Dimension Parkour -
"Almost there," he muttered, his eyes locked on the shimmering obsidian frame ahead.
The void vanished, replaced by the quiet hum of the winner's lobby. Jax slumped against a digital wall, watching his name climb to the top of the leaderboard. He had conquered the dimensions, one jump at a time.
The lush greens of the Overworld were replaced by the suffocating heat and crimson haze of the Nether. Lava falls cascaded around him like curtains of liquid fire. Here, the jumps were longer, fueled by the terrifying momentum of soul sand and the unpredictable bounce of slime blocks hidden within the fortress walls. He vaulted over a jagged fence, the heat singeing his virtual skin, and scrambled up a ladder of weeping vines just as a Ghast’s fireball shattered the platform behind him. Dimension Parkour
He leaped, his fingers brushing the surface as the timer froze at 18:14.
With a final, desperate lunge, Jax dove through the portal. The world inverted, turning cold and silent. He was in the End. The sky was a static void of purple and black, filled with obsidian pillars that stretched toward an unreachable ceiling. The final stretch of the Dimension Parkour was a spiral, a winding staircase of end stone that defied gravity. "Almost there," he muttered, his eyes locked on
The timer flashed red: 18:10. He was five seconds away from failing the S-Rank.
The path ahead was a frantic assembly of floating oak logs and cobblestone pillars suspended over a bottomless void. Jax took a breath, sprinted, and leaped. His boots clicked against the stone, a rhythmic staccato that echoed the pounding of his heart. One wrong move and he’d respawn at the last checkpoint, losing precious seconds he didn't have. He had conquered the dimensions, one jump at a time
Jax stared at the ticking holographic timer hovering above his wrist, the numbers bleeding a soft neon blue against the pixelated grass of the Overworld. The air felt thin, vibrating with the energy of the first dimension. He wasn't just running for a high score; he was running to survive the collapse of the server.