Chapter 4
Beep!
I took a sharp inhale, like someone breaking the surface after nearly drowning.
[Fourth loop over. Player has died. Remaining attempts before game over: 6]
I lay limp on the bed, staring at the ceiling, my heart pounding out of control. That instant of dying had felt way too real—so real that I could still smell my own flesh, charred and burnt.
I'd gambled on the idea that even though that "killer" was a copy of me with my memories and my thought patterns, he was still a separate entity.
If he were just an NPC generated by the game, then after getting blown up, he should reset and respawn in the next loop. But what if, in this death-loop game, he was an actual independent life form? What if he were someone like me, another player bound by the same rules?
I rolled out of bed, rushed into the living room, and grabbed my phone from the corner. The whole process of my last death was recorded clearly on it.
I watched myself die. Because gasoline vapor was actually more flammable than liquid gas, he actually died before I did. And then, after he died, I was burned alive by the gasoline.
I was now on my fifth loop. It was 12:05 am. I'd already wasted four chances. Fighting head-on didn't work, and neither did hiding. Even going down together didn't count as a win.
I had to find a way to kill him and still keep myself alive. The biggest problem here was that he was "me". No matter how intricate a trap I laid, if I could think of it, so could he.
Because if our positions were reversed and he were the one guarding the apartment, he would do the exact same things. It was like playing chess with my left hand against my right—every game would end in a stalemate.
To defeat myself, I had to introduce a "variable" that even I couldn't predict. Only when I didn't know what I was going to do next would my killer be unable to anticipate me.
So, I sprinted to the study and started tearing the place apart, searching for something. At last, in the corner of a drawer, I found a deck of cards.
I took them out and shuffled them quickly a few times. Then, I grabbed a sheet of paper and wrote down several options, each one corresponding to a suit.
With spades, I would hide in the closet with a knife. With hearts, I would hide behind the door with a knife. With clubs, I would hide under the bed with a boning knife. With diamonds, I wouldn't hide at all. I'd charge out directly, grab every weapon I could, and fight him in the stairwell.
I took a deep breath when I was done writing. Now, even I had no idea which path I would choose. I closed my eyes and drew a card at random from the deck. I flipped it over to see the seven of diamonds.
I looked down at the matching option on the paper. I wouldn't hide at all. I'd charge out directly, grab every weapon I could, and fight him in the stairwell. This was definitely the last thing I would pick if I were being rational.
Honestly, in terms of weapons and gear, I was way outmatched. His axe had a much longer reach; he could hit me with it before my knife could get anywhere near him.
So, knowing myself, the smart play would be to hide somewhere and catch him off guard, hitting him when he least expected it.
But precisely because of that, the strategy tied to the seven of diamonds was the one method he would never see coming.
I snatched a folding umbrella off the entryway cabinet to use as a decoy weapon, then headed to the kitchen and grabbed a boning knife as my real kill shot.
I checked the time. 12:45 am. There were 15 minutes to go before my killer usually kicked the door down.
This round, I wasn't just leaving things to chance. I was going to scramble the timing, too. Instead of waiting until the last moment, I walked straight to the door and pulled it open.