizations were merely specks drifting in a river of time too vast for mortal comprehension.

Or, at least, most deities thought that way.

Some, however, were truly compassionate toward mortals.

Like his closest friend, Briat’iés.

Briat’iés was an angel of the highest choir, assigned to the same sector, and he did not share Vahn’s cynicism.

Where Vahn watched mortals’ hands, Briat’iés watched their hearts.

He spoke of their potential for kindness as though he genuinely believed in them.

But Vahn never saw it.

...

Not until he descended upon the world of Triviscaris.

••• The Triviscari were different from any other species Vahn had guided before.

For the first time in an eternity, the rhythmic clink-clink-clink of his hammer did not feel like a countdown to a world’s self-destruction.

Because these mortals wished only to lead peaceful lives.

They were not a war species, though they were very much capable of it.

At their core, they simply wanted to appreciate the wonders of existence.

They were not hostile toward one another.

They were not greedy.

They did not see the tools Vahn gifted them as means to dominate their neighbors.

Instead, they used the secret of the lever to lift heavy stones for their elders’ homes.

They used the art of the forge to create intricate jewelry and delicate wind chimes that sang in the mountain breeze.

They took the fire he granted them and used it to cook communal feasts, inviting the lonely and the wayward to their tables.

...

Inviting him to their tables.

They truly had the potential for kindness.

Vahn found himself lingering in Triviscari workshops long after his divine duties were technically fulfilled.

And the more he lingered, the more he began to feel something he had not felt since the first time he saw a world tear itself apart.

Attachment.

He began to feel attachment.

And with that, he stopped being a nomad.

He stopped looking toward the next planet on his ledger.

He set aside his travel-worn hammer and settled into the warmth of Triviscaris, becoming the silent patron of their golden age.

...

But attachment is a dangerous thing for a god.

Attachment creates blind spots.

Vahn was so consumed by the beauty of what the Triviscari were building that he failed to notice when their curiosity turned toward the forbidden.

He failed to see the moment their pursuit of better became a pursuit of forever.

The people of Triviscaris had begun to covet immortality.

The other Minor Gods and High Angels who watched over them tried to convince them that this wish of theirs could not be fulfilled.

Immortality was heresy, a crime deemed most vile by the upper echelons of heaven.

Triviscaris did not care.

Eventually, a mandate descended from the High Gods — Destroy the research.

Cull the scholars.

Return to the stars.

Most of the divine host obeyed with cold indifference and withdrew at once.

But Vahn stayed back.

He looked upon the cities he had helped raise, upon the families he had come to cherish, and found that he could not leave.

Neither could his closest friend, Briat’iés...

though the angel had a different reason.

At that time, Vahn was too distracted to notice that Briat’iés had begun committing blasphemies of his own.

He had started to question the heavens.

And before long, he created a life...

in the most literal sense.

From nothing but the substance of his longing and the silver light of his essence, he birthed a daughter.

In hindsight, Vahn wished he had been there for his friend.

He would have given him counsel.

He would have listened to his fears.

But by the time concern reached him, it was already too late.

Because Briat’iés had created a girl from nothing but his desire.

In doing so, he unknowingly shaped an existence that was above fate because the girl that he had created was never woven from its loom.

Thus, she could defy destiny.

And she did.

Out of the ignorant kindness of her heart, she rescued a young prince who had been doomed to die young.

It was a beautiful miracle.

But the heavens did not see it that way.

They saw a flaw in the divine order.

They saw disobedience, an anomaly that might one day become a threat.

So they came for the girl.

Briat’iés stood against them, as did the mortal king whose son had been saved.

Vahn picked his side with them too, though he knew it was a losing cause.

And just as he had feared, the war that followed — the Rebellion Against the Stars — was never really a war at all.

It was an execution.

The High Gods came and casually stitched the skins of every mortal who dared defy them into the carapaces of insects, and turned their spines into the roots of weeping trees.

Vahn watched, pinned to the earth by obsidian stakes, as they took Briat’iés’ daughter and hung her in the sky before remaking her into a moon that would never stop bleeding.

In just under an hour, everything was lost.

Then the High Gods left.

Ch 1 Ch 2 Ch 3 Ch 4 Ch 5 Ch 6 Ch 7 Ch 8 Ch 9 Ch 10 Ch 11 Ch 12 Ch 13 Ch 14 Ch 15 Ch 16 Ch 17 Ch 18 Ch 19 Ch 20 Ch 21 Ch 22 Ch 23 Ch 24 Ch 25 Ch 26 Ch 27 Ch 28 Ch 29 Ch 30 Ch 31 Ch 32 Ch 33 Ch 34 Ch 35 Ch 36 Ch 37 Ch 38 Ch 39 Ch 40 Ch 41 Ch 42 Ch 43 Ch 44 Ch 45 Ch 46 Ch 47 Ch 48 Ch 49 Ch 50 Ch 51 Ch 52 Ch 53 Ch 54 Ch 55 Ch 56 Ch 57 Ch 58 Ch 59 Ch 60 Ch 61 Ch 62 Ch 63 Ch 64 Ch 65 Ch 66 Ch 67 Ch 68 Ch 69 Ch 70 Ch 71 Ch 72 Ch 73 Ch 74 Ch 75 Ch 76 Ch 77 Ch 78 Ch 79 Ch 80 Ch 81 Ch 82 Ch 83 Ch 84 Ch 85 Ch 86 Ch 87 Ch 88 Ch 89 Ch 90 Ch 91 Ch 92 Ch 93 Ch 94 Ch 95 Ch 96 Ch 97 Ch 98 Ch 99 Ch 100 Ch 101 Ch 102 Ch 103 Ch 104 Ch 105 Ch 106 Ch 107 Ch 108 Ch 109 Ch 110 Ch 111 Ch 112 Ch 113 Ch 114 Ch 115 Ch 116 Ch 117 Ch 118 Ch 119 Ch 120 Ch 121 Ch 122 Ch 123 Ch 124 Ch 125 Ch 126 Ch 127 Ch 128 Ch 129 Ch 130 Ch 131 Ch 132 Ch 133 Ch 134 Ch 135 Ch 136 Ch 137 Ch 138 Ch 139 Ch 140 Ch 141 Ch 142 Ch 143 Ch 144 Ch 145 Ch 146 Ch 147 Ch 148 Ch 149 Ch 150 Ch 151 Ch 152 Ch 153 Ch 154 Ch 155 Ch 156 Ch 157 Ch 158 Ch 159 Ch 160 Ch 161 Ch 162 Ch 163 Ch 164 Ch 165 Ch 166 Ch 167 Ch 168 Ch 169 Ch 170 Ch 171 Ch 172 Ch 173 Ch 174 Ch 175 Ch 176 Ch 177 Ch 178 Ch 179 Ch 180 Ch 181 Ch 182 Ch 183 Ch 184 Ch 185 Ch 186 Ch 187 Ch 188 Ch 189 Ch 190 Ch 191 Ch 192 Ch 193 Ch 194 Ch 195 Ch 196 Ch 197 Ch 198 Ch 199 Ch 200 Ch 201 Ch 202 Ch 203 Ch 204 Ch 205 Ch 206 Ch 207 Ch 208 Ch 209 Ch 210 Ch 211 Ch 212 Ch 213 Ch 214 Ch 215 Ch 216 Ch 217 Ch 218 Ch 219 Ch 220 Ch 221 Ch 222 Ch 223 Ch 224 Ch 225 Ch 226 Ch 227 Ch 228 Ch 229 Ch 230 Ch 231 Ch 232 Ch 233 Ch 234 Ch 235 Ch 236 Ch 237 Ch 238 Ch 239 Ch 240 Ch 241 Ch 242 Ch 243 Ch 244 Ch 245 Ch 246 Ch 247 Ch 248 Ch 249 Ch 250 Ch 251 Ch 252 Ch 253 Ch 254 Ch 255 Ch 256 Ch 257 Ch 258 Ch 259 Ch 260 Ch 261 Ch 262 Ch 263 Ch 264 Ch 265 Ch 266 Ch 267 Ch 268 Ch 269 Ch 270 Ch 271 Ch 272 Ch 273 Ch 274 Ch 275 Ch 276 Ch 277 Ch 278 Ch 279 Ch 280 Ch 281 Ch 282 Ch 283 Ch 284 Ch 285 Ch 286 Ch 287 Ch 288 Ch 289 Ch 290 Ch 291 Ch 292 Ch 293 Ch 294 Ch 295 Ch 296 Ch 297 Ch 298 Ch 299 Ch 300 Ch 301 Ch 302 Ch 303 Ch 304 Ch 305 Ch 306 Ch 307 Ch 308 Ch 309 Ch 310 Ch 311 Ch 312 Ch 313 Ch 314 Ch 315 Ch 316 Ch 317 Ch 318 Ch 319 Ch 320 Ch 321 Ch 322 Ch 323 Ch 324 Ch 325 Ch 326 Ch 327 Ch 328 Ch 329 Ch 330 Ch 331 Ch 332 Ch 333 Ch 334 Ch 335 Ch 336 Ch 337 Ch 338 Ch 339 Ch 340 Ch 341 Ch 342 Ch 343 Ch 344 Ch 345 Ch 346 Ch 347 Ch 348 Ch 349 Ch 350 Ch 351 Ch 352 Ch 353 Ch 354 Ch 355 Ch 356 Ch 357 Ch 358 Ch 359 Ch 360 Ch 361 Ch 362 Ch 363 Ch 364 Ch 365 Ch 366 Ch 367 Ch 368 Ch 369 Ch 370 Ch 371 Ch 372 Ch 373 Ch 374 Ch 375 Ch 376 Ch 377 Ch 378 Ch 379 Ch 380 Ch 381 Ch 382 Ch 383 Ch 384 Ch 385 Ch 386 Ch 387 Ch 388 Ch 389 Ch 390 Ch 391 Ch 392 Ch 393 Ch 394 Ch 395 Ch 396 Ch 397 Ch 398 Ch 399 Ch 400 Ch 401 Ch 402 Ch 403 Ch 404 Ch 405 Ch 406 Ch 407 Ch 408 Ch 409 Ch 410 Ch 411 Ch 412 Ch 413 Ch 414