
by SR Fauth
Graybridge didn’t ask for a hero. It got Regis Vale, Acting Guild Master of Branch Zero, a crumbling, rat-infested dump of a Guild Hall with exactly five entry-level heroes, one homicidally cheerful tutorial AI, and an Auditor who can weaponize paperwork like it’s a sacred art. Regis has a plan: rebuild the branch, train the team, win public trust, lure investors, and turn this sad little outpost into a city-dominating powerhouse. There’s only one problem. Regis Vale is actually Aurelius Grimm, the Black Regent, an infamous supervillain who has almost ended the world multiple times and is currently trapped in the world’s worst job assignment because the System made a clerical error and decided that “rehabilitation” means “middle management.” Now he’s stuck pretending to be inspirational while teaching villain-grade strategy disguised as heroic leadership. He’s trying not to use his absurd powers in public. He’s trying not to get recognized. He’s trying not to strangle StarBuddy, the mascot AI that keeps screaming things like SIDE QUEST: REPLACE COFFEE FILTERS directly into his eyeballs. Meanwhile, Graybridge is crawling with problems. Baron Silt, a penguin-like underworld landlord with concrete-bending power and a petty grudge. Lady Rancor, a terrifying Alignment of Evil liaison who might be Regis’s biggest fan and also might want to kidnap him back into villain politics. And Director Halcyon, a smiling Guild executive who “supports” Branch Zero while quietly stacking the city like a rigged NEX machine. As the team levels up through bruising street fights, ridiculous meme-tier villains, and catastrophic gadget experiments that should absolutely be illegal, Regis discovers the truth about heroism. It’s annoying. It’s loud. It’s effective. And it’s starting to make people ask the one question Regis cannot afford to answer. Just who is Regis Vale? If you like overpowered protagonists forced into ridiculous situations, super-powered workplace comedy, chaotic heroes earning points for doing the right thing the wrong way, and a world where ethics are a currency and violence is a very normal problem solver, you’re going to have a great time in Graybridge. Just… maybe don’t stand too close to Otto’s inventions.
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