-anichin.buzz--supreme-sword-god--2024--57-.-36... -
“You didn't forget. So neither will I. —Rei”
The game had been shut down. The servers wiped. But Rei's consciousness hadn't returned. -ANICHIN.Buzz--Supreme-Sword-God--2024--57-.-36...
Based on the structure, this is likely a stylized or encrypted reference to a web novel, light novel, or serialized online fiction — possibly from a platform like Anichin (a fan translation or original novel site), with “Supreme Sword God” as the title, “2024” as the year of release or a key arc, and “57.36” as a chapter or verse number. However, since “ANICHIN.Buzz” is not a widely known domain and the formatting includes unusual punctuation, I will treat this as a to draft a long-form fictional piece based on the inferred themes: a supreme sword god, a 2024 setting, and a fragmented numerical motif (57.36). “You didn't forget
“Kite. The real world is broken. Here, I am infinite. I am the blade that ends all lies. Do not save me. Join me.” The final verse. The servers wiped
On February 29, 2024, a seventeen-year-old hacker named stumbled upon the 57.36 anomaly while scraping dead URLs. He wasn't looking for a sword god. He was looking for his sister, Rei, who had vanished six months earlier after beta-testing a full-dive VR game called Supreme Sword God .
Specifically, it was the latitude and longitude (57.36° N, 171.02° W) of a place that didn't exist: a phantom island in the Bering Sea, called by the algorithm The Scabbard . Here, the boundaries between the digital and the physical had worn thin—eroded by years of undersea cable leaks, rogue satellite signals, and a singular 2023 quantum computing accident that had splintered a fragment of reality.