If that was the case wouldn’t they be actively recruiting the students instead of just getting them referred?Seems like the school is using this school and dungeon to purge the god power from the students. Likely using the whole sex thing to keep them distracted from the true goal.
I mean, That skills? It may looks simple but it is actually very helpful for adventure/dungeon travel."Would you like to pull for some Skill gacha? We've got some new, ultra-rare ones on the banner!"
<Pull a couple, look inside>
"You got: spatial storage and appraisal!"
I'm not sure what I expected but I'm still disappointed
The wrappings have negative side effects. He says that after each fight they get tighter, that he can't take them off anymore, and that it's getting hard to breathe. Presumably, if he doesn't offload the things they will strangle him before too long.So he gave up a god level robe equipment for inventory and the appraisal skill? I would have just asked for a curse debuff...
I don’t think your explanation makes sense. If people actually die in there what is the point of sending them in on a suicide mission on the first day where nobody is expected to survive?Hmm, it's claimed that people lose their memory of the dungeon when they die, and that you return when you die.
But I can't believe that, because someone must have managed to keep their memory of the dungeon to know that others lost their memory of the dungeon, otherwise how would it be a known aspect of the dungeon?
I theorize that people die when they are killed, and the only way people are returned is if someone clears the dungeon, thus triggering the return process, and that the only ones that get returned are the ones that managed to survive until the dungeon got cleared. That only the people actively involved in clearing the dungeon retain their memory, and the rest lose their memory. And that those that die inside the dungeon are actually dead, for real, and somehow had them be erased from everyone else's memories to make it as if they never existed. This either includes the ones that actively cleared the dungeon or not, if it does include them, then that easily explains the rumor that you return when you die because those that actively cleared the dungeon wouldn't know what the others did or did not do, whether they survived or died, and they wouldn't remember any of the people that died due to the memory erasure, and the people that didn't actively clear the dungeon would have had their memory of the dungeon erased, so they wouldn't know if they died or survived.
Truly a man of culture.Bang that shop-keeper![]()
Culling the herd, weeding out the weak to leave the strong?I don’t think your explanation makes sense. If people actually die in there what is the point of sending them in on a suicide mission on the first day where nobody is expected to survive?
You forget the teachers and the fact that not everyone goes into the dungeon at the same time.Culling the herd, weeding out the weak to leave the strong?
That's one popular trope I can think of to answer the question.
I just find it confusing how the dungeon is designed to erase people's memories of their experience inside the dungeon, yet the classmate somehow learned about this even though, by all accounts, no one should know about that function of the dungeon because it erases the memories of people's experience inside the dungeon.
That too!Bang that shop-keeper![]()
I don't think it is the dungeon that is causing the memory erasure, but the gate that acts as a safety device when teleporting them. Hard to say if it is intentional or not for people to lose their memory when they die. My theory is that a copy is saved when they enter, and those crystals that are dropping when people die are recording their experiences while in the dungeon, and either they come back themselves and/or the crystals merge with the copy when the gate recalls them. But if the crystal gets absorbed by the dungeon before it is recalled like those that were left on the ground, then the experience is lost and just the copy is recreated.Culling the herd, weeding out the weak to leave the strong?
That's one popular trope I can think of to answer the question.
I just find it confusing how the dungeon is designed to erase people's memories of their experience inside the dungeon, yet the classmate somehow learned about this even though, by all accounts, no one should know about that function of the dungeon because it erases the memories of people's experience inside the dungeon.