Chapter 4

One month into the game, two thousand people were dead.

The hope that outside help would come had been crushed, not

even a message had gotten through.

I didn't see it myself, but they said that the panic and the madness

that took hold of the players when they realized that they really

couldn't get back was unbelievable. There were people crying and

others wailing, and some even tried to dig up the ground of the

city saying that they were going to destroy this world. Of course,

all buildings were non–destructible objects so this attempt failed

without any results to show for it.

They say that it took days for the players to accept the situation

and think of what to do after that.

The players were split into four categories.

The first consisted of a little over half the players—they were the

ones who still wouldn't accept the conditions that Kayaba Akihiko

had put forth and still waited for outside help.

I understood what they were thinking painfully well. Their real

bodies would be lying on a bed or sitting in a chair fast asleep.

That was reality and this situation was «fake». If there was even

the smallest discovery, they might be able to get out. Of course, the

log out button was gone but there might be something that the

creators of the game might have overlooked....

And outside, the company who ran the game, Argus, would be

trying harder than anyone to save the players.

If they could just wait, they might be able to open their eyes, have

a teary reunion with their family, and then return to school or

work and this would all have been just something to talk about....

It wasn't really unreasonable to think like that. I think I was

hoping for the same thing deep inside.

Their plan of action was to «wait». They didn't take a single step

out of the city and used the money they had been allotted at the

beginning of the game (the currency was called «Cor» in this

world) sparingly, buying only the food they needed to get through

the day and finding cheap inns to sleep in, and walked around in

groups spending each day without any thought.

Thankfully the «Starting City» was a city that took up 20% of the

first floor's surface and was large enough to hold a Tokyo district.

So the five thousand players would have sufficient room to live in.

But no help was forthcoming, however long they waited. On some

days the sky outside was not a crystal blue but covered with grey

clouds. Their money couldn't last forever and they realized that

they would have to do something.

The second category consisted of about 30%, or three thousand

players. It was a group where all the players worked together. The

leader of it was the admin of the largest online game info site.

The players who made up this category were split into several

groups and shared all of their gains, collected information on the

game, and set out to explore the labyrinth area where the stairs

were. The leaders of this group set up their base of operations in

the «Black Iron Palace» and sent orders to their various groups.

This huge group didn't have a name for quite a while, but after all

the members received a uniform, somebody gave them the

somewhat grim name, «The Army».

The third category consisted of, at an estimate, a thousand

players. It was made up of people who had wasted all their Cor but

didn't want to make money by fighting monsters.

As a side–note, there were two basic bodily needs in SAO: one was

fatigue and the other was hunger.

I understood why fatigue existed: virtual information and real

information were no different to the users' brains. If players

became sleepy they could go to an inn and rent a room to sleep in

depending on the amount of money they had. If one saved up a lot

of Cor they could buy a house, but the sum needed wasn't small.

Hunger was a need that many players thought of as strange.

Although they didn't really want to imagine what was happening

to their bodies in the real world, it was most likely that we were

being force–fed nutrients somehow. That meant that the

emptiness we felt here had nothing to do with our real bodies.

But if we bought some virtual bread or meat in the game and ate

it, the emptiness disappeared and we felt full. There was no way

to find out how this strange mechanism worked short of asking a

professional in the field of neurology.

So the opposite was true too: the hunger didn't disappear unless

we ate something. We most probably wouldn't die if we starved,

but the fact that it's a need that's hard to ignore doesn't change. So

the players visited the restaurants that the NPCs ran daily and ate

some food, at least virtually.

Also, there was no need to excrete waste in the game. As to what

was happening in the real world, I didn't even want to think about

it.

Well, back to the main point....

The players who had squandered all their money in the beginning,

who couldn't sleep or eat, usually joined the huge organization

that I mentioned a while ago, «The Army». This was because they

received at least something to eat if they followed the orders from

the top.

But there are always those who can't ever cooperate with others

however hard they try. The ones who never wanted to join, or got

kicked out for causing trouble, used the slums of the «Starting

City» as their base and started thieving.

Inside the city, or the places mostly referred to as «Safe Areas»,

there was protection implemented by the system and players

couldn't hurt each other. But it wasn't like that outside. The

stragglers made teams with other stragglers and ambushed other

players —which was in many ways much more profitable than

hunting monsters— out on the fields or the labyrinth areas.

Even then, they never «murdered» anybody —well, at least during

the first year.

This group got slowly larger until they reached the

aforementioned number of a thousand.

The final, fourth category was, simply said, the rest.

There were fifty groups created by people who wanted to clear

the game but didn't join the huge organization. They numbered

around five hundred. We called these groups «Guilds» and they

had a mobility that «The Army» lacked. Using that mobility, they

steadily grew stronger.

Then there were the very few who chose the merchant and

craftsman classes. They only numbered about two to three

hundred, but they created guilds of their own and started training

the skills that they would need to earn the Cor they need to get by.

The rest, around one hundred players, were called «Solo Players»

— this was the group I belonged to.

They were the selfish group who had decided that acting alone

would be better for strengthening themselves and simply

surviving. If they could use the information they had, they could

level up quickly.

After they had gained the power to fight against monsters and

bandits by themselves, there was truthfully no merit in fighting

with other players.

An additional feature of SAO was that there was no «Magic»; in

other words, there were no «long range attacks with a 100%

accuracy rate», so one could fight large groups of monsters alone.

If one had the required skills, playing solo was much more

effective in getting experience points than party playing.

Of course, there were risks involved. To give an example, if a

person was «Paralyzed» and if he had party members with him,

they'd just cure him and that'd be that. But if the person was

playing solo, it could lead straight to death. Actually, in the very

beginning, solo players had the highest fatality rate amongst all

the players.

But if you had the experience and knowledge to win through all

this danger, there was a much better compensation for all this

risk, and the beta testers (including myself) had both of these

things.

With this precious information the solo players leveled up at a

fierce pace and a huge gap soon opened between them and the

rest of the players. After the game had calmed down a bit, most

solo players got out of the first floor and used the cities in the

upper levels as their bases.

Inside the Black Iron Palace, where the «Chamber of

Resurrection»2 had been during the beta testing, there now stood

a huge metal monument that hadn't existed during beta testing.

The names of all ten thousand players were carved on its surface.

In addition, a line appeared through the name of a person who

died and it gave the time and cause of death next to it.

The first person to get the honor of having his name crossed out

appeared three hours into the game.

The cause of death was not losing to a monster. It was suicide.

He believed in the theory that "according to the structure of the

NerveGear, if a person is cut off from the system they'll

automatically regain consciousness." He climbed over the iron

fence at the north end of the city, at the edge of Aincrad, and flung

himself off.

Beneath the floating castle that was Aincrad, no ground could be

seen however much you strained your eyes. There was only an

endless sky with several layers of white clouds. As countless

players watched him, the boy got steadily smaller, leaving a long

scream and finally disappearing into the clouds.

The short line was crossed mercilessly over the boy's name two

minutes later. The cause of death was «Falling in midair». I didn't

even want to imagine what he went through during those two

minutes. There was no way of knowing if he had returned to the

real world or, as Kayaba had said, he had his brain fried. But most

people believed that if there was such a simple way of escaping

the game, the people outside would have already pulled the plugs

and saved us.

But there were still some who gave in to this easy way of dealing

with things. Most people, including me, found it hard to take the

«Death» in SAO as reality.

That had still not changed. The phenomenon of the HP bar

reaching zero and the polygons that made up our bodies being

destroyed was too much like the «Game Over» that we were all

too familiar with. It was probable that the only way to understand

the real meaning of death in SAO would be to experience it

yourself. This shaky truth would have been the reason that the

decrease in players slowed.

On the other hand, a lot of the players who were part of «The

Army», especially the ones who had first belonged to the first

group, started losing their lives while trying to clear the game and

fighting monsters.

Fights in SAO needed a bit of getting used to. It was less like trying

to force yourself to move but «entrusting» your movements to the

system.

For example, even for a simple uppercut with a one–handed

sword, if the player learned the «One–handed Sword skill» and

then equipped «Uppercut» from the list, they would only need to

assume the starting motion; then the system would almost

automatically move their body for them. But if someone without

the skill tried to copy the movements, it would be too slow and

weak to use in actual combat. It was like inputting commands in a

fighting game.

The people who didn't adjust to this just swung their swords

around and even lost to boars and wolves they would have been

able to beat if they used the single strike skills they had by default.

Even then, if they just gave up and ran away after losing some of

their HP, they wouldn't have died but...

Unlike the attacks of 2D monsters that we see through a monitor

screen, the battles in SAO were so real that you'd feel afraid. It was

as if a real monster was baring its teeth at you and giving chase

with the intention of killing you.

Even during the beta testing there were some people who

panicked in the middle of a fight, but now death awaited you if you

lost. The panic–stricken players forgot about using their skills and

even running away, their HP disappeared and they were expelled

from this world forever.

Suicide, losing to monsters. The number of crossed–out names

multiplied at a terrifying pace.

When these reached two thousand, one month into the game, a

cloud of despair hung over the surviving players.

If the number of deaths kept increasing at this pace, all ten

thousand would be dead in less than half a year. Clearing the

hundredth floor seemed like a mere dream.

But... humans adapt.

A little over a month later, the first labyrinth was cleared and the

number of deaths started to slow quickly. People started

spreading information in order to survive and most people started

to perceive that monsters weren't all that scary if you gained

enough experience points and leveled up properly.

It might be possible to clear the game and return to the real world.

The number of players that started thinking like that increased

slowly but steadily.

The top floor was still far away, but the players started moving

with this vague hope... and the world started turning again.

Now, two years later and with twenty six floors left, the number of

survivors is around six thousand.

This is the current situation in Aincrad.