The screen began to tear. The "Win" trophies flooded his inventory so fast the sound effect turned into a continuous, deafening screech.
"I’m a god," Leo whispered, watching his name rocket to the top of the Global Leaderboard. RACE CLICKER INFINITE SPEED SCRIPT
But then, the music stopped. The other players froze mid-stride. A shadow loomed over the track—a giant, default "Noob" avatar with glowing red eyes, the symbol of the server’s automated Warden. The screen began to tear
Leo’s monitor went black. When he tried to reboot, all he saw was a single line of text in the corner of his screen: Slow down. The finish line is closer than you think. But then, the music stopped
He didn't run; he deleted the distance between himself and the finish line. The stadium became a smear of light. He passed the 50,000-stud mark in a millisecond. Then 1,000,000. He wasn't just winning the race; he was outrunning the game’s ability to render the track.
The world shifted. His Speed counter didn’t just climb; it broke. The numbers blurred into a white streak, soaring past millions, then billions, into scientific notation. His avatar began to vibrate, its limbs twitching with the energy of a collapsing star. The race countdown hit zero. GO!
His PC fans roared like a jet engine. On his screen, the Speed counter began to count backward into negative numbers.
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