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Although Alex felt disappointed about the results, he wasn't devastated. Meanwhile, Avatar's passionate fanbase erupted across social media, flooding forums and comment sections with accusations of corporate manipulation and rigged competitions.
"AVATAR WAS ROBBED!" "Third place is BS when everyone knows Avatar was the best game" "Planet Krall winning proves these competitions are just corporate spending contests" "This is exactly why the gaming industry is dying - money beats creativity every time"
Alex gave his small team a well-deserved break to decompress and recharge. Avatar might not have won the official competition, but it had already generated serious revenue through microtransactions. More importantly, they'd proven that a startup could compete with industry giants. There would be other battles ahead.
The mood at Titan Games was considerably darker. Marcus Sterling was in full corporate meltdown mode, taking out his frustration on every employee within shouting distance.
"Over $200 million," he raged at his executive team. "We spent over $200 million on this campaign and still finished second to some European studio that probably operates out of a garage!"
Including development costs, marketing, and the aggressive ranking manipulation campaign, Titan Games had invested nearly a billion dollars in Primordial World. Without a championship to leverage into merchandising and sequel deals, recovering those costs would be nearly impossible.
"Sir," ventured Michael Torres, the company's VP of Business Development, "we might want to consider acquiring Stormwind Studios. Our intelligence suggests they approached several investment firms recently but couldn't reach acceptable terms."
Brandon expression shifted from rage to predatory calculation. "Explain."
"They're a new company that probably spent everything on development. The ranking war likely drained their reserves further. Avatar's performance shows clear signs of resource exhaustion toward the end—they couldn't sustain the spending necessary to compete."
Brandon nodded slowly. Stormwind was exactly the kind of target he excelled at acquiring: talented but cash-poor, with valuable IP they couldn't properly monetize.
"Avatar is genuinely superior content," Torres continued. "Our analysis team has been studying it extensively. With our marketing resources and distribution network, we could turn it into a franchise worth hundreds of millions."
"And right now, they're probably desperate enough to accept a lowball offer," Brandon concluded with a cold smile. "Set up a meeting. Strike while they're vulnerable."
In a modest suburban apartment thirty minutes from downtown, Tom was enduring his mother's latest lecture about career choices.
"Why are you home on a Wednesday?" Catherine asked suspiciously. "Did that startup finally go under?"
"Mom, we finished a major project and got comp time for all the overtime we put in," Tom said wearily. "The company is doing fine."
"'Comp time,'" Catherine repeated skeptically. "That's what these small companies do instead of paying proper overtime. You know your cousin Jennifer works at Titan Games, right? They get quarterly bonuses, stock options, full benefits. Real corporate stability."
Tom had heard this comparison dozens of times. Jennifer's job at Titan Games had become his mother's golden standard for career success, despite the fact that Jennifer spent most of her time in middle management meetings that accomplished nothing.
"I'm not quitting, Mom. We're building something special at Stormwind. When Avatar takes off as a franchise, I'll be part of the core team that made it happen."
"Core team of what? Unemployed game designers?" Catherine shook her head in exasperation. "These startup owners fill young people's heads with dreams about equity and profit-sharing. I've seen it before—they work you to death with promises of future wealth, then fold when they run out of investor money."
Tom grabbed his jacket. "I need some air."
Walking through his neighborhood, Tom felt the familiar doubt creeping in. Avatar's third-place finish had been disappointing, especially after coming so close to the top spot. Maybe his mother was right about the stability of corporate jobs. Maybe he was deluding himself about Stormwind's future prospects.
But then he thought about the creative freedom Alex provided, the genuine innovation they'd achieved with Avatar, and the passionate player community they'd built. Jennifer might have job security, but she'd never created anything that millions of people loved.
That had to count for something.
Alex had hoped for a quiet few days to process the competition results, but the business world had other plans. His Bluetooth headset chimed constantly with acquisition offers from major studios who smelled blood in the water.
"Titan Games wants to buy us out too?" Jake asked over beers at their usual spot.
"Brandon Sterling probably thinks we're desperate," Alex replied. "Classic predatory acquisition timing—approach the wounded startup when they're most vulnerable to lowball offers."
"Are we desperate?"
Alex considered this seriously. "Not really. Avatar generated almost $7 million in microtransaction revenue, and that's with minimal monetization. Once we launch cosmetic items, mounts, and decorative content, we should be looking at eight figures annually."
"That covers operating costs?"
"Should do." Alex paused, remembering that without the system's free art resources, they would have blown through their budget months ago. The system was essentially providing them with millions of dollars worth of professional content creation at no cost.
"Then tell Sterling to fuck off," Jake said simply. "You built something special here. Don't let some corporate asshole turn it into another generic cash grab."
Alex raised his glass in agreement, but before he could respond, his headset chimed with an incoming call from an unknown number.
"Alex! Jesus, finally got through to you." Danny's voice was slightly distorted, probably calling through a VPN from wherever he was hiding.
"Danny! Where the hell are you? Your family is worried sick."
"I'm fine, just laying low until Dad's blood pressure returns to non-fatal levels. But forget about me—what happened with Avatar? Third place? After everything we did?"
Alex could hear genuine disappointment in his friend's voice. Danny had risked his entire relationship with his father to help Avatar climb the rankings, and it must sting to see the effort fall short.
"We got outspent by companies with unlimited war chests," Alex explained. "But honestly, third place for a startup is incredible. We proved we can compete with the big boys."
"Still sucks though. I was really hoping to see you take down those corporate dickheads."
"The fact that you tried means everything, Danny. What you did with your dad's company system—that took balls I'm not sure I have."
Danny laughed. "Yeah, well, I might be disowned when I finally come home, but it was worth it to see Avatar climb the charts. That game is genuinely special, Alex. Don't let anyone convince you otherwise."
After ending the call, Alex finished his beer and headed home. Tomorrow he'd start planning Stormwind's next moves.
Alex was deep in REM sleep when his Bluetooth headset's emergency override kicked in, jolting him awake with David's voice practically screaming in his ear.
"Boss! Boss! We won! We're the champions!"
"What?" Alex mumbled, still half-asleep. "Champions of what?"
"Avatar! Avatar won the New World Competition! We're number one!"
Alex sat up in bed, suddenly wide awake. "David, what are you talking about? The competition ended a week ago. Planet Krall won."
"No, boss, you need to check the news! There's been a scandal!"
THROW POWER STONES PLZ.