Is It Wrong To Repay The Debt In A Dungeon -f... Jun 2026
Every monster defeated leaves behind a crystal that can be traded for currency.
They took Marek to the Guild’s Hall at dawn, not because the Guild had called them but because Lysandra had paid for a margined invitation—enough to get a hearing but not enough to buy silence. The Hall’s columns gleamed with the same silver as the ink in the contract Bellamy signed. The Guild’s arbiters listened with faces like sealed coins. They asked questions in the language of finance and law; they wanted dates, signatures, names of those who had witnessed Marek’s detention. Bellamy presented witnesses—people whom Lysandra had convinced to speak: the gatekeeper Merek, the cartographer, the cleric who made the pamphlet, and Marek himself. Is It Wrong to Repay the Debt in a Dungeon -F...
If the title sounds like a mouthful, it’s because it plays on the famous anime "Is It Wrong to Try to Pick Up Girls in a Dungeon?" (DanMachi). However, isn't an epic quest to save the world. Instead, it’s a quirky, addictive mix of dungeon crawling, resource management, and high-stakes debt repayment. Every monster defeated leaves behind a crystal that
(often abbreviated as DanMachi ).
Bellamy Voss arrived in Orim with a coin left for his final ferry and a scrap of parchment that bore his father’s signature. The letter promised absolution: repay the old loan to the Guild, and the family’s name would be cleansed of the pawned fields and unpaid tithes. The problem, as Bellamy learned at the city gates, was that the Guild accepted only one kind of payment for the debts that mattered—treasures pulled from the depths, items of rare worth judged by the Guild's arbiters. The letter had named one more thing: a clause that allowed debts to be repaid by deeds. Rescue a soul trapped in the dungeons and the debt would be erased. The Guild’s arbiters listened with faces like sealed coins