New York, New York, USA
3:30 AM EST
The rattle of several year old tracks beneath the subway car gave him company in the absence of commerce. Despite late night activity gaining prevalence in more of the urban areas of the city, most of the Burroughs were desolate this far past 2 AM. Most of the bars were already closed, and the few people still outside their homes were as a rule, up to no good. Thom tapped busily at the screen of his smart phone more to assuage the anxiety that always nagged at him when he headed home from work. The train car he was riding in lurched from a bump, then settled.
He glanced up. "This city could afford to pay for maintenance on the rails," he complained in a low voice. "Infrastructure my ass..."
A light somewhere near the front of the car caught his eye, and Thom glanced toward the glare with a hint of fear in his eye. Things that he was not accustomed to or that deviated from the norm always came as something of a shock to him.
Everything about his life was always the same, until recently. His gaze trailed back to his phone for a moment as he recalled something recent, a fond memory. His lips broke into a slight smile.
An envelope flashed across the screen of his phone, and the youth flicked over to a doting message from his mother. "You're late. Sorry, work called, I have to go in early again. I won't see you, but there are leftovers in the fridge. Don't stay up too late tonight- you barely made your train this afternoon, and I won't be able to drive you to work."
He sighed and thumbed a quick, "Okay. Love you."
As if. The only thing I wake up for anymore is Terrasphere. I'm not going to lose any play time.
In the other world, Thom didn't just dream of new, unexplored lands or behemoth enemies to be conquered- inside that world, he did all of it. He went the places he wanted to go, and he did things he never dreamed possible.
Everything about his life before the game was a restriction. A matter of circumstance, wherein he was trapped forever in a cycle of poverty and wages that were doomed never to rise. So, when the news came to him in whispers...
He froze, then glanced back up at the television. What did that girl just say? "The ultimate virtual reality life?"
Sitting in reverent silence on a New York Subway Car, Thom realized that his secret was out. People would see that add. The word Terrasphere flashed across the screen in alluring print, and his heart sank.
More and more people would flood the servers. More people would come to compete for his glory, and they would try to steal away his promised life.
Was the dream over?
"No," Thom assured himself with a soft smile, gripping his phone in one hand and the arm of his seat in the other. "This is perfect."
More rivals meant a bigger challenge. A larger pool of resources for the game. More freedom to grow. It meant Terrasphere would become something...
Even more fascinating.