My Ultimate Sign-in System Made Me Invincible - Chapter 468 Friends' Drama (2)

Chapter 468 Friends’ Drama (2)
The group chat had descended into what one would call a controlled chaos, and it was all because Liam dropped information his friends weren’t prepared for.
Messages were coming in rapid succession now, overlapping and interrupting each other in a way that would have been incomprehensible to anyone outside their circle but made perfect sense to the eight people who’d known each other long enough to follow three conversations simultaneously.
Kristopher: Since when does the Lucid have phone capabilities?
Harper: I thought it was just for gaming
Alex: Wait are you saying the device can make calls?
Stacy: Can we text from it?
Kristy: What about apps?
Lana: This is huge
Elise: How does that even work?
Liam watched the messages flood in, his smile widening. They were doing exactly what he’d expected—spiraling into speculation mode before he’d given them any actual details. It was endearing in a way.
Liam: You’ll have to wait and find out.
Matt: LIAM!
Matt: You can’t just drop that and then say wait
Matt: That’s cruel
Kristopher: He’s right
Kristopher: That’s genuinely cruel
Alex: Unusually cruel actually
Liam laughed out loud at that, the sound echoing in his empty bedroom. They weren’t wrong. But he also wasn’t ready to explain the full scope of what the phone function entailed, partly because he wanted them to experience it rather than just hear about it, and partly because he was enjoying watching them process the implications in real time.
Liam: All you need to know right now is that you’ll be able to do everything you can do on your current phones. And more.
Liam: The daily gaming restrictions still apply. But those only apply to gaming. The phone functions are unrestricted.
There was a brief pause as they absorbed that information. Then:
Harper: Everything we can do on our phones
Harper: That’s messaging, calls, photos, videos, apps, browsing
Harper: All of that?
Liam: Yes.
Stacy: And MORE?
Stacy: What’s the more?
Liam: You’ll see.
Stacy: You’re killing me
Stacy: Actually killing me
Kristopher: Can we take pictures and videos with the Lucid?
Kristopher: And if so, what’s the quality?
That was a fair question, and one Liam had been expecting. Kristopher was always the one who thought about practical specifications while everyone else got caught up in the excitement of possibilities.
Liam: Yes. The quality will be 16K.
The chat went silent for approximately three seconds. Then it exploded again.
Matt: 16K
Matt: SIXTEEN K
Matt: Liam that’s INSANE
Alex: Current flagship phones top out at like 8K and even that’s only for specific models
Alex: You’re saying the Lucid will do double that?
Stacy: The camera companies are going to have a collective breakdown
Kristopher: 16K video recording too or just photos?
Liam: Both.
Harper: Oh my god
Kristy: I don’t even have a screen that can display 16K
Kristy: Nobody does
Liam: The Lucid does.
There was another pause, longer this time, as they processed the implications of what he was telling them. Liam could imagine them sitting with their phones, staring at their current devices, trying to reconcile the technology they used every day with what he was describing.
Matt: If Nova Technologies announces the phone function publicly and gives these details, the valuation of phone companies is going to crater 😂
Matt: Like actually just collapse
Matt: Who’s going to buy a $1,200 phone that takes 8K photos when the Lucid takes 16K photos and also does literally everything else better?
Liam considered that for a moment. Matt wasn’t wrong. The smartphone market was worth nearly a trillion dollars globally, and the premium segment was dominated by two companies whose entire value proposition rested on having the best cameras, the fastest processors, and the most seamless integration.
The Lucid would make all of that irrelevant.
But unlike the healthcare and entertainment industries, where the disruption was immediate and unavoidable, the phone market disruption could be managed with timing. There was no urgent humanitarian need to replace smartphones immediately. People weren’t dying because they didn’t have access to 16K cameras.
That gave him flexibility.
Liam: The public release of the phone function is still a long way out. It might come before the Medical Nanites rollout, might come after. I haven’t decided yet.
Stacy: I’m sure those two phone companies that keep competing over who has the best camera are going to be under extreme pressure soon 😂
Stacy: All that marketing about “professional-grade photography” and “cinema-quality video”
Stacy: And then Nova Technologies shows up with 16K like it’s nothing
Alex: The future pre-order events are about to get even more intense
Alex: Every month there’s going to be more reasons people desperately want a Lucid
Alex: First it was gaming
Alex: Then it was the Air’s connectivity
Alex: Then Studio for content creation
Alex: Then Medical Nanites for healthcare
Alex: Now phone functionality
Alex: How are people supposed to choose which reason matters most when they’re trying to get a device?
Kristopher: That’s actually the point though isn’t it
Kristopher: The more capabilities the Lucid has, the more universally essential it becomes
Kristopher: It stops being a luxury gaming device and becomes fundamental infrastructure for participating in modern life
Liam read Kristopher’s message twice. That was exactly right, and it was impressive that Kristopher had articulated it so cleanly. The Lucid wasn’t just a product anymore. It was becoming a platform—a gateway to capabilities that would eventually touch every aspect of daily existence.
Gaming. Communication. Content creation. Healthcare. And more that he hadn’t announced yet.
Each new function didn’t just add value. It redefined what the device was.
Kristopher: What I’m actually worried about is the criteria for Medical Nanites rollout
Kristopher: Right now access is limited by Lucid device availability
Kristopher: Are you planning to increase the monthly stock in the future?
Kristopher: And are you going to share devices specifically for people who need nanites but can’t win the regular lottery?
Liam paused before responding. That was a harder question than the technical ones, and it was one he’d been thinking about carefully since designing the nanite subscription model.
The tension between scarcity and need was real. People were going to die waiting for access to technology that could save them. That wasn’t hypothetical. It was mathematical certainty. Ten thousand devices per month meant 120,000 per year, which meant millions of people who needed Medical Nanites wouldn’t get them for years, and some wouldn’t survive long enough to benefit.
But flooding the market immediately created different problems. Infrastructure problems. Support problems. Quality control problems. And most importantly, it eliminated the scarcity that made the ecosystem economically sustainable and strategically controllable.
Liam: It’s a solid idea. I won’t be doing it immediately, but after the second month of Medical Nanites rollout, I’ll be making some changes. By then there will be more than 100,000 users in the ecosystem, and the infrastructure will be more stable.
Kristopher: That makes sense
Kristopher: I’m really impressed with what you’re doing
Kristopher: Not just the technology
Kristopher: But the way you’re thinking about deployment and access
Kristopher: It’s not easy balancing innovation with responsibility
Kristopher: And you’re doing it better than most people would
The other messages came quickly after that, variations on the same theme.
Matt: We’re always here to support you man
Harper: Whatever you need
Stacy: You know we’ve got your back
Alex: Obviously
Kristy: Always
Lana: Of course
Elise: Yeah
Liam felt the warmth in his chest expand again, that specific feeling that came from being reminded that some people knew him as just Liam, not as Nova Technologies or the person reshaping civilization, but as a genuine friend.
Liam: Thanks. I appreciate it.
Liam: Actually, I should mention—I’m planning to reduce the clinical trial timeline from 90 days to 60 days.
There was a beat of silence. Then:
Kristy: Liam
Kristy: You should just say you want to give people in power even more sleepless nights 😂
Matt: He doesn’t even want to give them time to breathe
Stacy: Government officials are going to see that announcement and just start crying
Harper: Can you imagine being a regulatory official right now?
Harper: You see the announcement about Medical Nanites
Harper: You spend a month trying to figure out how to respond
Harper: And then the timeline gets compressed by another month
Harper: I’d quit
Alex: They probably can’t quit
Alex: This is too big
Alex: They’re stuck dealing with it whether they want to or not
Kristopher: The announcement is going to be chaos
Kristopher: Social media is still processing the original 90-day timeline
Kristopher: Reducing it to 60 is going to restart all the reactions
Liam sent multiple laughing emojis.
Liam: It’s not really my fault that governments move slowly 😂
Liam: If they can’t adapt to accelerated timelines, that’s a them problem
Matt: Brutal. How could you say that they have skill issue?!
Matt: I think he’s trying to say that they are the skill issue
Matt: Even more brutal
Liam: Anyway, Lucy will activate the phone function for your devices soon. You’ll get a notification when it’s ready.
Kristopher: How soon is soon?
Liam: Within the next few hours probably
Stacy: I’m going to be checking my Lucid every five minutes now
Kristy: Same
Matt: Honestly same
The conversation continued, flowing naturally into speculation about what they’d do once the phone function activated.
Matt immediately started planning to record everything in 16K and never use his current phone again. Alex wanted to know if the Lucid could replace his laptop for work. Elise was already thinking about social media content she could create with that kind of camera quality.
Liam let them talk, occasionally jumping in with clarifications or confirmations, but mostly just enjoying the conversation. He was still in bed, propped up against pillows with his phone in hand, morning sunlight streaming through the windows, and no immediate obligations demanding his attention.
It was peaceful in a way that felt increasingly rare.
Harper: Question
Harper: If the Lucid can do everything a phone can do
Harper: And it can do everything a computer can do with the right peripherals
Harper: And it can create professional content with Studio
Harper: And it provides medical monitoring with nanites
Harper: What CAN’T it do?
Liam thought about that for a moment. The honest answer was that the Lucid’s limitations were mostly artificial—restrictions he’d chosen to implement for strategic reasons rather than technical constraints.
Liam: Not much. But there are things I’m holding back for later releases.
Alex: Like what?
Liam: You’ll see.
Matt: “You’ll see” is becoming your catchphrase
Matt: And I kind of hate it
Matt: But also respect it
Liam smiled at his phone.
Liam: Good.
The chat continued for another twenty minutes, drifting between topics—speculation about the phone function, jokes about government officials losing sleep, questions about when the clinical trial volunteer selection would be announced, and then conversations without any particular agenda.
Eventually, Liam set his phone down and stretched. He should probably get up, shower, handle the dozen things that required his attention. But there was something satisfying about staying exactly where he was, participating in a group chat with his friends like this was a normal morning and he hadn’t just announced technology that would reshape human civilization the night before.
He eventually got out of bed and went to the bathroom, to take his bath, before going downstairs for brunch.


