What was ahead of me diving through the gate was a rather large room.

The size is about the same as Lynn's room, so maybe 20 tatami won't go down.

"Room..."

"... Safe point, I guess. Maybe when you clear it, they'll send you back here."

"Exactly. Gentile traveler."

Unexpectedly we turned to the voice hung from behind.

A nun who certainly wasn't supposed to be there when he looked over the room all the way once, stands behind him at some point.

The moment I tried to set up a weapon on my guard, I realized that the face was what I saw.

"Uh, you're a navigator, aren't you?

"Yeah, it's been a while, traveler skna"

The nun with a smile on my words gave me guidance when I set the initial settings for NPC's... surely it was a name like Illis.

It was an NPC commonly known as the Navigator.

I remember because it was only two weeks before I last saw her, but Lynn seemed to finally realize it after a little thought.

"This is a place of peace. It's a space to get ready before you try a dungeon."

"When I say prep, there's nothing here, is there?

"That's natural. While you're at peace, it's a space where you can unlock a lot of features in consideration for Stardust Shards."

Lynn's answer to the question was, in short, to collect shards of stardust.

I see this room with nothing is a safe point where you can customize it yourself.

"Uh... grasp grasp. So, what do you do when you want to go back to Fierce?

"You can exchange return tags by collecting a certain number of Stardust Shards. This is a measure to keep the monster from crossing from this world to that one. I hope you understand."

"How to replace it?

"I will do all the exchange of items, not just return bills. Call me if you need anything."

As far as the words of the navigator are concerned, thank you. That gate looks like a one-way street. Because they won't let you cross the monster, I guess that means if the road is connected, the monster could flood the city.

But isn't that why you set up gates all over the city on purpose in the first place?

If we'd done more on the border, we wouldn't have to go one-way, would we?

I thought so, but I didn't put it in my mouth.

There's no way Lynn can think of anything that even I can think of, and aside from where the gate was installed, the reason for the one-way trip itself was convincing.

"If that's the case, fine. That door over there is good for a dungeon, right?

"Yes, use that path to the Labyrinth of Stardust. Defeat the Lord of the Labyrinth or turn back the way you came and you will reach this space."

"Yes, sir. Okay, let's go, Nana."

"Rika-yi"

Good luck.

Waving at the dusty, bowed head navigator, we dived through the door to the dungeon.

We dived through the door and stood down on a meadow with a view of the starry sky. It was like a dungeon and other ragged fields.

"Hmm...... Nana, can you throw thoughtfully into the sky?

"Wait a minute...... Shit!

Thoughtful toward the top. The iron balls thrown using up to skill bounced back by hitting "something" without going a hundred meters.

Zdon! and Lin opened her mouth as she made a noise and recovered the iron sphere buried on the ground.

"I see." In the dungeon, too. "

"So what just hit the ceiling?

"Probably. It's too open to call a labyrinth, but it's certainly a convenient terrain to take some time to explore."

Although the surroundings are brighter than imagined thanks to the moonlight and starlight, that ceiling seems to create an environment called "night," which is no different to the dark.

Still, it's a very flat field except there are woods everywhere.

If this is all the prospect, I see enough.

"Lynn, there's a hole in the wall about a kilometer over there."

"There you go, Nana. I don't know if it's a staircase, but let's just go check it out."

Lynn reacts with joy to my words when she finds a hole wide open in the wall.

I'm not just talking about WLO, but there are things called dungeons that have a clear hierarchy and things that don't.

For example, the scorched rock cave that Toka properly went to was a type of dungeon with no hierarchy and gradual descent of the interior of the cave. If I insist, I can say the type of dungeon that divides the upper, middle, and lower layers.

The hierarchical type goes without saying. It's about a dungeon that changes the strength and environment of your enemies every time you go down the stairs.

The Labyrinth of Stardust, this event dungeon, is a dungeon lurked without any prior information.

So we don't know what structure this dungeon is, and we don't know what's coming out.

All I know is that it's a dungeon for players after Fierce.

Perhaps Lynn is assembling information for the offense now at a terrible rate.

Sometimes this event is for the surroundings, and Lynn should be thinking in that direction.

All I could do was tell Lynn the information I had gained from the primitive collection of information using the five senses.

"Mmm... Lynn, diagonal rear, two pretty fast monsters coming"

You don't have to use your enemy skills to perceive monster attacks with the sound of stepping on the grass.

Reporting to Lynn, I tried to pull out a shadow stitch and Lynn controlled me by hand.

"Two wolf monsters."

A black-colored wolf approaching us, dispersed in the darkness of night.

Lynn never sets up a cane, but draws letters in the air with her magically wrapped fingertips.

"Lightning. Run, Petite Bolt."

"Petit Bolt" is the magic of stopping someone from paralyzing them for just a few moments. Lynn, who hit the nearest Wolf with that, starts chanting again without getting her hair in between.

That, too, probably without stopping the fingertips that draw the letters to activate some magic.

"Lightning. Run, Petite Bolt."

The moment another petite bolt hit another one of the wolves, the letters depicted in the universe emitted intense light.

"Lightning Bolt"

A thunder tearing heaven burns down two wolves. Powerful range magic with perhaps intermediate or higher power will do a lot of damage to the two wolves.

Although it was powerful magic, both bodies are still alive while taking about 80% of the damage. But you're paralyzed and unable to move, and there's no sign you're going to attack me right away.

"Thunderball."

The two wolves were pierced by the elementary lightning magic unleashed by Lynn and died lightly.

"You shouldn't be tough on boulders from the ground floor, right?"

That's what Lynn said, smiling with her hands down that she was spreading.

"What were you doing with that?

"Multiple activation of magic...... no, you should say wait in parallel. This game can be combined with chanting and other ways to activate it."

I was watching Lynn fight and I had no idea what she was doing, and I honestly asked her what she was doing.

According to Lynn's explanation, magic has several other different activation methods besides chanting.

The same is true, for example, of the writing magic that Lynn used, the music magic that uses instruments, and the formation magic that uses items.

Prepare powerful magic at the same time as you perform chants, knocking them into gaps made with chant magic. Or vice versa, defend yourself with another magic while chanting powerful magic.

Says "difficult enough to play the piano". I could play the piano, too, but I didn't feel like I could handle the kind of technology that handles a bunch of magic in parallel.

"Well... now you have eight shards of stardust. Well, how much is one worth?"

"I don't even care about efficiency. If the boss is strong, he might as well get around Trillian's."

"I don't think there's much in the boulder."

For example, a dungeon that gets ten shards of stardust in a circle, but takes two hours, and a dungeon that's one in a circle, but can turn in ten minutes, the latter is more efficient.

The difference is only insignificant, but given the fact that it will keep spinning for seven days, it's a chilli tsumo.

Nevertheless, the difference in actual efficiency is not known.

Maybe Fierce is smashing and efficient, or there is no differentiation due to the difficulty of being out-of-the-box.

"Anyway, I'm going to head to the hole just now. I'll remember all the fine terrain, so Nana's just the enemy, please."

"I hope it's not randomly generated"

"Still, there are patterns. Let's not get the feeling by the end of the day."

There's a reason Lynn can say "remember it all" as a matter of course.

Lynn, who can stay focused for nearly eighty hours, either because she spends most of her time concentrating while awake, or because her memory far surpasses her constant sole.

That's one of the reasons Lynn was doing her bluffing grades in her studies and learning, which makes her focus on things fundamentally different.

So basically, Lynn never forgets what she thought she'd "remember".

However, I tend to remember only fairly blurred things that I didn't have to remember for that matter.

I think the reason I forgot the Navigator's face earlier is because I'll never see that NPC again.

"Well, that's usually the stairs."

"Let's just get down. Which way are we going to go around, and we can do it later. I'll try to keep it as low as I can and head to the boss."

"Aye ~"

We headed to the second tier of the Labyrinth of Stardust as we descended the stairs with wide sides and small steps in vain.