The Villain is Too Good at Broadcasting

Chapter 24 - The True Master of the Korean Peninsula (2)



Chapter 24 The True Master of the Korean Peninsula (2)

‘A streamer dares to swear? Such a morally corrupt bastard shouldn’t be broadcasting.’

Lee Sung-shin, an aspiring professional LOS player attending Sangshin High School, ground his teeth and turned on his PC as soon as he emerged from his capsule.

To relieve stress from his not-so-successful main character’s ranked games, he’d been leveling up a secondary character.

But then, a local picked a fight with him, and that guy was using a streamer name as his nickname.

It was unacceptable.

How dare a local challenge the secondary character of a master?

At first, he thought it was a streamer with few viewers and intended to humiliate him to the point where he’d never dare broadcast LOS again.

But the opponent wasn’t a low-tier streamer; he was a big-time streamer with no less than 30,000 viewers.

Since he usually didn’t pay attention to internet broadcasts, he didn’t know much about streamers.

Lee Sung-shin’s only interest was in games.

However, he knew how significant 30,000 viewers were.

Beyond just a large company, it was an ultra-large corporation.

He knew from conversations with friends that even having a few thousand viewers was enough to earn respect.

But 30,000?

It was an unheard-of number.

Moreover, the nickname ‘Sha’ was one he’d never heard in conversations with friends.

Even though it was the holiday period and he hadn’t met up with his friends often, he’d never heard of it during the semester either.

Grinding his teeth, Lee Sung-shin accessed the site ‘Inventory,’ where he usually posted.

A site frequented by many LOS players.

It was the perfect place to target a specific streamer.

Many issues had actually originated here and spread everywhere.

‘I’ll stir up a controversy about his character somehow. How can someone who talks like that be a broadcaster? I’ll make him regret it with tears of blood! You bastard.’

After steeling his resolve several times, Lee Sung-shin logged in and posted on the free board.

Content: I’m a master player, and I met a streamer named ‘Sha’ while playing with my secondary character. When I checked his stream, he had 30,000 viewers, and he was blatantly swearing. Is this normal? He seems to be a very famous streamer to have so many viewers, but I don’t get what he’s thinking. For those who don’t know, I’ve uploaded a recording of his swearing.

Attachment: Streamer ‘Sha’ Swearing Original Recording

He uploaded the recorded insults the streamer had whispered in his ear earlier, editing out his own curses.

He believed this would be enough to damage the streamer’s broadcast.

Lee Sung-shin clenched his fist as he checked the post he had uploaded.

The anger from earlier still hadn’t subsided.

It was the first time in his life he’d been humiliated like that.

He was desperate for revenge.

[A comment has been added to your post!]

[A comment has been added to your post!]

[A comment has been added to your post…]

‘Good.’

Since it was a post targeting a streamer with 30,000 viewers, comments started flooding in as soon as he uploaded it.

He smirked as he began to read the comments.

And soon, he faced a shocking sight.

└LOL, Sung-shin is posting here?

└LOL LOL LOL

└Sung-shin! Why did you cut out your own swearing?

└Our Sha always broadcasts like this, LOL

└Wow, honestly, I’m a bit jealous. How does it feel to get sworn at directly? If it were me… I’d probably be losing my mind.

└Chushin-ah! Stay strong!

└I had a hunch, and Sung-shin posted immediately, LOL. Your life is a legend, LOL LOL

└Nice, I’ll make sure this iconic post doesn’t get deleted.

└Sung-shin! Brag about this at school, and you’ll be a super popular kid, LOL. You’re going to be a superstar when school starts. Congratulations in advance^^b

The reactions didn’t go as he expected.

Instead, everyone was mocking him, and various jokes were flooding in.

Very few people criticized the streamer.

Most accepted that this was just how the streamer was, and some even seemed envious.

Having read all the comments, Lee Sung-shin shakily moved his mouse to the delete button.

But.

[This post requires admin approval to delete as it has become an iconic post!]

He couldn’t even delete it at will.

In short, it was immortalized.

Lee Sung-shin’s post remained as it was on the free board and became a hot topic, spreading rapidly within five minutes of being uploaded.

Shaking with anger, Lee Sung-shin finally put down his mouse.

‘Everyone’s gone mad.’

The comments had already become too chaotic to read.

The level of banter was beyond what Lee Sung-shin, who wasn’t used to internet broadcasting, could handle, making him doubt his eyes.

Just as he closed the internet browser and was about to kick his blankets on his bed.

Ka-tok, ka-tok.

A notification sound came from the smartphone he had left on his desk.

It was a group chat with friends he usually hung out with.

Reluctantly, Lee Sung-shin checked his smartphone.

-Hey, LOL, Sung-shin, isn’t this you? LOL

-Wow. You got cussed out by Our Sha? Best output from Sangshin High, 인정 ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ

-Where are you now? Damn, did you really mess with Our Sha? You’re dead.

-Lol, by the way, wasn’t Sung-hyun a Sha subscriber?

-ㅇㅇㅇ Yeah, his nickname is HiddenNoseHairOfRepAtMan.

-Sung-shin is really dead, LOL

Boom.

“Damn it!”

As Lee Sung-shin cursed and slammed his desk, his mother entered the room.

“Why are you yelling again?”

It seemed the boy’s nightmare was just beginning.

“Man, the level is really low these days. Don’t you think?”

I smiled as I cheerfully destroyed the enemy Nexus.

So far, I had six wins out of ten placement matches.

Since I turned off the broadcast screen every time I queued, there weren’t as many snipers as I had expected.

Out of the six games, there was only one game with a sniper on the enemy team.

The problem was the high number of dodges every time a match was found.

On average, there were about two dodges per game.

After finishing the previous game cleanly, I immediately started the next match.

Today’s goal was to complete all ten placement matches.

I felt a bit tired from being so focused on the game.

But the good thing was that most of the games ended quickly with a 15-minute surrender.

At this pace, it seemed I could finish the placement matches before ending the stream.

‘CuriousMan’ donated 10,000 won!

[Paid question, but what was your rank in the PC version? You seem very skilled; didn’t you say you played it in elementary school?]

Taking advantage of the time it took to find a game, a viewer asked a question through a donation.

A streamer should always respond promptly to paid questions.

I smiled brightly and answered.

“Oh! I was a Challenger in elementary school. Was it 800 points? Not that high.”

-???

-Ha, LOL, that’s hard to believe.

-Bragging alert, ㄷㄷ

-How could an elementary schooler be Challenger 800 points, LOL. MMR 800 points I can understand.

-Oh, here we go, someone who’s a bit good at games starts bragging immediately.

-Challenger in elementary school? Hmm… that’s hard to believe.

-Lies.

‘Are you insane?’ donated 1,000 won!

[LOL, liar. You were a Challenger? I’ll donate 100 million won if you can prove it LOL. But you can’t, right?]

I glanced at the donation and slyly asked.

“Is that you, Sung-shin?”

-LOL LOL LOL LOL

-Ah, Sung-shin is a legend.

-Since Sung-shin really made today’s stream lively, let’s invite him as a guest later.

-For real, if we get Sung-shin as a guest, that day’s stream will be fun.

-Doing an outdoor stream would be good too.

-Sung-shin, are you streaming?

Someone had already donated earlier to inform me that Sung-shin had posted on the Inventory site.

Thanks to that, my persistent viewers, known as the ‘Malicious Group,’ had flocked to the post and bombarded it with comments.

I didn’t check the post myself, but if these guys were involved, they must have thoroughly messed with him.

Even though they were my viewers, they were so fierce that even I was scared of them.

I chuckled as I looked at the chat room and opened a web page.

The PC version of .

The PC version was still in service because many users missed the old days.

After logging in, I immediately revealed my score and ID.

[StrongEyeLevelTeacher? Challenger 812p]

I used to hate eye level teachers when I was young.

When I authenticated myself, the chat room went wild.

-Ah, this is what ‘talent’ is…!

-If the League of Storm Pro League hadn’t been discontinued, you’d be a pro gamer, LOL.

-Crazy.

-Clipping and exporting this.

-Hey, where did the guy who said he’d donate 100 million won go?

-Lol, typical runaway.

For real, he fled without leaving any underwear behind.

-Hey! Check the donation ID and publicly shame him.

I didn’t expect much.

I called out to the ChickenBox employee watching my stream.

“Handle it as the public wishes.”

While I was playing around with the viewers by authenticating my rank, the match was found.

[The game is starting.]

This game also placed me in the top lane, and it started.

The problem began from there.

“Wow! It’s Our Sha! I’ve successfully sniped him!”

As soon as the game started, our team’s jungler began hovering around me, seeking attention.

Damn.

I even queued up secretly.

Starting off with such a show-off was quite troublesome.

“Are you a streamer?”

“Wow, are you streaming now?”

“How many viewers do you have?”

Moreover, the jungler’s reaction caused the other team members to fuss over me as well.

Such situations drastically lower the chances of winning a game.

A win in placement matches is far more valuable than a win post-placement. Losing was not an option.

I smirked and looked at the jungler.

His ID indicated he was a fan of mine.

-LegRepAtMan’sMiddleLeg.

…what a bastard.

Such IDs should be banned. How does that even get approved?

Receiving attention isn’t bad, but losing a game is unacceptable.

I looked at the jungler and winked with my left eye.

[In-game voice deactivated.]

Good.

“Hey, you’re watching the stream, right?”

Twipod’s broadcast delay was two seconds.

Just like I had the dashboard up on the right, others could run other programs while playing.

That guy was likely watching my stream while playing.

Two seconds later, he nodded.

“Yes!”

He answered using the in-game voice. To others, it would seem like he was talking to himself.

So, the team frowned at the jungler while he remained unfazed.

I ground my teeth as I looked at him.

“If you don’t want me to rip you apart, shut up and play the game.”

The jungler grinned blissfully.

Damn, this lunatic!

“Bro, can you be a bit more provocative? I’ll do my best.”

What?

Is this guy insane?

“Shut your mouth and play like a dog, and I’ll accept your friend request after this game. Got it, you damn bastard!”

The jungler trembled and looked like he wanted to hug me immediately.

“Bro, I’ll do whatever you say. Please use me as you wish!”

The world is wide, and there are many crazy people.

How did I end up in this situation?

…Is this what they call reaping what you sow?


Tip: You can use left, right, A and D keyboard keys to browse between chapters.