Reincarnated as the Villain: The System Made Me Overpowered-Chapter 31: The God-Slayer Awakens

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Chapter 31: The God-Slayer Awakens

Smoke clung to the broken skies above Ebonreach. The obsidian towers were cracked, bleeding aether into the heavens like a wounded god. Craters scarred the land. The remnants of the Wyrmgate still glowed faintly, pulsing like the final heartbeat of a dying titan. And in the center of it all stood Valerian Nightshade—draconic wings tattered, obsidian coat torn, and silver eyes no longer glowing with the System’s tethered power.

The world had changed.

And the gods knew it.

All over the continent, ancient seals cracked. Leylines surged like tidal waves. Mana storms tore through cities. The sudden collapse of the System—the very mechanism that kept the balance between fate and chaos—had triggered a reaction unlike anything seen in the last thousand years.

And it had all begun with a single word.

"Ascend."

Valerian clenched his fist, the System crystal now darkened and inert, embedded in his palm like a cursed relic. The connection was gone—but something had taken its place. Something older. Wilder. Hungrier.

"You broke it," Lira said, stepping through the rubble behind him. Her crimson armor was scorched, her expression a mixture of awe and barely-contained fear. "You killed the System, Valerian. The failsafe of the gods. The contract of all power. What... what are we now?"

Valerian turned, and a small smirk played on his lips despite the exhaustion etched into every muscle. "Free."

A sharp roar shook the valley.

From the north, a winged beast burst through the clouds, its scales gleaming with celestial light—one of the Primals. The Guardians of Order. Creatures bound to the System’s will. Without the chain to hold them now, they were sovereign—and furious.

The creature descended with a cry that split mountains. Silver fire rained from its mouth, consuming the hills beyond. Entire formations of knights who had come to investigate the Wyrmgate’s collapse were incinerated before they could scream.

Valerian’s smirk vanished.

"Lira. Get the wounded out."

"What about—"

He stepped forward, wings flaring, hand gripping his glaive—the Duskreaver, born of a Shadow Titan’s spine and the last breath of the fallen war god, Ashkar.

"I’ll keep it busy."

She hesitated for a heartbeat, then nodded and vanished into the ruins, rallying the survivors.

The Primal landed with a quake. Its body was cloaked in astral flame, its eyes glowing with unfiltered rage. It spoke—not with words, but with will.

"You shattered the Balance."

Valerian rolled his neck. "It was already broken."

"We were the keepers. You were the instrument. And now—now the chains of causality are severed."

A pause.

"You are an anomaly. You will be erased."

Then it attacked.

The sky became a whirl of starlight and fire as the beast lunged. Valerian surged upward, wind howling behind him as Duskreaver met divine talon in midair. The clash sent a shockwave through the clouds, carving a rift in the heavens. Lightning danced across the battlefield as their duel lit up the ruins of Ebonreach.

The war-wyrm—Valerian’s summoned behemoth—roared from below and leapt to join its master, engaging the Primal in a titanic aerial brawl. Wings cracked. Flames collided. The sky itself screamed.

Meanwhile, across the empire, chaos unfolded.

---

In the Capital, Aurion:

A council of Archmagi argued over what to do with the loss of System governance. Spells were no longer auto-corrected. Healers failed to resurrect. Portals blinked erratically or opened to unspeakable voids. The magical infrastructure that had sustained civilization was now a ticking bomb.

In the midst of panic, a new voice rose.

Selene of House Veylin stood at the center of the grand hall, her eyes like sharpened blades.

"We prepare for war," she declared. "Because the world we knew is dead—and those with power will come to claim what remains."

Gasps echoed through the chamber. The old nobles of the System-backed order looked terrified, but Selene only straightened her back and kept speaking.

"We must forge new pacts. The old gods stir. And the Nightshade boy—he may have begun a war no one is ready to finish."

---

In the Northern Frostlands:

Lady Seraphine emerged from a burning temple of the Forgotten Saints, her blade soaked in divine ichor. She looked toward the sky, feeling the surge of wild mana. The gods had begun to awaken—the old gods, long suppressed by the System. And they were not merciful.

A black snow fell around her.

"The End Epoch has begun," she whispered.

Her personal guard knelt beside her. "Should we return to the Citadel?"

Seraphine shook her head. "No. We go south. We find him. If Valerian has truly broken fate... then he may be the only one strong enough to survive the gods’ wrath. Or stop it."

---

Back at the Ruins of Ebonreach:

Valerian smashed against the ground, his shoulder dislocated, mouth bloodied. The Primal descended again, screaming in fury.

"Return the balance, mortal!"

But Valerian stood. Wavering, yes. But still standing.

He dragged himself to his feet, lifting Duskreaver one-handed.

"Balance?" he snarled. "That’s just another name for control. You think I shattered your world to let it rebuild itself into order?"

His silver eyes ignited—this time, not with the System’s light, but something raw. Something old.

"No. I did it to remake it."

He raised the crystal embedded in his palm.

And it responded—not as a system interface, but as a living core. The broken fragments of the System had become something else. Something primal. It fed on entropy. On will.

And Valerian had more than enough of both.

He roared, and the battlefield warped.

Reality bent.

Ravens made of shadow emerged from his back like a cloak. His glaive crackled with midnight lightning. Every breath summoned illusions that killed. He was no longer bound by the laws of structured power. He was the anomaly—the flaw turned weapon.

The war-wyrm, broken and wounded, fused with him in a final act of defiance. Wings of draconic flame flared from his back, and a crown of horns formed over his head.

The Primal faltered.

"Impossible..."

Valerian vanished.

And reappeared with his glaive already buried in the beast’s throat.

The explosion of silver blood turned the world white for a moment. The Primal fell, its celestial body crashing through mountains and forests like a meteor.

Silence followed.

And then a scream—not of terror, but of triumph—rose from the survivors.

Valerian stood atop the corpse, drenched in divine ichor, his chest rising and falling in ragged breaths.

The first true god-slayer of the post-System era.