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GEAR

GIGAKINN
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
A long chaptered coming of age story. Unfortunate Ari's life takes a complete different direction when he finds out he's been chosen by the GEAR. Ari is thrown into the most prestigious toxic school in Japan. He must now vie to survive in the hostile competitive sports environment that is Japanese high school basketball. Authors note:(Hello. GIGAKINN here. This is my original story, GEAR. I'll also be posting on Royal Road under the same user name, GIGAKINN) (Dec, 2025)
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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1: The Accident

Three Years Ago

Seiko Gymnasium.

The energy was like a minefield. Young efforts coming from vanity and this metallic clang of constantly hitting the rim....for the last three minutes.

He stood at the free-throw line. The basketball felt heavy in his hands, like holding onto an anvil with a rope tied around it and the other end tied around his neck. Sweat dripped down his corpse like temple—not from exertion, but from pure anxiety.

The middle school gym wasn't even half-full, just a handful of parents scattered across the bleachers. Even less were the students and teachers.

But to the pale skinned boy standing at the free throw line, it felt like the entire world was watching him miss.

"Toru! Any day now!" Coach Matsuda's voice boomed off the gymnasium walls.

He could feel the pity. From other parents. Thanking god their own child was decent at basketball. From the bench kids who laughed saying even they could do better.

The boy could feel all of it.

He bounced the ball once. Twice. His hands were too big for his thirteen-year-old body, all knuckles and long bony fingers. He was already 6'1", taller than most of his puny teammates, taller than half the teachers at Seiko Middle School. People looked at him and saw a power forward. Saw potential. Saw a basketball player.

They were all wrong.

He shot. The ball sailed in a tragic arc, hitting the front of the rim with a hollow clang that seemed to reverberate through his entire skeleton. It bounced pathetically to the left, not even close to the basket.

"For god's sake, Toru." Matsuda wasn't even angry anymore. Just tired. "You're 6'1" and you shoot like you're throwing a grenade. How is that even possible?"

The other players snickered. Ari heard Kentaro whisper something to Daichi, saw them both laugh. Their giggles rattled their way into his pale skin His face burned red, but he kept his expression flat. Ari had learned early that showing emotion only made it worse.

"Run it again," Matsuda said with the enthusiasm of a man scheduling his own funeral.

But Ari couldn't run it again. He couldn't do any of it again—the missed layups, the turnovers, the way his body seemed to revolt against every basketball fundamental ever invented. He was tall and he loved basketball with a passion that bordered on religious, but his body just wasn't made for basketball... Or really anything else in life

After practice, he'd stayed late in the gym, working on his form in the dark like some kind of basketball ghost. But it never helped. His shot never went in without luck. His footwork never made sense. His agility was just not there. He was a 6'1" statue with the coordination of a newborn giraffe. His knees hurt when he moved too hard. He just....SUCKED.

Two months later, he quit.

The memory of Coach matsuda's face was not disappointed, but relieved. That memory still kept Ari up at night sometimes.

Present Day – April, Three Years Later.

Ari Toru woke up at 5:47 AM to the sound of his phone alarm playing a jazz piano instrumental he'd downloaded specifically because it was the only thing that made him not want to throw his phone against the wall. He lay there for thirty seconds, staring at the ceiling of his small bedroom, mentally preparing himself for another day of being aggressively average.

At sixteen, he'd grown another five inches to 6'6", which should have been impressive but mostly just made him feel like a poorly-constructed tower in a city of normal-sized buildings.

His body had remained stubbornly slender despite his mother's best efforts to fatten him up—78 kilograms stretched across that frame made him look like someone had taken a regular teenage boy and run him through a taffy-puller. His face was determinedly unremarkable: straight nose, full girly lips, thick brows that made him look like he wasn't Japanese, high cheekbones that weren't quite high enough to be interesting. Th

Except for his eyes.

Ari had inherited his grandmother's eyes—intimidating, very upturned at the corners, and his iris was a void like onyx. Black with zero colour, the same with his beautiful mother. It made people uncomfortable. Like a terror cat. Unsettling.

His middle school guidance counselor had noted in his file (he'd seen it once when she left the room). They were dark. Just dark. Void and when he focused on something, people said it looked like he was trying to see through it to the other side. And weirdly enough his pupil would contract and expand depending how excited dear old Ari was.

Girls would complain to teachers when he just happened to cross eyes with them.

Boyw called him a creep.

But who cares about any of them

Ari had stopped playing basketball.

But he'd never stopped watching it. Never stopped analyzing it. While other kids were out being normal teenagers, Ari was on his laptop breaking down game film like a military strategist, memorizing plays. It was an obsessive dedication that would have made him a genius if he could actually just fucking play the sport.

But he couldn't. So instead, he'd poured everything into academics.

His room reflected this pivot: walls once covered with basketball, anime and yes power rangers posters now held a single, faded Kobe Bryant print above his desk, surrounded by achievement certificates and a small bookshelf crammed with textbooks and study guides and. His old basketball sat in the corner, deflated, gathering dust like a relic from a past life. A loser life.

Ari pulled himself out of bed, his black hair fell across his forehead in its characteristic mop-top chaos. Thick and even darker than his eyes. He'd need a haircut soon, but haircuts required caring about appearance, and Ari had allocated exactly zero mental energy to that particular concern.

Downstairs, his parents were already awake.

Toru Hideaki sat at the kitchen table reading the morning paper with focused intensity. A man who clearly still believed in print journalism—who even reads newspapers in 2025...do they still even exist.

Regardless Ari wouldn't bother to ask where his father even got them.

Hideaki was forty-three, with silver threading through his black hair and reading glasses perched on his prominent nose. He was the one Ari had to thank for the thick chaotic black thing he called his hair. At least balding was something he would never worry about. They both had an abnormally close hairline for Japanese males. Especially Ari wouldn't care to at least trim his mosaic of baby hair.

Hideaki worked as a mid-level accountant at a manufacturing firm—reliable and utterly unmemorable work that paid the bills and kept the family comfortable. He wore his white dress shirt even at breakfast, as if preparing for work was a ritual that began the moment consciousness did.

"Morning, Ari," he said without looking up from an article about interest rates.

Toru Michiko was at the stove, 32 years old. A beautiful woman. Making tamagoyaki. Muscle memory tamagoyaki. She'd of course had time to master the breakfast for the 16 years she'd been married.

She was smaller than her husband, petite and energetic, with smile lines around her eyes that came from years of finding joy in mundane things. She worked part-time at a local library, which suited her perfectly—she loved order, loved books, loved the quiet contentment of a well-organized life.

"Ari! The eggs are almost ready. Did you check your email last night?" Her voice had that particular frequency that all mothers seem to unlock—bright, cheerful, and somehow conveying multiple layers of meaning simultaneously.

"Not yet." Ari poured himself a glass of water, his height making him duck slightly under the kitchen light fixture that had been installed for normal-sized humans.

"Check it now." His father finally looked up from the paper, and there was something in his expression that Ari couldn't quite read. "There should be something important."

Ari pulled out his phone, thumbing through his emails. Mild interest. He expected nothing but spam and school announcements. Then he saw it.

Subject: ACCEPTANCE – Yoshimura High School Scholarship Program

His thumb hovered over the email for three full seconds before he opened it.

Dear Toru Ari,

Congratulations! After careful review of your academic records and entrance examination scores, we are pleased to offer you a full scholarship to Yoshimura High School for the upcoming academic year...

Ari read the email three times. Then a fourth.

Yoshimura High School.

Yoshimura High School.

It was one of the most prestigious boarding schools in Japan, a private academy that consistently sent students to Tokyo University, Kyoto University, all the top-tier institutions. And that was a regular occurance.

Students who graduated from Yoshimura were bound for success in life both in Japan and abroad. Especially abroad

It was the kind of school that appeared in articles about "Japan's Educational Elite." The kind of school that had a waiting list longer than most schools' actual enrollment.

It was also, Ari knew with a sinking feeling in his stomach, home to one of the best high school basketball programs in the entire country.

"Well?" His mother had turned from the stove, her voluptuous body moving gentle. Wooden spatula still in hand, her face was bright with excitement. "Did you see?"

"I got in." The words felt strange in his mouth.

"YOU GOT IN!" Michiko practically launched herself across the kitchen, pulling Ari into a hug that his height made awkward but his mother's enthusiasm made inescapable. Pressing him against her soft comforting body.

"I knew it! I knew your scores would be good enough! My brilliant boy!"

"It's a significant opportunity." His father had stood up now, folding the newspaper with careful precision. "Yoshimura's academic reputation is exceptional. The connections alone would be very useful for university applications."

"And it's a full scholarship!" His mother was still clutching his arm. "Room, board, everything! Do you know how much that saves? This is incredible, Ari. This is incredible."

They were happy. Genuinely, unreservedly happy.

Ari felt like he'd swallowed a stone.

He spent the morning in a daze, mechanically going through his routine at his current high school—a perfectly average public institution where he was a perfectly average student who happened to be very tall. His friends (the few he had) congratulated him with little enthusiasm people reserve for things that don't directly affect them. His teachers nodded approvingly, as if his acceptance validated their own teaching somehow.

But Ari couldn't shake the dread pooling in his gut.

He knew about Yoshimura. Everyone who followed high school basketball knew about Yoshimura. Their team had won the national championship twice in the last seven years. And if you know how competitive Japanese highschool basketball was you'd be speechless.

They produced players who went on to university programs, sometimes even overseas. Their gym was state-of-the-art. Their coach was and NBA champion.

And their student body, according to every forum and social media post Ari had ever seen, was a hierarchy of athletic excellence and social status that would make a medieval feudal system look egalitarian.

At Yoshimura, basketball players were gods. The starting five were celebrities. Even the bench players had social clout. The school's culture revolved around the team—their games, their victories, their drama.

And then there would be Ari: 6'6", the exact physical profile of a power forward, surrounded by basketball excellence, and completely, utterly, hopelessly talentless.

He'd be a walking target. A joke. The tall kid who couldn't play. In a school where basketball was everything, he'd be nothing. Worse than nothing—he'd be a disappointment. A waste of good height.

That afternoon, after school, Ari walked through the small park near his house, hands shoved in his pockets, trying to figure out how to tell his parents he didn't want to go. They were so happy. His mother had already started planning, talking about what he'd need for the dorms, about visiting during breaks. His father had actually smiled—really smiled, not the polite expression he usually wore, but something genuine.

How could he tell them he'd rather stay at his mediocre public school than go to Yoshimura?

The basketball court in the park was empty, the chain nets swaying slightly in the spring breeze. Ari stopped, staring at it. Some kids had left a ball behind, sitting at the free-throw line like an invitation.

Almost unconsciously, Ari walked onto the court, picked up the ball. It felt foreign in his hands now—it had been three years since he'd seriously held one. He dribbled once, twice. His form was still terrible. He could see it in his mind's eye, all the mistakes: too much wrist, not enough leg drive.

He knew everything about basketball. He just couldn't do any of it.

Ari shot. The ball hit the backboard and bounced away. Beyond his reach. Beyond Ari.

"Of course," he muttered to himself.

He left the ball where it rolled, walking away from the court with his hands back in his pockets and his future feeling like a weight around his long neck.

Two Weeks Later

The bus to Yoshimura High School was comfortable, modern, air-conditioned. It was specifically chartered for new students, picking up scholarship recipients from various districts around the prefecture. Ari had a window seat, his long legs cramped even in the spacious seating, his duffel bag on the seat next to him serving as both luggage and social barrier.

Ari had bade his parents goodbye. And like everyone else he had his luggage with him.

There were maybe fifteen other students on the bus. Most were chattering excitedly, comparing acceptance letters, already forming the beginnings of friendships. A few were on their phones. One girl was reading, completely absorbed in her book.

Ari stared out the window, watching the cityscape gradually shift to suburbs, then to the more rural area where Yoshimura was located. The school owned a massive campus—dormitories, academic buildings, sports facilities that rivaled small universities.

His mother had cried when he left. Happy tears, proud tears. His father had shaken his hand like Ari was going off to war. He told him to work hard, make them proud.

Ari had smiled and nodded and felt like a fraud.

The countryside rolled past, green and peaceful. It was late afternoon, the sun starting its slow descent, painting everything in warm golden light that. Made the world look kinder than it was.

Ari's phone buzzed. A message from his mother: Be safe! Call us when you arrive! So proud of you!

He typed back a quick response, then returned to staring out the window. In a few hours, he'd be at Yoshimura. He'd be surrounded by excellence he could never achieve, by a culture that would remind him daily of his failure, by—

The truck came.....OUT OF NOWHERE

Later, Ari wouldn't remember the details clearly. The bus driver's SHOUT. The SUDDEN swerve. The HORRIBLE, METALLIC crunch of IMPACT. The WORLD tilting sideways. Someone SCREAMING. The window EXPLODING inward in a SHOWER OF GLASS.

He remembered the sensation of weightlessness, of being airborne, of his body slamming against something hard. Pain, bright and absolute, consuming everything.

Then darkness.

Yoshimura Medical Center – Three Days Later

The first thing Ari heard was beeping. Steady, rhythmic, mechanical. The second thing was his mother's voice, low and worried, speaking to someone he couldn't see.

"—said he should be waking up soon. No permanent damage, thank god, but the shock—"

"Michiko." His father's voice, calmer but strained. "He'll be fine. The doctor said—"

Ari opened his eyes.

The hospital room swam into focus, slowly and gradually he made out the details of where he eas: white ceiling tiles, fluorescent lights, medical equipment clustered around his bed. An IV in his arm. Bandages on his left shoulder and forehead. Everything hurt, but distantly, like his body was reporting pain from far away. And yet the pain was pulsing, weakening.

"Ari!" His mother's face appeared above him, and she looked terrible—her bright gray eyes and white of it was now worryingly red, her face was pale, hair was pulled back in a messy ponytail so unlike her usual careful appearance. "Oh thank god, thank god—"

"How do you feel?" His father was there too, standing beside the bed, and he looked like he'd aged ten years in three days.

"Like..." Ari's voice came out raspy, dry throat. "Like I was in a bus accident."

It was a stupid joke, but his mother laughed anyway, a wet, relieved sound that turned into a sob halfway through. She grabbed his hand—his right one, the one without the IV—and squeezed hard enough to hurt.

"You scared us," she said. "You scared us so badly."

"What happened?" Ari tried to sit up and immediately regretted it..'my poor back'. He cried inside

His father gently pushed him back down.

"The truck ran a red light," his father explained. "It hit the bus. You were thrown—" He stopped, and he swallowed hard. "You hit your head. Broken collarbone, concussion, lacerations. But you're okay. You're going to be okay."

Each word came after the other with a raising worry from his mother and a contained grim anger from his father.

"What about the other students?", Ari asked.

"Minor injuries, mostly. One student broke their arm. The bus driver has whiplash. But everyone survived." His father's voice was firm, grounding. "You were the most seriously injured."

'I guess this is why sit belts are important.'

But Ari's parents wouldn't scold him on that....yet.

Ari lay back, processing. Broken collarbone. That meant no basketball for—he almost laughed at himself. No basketball. As if that mattered. As if he played basketball.

"The school called," his mother said, wiping her eyes. "They said to take all the time you need to recover. Your spot is secure."

"That's good." The words felt automatic.

His parents stayed for another hour, his mother fussing over his blankets and pillows, his father asking the nurses questions with almost more precision than they could handle. He was so worried, Ari could tell no matter how hard his stoic father tried to hide it.

Eventually, a nurse gently suggested they let Ari rest, that visiting hours were ending.

His mother kissed his forehead. His father squeezed his shoulder—the good one. Then they were gone, and Ari was alone in the hospital room with the beeping machines and the smell of antiseptic.

He stared at the ceiling, thinking about how strange life was. Three days ago, he'd been dreading Yoshimura. Now he was just grateful to be alive.

His eyes felt heavy. The painkillers were probably kicking in. He should sleep. The doctor had said rest was important for—

The text appeared in his vision.

Ari blinked. Blinked again. The text was still there, floating in the air about two feet from his face, glowing faintly blue like a holographic dislay. Translucent and beautiful.

[GEAR INITIALIZING...]

[10%... 47%... 89%... 100%]

[INITIALIZATION COMPLETE]

"What the—" Ari tried to sit up again, ignoring the pain. The text moved with his vision, staying centered no matter where he looked. He waved his hand through it. His hand passed through empty air, but the text remained, perfectly clear, perfectly impossible.

[WELCOME, ARI TORU]

[YOU HAVE BEEN SELECTED]

"No," Ari whispered. "No, this isn't—this is a concussion. This is brain damage. This is—"

[SYSTEM ACTIVATED: I AM THE GEAR]

[ANALYZING HOST...]

A new window appeared, filling his vision with text and numbers:

[HOST STATUS]

NAME: TORU ARI

AGE: 16

HEIGHT: 198 CM (6'6")

WEIGHT: 78 KG

POSITION: POWER FORWARD

PHYSICAL STATS:

POWER: 23/100

STAMINA: 31/100

VERTICAL: 18/100

SPEED: 35/100

BASKETBALL STATS:

SCORING: 12/100

DEFENSE: 15/100

ATHLETICISM: 22/100

IQ: 67/100

PASSING: 28/100

SKILL: 8/100

[CURRENT ASSESSMENT: CRITICALLY UNDERDEVELOPED]

[POTENTIAL: CALCULATING... ERROR... RECALCULATING...]

[POTENTIAL = LIMITLESS]

Ari stared at the numbers, his heart pounding. This wasn't real. This couldn't be real. He'd hit his head, he was hallucinating, he was—

"Help!" His voice came out strangled, panicked. "HELP! I need a doctor!"

The door burst open. A nurse rushed in, followed quickly by a doctor—young, professional, immediately concerned.

"What's wrong? Are you in pain?" The doctor was at his bedside, checking his vitals.

"I'm seeing things!" Ari pointed at the air where the system display hovered. "Text! Numbers! It's right there!"

The doctor and nurse exchanged glances. The kind of glances medical professionals exchange when a patient is not doing well. Or just when a kid who was in a bus accident swears his seeing numbers.

Must be Mathe and Calculus PTSD.

"Ari, can you tell me what you're seeing?" The doctor's voice was calm, carefully neutral.

"It's like... like a video game interface. Stats. Numbers. It's saying I have a 'system'—" He stopped, seeing their expressions. The concern. The professional worry.

They thought he was crazy. Or brain damaged. Or both.

"It's probably a combination of the concussion and the stress," the doctor said, pulling out a small flashlight to check Ari's pupils. "Visual hallucinations aren't uncommon after head trauma. We'll run another CT scan, make sure there's no swelling we missed."

"I'm not hallucinating!" But even as Ari said it, he could see the system display, still floating there in bright white writing and an orange design. Some sort of transparent dark blue canvas, visible only to him. The doctor and nurse were looking right through it.

The doctor said something to the nurse about medications, about observation. Ari caught words like "traumatic stress" and "monitoring."

His parents were called back. His mother was crying again, his father talking quietly with the doctor in the corner. More tests were ordered. Everyone was very concerned, very professional, very sure that Ari was experiencing some kind of post-traumatic breakdown.

And through it all, the system display remained, patient and implacable.

[ARI TORU]

[DO NOT PANIC]

As if that was helpful advice.

Eventually, his parents left again—his mother was reluctant, his father promising to be back first thing in the morning. The doctor adjusted his medications. The nurse checked his vitals one more time. Then Ari was alone again.

The system was still there.

He took a deep breath, forcing himself to think. Okay. Either he'd seriously damaged his brain, or something impossible was happening. Given that the doctors couldn't see the display, option one seemed more likely. But the alternative...

Ari had read web novels. Watched anime. He knew the tropes. Systems. Litrpg. The "chosen one" suddenly gaining abilities through some game-like interface. Becoming all powerful and having harems. He'd consumed hundreds of stories with that exact premise during his years of basketball obsession, living vicariously through protagonists who had the skills he lacked.

"If you're real," he whispered to the empty air, "prove it."

The display shifted.

[CONGRATULATIONS, ARI TORU]

[YOU HAVE BEEN GIFTED THE GEAR SYSTEM]

[IT IS IN YOUR BEST INTEREST TO MAKE FULL USE OF IT...]

[...AND BECOME THE MVP OF MVPs]

Then, as if the system had a sense of timing:

[INITIAL QUEST UNLOCKED]

[QUEST: "FIRST STEPS"]

[OBJECTIVE: RECOVER FULLY FROM YOUR INJURIES]

[REWARD: 10 SKILL POINTS, SYSTEM TUTORIAL]

[TIME LIMIT: NONE]

[FAILURE CONDITION: NONE]

He took time to really take it all in. These translucent messages. It was insane. This was impossible. This was everything he'd ever dreamed about and never, ever thought would actually happen.

Or he was having a mental breakdown in a hospital bed, and none of this was real. He reached out weakly with those long arms of his trying to scratch and touch the interface Infront of him. It went right through. He couldn't feel a thing. It just blurred the words where his hands touched....or didn't touch.

The smart thing to do—the sane thing to do—would be to tell the doctors, let them run their tests, accept whatever medication they prescribed. Trust in modern medicine and rationality.

But Ari was sixteen years old, had just survived a bus accident, and was staring at a system interface that promised to make him into something he'd never been: a basketball player. No...The MVP of MVPS.

He made a decision.

"Okay," he whispered to the system, to himself, to the universe. "I won't freak out. I'll recover. I'll keep this quiet. And if you're real..." He paused, his cat-like eyes intense even in the dim hospital room. "If you're real, then show me. Show me what I can become."

The system display pulsed once, as if in acknowledgment.

[WISE CHOICE]

[REST NOW, ARI TORU]

[YOUR EVOLUTION BEGINS SOON]

Ari lay back against the pillows, his broken collarbone throbbing, his head aching, his future suddenly impossibly uncertain and impossibly bright.

Outside his window, the sun had fully set. Somewhere in the distance, he could hear the sound of a basketball bouncing on pavement—someone playing in the hospital parking lot, probably, the rhythmic echo carrying through the spring night.

For the first time in three years, the sound didn't fill him with regret.

It filled him with something else entirely.

Hope.