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The Immune Blade

Asril_Gunawan_5260
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
In 2019, humanity fell to its knees. A deadly virus mutated the infected into mindless monsters, tearing society apart. Tokyo became a graveyard overnight. Amid the chaos, Ryuji, a 24-year-old office worker and amateur swordsman, was simply trying to survive—and reach his family in Osaka. But fate had other plans. Trapped, bitten, and desperate, Ryuji attempted to end his suffering with the blade passed down through generations—a symbol of forgotten honor. As he prepared for death, a violent lightning strike shattered the skies, striking Ryuji and his katana. He did not die. He awakened. Blessed—or cursed—with the ancient power of the Thunderstrike Techniques, Ryuji became something no zombie virus could consume: a warrior reborn in the storm’s fury. With superhuman strength and seven forbidden sword techniques coursing through his veins, he carries a new mission: Find the source of the virus. Uncover the truth. And cut down anyone standing in his path. The end of the world is only the beginning. The true battle is about to begin.
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Chapter 1 - Chapter One: “Patient Zero Wasn’t the End”

December 19, 2019 – Tokyo, Japan

The sky over Tokyo was unusually grey for winter, like even the sun was hesitant to rise. On the twenty-third floor of a polished glass tower in Shibuya, Ryuji Nakamura, 24, tightened his tie and took a deep breath. First day at his new job—a logistics assistant at Asakura Tech—nothing glamorous, but after months of sending resumes, it was a lifeline.

He smiled nervously at his reflectionu in the elevator mirror. "You got this," he whispered.

But he didn't.

No one did.

On the news screen in the lobby, a headline scrolled:

"New Strain of Coronavirus Reported in Wuhan—Officials Say Situation Under Control."

Everyone ignored it. Just another virus in another city. People wore masks out of habit, not fear. The elevator dinged, and Ryuji stepped into his new life, blissfully unaware that the world he knew was already ending.

The day passed in a blur of paperwork, awkward introductions, and coffee runs. By nightfall, the city buzzed with its usual energy. Neon lights blinked. Crowds flowed like tides. Ryuji stopped at a ramen shop, scarfed down dinner, and messaged his sister, Aya:

"First day survived! Not fired yet haha."

That night, a storm rolled in. Wind howled through the cracks in his apartment windows. Ryuji barely noticed. He was exhausted.

But across the sea, in a darkened lab, something ancient and artificial stirred.

The virus mutated.

It wasn't natural. It wasn't random. And it didn't spread like the last one. It evolved.

By the end of the week, reports of strange fevers, violent behavior, and "neurological decay" surfaced from multiple countries. Officials scrambled for explanations.

By New Year's Eve, the first footage of someone biting another human on a crowded subway went viral.

By January 10th, Japan closed its borders.

Ryuji never made it to his second paycheck.