After finishing a game with no save points, Yeon Seonwoo wakes up inside it. Not as the protagonist. Not even as a side character that matters. And somehow… the story is already over.
Before he can make sense of it, he’s dragged in front of the game’s hero—the man who cleared everything.
“Are you useful?”
A single wrong answer might get him killed.
Forced into the hero’s side as an “exclusive supporter,” Seonwoo quickly realizes something is off. The world doesn’t feel finished. The hero doesn’t act like one.
And certain things… don’t exist in the game he played.
If there was only one ending—then what exactly is this world hiding?
Creating Hidden Endings Vol 1 had an interesting premise. What if you not only woke up in a video game, but you woke up in the game you'd spent hours grinding away at and were at the mercy of the mad main character you left behind? "D-Rank Hunter's Regression" took a main character who was thrown back in time every time he died, so he had essentially lived 300 lives with no sense of permanence and it had made him a powerful, narcissistic, sadist. It was a monster hunter/ dungeon crawl game on top of dating simulator? Overall it means that when Yeon Seonwoon woke up in a side character with little value as a fighter or as an active battle supporter, he had to scrape by. Until the day he was kidnapped and forced into a servant contract where he used his meager abilities to help the video game's main character to sleep and relax. It's an interesting and unusual premise.
The bad side is that the writing is confusing. Scenes repeat themselves, people speak who aren't in the scene, sometimes I just couldn't understand what the characters were trying to say. In the end the interesting ideas weren't worth trying to slog through the confusing editing.
This translation isn’t great, the pronouns are all over the place making it difficult at times to understand who is speaking to who , misgendering people left and right etc. If you are used to deciphering from a translation app it probably won’t bother you too much -but that’s where the quality is at.
I received a free copy of this book via Booksprout and am voluntarily leaving a review. It was interesting but perhaps someone who understands gaming will find it more enjoyable.