
by Yuma123
The system didn't give me a sword.It gave me a performance review. When the apocalypse arrived, most people got combat classes, mana cores, or at least a decent sword. Ethan Cole got a notification that read: You have been assigned: Operations Manager (Provisional)Your performance will be reviewed at regular intervals.Underperformance may result in demotion, resource reallocation, or termination.Good luck. No attack stat. No mana. No class skills that actually kill anything. What he got instead was a system that evaluated how well he managed people, resources, logistics, and organizational structure — and rewarded him accordingly. Turns out, in a world where everyone else is busy leveling their sword arm, someone still needs to figure out where the food comes from, why the chain of command keeps collapsing, and how to stop three different survivor factions from killing each other before the actual monsters get a turn. Ethan is not the hero.He's the guy making sure the hero has somewhere to sleep, something to eat, and a reason not to defect. Directive started as a refugee camp.Then it became a settlement.Then an organization.Then something the system itself couldn't quite classify. And the higher Ethan climbs — from Team Lead to Operations Manager to whatever comes next — the more he realizes: The system isn't a reward mechanic.It's a management structure. And management structures can be studied.Reverse-engineered.Gamed. The only question is what happens when the system notices you've figured out how it works. Progression fantasy with a white-collar twist. Organizational building, bureaucratic warfare, and the slow, deeply satisfying process of turning a collapsing world into something that actually functions. No chosen one. No secret bloodline. Just competence, structure, and the audacity to submit a better report than the apocalypse.
| # | Title | Words |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | Chapter 1 — The End of the Workday | 0 |
| 1 | Chapter 2 — Congratulations on Your Assignment | 0 |