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Chapter 22 - Chapter 22: House of Blue People

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In a sleek, high-tech mansion within someone's Infinite Realms territory, Ryan stood staring at his guild members in complete bewilderment.

"What the hell happened to you guys?" he asked, looking around at what appeared to be a room full of ten-foot-tall blue aliens. "I go overseas for one business trip—one month dealing with suppliers in Singapore—and I come back to find my entire guild turned into... what are these things?"

His guild members burst into laughter. A player named SkyWalker47 stepped forward to explain. "Boss, these are Avatar skins! They're the hottest thing in the game right now."

"Avatar? What the hell is Avatar?"

Over the next hour, his guild brothers filled Ryan in on the New World Competition drama, Avatar's shocking championship victory, and the subsequent merchandising phenomenon that had swept through Infinite Realms like wildfire.

The more Ryan heard, the more intrigued he became. By the end of their explanation, he was genuinely curious to experience this revolutionary game that had somehow beaten corporate giants with hundred-million-dollar budgets.

"Alright, you've convinced me," Ryan said. "Let's see what all the fuss is about."

Twenty-four hours later, Ryan stood in the same virtual mansion, now sporting his own Avatar skin and grinning at his transformed guild members. "Okay, I admit it—we look pretty badass now."

Ryan had purchased his Avatar skin from another player for about $2,800—nearly triple the original retail price. The secondary market had gone absolutely insane, with Avatar skins trading for $3,000-4,000 at peak demand.

Even more shocking was the Toruk mount auction. During the premium lottery event, someone had managed to acquire one for "only" $300,000 in loot box spending. But at the player-to-player auction house, a Toruk had sold for an absolutely staggering $500,000.

Half a million dollars. For a virtual mount in a video game.

The gaming world was still trying to process that number, but Ryan understood the psychology behind it. The Toruk wasn't just a mount—it was a status symbol that would provide massive advantages in all future Avatar content. Smart players were treating it as an investment in upcoming expansions.

Avatar's unexpected championship virtually guaranteed that Pandora would become a major content world within Infinite Realms. Future equipment, quest lines, and exclusive content would likely require Avatar assets to fully experience. The Toruk mount's unique abilities—summoning Na'vi allies, providing group buffs, maintaining atmospheric immunity—would be invaluable in that expanded ecosystem.

Plus, there was the pure exclusivity factor. With only five Toruk mounts per server across the entire global network, ownership represented membership in the most elite tier of gaming luxury.

All these secondary market transactions generated continuous revenue for both Infinite Realms and Alex's studio through the platform's transaction tax system. Every trade, every auction, every gift between players triggered automatic fees that were shared with content creators.

When Ryan bought his Avatar skin for $2,800, the system automatically deducted 2% as transaction tax—$56 that was added to Avatar's revenue pool and split with Stormwind Studios according to their partnership agreement.

While individual transaction taxes seemed small, the sheer volume of Avatar merchandise changing hands was generating substantial ongoing income. Many smaller game studios survived primarily on these secondary market fees rather than initial sales.

Auction house transactions carried even higher tax rates, typically 5-10%. The $500,000 Toruk sale had generated $50,000 in transaction fees alone—money that flowed directly back to Alex and his team without any additional effort on their part.

It was a brilliant system that aligned everyone's incentives: players got exclusive items, the platform got transaction fees, and content creators received ongoing revenue from their intellectual property's continued circulation.

In the mahogany-paneled study of the Reeves family estate, Danny approached his father's desk with the careful movements of someone walking through a minefield. Richard sat behind the imposing wooden surface, a golf club resting ominously within easy reach.

"Dad... hey Dad," Danny managed, his voice barely above a whisper.

Richard looked up from his quarterly reports with an expression that could freeze molten steel. Danny had been missing for weeks, and tracking him down had required private investigators and considerable family resources.

"So," Richard said quietly, "the prodigal son finally returns."

Danny dropped to his knees without hesitation. "Dad, I know I screwed up. You can yell at me, ground me, cut off my trust fund—whatever you want. Just... maybe don't hit me in the face? I have a date this weekend."

Richard stood up from his chair and walked around the desk. Danny squeezed his eyes shut and braced for impact, fully expecting to feel the familiar sting of his father's disappointment expressed through physical correction.

Instead, he felt a firm hand on his shoulder.

"Stand up, son. A man doesn't grovel, even when he's in the wrong."

Danny opened his eyes in shock, carefully rising to his feet while studying his father's face for signs of impending violence. Richard seemed... calmer than expected. Still angry, but not in the explosive way Danny had anticipated.

"Do you know the people who developed Avatar?" Richard asked without preamble.

"I... what?" Danny blinked in confusion. "Why are you asking about Avatar?"

"Because, you little idiot, my company is exploring a partnership with Avatar's creators," Richard said, his tone shifting to business mode. "When you decided to use my corporate messaging system to promote that game, you inadvertently created a business opportunity. Our employee engagement with Avatar was so overwhelmingly positive that we're now looking at potential collaboration deals."

Danny's mind reeled. His father wanted to do business with Alex? "You're serious about this?"

"Dead serious. The Avatar phenomenon represents exactly the kind of authentic brand engagement we've been trying to achieve for years. If we can formalize a partnership, it could be incredibly valuable for both companies."

"But... how would a grocery chain partner with a video game?"

"Product placement, themed promotions, cross-marketing opportunities—there are dozens of ways to leverage Avatar's cultural impact," Richard explained impatiently. "The question is whether you can help facilitate introductions to the development team."

Danny felt like he was trapped in some kind of alternate reality. "I... yeah, I might know someone who could help with that. But you have to promise to keep it confidential. I gave my word about maintaining privacy."

"Fine. Who's your contact?"

"Alex Morrison," Danny said, then immediately realized he'd revealed too much.

Richard's eyebrows shot up. "Alex Morrison? Marcus Morrison's son?"

The pieces clicked into place for Richard. Of course Alex was behind Avatar—it explained why Danny had been so willing to risk everything to support the project. The tight friendship between Danny, Alex, and Jake had been legendary since their high school years.

But Richard also remembered the stories about Alex's gaming addiction, the family drama, Marcus's frustration with his son's lack of direction. It was ironic that the kid everyone had written off as a lost cause had become one of the hottest entrepreneurs in the entertainment industry.

"Jesus," Richard muttered. "Marcus used to complain about that boy constantly. Said he was wasting his life on video games, had no ambition, no business sense."

He looked at Danny with a mixture of admiration and disappointment. "Alex Morrison just made twenty billion dollars in merchandise sales, and here you are, still chasing cocktail waitresses and burning through trust fund money."

Danny watched his father's expression darken as the comparison sank in. The golf club suddenly seemed much closer to Richard's hand.

"Dad, wait, I was just trying to help Alex succeed—"

"I'm having dinner with Marcus tomorrow night for our monthly golf game," Richard interrupted. "You're going to arrange for Alex to join us. And Danny? Don't mention this to Marcus yet. Alex should be the one to tell his family about his business success."

Richard picked up the golf club and headed for the door. "Oh, and son? Next time you want to help a friend, maybe try something that doesn't involve corporate fraud."

"Dad, wait!" Danny called after him. "You never told me what kind of partnership you have in mind!"

But Richard was already gone, leaving Danny alone in the study to contemplate how his life had become so surreal that his father was now asking him to set up business meetings with his best friends.

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