That user was a well-known figure on Blinder.
I learned this in the “Completely Anonymous” board tucked in a corner.
This board was different from others in that everything was kept blind.
To give you an idea, here’s what the current posts look like:
Someone: I can’t take manual labor anymore
Someone: Saw a mutation hunting a cow—it’s just wrong
Someone: They say monsters are showing up up ahead—are we safe here?
Someone: Monsters live in the next town over?
Someone: Another post from that Bitchy Aunt—seriously
Someone: Ugh, that Bitchy Aunt again. Can’t stand her
Someone: Why did they have to copy that site? Couldn’t they have just made it like FailNet?
...
It was there that I learned the user I had suspected to be Kim Daram was being called the Bitchy Aunt.
It wasn’t just because the person was strange. They were constantly flaunting their achievements, stirring up jealousy among users. It seemed like the nickname was a result of that.
If I’d posted as Unemployed, no one would have clicked on my post, no matter how right I was.
“······.”
In South Korea, reputation matters.
That hasn’t changed even three and a half years after the war started.
How you acquire that reputation is what matters most.
That’s where Skelton’s successful debut on Blinder comes in.
The Power of Connections
If you live alone, maybe you don’t care about this. But in a group, nothing is as important as connections.
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