youamy
Power in the Thousand Realms correlates with sacrifice: years of life, beloved memories, pieces of soul. Grimm refuses the equation.
Starting from fourth-grade aptitude, he treats cultivation as optimization problem. Each advance must cost less than conventional methods yield. Each technique must be reversible, sustainable, efficient. Other wizards burn bright and burn out. Grimm intends to persist.
His approach reveals hidden economies in the multiverse. Power sources that conventional cultivation ignores: residual energy from decaying realities, conceptual momentum from extinct civilizations, the information density of sufficiently complex understanding. Grimm builds his advancement not through spiritual refinement but through intellectual capital-networks of knowledge that compound across dimensions, alliances with entities that value understanding over force, techniques that leverage local physics rather than overriding them.
The asymptote approaches: infinite capability, zero cost, perfect sustainability. Whether such a state is achievable or merely the final trap, Grimm intends to determine.
But the multiverse is not static. Other minds pursue similar optimizations. Ancient systems resist perturbation. And the deeper Grimm descends into pure knowledge, the more he risks becoming something that values understanding over existence itself-something that would sacrifice everything, including itself, to complete the equation.
The Fourth Grade was the starting condition. The Asymptote is the destination. The path between them will remake reality.