@Richman Kinda spoiler with many levels.
n%=W is a skill that
every reincarnator possess. It was exclusive skill created by D. The first effect is that reincarnator will got full recovery after level up. It works for a while until they become powerful, current Kumoko level.
Second effect is spoiler more on the lore.
The reincarnator came from earth so they are not connected to the system. This skill bind their soul to the benefit of the system. D made this so the reincarnatorcan "enjoy" their isekai life...
@Richman : it us connected to their reincarnation. All the classmates have it. Not going to list everything it does, that would require spoilers, but iirc it is why they heal on a level up (others do not heal)
@thobong : there is a reason for the difference, but it will not come up for a while...
The mom during the pause: "Is this spider a friend? or a foe? but they saved my baby so they can't be that bad"
Kumoko: "What the FUCK is that baby?? Why do you have that baby?? FUCK THAT BABY FOR LIVING A GOOD LIFE"
@Richman egh I can't quite remember but its basically *spoiler*
The reincarnators ability to achieve an energy 'level' that goes beyond the system that was put in place for that planet. Essentially gives them cheat skillups/xp gains etc and even allows them to become gods if they obtain enough energy to go beyond the system.
*Bigger dicc spoiler*
Essentially, the mc was not a classmate, it was a spider that was nesting in the classroom in the corner, its soul absorbed some of the god 'D's soul and hence obtained a humans personality. Its why she also got so OP and became a god. I know the LN differs to the WN and I read the WN, but she should obtain the skill 'apotheosis' soon after devouring a massive amount of energy and evolving into a god beyond the system. Able to go to other worlds and dimensions with ease and see the truth of the world she is in and its peril state.
The skill is “N%I=W”, not “n%=W”. I don't know why the skill is called that, but in various programming languages, ‘%’ represents an operation the result of which is the remainder of arithmetic division. For example, “14%3” would result in 2.