In book 2 of this action-packed illustrated series, the best kid gamers return to the world of eSports and battle for glory at their first pro tournament. Perfect for young fans of Ready Player One and Mr. Lemoncello's Library.
Welcome to Affinity, the hottest battle royale video game around! Since winning the first-ever Affinity tournament, The Weird Ones are supposed to be on top of the world. Josh, Hannah, Larkin, and Wheatley have formed their own professional team and launched a popular streaming channel, and they’re set to take eSports by storm.
But the kids have an awful secret: Wheatley is missing. And considering the threats he received before he disappeared, the other team members are worried. Plus, they keep getting matched with random players in-game who seem . . . disturbingly Wheatley-like? It’s creepy. Sinister, even. And it’s getting worse.
With their first pro match looming, the kids are running out of time. They need help, and fast—because without Wheatley, their pro dreams may be dashed before the game even begins.
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M. K. England (they/them) grew up on the Space Coast of Florida, watching shuttle launches from the backyard. These days, they call rural Virginia home, where there are many more cows but a tragic lack of rockets. In between marathon writing sessions, M.K. can be found drowning in fandom, rolling critical hits at the gaming table, digging in the garden, or feeding their video game addiction. They probably love Star Wars more than you do.
M.K. is the author of The Disasters, Spellhacker, The One True Me and You, and other forthcoming novels. Follow them at mkengland.com.
1
Hannah
I’ve wanted to be a professional gamer ever since I first picked up a controller. Getting paid to play video games? Yes, please. Getting the latest gaming gear for free, just so I can show it off? Amazing. Having my gaming skills actually recognized and admired--sounds good, right?
Somehow, I managed to completely overlook the fact that it is so much work.
“Hey, thanks for the sub, Breaker!” Larkin chirps, smoothly chatting with our live viewers even as she heals our teammate through a wicked attack.
She’s so good at that kind of stuff. She always makes sure to thank people when they subscribe to us on Clutch, or donate money when we do something awesome. She talks to our viewers, responds to the things they say in chat, and is always in a good mood for them. I get tired after being on camera for a while, but Larkin is a natural.
The tiny box with her live video feed shows her sitting in the glow of her computer monitor, spiky hair streaked with blue, and grinning with pure joy as she skips away from the fallen avatar of her enemy. My live video feed shows me as I always am: pale skin washed even paler from the camera light, hair pulled back in a messy braid, ball cap with the Affinity logo firmly in place, expression serious. Always serious . . . unless I’m utterly destroying someone, of course. Larkin is an amazing performer. I mostly just try to not embarrass myself by saying the wrong thing. I’m just here to do what I’m good at.
And what I’m good at is wrecking faces in the online battle royale game Affinity.
Maybe that makes me sound full of myself, but I have actual outside confirmation of my skill. I played in the first ever Affinity Invitational Tournament, where only the top sixty-four players in each role were invited to participate. And I didn’t just play--I won. My whole team won, really--me, Larkin, Josh, and Wheatley, playing under the team name The Weird Ones. But since the final round was a free-for-all with only one winner, instead of a whole team, we had to choose just one person that all the others would defend and support. That person was me. We all took down the other players together, but in the end it came down to just me and the other team’s top DPS.
The moment I landed that final blow was pretty much the best moment of my life. I was crowned the top Affinity player in the country. I was also given the opportunity to form my own professional gaming team, so of course I picked Larkin, Josh, and Wheatley. The Weird Ones have gone pro, and our first match is coming up super fast.
Except there’s one small problem.
Wheatley is still missing.
“Starzzle, that Nano Rogue is coming up behind you,” I call out, bringing my focus back to the game. She’s on high ground, too far over my head for me to intervene in time. “Rex, can you get there?”
Rex is the name we’ve started calling Josh, a.k.a. TankasaurusRex, whenever he’s playing with us while we stream. He listens in on voice chat but doesn’t talk, which I don’t get. He had to deal with people watching him play during the tournament. He’s going to have to deal with even more people watching once we have our first professional match in just a few days. Neither of those involve people hearing his voice, though, so that must be the thing.
I’d much rather people only hear my voice instead of seeing my face, but I guess everyone is different. If I’m gonna make it as a streamer, I don’t have much of a choice anyway.
On my screen, I see Larkin’s health bar drop sharply, then stabilize as she throws heals on herself. Her avatar bounces around, kiting the Rogue around the battlefield in a desperate attempt to survive. A bright red glow bursts over the horizon--Josh’s stun move, I bet--and Larkin has both of them healed to full in no time. They’re both so good.
“Whew, thanks for the backup, Rex!” Larkin says brightly. “You’re the best!”
I smile to myself as I line up a big finishing move to take out the Song Titan I’m currently destroying. Larkin thinks it’s weird when we talk to Josh and he doesn’t respond, so she always follows up to let people know what Josh did.
It makes sense. I know she wants me to do more talking to our viewers, more narrating what we’re doing, more joking and having fun, all that. It’s not as easy for me as it is for her, though. We both have our roles: she’s the one who’s good at all the social stuff, and I provide the more technical commentary during our matches. Sometimes I give advice for new players, or talk about strategy . . . but not too much, because our pro league competition could be watching.
“Great job, both,” I say, trying to make my voice sound more upbeat, the way I know Larkin would want it. “For the new players out there, on a free-for-all map like this, sometimes it’s more important to keep the other team from eliminating you than to focus on taking them out to boost your own score. We’re ahead by two right now, so Rex made the right call there to abandon his fight with the other tank and keep Starzzle from getting eliminated instead.”
The chat floods with text after that, and I catch a few comments here and there. Things like, “Good point!” and “But defense is boringggggg.” There are probably some people having a great time telling me how wrong I am and how bad we are, too, but I don’t pay any attention. I gotta focus on finding my next target to eliminate. It’s too hard to keep up with the chat during a match anyway.
Despite how weird it is to be watched and listened to all the time, I really like this part of livestreaming. It’s like getting to talk about my favorite thing in the world (gaming, of course) with thousands of friends every night. There are downsides, though. The people in our stream’s chat aren’t always nice.
And they can be really nosy.
Breaker221: Where is Wheaties??? Is he not on the team anymore?
Nameless1: Yea bring back Wheat
Nameless1: Nano Ranger is a sick class combo
Breaker221: No one cares about all the randos you been playing with lately
Breaker221: No offense rando
Nameless1: So?? Where is Wheat???
The question makes a little pit of dread open up in my stomach. Truth is, we haven’t heard from Wheatley since our final match against Phantom Gryphon Party during the tournament. Once Wheatley was eliminated, that was it. He was just . . . gone.
Honestly, I’m afraid he might be gone forever. He was an artificial intelligence, after all. Hurricane Games, the company that created Affinity, also created Wheatley. He was stored on their computers. All they had to do was hit Delete.
I shake my head to get rid of the thought. He can’t be gone. He’s not. We’re going to find him before our first match. We have to, not just because I really don’t want to replace him on our pro team . . . but because he’s our friend, and we all miss him.
I thought he might have been back in a stealthy kind of way, at first. A Nano Ranger named MsLadyCortana grouped with us once not too long after the tournament, and she said some stuff that sounded exactly like Wheatley. She never responded to our questions, though, and never spoke to us after that one match. We ended up deciding she must have been a copycat, someone who thought Wheatley’s class combo was cool and his weird jokes were funny.
We’ve been dealing with that a lot since...
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