At this point, I can only assume that the MC has lost all touch with reality and kinda forgotten that you die if you get killed in real life.
There's no gamer that wouldn't understand the consequences of going "as deep as you can" on a pure evasion build, after all.
This is still fun, though.
@Azapuela:
Actually, though that was my initial reaction too, but if one considers that 50 is apparently a "life-long grand-master" status in this world, it's possible that to people who aren't cheating, he's basically got a nigh-impossible-to-attain defensive-monk build.
And for people who have to work their way up the stat ladder normally, building his build may just be untenable. Evasion is often a stat that's kind of useless until you get it quite high, after all (otherwise RNG eventually kills you—which can be worked around with patience in a game when you don't
die when you die, but, they don't have that luxury).
Put differently, he's like an early-edition D&D high-level wizard—really OP, but you
should have had to risk death a helluva lot to get there. (D&D was originally a game where the game was really out to kill you, so classes could be balanced around risk-reward like that; more recent editions are more symmetrically balanced)
(As a lesser point, for him to have that on
top of his presumably saint-level healing skill—where normally healers have to min-max healing and have weak defensive stats all-round—may be like running into someone who's three times the level cap.)