�Hmm, I know what you mean.�But nothing in the world is 100 percent safe if you put it that way.�For example, there are more deaths from kitchen knives than objects.�
�But there are fewer users of objects than kitchen knives.�There�s a difference between 1 in 10 dying and 10 out of 100 dying.�You can�t just measure it by numbers.�Besides, I heard that there are definitely people who die as objects, right?�
Uorin held out the <Everyday Gift> to Sirone.
�It was 240 years ago that this object first appeared in the world.�And some of the people who owned these things actually died a miserable death.�
�������������
�Equivalent exchange of good fortune and unhappiness?�
�no.�It�s not an object�s problem, it�s a human problem.�The first owner of <Everyday Gift> was a shoemaker living in the lower class.�I probably made a lot of money.�But he couldn�t overcome the compulsion.�The day when he got caught in a simple gift became extremely depressing.�That was 75 out of 100 days.�Eventually, he developed a mental illness and went crazy after playing roulette all day.�
It was a phenomenon that occurs when humans fall into probabilities.
In fact, people who are addicted to gambling and go down to the finish line do not gamble to make money.�All they wanted was the pleasure of winning a battle of odds, and money was just a tool to get it.
�After so many years, <Everyday Gift> passed into the hands of a certain nobleman.�It�s not like you�re the kind of person who only looks at roulette because they don�t have enough money.�But one day, by a miracle, I won.�and����.�
�and?�
Uorin pursed her lips, imagining the situation at the time.
�The family is ruined.�
�Damned?�why?�
�If you get caught in a miracle, give me an object.�The object the noble received is a small stone called <Nemesis>, and when it comes in contact with it, the user�s imagination becomes a reality within a radius of 20 meters.�The noble who obtained <Nemesis> was absorbed in his imagination every day.�You know my brother.�That�s why, human desire����.�
Uorin wiggled her index finger and clicked her tongue, perhaps embarrassed to say it.
Sirone immediately understood.�He also didn�t think it was necessarily bad.
All human beings live with desires, and balance with reality is achieved through imagination.�
The problem was when that imagination became a reality.
�Anyway, that�s how it got ruined.�And <Nemesis> left to find a new owner.�It is still very popular among fans.�But I don�t think I can last long.�In some cases, they returned to the auction house after a month.�Of course, it is true that objects are dangerous.�But that�s a human problem, not an objet problem.�In fact, most of the owners of <Every Day Gift> lived a comfortable life.�
If so, Sirone has nothing to say.�But the feeling got worse.
If it�s not particularly dangerous, what is an object?�Why is this stuff going around the world?
Sirone turned her attention to <Everyday Gift>.
For an object to give birth to an object was like a goose laying golden eggs from the collector�s point of view.
But at the same time, I thought it was terribly destructive.�If there was no limit to the production of objects, the world would perish someday, if not immediately.
When I confided my thoughts, Uorin also agreed to some parts.
�There is a possibility.�Although not in our generation.�But it will be fine.�Even if it is an object, its durability is not as strong as other objects.�It is bound to break down over time.�Among the items that have been miraculously discovered so far, the most dangerous is <Nemesis>.�At the Curia auction, <Nemesis> is classified as A grade.�<Everyday Gift> is also grade A.�I guess I can�t give you a gift that�s higher than the grade.�
Curia is a world-class auction company, and I had heard about it from Nade before.
However, Sirone paid more attention to other words than that.
<Everyday Gift> cannot give you a gift higher than your level.�At first glance, it seemed plausible, but it made no sense. JrNovels.com