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WebtoonLitRPG

THE UNRECORDED

In a world where a global Record decides what you can be, an F-0 porter finds the blind spots where the system's truth breaks.

litrpghidden-identitysystem-apocalypseslow-burnconspiracy
LovedSolo Leveling (webtoon) · Tower of God (webtoon) · Omniscient Reader's Viewpoint (webtoon)
Not for meDemon Copperhead
Chapter 1

Chapter 1

The corridor inside Rift 1174-T1 was narrow enough that the equipment crate kept brushing the wall when Han Jun turned his shoulders wrong.

The wall was not concrete. Tier-1 Rifts still imitated architecture, but the imitation was never exact. This one had grown a corridor instead of building one, its surface smooth in places, ridged in others, faintly luminous under the strip lights the Chronicle team had bolted in along the route. Moisture beaded on the ridges and fell in slow, uneven drops. The air smelled like metal left in rain.

Jun kept both hands under the crate and walked behind the combat team at the prescribed distance: eight meters from the rear operative, outside the engagement line, close enough to retrieve equipment if ordered. His wrist Display sat on the inside of his left arm, bright and flat in the dim corridor.

SI-4. RG-0. CT-3. SR-1. Composite: F-0.

Ahead of him, the C-Class lead raised two fingers. The team stopped.

A motion-sensor plate on the wall flashed an assessment line across the corridor.

[LOCAL THREAT INDEX: 70]

The three D-Class operatives shifted without speaking. One moved left, shield generator up. One lowered into a firing stance. The third drew a resonance blade that hummed with pale blue light. Jun stopped where training said to stop and lowered the crate to one knee so he could lift it again quickly if they needed to move.

The hostile came out of the ceiling.

It unfolded from a seam in the Rift-material with too many joints and no visible head, a mass of dark crystal plates and flexing inner tissue. The shield operative met the first strike. The impact rang down the corridor. The blade user stepped in under the recoil and cut through two of the front limbs. The C-Class lead drove a compressed burst of Rift energy into the exposed center. The creature split open along a bright line and collapsed in pieces that began dissolving before they hit the floor.

Routine.

The wall panel updated.

[LOCAL THREAT INDEX: 12]

One more hostile emerged from the side passage. The rear D-Class operative put two rounds through it before it cleared the corner.

Routine again.

Jun lifted the crate. The team moved. He followed.

That was the work. Carry the thing. Wait while stronger people used the numbers on their wrists the way the world expected them to. Move when told. Stop when told. Stay out of the way. If the operation went well, nobody said his name. If it went badly, they remembered he had been there.

At the extraction route, the corridor widened enough for a Chronicle Node to be mounted into the wall. The housing was the standard sector model: matte gray, circular lens array, indicator strip running vertical along the right side. The indicator should have been steady blue.

It flickered once.

A small fault. A maintenance log entry. Nothing anyone on this team would care about.

Jun's Display changed.

Not all of it. One line.

SI-4 became SI-■ for less than a blink.

Then it was SI-4 again.

Jun stopped.

The crate pulled against his grip. The team kept moving for two steps before the rear operative glanced back.

"What are you doing?" the man said.

Jun adjusted his hold and resumed walking. "Nothing."

The operative looked at him for half a second longer, then turned away. There was no reason to spend attention on a porter.

Jun kept his eyes on his wrist until the corridor bent and the Node was behind him. The Display remained stable.

SI-4. RG-0. CT-3. SR-1. F-0.

His pulse had climbed. Not from exertion. The crate weighed eighteen kilograms. At SI-4, that was work, but familiar work. This was different. The single black square sat in his memory with a clarity the rest of the operation had not earned.

At the extraction gate, a scanner panel washed the team in Chronicle light. The C-Class lead passed. Accepted. The three D-Class operatives passed. Accepted. Jun stepped through last. The panel read his wrist.

[F-0 SUPPORT ACCESS CONFIRMED]

The gate opened because porters were allowed to leave.

Outside, the staging area was loud with the usual post-clearance noise: equipment carts, med-techs, two analysts arguing over contamination values, a wall display cycling through sector threat summaries. The Rift behind them shimmered inside its containment frame like heat caught in glass.

Jun set the crate down in the designated return lane and waited for the team lead to sign off the operation log. The man did not look at him while speaking to the terminal.

"Rift 1174-T1. Clearance successful. Team performance within expected parameters. One minor delay at corridor three due to environmental residue. Support satisfactory."

The terminal processed.

A line of text appeared on the shared screen.

Rift 1174-T1 Clearance: Successful Team Performance: Within Parameters Support Staff: Adequate

No names.

Porters were not listed unless they damaged equipment, obstructed a route, or died in a way that required inventory adjustment.

Jun stood until the team dispersed, then stepped close enough to the terminal to read the finalized Record twice. The words did not change. They never did after certification.

Adequate.

He looked down at his wrist.

F-0.

Then back at the Record.

A decade ago, he had learned not to argue with screens. Screens did not care. They displayed what the Chronicle said was true, and in most places that ended the matter. The world had been arranged around that ending. Doors, jobs, pay scales, deployment rights, medical priority, legal testimony. A number on a wrist and a line in a Record. Enough to decide a life.

Jun turned away from the terminal and crossed the staging area toward the assignment kiosks.

The queue was short. Two transport handlers. One cleaner. A porter older than him with a permanent bend in his back from carrying loads his SI said he should never have been assigned in the first place. The man reached the kiosk, checked his options, swore under his breath, and took a warehouse rotation.

Jun stepped forward when it was his turn.

The kiosk scanned his Display and opened the support assignment menu available to F-0 personnel. Most of the listings were standard: staging cleanup, load transfer, post-operation sorting, low-priority escort duty for Tier-1 entry teams. He read all of them without touching the screen.

At the edge of the interface, in the maintenance sidebar most support staff ignored, a public notice scrolled past.

Node Service Delay — Sector East / Older Installations Repair Schedule Revised: Q4

He read the sector numbers. Stored them.

There were six Tier-1 and Tier-2 sites in that maintenance bracket. Three too far from his district to be practical. Two recently serviced despite the notice, judging from updated field logs. One left.

Jun selected a porter slot attached to an older Rift in Sector East and submitted the request.

The kiosk displayed:

Assignment Pending Approval

He stepped aside.

A transport siren sounded somewhere above the bay. A new combat team came through the far doors in clean uniforms with bright Displays and the posture of people used to being seen. Nobody looked at the porters lined at the kiosks. They moved around them the way people moved around pillars.

Jun left the staging area through the lower exit reserved for support staff and crossed into the transit corridor that led back toward the district rail. Here the Nodes were older, mounted farther apart. Their indicator strips glowed a little dimmer than the ones near the active gates. Most people never noticed the difference. Most people had no reason to.

Jun noticed all of them.

He rode the train standing, one hand on the overhead bar, the other turned inward so he could see his Display reflected in the darkened window between station lights. F-0 looked the same in reflection as it did directly. Flat. Final. A fact with no visible seam.

But there had been a seam.

Only a fraction of a second. Only one line. Only a character the Display could not render.

At his stop, he got off with the late-shift workers and walked three blocks through a low-Indexed district where the street cameras had blind spots at the corners and the public displays refreshed half a second slower than the ones near the Authority hub. He climbed the stairs to his building because the lift had been under repair for six months and unlocked the door to his single room.

Bed. Sink. Folding table. One chair. A wall terminal old enough that it hummed when the screen brightened.

He set his work gloves on the table and sat on the edge of the bed without taking off his boots. The room was quiet enough that he could hear the terminal fan ticking as it cooled.

He lifted his wrist again.

SI-4. RG-0. CT-3. SR-1. F-0.

Jun stared at it until the shape of the numbers blurred.

Then he lowered his arm, reached for the terminal, and opened the public Chronicle maintenance archive. Sector East. Older installations. Node service delays. Coverage maps.

If the flicker had been nothing, the records would still be there.

If it had not been nothing, they would be there too.

The screen loaded slowly. Grid by grid, the sector map resolved. Nodes. Overlap fields. Repair dates. Coverage strength.

Jun leaned forward.

In the reflected light of the terminal, the Display on his wrist still read F-0. He did not look at it again. Not while the map was opening. Not while the first coverage line came into focus.

He had already seen the one thing he needed.

The system had blinked.

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SummaryThis is the short version — the full blueprint opens further down ↓
Premise

Thirty years after reality fractured into deadly Rifts, the Chronicle governs civilization through an all-seeing recording network that turns measured capability into enforced fact. Han Jun is an F-0 porter, the lowest rank in the system, but inside pockets of Static where the Chronicle cannot fully observe, his body begins to exceed the limits on his wrist display. As he investigates the missing 47 minutes from the worst Rift collapse in history, Jun uncovers a buried lie that threatens the foundation of the world itself.

The Cast
  • Han JunA late-twenties Rift porter with an F-0 classification, Jun has spent ten years hauling gear for teams that barely notice him. He survived the catastrophic Rift Collapse 01 with 47 minutes missing from his memory, and in the gaps of Chronicle coverage he discovers that the system's reading of him is catastrophically wrong.
  • Kara VossA razor-sharp Chronicle analyst ranked C-4 with elite Cognitive Throughput and almost no combat strength. She specializes in finding inconsistencies in the system's records, and when Jun appears across multiple impossible outcomes, she becomes the strategist who helps turn suspicion into proof.
  • Sera HwanA quiet C-3 combat operative whose effectiveness consistently outpaces her official rating. She was originally assigned to the doomed Rift Collapse 01 team and enters Jun's orbit through steady competence, tactical support, and a refusal to leave the mystery alone.
  • Director KashenThe A-7 head of the Chronicle Authority and the man who certified the official record of Rift Collapse 01. He is not a reckless tyrant but a true believer who thinks civilization depends on the Chronicle's infallibility, even if preserving that faith requires burying the truth.
  • Operative YunThe dead S-7 squad leader celebrated as the greatest hero of the Collapse. In the Static-haunted remains of the disaster, Yun survives as Residual Memory tied to the real events of the lost 47 minutes and to Jun's forgotten role in them.
  • The TwelveThe elite S-Class team officially memorialized as martyrs of Rift Collapse 01. Their lingering Echoes in Static preserve techniques, memories, and fragments of the truth, turning Jun's climb in power into an excavation of what they actually gave their lives for.
The Arc
  • The Floor: Jun lives as an invisible F-0 porter in a world where the Chronicle's recorded limits are law. After a malfunctioning Node and a pocket of Static let him perform impossible feats, he begins mapping the system's gaps and learns he has been living inside a lie.
  • The Crack: Chronicle analyst Kara Voss identifies Jun as the constant in a string of statistically impossible Rift outcomes, and the two begin probing degraded sectors together. As Jun deliberately enters heavier Static and meets the quietly formidable Sera Hwan, his hidden stats and the scale of the discrepancy become undeniable.
  • The Buried Record: By recovering Echoes left in high-Static zones around the Collapse site, Jun gains techniques, Resonance, and fragments of the lost 47 minutes. At the same time, Kashen moves to erase Static and lock Jun back into the official narrative, forcing the investigation into open conflict with the institution itself.
  • The Unrecorded: Jun breaches the exclusion zone around Rift Collapse 01 and enters Deep Static where the Chronicle cannot classify or restrain him. There he recovers the full truth of the disaster, learns what the Twelve and Yun actually did, and emerges into the indexed world as something the system cannot meaningfully classify.
  • The Correction: With the truth in hand and the Chronicle moving to overwrite the last surviving evidence, Jun confronts Kashen and races the system to the Collapse site's core. The final clash is not just over one man's rank but over whether the world's foundational Record can be forced to acknowledge reality it was never built to contain.
Tone

The prose is lean, propulsive, and heavily fused with system language: classifications, threat indices, coverage percentages, and display readouts are treated as sensory reality. Action is precise and clinical rather than flashy, with tension built through pressure, observation, and sudden quantified breakthroughs. The atmosphere is cold urban apocalypse edged with spatial distortion, dead data, and the unnerving intimacy of a world that measures everyone.

Chapters
Ch 1
Read
1,649w
Ch 2
Three Seconds of Static
2,114w
Ch 3
The Constant Variable
2,109w
One blueprint per writer. We'll draft Chapter 4 next and send it as soon as it's ready. See what you get.

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