...The Sole Reader Who Knew Everything...
There was a novel that no one read.
No fanbase. No hype. No community. Just a wall of silence. It was a web novel buried deep in the corners of an old site, called Three Ways to Survive the Apocalypse. Over three thousand chapters long, the story stretched for over a decade.
Its stats? Abysmal.
Views per chapter: 1.
Comments: 0 or maybe 1.
And that one view—it was always mine.
For some reason, I kept reading it. Every single night after school, after a lonely dinner, I’d log in and read a few more chapters. Maybe it was the world-building—intricate and vast—or maybe it was the protagonist, Yoo Joonghyuk, who restarted time endlessly trying to save the world. He wasn’t heroic in the traditional sense. Cold, logical, and ruthless. But he was captivating.
Despite everything, I read the whole thing. Every arc. Every tragedy. Every ending.
And on one ordinary day, as the world bustled outside my window, I read the final chapter—chapter 3,149.
And that was the day everything changed.
The sky tore apart.
It wasn't metaphorical. A literal rupture split the blue canvas, and flames poured through like hell had opened above us. Screams echoed from the streets as monstrous shadows leapt from the cracks in the sky. I rushed to the window and froze.
It was a scene directly from the novel.
A familiar system notification appeared in front of me, hovering in midair:
[The Main Scenario has begun.]
[You are now a participant.]
I staggered back. This wasn’t a prank or a dream. This was real. The novel—the very one only I had read—was becoming reality.
In the distance, I saw figures. One of them stepped forward through the fire and destruction.
Yoo Joonghyuk.
The protagonist I had followed for years, wielding his sword against giant beasts, was now standing on my city’s burning highway, slashing his way through hordes of monsters with deadly precision.
I wasn’t watching fiction anymore. I was inside it.
The world fell into chaos quickly. The system that governed the scenarios turned every human into a potential player—tasked with surviving apocalyptic trials. Death was sudden and cruel. People were judged by choices they didn’t understand. Only a few adapted.
But I wasn’t just a random person anymore.
I was the sole reader.
I knew every hidden event, every dungeon, every traitor, every path. My memory of the story was my weapon. When others died trying to figure out what to do, I moved with clarity, dodging death again and again.
But knowledge was a double-edged sword.
I knew the fates of the companions I would meet. The sacrifices. The betrayals. The pain. And yet I couldn’t look away.
A week into the new world, I encountered them—Joonghyuk and his team. Jung Heewon, the paladin of justice. Lee Hyunsung, the gentle soldier. Yoo Sangah, my former office colleague, now wielding power.
They were wary of me, of course. I was just a civilian. But I started earning their trust, revealing just enough information to guide them without exposing how I knew it all.
Joonghyuk, in particular, was suspicious. He had lived this apocalypse many times through regressions. But he had never seen someone like me—someone who acted like he knew the future too.
“Who are you?” he asked one night after a deadly battle. His sword was at my throat. “How do you know all this?”
I wanted to tell him the truth—that I had followed his journey since the beginning, that I had watched him suffer through hundreds of deaths across timelines. That I admired him.
But I couldn’t.
So I just said, “I’m someone who read this story before it began.”
His eyes narrowed. “A prophet?”
“Something like that.”
He didn’t kill me. Not then. Maybe some part of him believed me.
As we moved from one scenario to the next, I started shaping events subtly—avoiding the worst outcomes, steering people away from their tragic fates. But it wasn’t easy. Changing the story had consequences. The world responded.
New scenarios—ones I didn’t recognize—began to appear.
The story was fighting back.
The world was evolving past the script, and I was no longer the omniscient reader I thought I was.
Still, I kept going. Because I remembered the ending. A glorious, hard-won future where humanity survived, where sacrifices bore fruit. I clung to that hope like a lighthouse in the storm.
One day, I received a message.
[You have unlocked a hidden scenario.]
[Role: Author.]
It was impossible. I wasn’t the writer.
Or… was I?
All those years, I had posted comments, even if they were never seen. I had imagined endings when the author disappeared for months. I had lived in that world longer than anyone else.
Maybe this world recognized that.
The final lines of the message said:
“The story only needed one reader.
Now, it needs a writer.”
And so, I began to write.
Not with a pen, but with choices.
Every decision I made created new branches. I became a beacon of hope, a villain in some arcs, a leader in others. But above all, I rewrote the ending—not one where people simply survived, but where they lived.
Yoo Joonghyuk never had to regress again. He found peace.
The companions lived long enough to see a new sunrise over a world they rebuilt.
And me?
I watched them from a distance, my job done. I never appeared in the final tales people told, but my name lingered in whispers—the reader who knew too much, who appeared when the world needed him most.
"I am the sole reader who knew the end of the world.
But now, I am the author of its new beginning."
Title: Omniscient Reader’s Viewpoint
A forgotten novel.
A lone reader.
A world that turned fiction into reality.
And one soul who knew how it all ended… and how it could begin again.
...---...
...****************...
The sun sank beneath a shroud of smoldering clouds, painting the horizon in hues of blood and charcoal. On the edge of a towering cliff stood a lone figure, his silhouette outlined against the last light of day. This was The Wanderer — a man who had long since abandoned his name, driven by secrets even he struggled to remember. The wind howled around him, carrying whispers of a city on the brink of collapse.
Below, the city sprawled like a living organism, its veins lit with pulsing red neon. Towers rose like teeth gnawing at the sky, and the streets writhed with restless crowds. Hovering drones blinked crimson as they patrolled alleys and rooftops, enforcing the will of unseen masters. Somewhere in this labyrinth, The Wanderer knew, lay the key to the past he’d lost — and the fate of everyone still clinging to life in the city.
As darkness fell, he descended the cliffs, stepping into the city’s outer slums. The second image came alive here: flickering lights, ragged awnings, and shadows deeper than night itself. Holographic billboards screamed promises of salvation in garish colors. Each step took him past broken people — children begging for scraps, old men muttering warnings of “the storm” — a mysterious force everyone feared but no one understood.
The Wanderer kept his hood low and hand near the hilt of his ancient blade. The weapon’s black steel shimmered with runes that sometimes shifted under his gaze. It wasn’t merely a sword — it was a relic tied to the city’s origin myths, to stories of gods who once walked the Earth and bound humanity to cycles of ruin and rebirth.
In the third image’s alleyway, he met Astra. Her hooded figure emerged from the shadows like a wraith. Eyes glowing silver, she radiated an otherworldly calm. “You’ve come,” she said, her voice a haunting melody. She revealed herself as an oracle — one of the last who could read the city’s hidden flows of power. She spoke of a prophecy: a blade of old blood, a storm of metal and fire, and a choice that would decide whether the city would burn or heal.
“The Architects know you are here,” Astra warned, pressing a small device into his palm. “They will come for you. But the blade is not just a weapon — it is a key to the Core.”
The Wanderer pocketed the device. The Core — the very heart of the city — was a place of myth, said to house the Source, an ancient power capable of remaking or destroying everything. He’d heard tales of the Core since he was a boy, but none had ever found it. Perhaps because none had the blade he now carried.
In the fourth image, Astra led him into a vast underground chamber hidden beneath the city’s foundations. The air was damp and heavy with the scent of oil and old stone. Lanterns flickered, illuminating a council of masked figures seated in a circle — The Architects. Their masks were sculpted in the likeness of forgotten gods, each with a single glowing eye. They claimed to be the builders of the city, keepers of its codes and arbiters of its fate.
The Architects offered The Wanderer a bargain: surrender the blade, and they would restore his memories — every lost year, every hidden truth of who he once was. He hesitated. For so long, he had yearned to know what drove him into exile, why his dreams were haunted by fire and screams. But Astra placed her hand on his shoulder, and he saw behind the Architects’ words a hunger — a desire not to heal the city, but to seize the Core’s power for themselves.
He refused.
Enraged, The Architects summoned their guardians: the Obsidian Hounds — mechanical beasts, each twice the size of a man, eyes glowing red, claws clanking against the metal floors. The Wanderer and Astra fled through tunnels older than the city itself, pursued by the sound of steel paws striking stone. They emerged on the rooftops, the night air thick with ozone as lightning slashed the skies.
As the fifth image revealed, the two climbed the spire of the old Observatory — the city’s highest point — to gain a view of the Core’s rumored location. Far in the distance, beyond the shimmering towers, a great chasm pulsed with pale blue light. That had to be it: the Core.
But the hounds had scaled the tower. Lightning flashed as dozens of mechanical monsters crawled over the Observatory walls, their growls echoing into the storm. The Wanderer’s blade came alive in his hand, runes blazing. Astra unleashed shards of light from her fingertips, each bolt tearing through the darkness.
They fought back-to-back as rain fell in torrents, sparks flying where blade met metal. Each kill bought only moments; more hounds swarmed, driven by the Architects’ rage. The tower groaned under the assault, ancient stone cracking.
In a lull between waves, Astra pressed her forehead to The Wanderer’s. “You are more than your past,” she whispered, her eyes fierce. “You are what you choose now.”
He realized then: the storm wasn’t merely weather. It was a living force, a consciousness tied to the Core — and it had awakened, responding to the conflict. With Astra’s guidance, he raised the blade to the sky. The runes aligned with the storm’s lightning, drawing its fury into the blade. A blinding surge of energy exploded outward, disintegrating the remaining hounds and sending a shockwave through the city.
Silence fell as rain hissed against scorched stone. The city’s lights flickered, and for a heartbeat, the storm’s eye opened above the chasm — a vortex of swirling light revealing the Core far below.
Exhausted but resolute, The Wanderer and Astra climbed down from the ruined spire. Crowds gathered in the streets, watching the storm part overhead, revealing a sky lit with new dawn’s colors. Whispers spread: someone had challenged the Architects and survived. Someone had given them hope.
In the days that followed, the city stirred with rebellion. Astra and The Wanderer led those who dared to dream of freedom, guiding them toward the Core. The Architects, wounded and weakened, retreated into the shadows. But the fight was far from over. The Core itself was alive, its power both gift and curse. It would test anyone who sought to claim it.
And so, The Wanderer’s journey continued — not for vengeance or lost memories, but for a chance to reshape a world teetering between eternal night and a new dawn. He understood now that the blade was never his to own, but a trust passed down through forgotten ages — a reminder that every ending holds the seeds of a beginning.
As they stood at the precipice of the Core, the storm quieted. The Wanderer looked at Astra. Together, they stepped forward, ready to face whatever truths and trials awaited them in the light of the Core.
---
Please like and follow
I am a new writter need your help please 🥺 🥺 🥺
..........
If you want I can upload new episodes of each manhwa , manga here in next episodes just write down in the comment and also if you need specific chapters mention too I am willingly to give you
I have seen myself that there are no new episodes each mangas are of 100 to 200 episodes back so a little help for manga lovers or comic 💪💪💪💪💪
Just mention it in comment 🥰🥰🥰🥰
Download NovelToon APP on App Store and Google Play