Note from the author:
Hi. This is my first story in the "Deep Dive" series and also my first story overall. It serves as an introduction to the plot and workings of the systems involved more than anything else, so there is no mature content for now. That will come in future chapters.
I hope you will enjoy it either way.
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I was sitting in the back seat of the taxi, looking at my phone, reading the email again, maybe the seventh or eighth time this day.
It was a promo code for the DDVR game 'Ygress'. The name was weird, but one post at the forum I checked said, that it was intentional. It wasn't supposed to be a mainstream game. I have heard about it before but never paid much attention to it, mostly because of the price. The subscription was three or four times more expensive than even some AAA titles on the market. But when I got the chance to try it, most importantly for free, I felt like I have to take this opportunity.
I decided to read some more about the game online, but the information I found was sparse, to say the least. The official forum couldn't be accessed without an account with a paid subscription (no, promo code is not valid, come back when you are not broke), and all of the other sources had more or less the same stuff, that always came to 'feeling like you are a part of a living, breathing world thanks to game AI systems' or something like that. Sounded like every other game on the market, apart from the AI part, but that was probably just a marketing stunt.
The car stopped, and the driver told me that we have arrived. I stepped out, and immediately spotted the neon sign at the front of the building: 'Floating Brain'. Good name for a DDVR spot. This was the first time I was here, but I figured I should try out the best place in town since I am going to spend a few days here at least.
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- Welcome to The Floating Brain, the best place for your Deep Dive Virtual Reality adventure! — The speaker was on the moment I stepped through the door - Please wait just a moment, one of our staff will be here shortly to help you with everything you need.
Just as the recording was finishing its greetings, someone stepped out of the small room at the back.
- Hi, my name is Jeff, it's your first time here, right?
- Hi, I'm Nathan, and yes, how did you know?
- I've been working here for years, and know most of the regulars by name — he shrugged — so, have you ever played anything with a deep dive, or are you completely new to this stuff?
- I used to play, took a break for a while, and now I am thinking about getting back into it.
- Cool. Where were you diving? — He asked, taking some papers from under the counter.
- Oh, this one place with an overdone sci-fi vibe, near the city center.
- Right, I know the spot. It's called 'The Timeline Jump'. Not bad for a quick play, but it's more of mainstream business, good for newbies — he smiled and pushed the papers my way — no offense of course.
- None taken - I grabbed one of the pens laying nearby and took a glance at the documents — what am I signing here?
- Regular stuff, we plug you in and keep you cold while you agree to all of the things we need you to — he waved his hand and then pointed at the second page — and that we do not take responsibility for any of the belongings left in the lockers.
- Cool, cool - I signed the first paper, then I stopped — wait, what do you mean 'keep you cold'?
- Yeah, that's why I said that the Timeline Jump is basic. Their pods can get up to four-to-one synchronization, with up to twenty-four hours of sessions. They call it the market average, we call it the minimum.
- Umm, sure? - I signed the second document and slid it his way.
- Sorry, I'm used to talking with regulars. So the synchronization ratio is the rate of how much time you perceive to have passed in-game compared to real-time. Even simpler, with four to one for every real-time hour, you get four hours in the game.
- Isn't that pretty good?
- It is. But our pods can do double that — he said casually, hiding the papers under the counter — and we keep you cold to slow down your metabolic rate. The most popular choice here is a full week, but if you sign a few more papers you can go for a month or even more.
- Oh - I didn't even know that was possible.
- Yup. Top of the line, my man. I assume you checked our site and decided to come here for an extended diver, right? More than twenty-four hours?
- Yeah, I was thinking about going in for three days.
- Sure, that's reasonable for someone trying to get back into it after a long break - Jeff started typing something on the PC at the desk — so, one pod, private access, online or offline?
- Online.
- Not a problem. If you get disconnected during the game, or if there are any technical difficulties we offer additional time added to the current dive for free. Do you want that?
- Sure, if it's free then why not.
- Some folks don't want to spend more time playing than they originally planned. Still, it happened only once since I started working here that someone declined that offer.
- Sucks to be them I guess - I laughed.
- Damn straight - Jeff smiled back, pushing the terminal my way — you pay upfront and get access to your private cabin with a pod. I can walk you through it if you want.