But as the "Victory" screen flashed, the colors started to bleed. The screen turned a deep, glitchy crimson. A message appeared in the center of his monitor, written in a font that didn't exist in the game’s files: [THE BALANCE REQUIRES A TITHE]
Suddenly, the game’s interface flickered. The familiar "Credits: 0" in the bottom corner began to spin like a broken slot machine. $10,000… $100,000… "It’s real," he whispered. He entered a public lobby. The map was Infernal Abyss
. But today, he wasn’t looking for a fair fight. He was looking for the Tower Battles Infinite Money Script
For months, rumors had swirled about a script so powerful it could bypass the game’s core economy. While other players scraped together credits for a basic Scout, the holder of this script could summon a Golden Commando on wave one.
The neon hum of the Cyber-District was usually a sanctuary for , a legendary strategist in the world of Tower Battles But as the "Victory" screen flashed, the colors
The infinite money counter began to tick backward into the negatives. Fast.
, a nightmare for most. His teammates were panicked, desperately placing weak snipers. Xenon didn't say a word. As the first wave of zombies emerged, he didn't buy a cheap tower. He dropped a Railgunner , then another, then a Void Miner "Hack!" the chat screamed. "Report him!" The familiar "Credits: 0" in the bottom corner
Xenon sat in his darkened room, the glow of three monitors reflecting in his eyes. He hit "Execute."
Xenon tried to close the game, but his mouse wouldn't move. His computer fans began to scream. On the screen, his character—his digital self—didn't return to the lobby. Instead, it stayed on the empty, scorched map, looking directly at the camera.
But Xenon was mesmerized. He wasn't just playing; he was rewriting the physics of the battlefield. The towers didn't just fire; they roared with overcharged energy. The boss, the Great Void, appeared at wave 40—usually a twenty-minute struggle. Xenon clicked a button, and a forest of Omega Turrets materialized instantly. The boss didn't even make it past the first bend.
Xenon’s real-world lights flickered. He realized then that the script hadn't broken the game's bank—it had opened a door. And something from the Infernal Abyss was using that door to find its way out. Should we continue the story with Xenon trying to contain the glitch before it hits his hardware, or should we shift to a moderator’s perspective hunting him down?