Misaki leads me as I skip to cross noses.

About half an hour to follow.

"Hey, Misaki."

"What is it, Lyoji?

For some reason, I say it cold to Misaki, who smiles cockroaches.

"If you're directional, say so from the beginning."

"I think I'm lost!?

Your voice is noisy, Oi.

"I went through here earlier, and I thought you were just walking glued around the same place. Daimyo, you're walking aimlessly to see someone if you're crowded."

"Don't think it's not a good idea to tell Texto to just look upside down and figure out about people even though there's no evidence! Plus, Lyoji, he's checking the room, but he's not getting any results! We're all gonna get ahead of ourselves, aren't we?

Muggle. I regret getting involved with that, but you're right.

It's like there's some mysterious wording and tricks, but I don't know.

There's a lot of weapons and crap in the chest, but I don't want it.

It feels like it's used for hexagonal cranks or something.

It would be easier if I could find a key if I defeated a monster or something like that.

Oh, maybe a card summons Diective's husband will get him out of here.

But I regret I admitted to losing.

My husband would say, "I didn't even know I could solve this level of mystery," and I don't know.

Besides, the game software based on it seems to be decent, and the source code analysis hasn't worked well.

Unlike the mimic otherworlds that pull only levels and some laws out of the game, you say the program is solid?

There is no making to kill or erase all the participants in the dungeon without question at the moment, but it is also a story of what to do with it.

I wonder if I have a hand in finishing the game with that once.

End of pledge with my victory...... no, you won't. Not in many ways.

... Wait a minute, eh?

For once, can we clear this time even if we destroy the world?

All right, I'll give you a quick glimpse of what happens if I destroy the world.

You'll destroy the world first.

The Summoning and Pledge Cheat then decides that "it is impossible to fulfill a wish or fulfill a proxy pledge".

If this works, 'Automatic Breach of Pledge' will be established.

Then they'll summon you to the next other world... you think?

Unfortunately, it is not the next other world that is summoned, but a world that has gone through different histories derived from the 'possibility that the world did not perish'.

I mean, it's "Parallel World = Parallel Universe" that spared me doom for not being summoned.

As you know, I cannot prevent the emergence of parallel worlds by 'branches of history'.

Because I can't go beyond the walls of the world to be bound by Summons and Pledges.

If you repeat the destruction of the world over and over again or overdo historical alterations using space-time manipulative cheats...... that bump comes around to me.

A few years ago, for example, I fought an evil god who was simultaneously biased against all parallel worlds and could not be defeated without killing them at once.

The evil god himself was able to defeat Stella without difficulty.

As a result of the reconstructions of "The History of the Universe, in which the Evil Gods that were involved in World Genesis did not exist from the beginning," a parallel world was created that was infinitely equal.

As a result, I was caught in an extra-large summoning rush, falling into a feather that would accompany me from morning to night in another world.

If I hadn't accepted the suggestion of a fucking god, I would surely still be doing the abject evil norm...... no it is horrible.

But there are a few exceptions where parallel worlds do not derive even if I destroy the world.

First of all, a world that has already been established to perish and where the 'branch of history' does not intend to occur.

There's something about the world I took Stella from.

And the other is the boxyard world that sets the stage for God's play (game).

Special space-time space-time where the possibilities do not branch, and therefore there is no attempt to produce a twist in the timeline even if the time is rewinded.

I mean, right here.

The boxyard world is a so-called pot of worm poison to make trippers kill each other.

The ultimate goal is to take all the amplified energy in the boxyard world.

That's why we're isolated from Gaff's room, and no branch of history occurs to prevent energy loss due to a possible branch.

That's why I can do whatever I want with space-time manipulative cheats.

There is no such thing as destroying the boxyard world for me. You can always do it if you want to.

If there is a problem, it could be re-summoned to the pledgee's homeland that it is only the destruction of the boxyard world... or something.

Let's say one of the participants was a pledgee.

The boxyard world is not his home. So if the Pledgee returns to Earth without the Pledgee's wishes being fulfilled, I will be summoned that way.

If we are to prevent this re-summons, we need to kill the pledgee before we destroy the boxyard world.

Moreover, because it must be irreversible from my point of view, I must destroy the pledgee's soul so that there is no room for redoing it with space-time manipulative cheats, etc.

Clearly, it doesn't feel good to kill participants in positions similar to mine without their skin.

It's better to make a pledge no matter how cumbersome it is.

No, but... right.

On the other hand, that's what I'm talking about.

"Yes, yes, here's a reminder from Capi to all the participants -!

And here.

An extremely unpleasant voice interrupting my thinking echoed in the dungeon.

"Oh, my God! Less than half an hour after the start of the game, what a quick escape for both of us -!

... ho.

"Sa, only three more people can survive, right? Relax. Are you a die-job? So good luck to everyone else at best!

With the announcement over, he pointed at me like Misaki had won for some reason.

"Look!

"Why are you doin 'this... but it doesn't mean you're being mullified by the escapees out there"

Actually, I was thinking about that possibility.

There's no way out of here and we're gonna have to kill each other in the end.

"That's just not true. That would mean Capiel's lying."

Oh, well.

He has to be honest with what he's been asked, so all I can explain is that he's as fluffy as possible.

I don't want to be asked that way, I'm trying to seal a specific question.

Conversely, there is no falsehood in the first rule description itself.

"We're not gonna lose, either!

Misaki punches Peppy and her own cheeks to reinvigorate her temper.

"... can I hang out with you for a little while?"

Joining the game is like breathlessness in itself.

I don't care if it's the last time I smash it all.