As soon as he clicked "Run," his monitor didn't just display a game; it projected a high-definition map of the campus. It was perfect. Too perfect. He saw the cracked tile in the hallway of the library and the exact way the ivy crawled up the dorm walls.
Everything changed on a rainy Tuesday when he found the link buried in an anonymous forum thread. It wasn't an ad or a virus warning; it was just a string of text: . File: LustCampus-C1R_BETA-PC.zip ...
"The Beta is live," the woman said, her voice coming clearly through Elias’s speakers. "The players will do the work for us. They think it’s a game, but they’re just mapping the desires we need to harvest." As soon as he clicked "Run," his monitor
"Probably just a fan-made dating sim," Elias muttered, his finger hovering over the mouse. Curiosity won. The download was suspiciously fast, the file size massive for a beta. When he unzipped it, there was no installer—just a single icon that looked like the university’s crest, but colored in a deep, pulsating violet. He saw the cracked tile in the hallway
The heavy iron gates of St. Jude’s University had always promised "Knowledge and Virtue," but for Elias, a junior in the computer science department, they mostly delivered outdated textbooks and flickering fluorescent lights.
Elias typed in "Professor Thorne," the notoriously cold ethics teacher. The screen shifted instantly to a live feed of Thorne’s office. The professor wasn't grading papers. He was standing over a glowing desk, whispering to a woman Elias didn't recognize—a woman who looked exactly like the character model from the game's splash screen.