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Webnovel's Extra: Reincarnated With a Copy Ability-Chapter 85: Manufactured Need
Scarcity revealed itself quietly.
No alarms.
No announcement screens.
Just friction where smoothness used to exist.
At 07:30, the first student noticed it in Recuperation Wing East.
Energy restoration rates had been reduced by twelve percent.
Not catastrophic.
Just inconvenient.
At 08:12, Combat Simulation Rooms began requiring "priority clearance" for extended sessions.
At 09:05, supply lockers in three separate sectors locked behind new merit thresholds.
No headline.
No explanation.
Just structural tightening.
The Triangle was not attacking.
It was rationing.
And rationing changed behavior faster than threats ever could.
By ten o’clock, queues formed in places that had never required patience before.
Students recalculated routines.
Class C and lower tiers felt the squeeze first.
Class B began checking their dashboards more frequently.
Class A noticed something else—
Priority lanes had expanded.
They had more access now.
Not less.
That was the wedge.
Lucas stared at his resource panel and went still.
"They increased my allocation," he muttered.
Zagan’s response was immediate.
Divide and filter.
Lucas clenched his jaw.
Across campus, Arlo received the opposite adjustment.
Reduced restoration buffer.
Lower equipment priority.
Nothing dramatic.
But enough to slow progression.
Arlo found Lucas in the corridor, voice tight.
"They cut my chamber time."
Lucas didn’t pretend surprise.
"They’re adjusting tiers."
"So I’m lower value now?" Arlo snapped.
Lucas held his gaze.
"That’s not what this is."
"Then what is it?" Arlo demanded.
Lucas didn’t answer right away.
Because the truth tasted like metal.
It was incentive engineering.
If Class A accepted preferential access without resistance—
Solidarity would weaken.
Not through betrayal.
Through drift.
Dreyden saw the wedges forming in real time.
Energy spike patterns.
Training density heat maps.
Even hallway dwell times had altered.
He didn’t check his own allocation at first.
He already knew the answer.
When he finally opened his panel—
His access had expanded.
More than Lucas.
Priority override privileges.
Extended chamber locking rights.
Expanded simulation keys.
It was blatant.
He was being offered central gravity.
If he accepted—
Students would orbit him for access.
Scarcity would transform him into a gatekeeper.
Oversight wouldn’t need to fracture cohesion.
They would re-center it around controllable nodes.
Dreyden closed the panel without expression.
Raisel arrived ten minutes later.
"They boosted your allocation."
"Yes."
"You’re not using it."
"No."
Her eyes sharpened slightly.
"They want you to become institutional."
"Yes."
"And?"
"I won’t."
She studied him carefully.
"Why?"
"Because centralizing access is the fastest way to be owned," Dreyden said calmly.
Raisel nodded once.
"Good."
By mid-afternoon, tension rippled through Class B.
Two students competed aggressively over a limited chamber slot.
Voices raised.
A minor flare of magic.
Instructors intervened.
It ended quickly.
But it proved the concept.
Scarcity worked.
Oversight logged the incident with muted satisfaction.
Conflict increased eleven percent in lower tiers.
Priority alignment strengthening in upper tiers.
Projection curve stabilizing.
The observer leaned back.
"They will recalibrate within two days," he said.
"Unless?"
"Unless the anomaly refuses to consume."
The subordinate frowned.
"You think he won’t?"
The observer didn’t smile.
"He hasn’t yet."
Dreyden made a quiet move at 16:40.
He booked three extended simulation blocks.
High-cost.
High-tier.
Prime time.
The system approved instantly.
Students noticed.
Oversight noticed.
Then Dreyden did something unexpected.
He transferred access.
Not formally.
Not publicly.
But through a loophole in collaborative override permissions.
He opened the simulations.
Unlocked the gates.
Then walked away.
No announcement.
No speech.
He returned to a low-output hall in the basement.
Aboveground, Class C and B students discovered the unlocked chambers.
At first they hesitated.
Then one stepped in.
Then two.
Within minutes, six were training.
Separated.
Individual.
But using space that should have been closed.
No breach occurred.
The access was legitimate.
Assigned.
Unlocked.
Just unused by its holder.
By the time Oversight identified the anomaly—
It had already been witnessed.
The observer’s voice lost warmth.
"He is redistributing."
A subordinate pulled the logs.
"Under policy compliance."
The observer nodded slowly.
"That’s worse."
Lucas found out an hour later.
"You opened them?"
"Yes."
"They’ll shut that loophole."
"Yes."
"And then?"
Dreyden’s expression remained steady.
"Then they choose between tightening further or admitting redistribution."
Lucas exhaled.
"You’re turning scarcity into exposure."
"Yes."
Zagan spoke quietly.
He is making them show how far they are willing to squeeze.
Lucas leaned against the training wall.
"That’s dangerous."
"Yes."
"But necessary," Dreyden said.
That night, scarcity intensified.
Energy allotments dipped again.
Minor but measurable.
Oversight closed the collaborative override gap.
Too late. 𝚏𝕣𝕖𝚎𝚠𝚎𝚋𝚗𝐨𝐯𝕖𝕝.𝕔𝐨𝕞
The precedent existed now.
Resource hoarding had been rejected once.
That mattered more than the patch.
Across campus, something unexpected happened.
Instead of competition increasing—
Voluntary rotation began.
Students staggered usage.
Shared time windows without speaking.
Efficiency improved slightly.
Not by structure.
By mutual adjustment.
Scarcity, instead of fracturing them—
Was sharpening awareness.
Oversight projections lagged.
Models assumed selfish drift.
They had not weighted recent memory heavily enough.
Helin.
Maren.
The drill.
Students had seen too much to default blindly.
The Mandarin file updated near midnight.
They’re pushing faster than expected.
Dreyden typed back:
So will I.
Response:
Be careful. When structures fail, they collapse downward.
Dreyden paused.
Typed:
Then we stand sideways.
He closed the file.
On the balcony, wind carried colder air than usual.
Lucas joined him.
"They cut supply again," Lucas said.
"Yes."
"You think people hold?"
Dreyden looked across the dim campus.
Training halls lit unevenly now.
Movement slower.
But not scattered.
"They will," he said quietly. "If they understand why it’s happening."
"And if they don’t?"
Dreyden’s faint smile returned.
"Then Oversight gets its fracture."
Lucas was silent for a long moment.
"Do you actually believe they won’t escalate beyond this?" he asked.
Dreyden’s voice lost warmth.
"They will."
"When?"
"When soft pressure fails."
"And what does hard pressure look like?"
Dreyden didn’t answer right away.
Because hard pressure wasn’t scarcity.
It wasn’t erosion.
It was removal.
Expulsion.
Containment.
Permanent demotion.
Something that made an example impossible to reframe.
Lucas’s shoulders stiffened slightly.
"They won’t."
"They might," Dreyden replied.
Zagan’s presence stirred faintly.
If they choose force, the lines will sharpen.
Lucas swallowed.
"You’re ready for that?"
Dreyden’s gaze stayed on the dark silhouette of the central tower.
"I’m prepared for escalation."
Below them, the campus lights flickered once.
Barely noticeable.
Energy routing recalibration.
Scarcity tightening further.
Oversight watching for signs of fracture.
They would not admit failure.
Not yet.
Tomorrow would determine whether resource pressure created competition—
Or conscience.
If competition resurfaced—
The Triangle would regain equilibrium.
If conscience hardened—
Oversight would abandon scarcity.
And escalate.
Dreyden turned away from the railing.
"We’ll know within twenty-four hours," he said.
Lucas frowned.
"Know what?"
"Whether they believe in reform," Dreyden replied calmly.
Lucas felt a chill that had nothing to do with the wind.
"And if they don’t?"
Dreyden’s faint smile did not reach his eyes.
"Then they stop pretending this is an academy."
Above them, surveillance lenses recalibrated.
Below them, students reorganized quietly.
Scarcity was no longer just about resources.
It was about revealing lines.
And once lines were visible—
Everyone had to choose a side.
The Triangle had started squeezing.
The next move would decide whether it was still trying to control—
Or preparing to break something.







