Loser to Legend: Gathering Wives with My Unlimited Money System
Chapter 351 351: Live Stream After a Long Time
"You rewrote an entire ecosystem?" he asked.
Reva shrugged without looking impressed with herself. "The old one was garbage. Filled with bloatware and backends, and shit ton of privacy and data collecting spywares. This one won't fight you when you try to push it. It'll scale with whatever ridiculous pressure you put on it."
"That's dangerously vague," Xavier said, but he was already impressed.
He spent a few minutes flipping through features—instant link to any hologram display, real-time sync with his gloves, a neural typing mode that predicted full sentences, encryption so tight even the Blackwoods would break their teeth on it. It was the kind of system someone would kill to get their hands on.
Reva gave him a look. "Go ahead. Show it off. I know you want to."
Xavier didn't deny it.
He opened the livestream app. The counter jumped from zero to six digits before he even loaded the camera. The second he went live, the number shot past a million, then two, then climbed like the screen couldn't keep up.
Chat flooded the feed at a speed even the new OS struggled to display cleanly.
"XAVIER WHERE WERE YOU—"
"BRO YOU DIED???"
"WHY DID YOU DISAPPEAR MAN WE WERE WORRIED"
"UPDATE US—WHAT HAPPENED—WHY NO POSTS"
"HE LOOKS ALIVE HOLY SHIT—"
"OHHH HE'S SWEATY HE'S BEEN DOING SOMETHING—"
"HIS HAIR WTF DID HE FIGHT A BEAR—"
Xavier leaned back in the chair, letting the camera rest somewhere above him. "Relax. I'm fine," he said, letting his voice settle into that calm tone his fans always reacted to. "I had some mess to sort out. Personal stuff. Got sick too. Couldn't come live. But I'm back, so stop spamming like you're planning my funeral."
The comment feed exploded again, but this time with relief instead of panic. Someone immediately asked what he'd been doing.
"I'm planning something interesting," Xavier said, eyes drifting over the screen. "Can't talk about it yet. You'll know in a few days."
That sentence alone made the viewer count spike reach above eighteen million.
Then someone dropped a comment that the entire chat latched onto:
"XAVIER PLAY STARFALL ARENA TONIGHT PLEASE—TRY THE NEW MODE—IT'S AN ACTION FPS—YOU'LL LOVE IT—"
The name caught his eye. He searched it up on his new phone without breaking the stream. The game's trailer opened instantly—high-speed VR combat, tactical maneuvers, close-quarters fights, squad matches, survival rounds. It didn't look like a game for fun; it looked like a battlefield simulation with graphics polished enough to feel real.
He watched a ten-second clip of someone diving behind cover as a volley of energy rounds tore the wall apart.
"It's a perfect place to test myself," he muttered, more to himself than to the stream, but his fans heard it anyway and started screaming in chat.
Xavier lifted his gaze back to the camera. "Fine. I'll try it."
Chat exploded.
"But go easy on me. I've never touched it before. If I die in five seconds, you don't get to laugh."
They laughed anyway.
He smirked a little at the chaos on his screen. "I'll meet you in the game later tonight. Don't camp the spawn points. And don't roast me if I play like trash."
The stream went insane, fans spamming heart emojis, threats, jokes, hype messages, promises to protect him in-game, and at least fifty people arguing over which server he should join.
Xavier ended the stream while they were still screaming.
The numbers continued climbing for a second even after the camera cut off, a quiet reminder of how big his reach had become without him even trying.
Xavier had barely lowered the phone from his livestream when it buzzed again.
Unknown number. Private line. Not the kind that came by accident.
Reva glanced over from the couch, one eyebrow raised.
He ignored the look and answered anyway.
"Yeah?"
A woman's voice came through—smooth, practiced, the kind of voice someone used when they were used to commanding entire departments with a single message.
"Good evening, Xavier. I'm the owner of StreamSphere."
He almost hung up right there.
Last time her people contacted him, they tried pushing some massive partnership contract with royalties, promotional benefits, a personal team assigned only to his channel—basically a golden throne every creator would kill for. He declined without blinking and blocked every number tied to their company, something no sane streamer would ever do unless they wanted their entire career set on fire.
Xavier didn't care. They didn't own him.
He leaned back in the chair and said, "If this is about your partnership program, I'm not interested. Don't waste your time."
She laughed softly, like she was expecting that. "Not calling for that. Though I still think rejecting that deal was… impressive."
"Sure," he said flatly. "So why're you calling?"
"Because Starfall Arena's studio reached out to us," she said. "They asked for your contact details the moment your stream ended."
Xavier felt Reva's eyes shift toward him again.
The owner continued, "But since I know you don't like your information being thrown around, I didn't give them anything. Instead, I told them I would speak to you directly."
"Good," Xavier said. "So what's their problem?"
"They want to hold an event. A special limited-time one. Since you announced you'll be playing their game tonight, their servers blew up. They said they've never seen anything like it. Millions of new logins within minutes. They want to release an event tied to your debut."
Normally, he'd shut that down immediately. Corporate nonsense wasn't his thing. He wasn't interested in being someone's mascot or money machine. But this wasn't for him. This would be for his fans. And they'd lose their minds if an entire event launched just because he decided to play a stupid VR game for a night.
Xavier rubbed his jaw. "If they do this, it better not force players to pay anything. And no grind-heavy crap. I don't want my fans suffering because of some marketing stunt."
"I'll note that," she said quickly.
"And they have six hours," Xavier added. "If they can't make it by then, tell them to forget it. Also make sure they announce it on their socials so my fans actually know when I'm joining."
"I'll convey your terms to them right away," she said. "But before that—do you have any personal conditions? Payment amount? Event fee? You generated a spike bigger than some international tournaments. The studio is ready to offer—"
"I don't want payment," Xavier cut in. "Tell them to give whatever they planned for me to the dev team working on the event. All of it. They're the ones who'll be pulling an all-nighter for this. Let them have the bonus."
The owner went quiet for a moment, but her silence wasn't confusion—it was surprise, genuine for once.
"…Xavier, you are nothing like the streamers I've dealt with," she said finally. "Most would've demanded triple just for mentioning the game on camera."
"Yeah," Xavier said, shaking his head a little. "I'm not most people."
"I can tell," she murmured, sounding almost amused before composing herself. "I'll contact the Starfall Arena team now and return to you if they need clarification. Otherwise… enjoy your game tonight. The whole platform will be watching."
He didn't respond to the last part.
He cut the call, slipped the phone back into his pocket, and leaned back as Reva stared at him with an expression that wasn't quite shock—just a quiet, impressed look, like she'd expected him to make things complicated and instead he'd flipped the entire situation into something cleaner.