Rody has been doing his best, but it feels like no matter what he does, it's never good enough. He keeps trying, and trying, and it's starting to feel like he's going to run himself into the ground.
After being laid off from yet another job, Rody gets back to his apartment and has to break the news to his girlfriend, Manon. Tired of the constant instability and the feeling like Rody is destroying himself for her, she leaves, breaking it off with him in hopes that it'll be better for both of them in the end. Rody, disheartened and soaked to the bone, finds himself at the local café, where he spots a magazine that piques his interest. On the back of the magazine there's a job offer for waitstaff at a restaurant not far from where he lives. Figuring he needs a job anyway, he takes the magazine home, planning to visit the next day to apply. What follows is a story of hardship and discovery, and a journey to self-love and confidence in your own skin with the support of those who care about you.
Alternate reality retelling of the game and beyond, for people like me, who desperately wanted to see a world where Vince and Rody could be together, and possibly even happy.
Summary may change as story develops.
Y/N, a simple woman, joins the deadly games to pay off debts after her mother's death. Young-Il, a heartless soul, controls the games, watching everything from afar while sipping on his glass of whisky.
But this year is different. When he spots Y/N, number 160, during the game of "Red Light, Green Light," he can't help but grow more obsessed with her.
The first game ends, and Young-Il decides it's time to join the games himself, meet her, and make her his forever. Not that he will allow anyone else to even look at her
But will Y/N really trust him?