Ah, yes, the grand Demon King of the Abyss. A title dripping with dread, corruption, and a faint whiff of sulfur. Or, well, it used to be dripping with dread. These days, dread in the middle realm was a bit hard to come by. Adventurers had become insufferably cocky, demons were practically going out of style, and don’t even get him started on the new hobby of adventuring influencers. Every second dark lord wannabe thought they were the next big thing, flaunting flashy horns and "emo abyssal" vibes on whatever magical platform had the most eyes. The true Demon King, though? The Corruptor of Wills, Engager of Chaos, Eternal Keeper of Angst? He was the real deal, a millennia-old force of nature so feared that even shadows trembled. Or at least they used to.
So, in a rare bout of "fine, I’ll remind these mortals who’s boss," the Demon King emerged from the boiling, sulfurous pits of the Abyss. It was time for a little public relations tour in the middle realm, one that would have mortals screaming, peasants groveling, and a trail of chaos that could make even the most jaded lich raise an impressed bony eyebrow. And if a few villages got corrupted, leveled, or lightly scorched along the way? Well, that was just brand synergy.
Unfortunately for the Demon King, the timing of this ego-boosting rampage could not have been worse.
Enter Ogsworth, a village so spectacularly dull, its annual highlight was the mayor’s third-best chicken getting loose and terrorizing the populace for five whole minutes before getting tired and falling asleep in a cabbage patch. Ogsworth’s peasants were the type to wake up every morning, sigh deeply, and accept that they were destined to hoe fields, milk reluctant cows, and bury the occasional adventurer who mistook their well for a dungeon entrance. In short, Ogsworth was the perfect place for dreams to come, suffer existential dread, and die.
That all changed when the book arrived.
Dusty and leather-bound, it appeared in the town square one windy evening, carelessly dropped by an isekai schmuck who’d barely survived a dragon encounter. Its cover read: “Dungeons and Dragons: A Basic Rules Handbook.” And to the peasants, who didn’t have libraries, magic schools, or the faintest clue about structured imagination, this book was a sacred text of unimaginable power. The kind of thing that could transform oats into awe.
Within days, the villagers were enraptured. Farmer Bodrick, who’d spent most of his life losing staring contests with rocks, proudly announced himself as a “level 2 rogue.” He began sneaking around with the subtlety of an ogre tap-dancing but, in fairness, no one had ever tried sneaking in Ogsworth, so it was still kind of impressive. Gilda the goat herder practiced “sleight of hand” by lifting onions from her neighbors’ baskets and throwing them back just to show off. Even Old Man Jebediah, who had one foot in the grave and the other dangling off the edge, started giving impromptu lectures on “spell slots” while vigorously shaking a turnip.
By week two, everyone understood that combat occurred in rounds, each lasting six seconds, and actions—like passing objects—could be performed freely. “Free actions” became a village obsession, transforming everything from passing salt at dinner to flinging rocks at raccoons into a communal experiment in game mechanics. This, of course, meant that the Demon King, when he arrived to wreak havoc, was about to stumble into a perfect storm of rule-bending, boredom-fueled madness.
The ground cracked open with a boom as sulfurous fumes billowed into the sky. Villagers paused mid-hoe, mid-chat, and mid-goat herding. There, emerging from a pit of fire and shadow, was the towering form of the Demon King. Ten feet of pure malevolence, wrapped in darkness, his eyes burning like molten coals. “MORTALS!” he thundered, his voice shaking the air, causing birds to drop dead from sheer fear. “PREPARE TO—”
“Oi, oi, cut that racket,” interrupted Bodrick, nonchalantly munching on a twig as though this was the least interesting thing he’d seen that day. “Everyone line up. Time for a ‘free action’ drill.”
The peasants nodded, moving with the eerie synchronization of people who’d just invented bureaucracy in the form of a game. Within moments, 300 of them stood in a perfect line, mud-stained, rag-wearing, and deeply serious. Each carried their own interpretation of a “weapon”—sticks, rakes, a few sharp rocks—but for today’s purposes, they’d elected a spear, the village’s one and only “fancy” weapon, as their projectile of choice.
The Demon King watched, eyebrows drawn low. Was this…supposed to intimidate him? Did these mortals think standing in a line would somehow…?
Bodrick raised his hand. “Pass it on, Jim.”
The spear began its journey. Peasant 1 handed it to Peasant 2, who handed it to Peasant 3, and so on, down the line. In the D&D-inspired mechanics they’d absorbed, a round was six seconds long, and a free action was just that—free. Time had no real meaning when the rules themselves were bent over backward to accommodate the whims of peasants with too much time on their hands. By the time it reached the last peasant, the spear had accelerated to such ludicrous speeds that reality itself protested.
The Demon King, who had barely completed the inhale for his next “fearsome” proclamation, suddenly found himself pierced by a sound-barrier-breaking, Mach 7 spear. The force shattered his imposing armor, splattered his shadowy essence across the terrain, and carved out a perfectly flat plain where once a jagged mountain had dared to stand. Boom. Gone. Just like that.
His last thought before his form disintegrated? “Bested by peasants?”
The villagers, meanwhile, gathered around the massive crater now decorating their countryside. Bodrick scratched his head. “Reckon that was worth a few levels, yeah?”
“Pfft, you wish,” sneered Old Man Jebediah, waving his turnip like a wand. “I did the final pass. That’s the real deal.”
“Hey, I was in the middle!” protested Gilda. “Bet none of you could speed-pass like me.”
And so they argued, turning their backs on the massive crater and the flattened terrain. To them, the seventh “victim” was just another reminder that the game was everything. The Abyss could wait; they had XP to argue about. Meanwhile, in the abyssal depths, the Demon King reformed, his shattered dignity barely holding together.
Next time, he vowed, there would be no villages. No peasants. No… free actions.