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The Smartphone Saga: A Distracted Journey of Spells and Signals

Chapter 1 Part 1: Reconstituted --- A New Home Arc

Chapter 1 Part 1: Reconstituted --- A New Home Arc

Mar 08, 2024

On a field of finished war, from the wreckage of a dozen men, matter whispered together like a moist dream of Victor Von Frankenstein’s. A boy, soon to be a man, joined like a castle of sand, filled with blood and bile.

Clothes wove themselves from the fallen soldier's uniforms and the oozing bits of monsters, all to make a t-shirt and blue jeans. In the boy’s pocket a phone formed, resurrected from the materials around him. Gold and silicon, steel and lithium, crystals of magic to add spice. Then, with one last divine touch, Kami pushed a software update.

****

Jasson dreamed of dreams. Not his dreams, but the aspirations of all those people who, on his little 6.2-inch screen, managed to post confidence in minute-long videos. Jasson dreamed that, in his own shaky attempts, he had been able to capture a dream. His dream. But when Jasson went to watch the videos there wasn’t anything there.

Jasson Boar awoke to attempted theft, possibly assault if he could record it.

Someone rolled him over roughly and started pulling at his shoes. Jasson swatted idly at them, grumbling. Were his brothers pranking him again?

“Oi!” A stranger’s voice called, “This one’s alive!”

Alive?! Jasson thought.

“Bandage him up and put him on the sick wagon then,” another voice said from further away, “and don’t take his boots.”

“He ain’t got boots!” The first voice said.

“Notty I know he’s got boots,” the second voice said, “else how would he get out here? Now put them back on and get him in the sick wagon.”

What?! Jasson thought.

“I din’t say he has not’in’,” the first voice said, hurt, “Just that he ain’t got boots. Some kinda cloth with laces.”

“The poor bugger,” the second voice said, “marching to war with cloth wrapped feet. Well, at least he came out alive.”

It was at this point that Jasson decided that he was, in fact, not dreaming. He sat up and looked around, blinking. Well that couldn’t be right.

I was reincarnated wasn’t I? Jasson thought as he craned his neck. This isn’t Hell?

Around him was a flat field of grasses which probably held scenic wildlife at one point. Now all it held was scenic wild death, in a far more graphic form than Jasson had been prepared for. The twisted corpses of men and monsters littered the ground. A few feet away, providing afternoon shade for Jasson, the enormous corpse of a dragon lay in beheaded glory.

“Oi,” An ugly spotty little man leered over him, “Yo’r moovin’!”

What a meme-able face. Jasson thought. And not helping with my Hell theory.

“Ah,” Jasson said, standing and looking around, “where am I?”

The carnage began to feel less real, as if the details were from some campy horror movie. If anything, the monster corpses helped Jasson distance himself from reality. Yet Jasson knew that his stomach would rebel soon, and he had to do something before the shock wore off.

“The battlefield, boy.” the ugly man said, kicking a dismembered goblin, “and- what are you doing?”

When a modern teenager sees anything interesting (or powerfully horrifying) there’s only one option he can choose. Jasson pulled out his phone and opened the camera, switched it over to the good lense. He started recording.

“Hey,” Jasson said to the camera as he rotated, “Day one of my new life and I’m on a battlefield. This is the first person I’ve met so far, doesn’t he have a wonderful personality? What did you say your name was again?”

“Uh,” the ugly man said, “Notty. Notty Thing.”

“Naughty?” Jasson smiled desperately as his stomach started to buck, “Or knotty, as in knots. How do you spell that?”

“Er,” Notty said, “I know this one. It’s like tying knots. Let’s see, N-O-T-T-Y. Yeah, that’s it.”

“Well Notty,” Jasson smiled, “Let’s hope your day goes as well as mine has been. I’ll be checking in again later. Bye ya’ll.”

Jasson sighed and stopped recording. Suddenly Jasson felt his stomach roil like that time he’d eaten the fish fingers. Impatience is a bad habit when cooking fish.

Jasson turned to Notty saying “Thanks for the help Notty. I’m going to throw up now.”

Jasson promptly staggered away to a spot free of corpses and blood. Then it all came out, which was nothing but bile (quite unlike the fish fingers). Apparently, there was no in-flight meal for reincarnation.

Why was he on a battlefield? Why did people come apart like in the Leego games? But fleshy instead of plasticy. Taking that video was a terrible idea but, since Jasson was busy at the moment, he decided to delete the video at another time.

“Ah,” Notty’s voice said as he patted Jasson on the back, “that’s more like it son. Is this your first scrap? Has the stench got to yer?”

“Yup,” Jasson said, reflexively turning his attention to the smell. Bile burned Jasson’s throat as once again he chucked and checked the contents of his stomach. 

“Either way ya seem to have gotten through alrigh’,” Notty said, “Probs fainted at the sight of the first monster. I know I did, that’s why they got me on sweep-up.”

Jason considered this to be an easier story than ‘reincarnated from another world’ and decided to run with it.

“It was when my commander died,” Jasson said, trying to be dramatic but making the mistake of looking up into a corpse’s face, “Squished like a-”

Jasson heaved again, seeing an example to his right, then gave up and said “I don’t really remember anything. Yup. Not a thing.”

“About the battle?” Notty said.

“About everything,” Jasson said, “Blank slate. Where am I? What war was I fighting? What are these monsters?”

“Oi,” Notty said, looking cornered, “come now. I don’t know nuffink about them things. I’m just the sweep-up. Best I can tell yer is that them there are demon-monster things what try ta eat us. It’s ‘The War’, innit? An we’re in some field somewhere, wiv’ camp a bit away. Don' know more than that.”

Jasson nodded, this made sense to him. This spotty scrawny man didn’t seem like the kind of person to hold onto answers. Notty was visibly relieved that the advanced questioning was over.

“You said something about a sick wagon?” Jasson said, “You’re collecting the injured?”

“Yup,” Notty said, “An’ later more of us will be out to pick up the dead. Gotta bury ‘em right proper. An’ I don’t reckon you need the sick wagon. Yer doin’ alright as I can see. You’ll be needing to hike back to camp then. Grab some water from the wagon and be out of here.”

Jason couldn’t help but agree. Aside from the rapid nausea Jasson felt from seeing so many colors of human, he felt perfectly fine. Stronger in fact.

Three hours later, Jasson found that his reincarnated fitness didn’t last long.

The beaming radiant misery of the sun drained Jasson’s new-found strength, which flagged and failed pathetically. His shirt became a swamp, complete with determined flies following him from the war zone. Why did they have to make camp so far away?

Notty and his commander Sergeant Semi had invited him to stay. At least until they filled up the sick wagon. But Jasson decided that he’d be better off by himself than retching at dead wretches.  So Jasson walked alone on a road made by thousands of marching feet.

“Gods,” Jasson said, trying to scroll through his phone as he shielded the screen from the sun, “There’s no signal anywhere...”

The data was terrible, with a ‘No Service’ in place of the signal bars of life. So Jasson swiped through his apps, looking for something that worked offline. He noticed a Strange new app store called DISS. DISS wouldn’t open without the internet though, so Jasson kept scrolling.

Jasson landed on doing his daily Do-A-Lingo. ALthough Jasson was far from fluent Spanish, it provided him a happy thrill as the days ticked up. He opened the app and a cheery green Bat welcomed him. Jasson waited patiently for the app to finish loading, then he froze in disbelief. It couldn’t be.

“No!” Jasson said, falling to his knees and screaming to the sky, “NOO!!”

Somehow in the resurrection process, with all that went on, Jasson had lost his 243 day streak.

****

Hopeless in his horizon toil, Jasson crested another indistinguishable hill. Sensing a change, Jasson looked up from his tear-crusted phone and spotted fires in the valley below. He had found the army. A surprisingly ordered camp spread in lines and by ranks, and some of the tents had vibrant colors and designs. The fancy tents were clustered at a reasonable distance from those of the unwashed lowers, notably proving that even at war some people liked to have a sense of smell.

An hour later Jasson sat squished between hygiene hulks of the bad variety. Jasson had never had gruel before, and he did his best to appreciate it as he picked the rocks out. Apparently, a lifetime without food makes one a bit peckish. Jasson's stomach roared so that ignoring pebbles of the non-fruity variety was an easy chore. (This belayed all expectations of modern teenagers and was a shock to the multiverse.)

This miraculous gratitude was, in part, due to the cook. Jasson felt obliging after the cook described, in detail, that Jasson would be gutted from cheek to cheek if he wasted a drop of it. It hit home when the cook threw a knife to comically impale a man about to dump food out onto the fire. Waste was a sin in the army, after all there were starving children in...well not Africa. The next town over probably had some.

Once Jasson had finished eating he wandered around camp looking for the best service. He actually had signal here, although it bounced around like a FourthKnight gamer. Unfortunately, Jasson lost signal as soon as he left camp, save for small flickers. He finally found a solid signal around a campfire packed with relaxing soldiers.

Jasson sighed, finding a seat with a bit of elbow room. He sat, shifting and trying to hear the TikTiks as he ignored the smell. Pine and Pit of the Arm, a match made in scout camp. Eventually, Jasson gave up and downloaded some longer cat videos and funny compilations from WeTube. It would have to do, and his favorite creators hadn't po-

“Hey kid,”  a heavy pungent arm dropped over Jasson’s shoulders as a soldier slid into Jasson's elbow room. Jasson looked up and, upon seeing the grizzled face, decided upon agreeability.

The man grinned and said, “I heard you passed out in battle. You gonna join us again? Or are you gonna head back to the farm.”

“I don’t know,” Jasson said, panic-scrolling on his phone, “The 'farm' isn’t close and I was hoping to make money before I went home. ”

Jasson took a miasma laced breath. Was adventuring really an occupation? It was the only one he knew of from the clips he’d seen. Jasson didn’t have any money and the free soldier’s gruel left much to be desired. What did people do to survive in medieval times anyway?

"I was hoping to take some quests," Jasson said, "Maybe start adventuring. I don't know."

The silence stretched as the soldier took a swig of something foul. Jasson found himself holding his breath for a number of reasons.

“Adventuring takes a lot of grit,” the soldier said, “you get plenty of gore as your friends die. Of course, you could stick to the low-level quests. Gods know how many healing herbs we will need to get through the next month. I say go for it, and don't tell your parents that you decided to become an entrepreneur.”

Jasson nodded after the surprising display of vocabulary. So there were adventurers and even fetch quests in this world. That sounded like a good, familiar starting point. 

Herb gathering. He could get his hands dirty, right? Yeah, Jasson had never played outside but he’d gathered plenty of Herbs in games. It couldn't be that hard. Jasson wondered if he’d be able to craft any blue shield potions like in FourthKnight.

“Seems ya like that idea,” the soldier spat then said, “Go ask to be Discharged. We can’t have people fainting in battle so they should agree if you can pin down a testimony. They’ll remove your records and give you a less-honorable Discharge. You won’t get paid and will have to turn in your gear but the Discharge papers will let you get past the guards.”

“Ah,” Jasson said, “But what if, hypothetically, I never actually entered myself into the records.”

The man didn’t look surprised.

“Then you’d be a fool,” the man sighed, “Although not an uncommon one. If you’re not in the records then you can desert without getting followed up on later. You just need to make it past the guards on your way out of here.”

“Right,” Jasson said, standing, “Thanks.”

“Good luck kid,” the man waved, “If you had it in you I’d say enter your records first, but then you’d need to fight in another battle. Best take your chances. Just hike through the woods to the north and you should get past the guards.”

Jasson went out into the night with a reasonably full stomach and regrettably full mind. How would he sneak past guards? Jasson couldn’t physically crouch for long, nevermind enough for a stealth mission. Why couldn’t he have appeared in a townside forest or something? It had been miles just to arrive in camp, never mind Stalt. Jasson could have sworn that people didn’t live that far away from each other.

Jasson tried to open Guugle Maps up, but it wouldn’t load anything. Sighing he swiped off, then opened the BlUbber App. If the map there worked then he could at least-

One BlUbber is available in your area.

“What?” Jasson tapped, watching BlUbber reveal a heart racingly steep rate for the ride, “Paid in Drachma or VenGo? What’s Drachma?”

Jasson typed in his destination of Stalt, which came to an astronomical 1,052 bucks. This provided a brief cardiac arrest before he tapped on the ‘closest village’ option and it came up to 83 bucks.

Bringing up his VenGo Jasson checked the amount. He’d gotten some good tips and his birthday was pretty recent so…

“Yes!” Jasson said, “With five dollars to spare.”

Then, without thinking, he purchased the ride.

“Wait a second,” Jasson said, “What kind of BlUbber services a fantasy world?”

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ManiFisher
Mani Fisher

Creator

Truck-kun fell from the sky.

It was a terrible accident involving several casualties who found eternal rest. Unfortunately for Jasson Boar, a normal modern teenager, death was just the beginning of his problems.

After a brief conversation with Kami, Jason was reborn in another world. In a feat of divine mercy Kami chose to reconstruct Jasson's phone, avoiding making Jasson's next life Hell on (another) earth.

Unfortunately, Kami decided to put his own spin on things.

Now without a goal or signal, Jasson is left to explore the world in search of both. Wandering with his phone held high, Jasson must overcome being an annoying Gen Alpha and find what matters in life. After all, the “five ‘F’s of life” do not include Phone. It just doesn't work with the acronym FFFFF.

Come with Jasson as he gets a life, starts a substance abuse epidemic, walks right past his love interests while on TikTik, and finds the key to unlimited power (for his phone).

#Fantasy #comedy #slice_of_life #satire #casual #litRPG

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The Smartphone Saga: A Distracted Journey of Spells and Signals
The Smartphone Saga: A Distracted Journey of Spells and Signals

1.9k views2 subscribers

Truck-kun fell from the sky.

It was a terrible accident involving several casualties who found eternal rest. Unfortunately for Jasson Boar, a normal modern teenager, death was just the beginning of his problems.

After a brief conversation with Kami, Jason was reborn in another world. In a feat of divine mercy Kami chose to reconstruct Jasson's phone, avoiding making Jasson's next life Hell on (another) earth.

Unfortunately, Kami decided to put his own spin on things.

Now without a goal or signal, Jasson is left to explore the world in search of both. Wandering with his phone held high, Jasson must overcome being an annoying Gen Alpha and find what matters in life. After all, the “five ‘F’s of life” do not include Phone. It just doesn't work with the acronym FFFFF.

Come with Jasson as he gets a life, starts a substance abuse epidemic, walks right past his love interests while on TikTik, and finds the key to unlimited power (for his phone).
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51 episodes

Chapter 1 Part 1: Reconstituted --- A New Home Arc

Chapter 1 Part 1: Reconstituted --- A New Home Arc

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