Chapter Index

    Chapter 735 – Three Thousand Mirror Ruins 2

    Mo Lan’s home was in Building 2, Floor 17 of Deer Antler Residential District.

    The tall buildings in this world had neither staircases nor elevators—going up or down was entirely done through teleportation.

    Deer Antler Residential District was considered an upper-middle-class community in the city, with only one household per floor.

    There were dedicated teleportation rooms at the community entrance, at the base of each building, and inside each home. All one needed was to swipe a room card to get home, with no teleportation fees required.

    Mo Lan walked into the teleportation room at the community entrance, stood within the teleportation circle, swiped her card, and arrived in the teleportation room inside her home.

    This room contained several teleportation circles leading to different locations—one to the community entrance, one to the building’s ground floor, one to the garbage room, one to the community restaurant, and even one to the gym…

    It truly achieved the promise that no matter which building or floor you lived on, you were always just one step from exiting the community, one step from disposing of garbage, and one step from using any facility within the complex.

    Looking at these teleportation devices integrated into residents’ daily lives, Mo Lan gained a tangible sense of just how advanced Spatial Magic was in this world.

    She walked out of the teleportation room, found a comfortable spot in the Living Room, and sat down before summoning the Book of Cards and beginning to feed it materials.

    Mo Lan had inherited this identity, and along with it, she could freely use all of the identity’s assets.

    This was the benefit of the Realm-friend Invitation Letter.

    First were the items inside the pink storage compact mirror hanging around her neck.

    She needed ordinary items, so she took one mirror coin of each denomination and gave them to the Book of Cards as crafting materials.

    Mo Lan sensed the presence of spatial power within these mirror coins. The higher the denomination, the denser it was—they could practically be used as spatial gems.

    Even the smallest denomination, the one-yuan mirror coin, Mo Lan estimated could be used to create a spatial item with half a cubic meter of storage space.

    In Valen, Spatial Magic materials like these were rarely seen, yet in the Three Thousand Mirror Ruins World, they were used as common currency.

    This showed just how abundant spatial-type magical materials were in this world—no wonder teleportation devices could be integrated into everyday life.

    After crafting the various {Mirror Coin} cards, Mo Lan then set her sights on the storage compact mirror itself.

    This item was very common in the Three Thousand Mirror Ruins World, considered the lowest-grade spatial item.

    But in other places, it was even rarer than ordinary spatial items.

    This was the first spatial item Mo Lan had ever seen that could be used without magical energy—one that anyone could open.

    She emptied everything from the storage compact mirror, gave it to the Book of Cards as crafting material, and immediately crafted a {Unregistered Storage Compact Mirror} card.

    Once materialized, it was an identical storage compact mirror.

    Mo Lan put everything she had just taken out back inside, then hung it around her neck again.

    Next, she began studying the objects in the house that emitted magical fluctuations.

    Against the wall of the Living Room stood a very large cabinet, filled to the brim with recording stones.

    Recording stones could capture sound and images, and could be played back by activating them with magical energy.

    However, the recording stones in this cabinet were primarily meant for the original owner to watch.

    The original owner hadn’t begun cultivating yet, so she used a playback machine next to the cabinet.

    You inserted a one-yuan mirror coin into the playback machine, then placed the recording stone inside, and it would play.

    The recording stones in the cabinet included course recordings from the original owner’s classes, recordings left by her parents, and story recordings, song recordings, and film recordings purchased from recording stone shops. The original owner had watched them all, and Mo Lan, having inherited her memories, actually remembered them even more clearly than the original owner herself.

    Mo Lan wasn’t particularly interested in the contents of these recording stones. She only found one blank recording stone to use as material for the Book of Cards.

    The lighting fixtures, heater, air conditioner, stove, water heater, water supply tank, and toilet in the house all had magical fluctuations—they were magical items. But they were all fixed to the structure of the house and connected to the home’s energy supply box through wiring, so they couldn’t be individually removed to serve as materials for the Book of Cards.

    All these items also ran on mirror coins as energy.

    Among the benefits and protections provided by the Mirror Lord’s Prefecture for children of fallen heroes, there was a monthly stipend of mirror coins specifically designated for recharging the household energy supply box.

    Among these household appliances, most were unremarkable. Apart from differences in how they were powered, compared to those Mo Lan had used in other worlds, the only differences were in their aesthetic design—the actual experience of using them wasn’t drastically different.

    Only the toilet was quite remarkable.

    This toilet had neither an outlet nor an inlet for water.

    If not for her memories showing that this was used for going to the bathroom, she would have thought this short, squat thing was some oddly-shaped foot basin.

    The opening was small, but the basin was spacious—just the right size to sit on.

    Inside was a teleportation device specifically calibrated for certain materials. The moment excrement entered, it would be instantly teleported away and vanish.

    However, it could only teleport waste. If anything else fell in, it would simply stay in place.

    Similar devices were installed in the sink, bathtub, water basin, and even the floor tiles, though they needed to be activated to take effect. Some could teleport away dirty water, while others could teleport away dust.

    Teleportation devices had become so widespread that they had replaced the entire water supply, drainage, and sewage systems.

    “How convenient!” Mo Lan had never imagined Spatial Magic could be used this way.

    Unfortunately, as convenient as these devices were, they would be very difficult to replicate in other worlds.

    No other world could afford to use materials capable of creating spatial items as everyday consumables.

    Even if Mo Lan had mastered the method for crafting {Mirror Coins}, using the ones made by the Book of Cards as a daily energy source would still be extravagant.

    The cost of obtaining mirror coins in this world was even lower than the cost of her crafting them with the Book of Cards!

    The resources were so abundant that Mo Lan was a little envious of the people in this world.

    Besides the Living Room, kitchen, dining room, bathroom, and bedroom, the home also had a cultivation room.

    The cultivation room was larger in area than all the other rooms in the home combined.

    Of the entire home, the cultivation room had the highest construction cost. Built entirely from special materials, it not only had astonishing defensive properties and blocked all teleportation magic—making it extremely difficult for outsiders to force their way in—but practicing magic inside would not disturb others. It also had effects like calming the mind and gathering energy, which enhanced cultivation results.

    The original owner had entered it many times under her parents’ guidance, but after her parents passed away, she had never gone in again.

    Because this cultivation room, like the storage compact mirrors her parents had left behind, required cultivation and a specific method to open.

    The original owner hadn’t yet reached the age for cultivation, and since her parents’ passing, the cultivation room had never been opened.

    Mo Lan did have a way to open it, but after thinking it over, she decided not to.

    This was a level-ten world. Mo Lan had just arrived and was still in the phase of learning about this world. It was best to blend into the local identity she had inherited as much as possible and avoid doing things that didn’t fit that identity.

    Besides, given the original owner’s age, she would soon be able to take the talent assessment and begin formal cultivation. She could just open it then.

    Speaking of cultivation, the humans of this world shared some similarities with the humans of Valen.

    Note