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Chapter 45 - CHAPTER 44

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"Alex, Brandon Sterling was our guest just a few days ago," Lexi said with deceptive casualness. "He had some interesting thoughts about Fast and Furious using completely original automotive designs. He argued that while some originality can enhance a project, going fully original is unnecessary and potentially counterproductive."

She leaned forward slightly, her expression remaining professionally neutral while her eyes gleamed with anticipation.

"He specifically mentioned that players want to experience supercars they can't afford in real life—that's the whole appeal of racing content. Making everything fictional destroys that aspirational element and shows a fundamental misunderstanding of what makes these games compelling. What's your response to that criticism?"

"I think people can experience our content however they want," Alex replied with an easy smile. "Sitting up, lying down, whatever's comfortable."

His deflection made Lexi laugh despite herself, though it clearly wasn't the explosive reaction she'd been hoping for.

Internally, Lexi was surprised by Alex's composure. She'd expected someone in his early twenties to have a shorter fuse, especially when faced with such pointed criticism. She'd been banking on him getting defensive or angry—maybe even launching into an on-camera tirade against Brandon Sterling. That kind of drama would make for compelling television.

Instead, her provocation had hit nothing but air.

"You're quite the comedian," Lexi said, regrouping quickly. "Brandon also mentioned that he admires your courage in attempting something so ambitious. He called it a 'bold experiment' that will unfortunately become a 'valuable learning experience' for young developers."

Her smile remained friendly, but her tone had sharpened slightly.

"He's actually grateful for your attempt, since it might serve as a cautionary tale for future development teams throughout the industry." Lexi paused, watching Alex's face carefully. "Any thoughts on becoming an object lesson?"

Alex studied Lexi with mild amusement, recognizing the media manipulation at work. These hosts understood their audiences perfectly—people loved watching conflicts escalate. The more dramatic the confrontation, the better the ratings.

It reminded him of reality TV from his previous life, where producers would deliberately create volatile situations and watch the explosion. Three women in a room might cause drama, but thirty competitive celebrities in the same space? That was ratings gold. Nobody cared about the actual competition—they wanted to see who would snap first.

"Whether Fast and Furious succeeds or fails spectacularly, the market will make that judgment," Alex said calmly. "I'm genuinely touched by Brandon's concern for small studios like ours. He's devoted so much energy over the years to monitoring and critiquing his peers in the industry."

Alex's expression remained perfectly innocent as he delivered the next line.

"That level of attention to other companies' projects probably explains why Titan Games hasn't released anything noteworthy recently. Brandon's truly setting an example for industry leadership, and we're humbled by his dedication to watching our work so closely."

Lexi's eyes lit up with excitement. Now this was the content she'd been fishing for—verbal warfare disguised as professional courtesy.

The entertainment value was off the charts.

After Alex's Gaming Insider episode went live, it created immediate buzz throughout the gaming industry. The barely concealed animosity between Alex and Brandon provided exactly the kind of drama that communities thrived on.

Social media exploded with reactions and commentary. Fast and Furious had become the center of industry attention, though not necessarily for reasons Alex would have preferred.

The ultimate question remained: would Alex's bold claims vindicate his confidence, or would Brandon's skepticism prove prophetic?

Gaming forums filled with speculation and pre-positioned arguments. People were literally preparing for the post-launch discussion, ready to declare victory for whichever side the eventual product supported.

Industry veterans were particularly impressed by Alex's performance during the interview. Despite his youth, he'd managed to deflect obvious provocation with humor while landing a devastating counter-attack that highlighted Titan Games' recent creative stagnation.

Moreover, Alex had articulated frustrations that many smaller developers felt but couldn't afford to express publicly. His willingness to challenge Brandon Sterling directly had struck a nerve throughout the industry.

"Morrison's got serious guts," one developer posted on a private industry forum. "I really hope Fast and Furious delivers just to see Sterling eat his words."

"Kid's the only person in the industry with balls big enough to call out Sterling's bullshit on camera," another added.

"Classic case of youth versus experience. Usually experience wins, but Morrison's track record with Avatar suggests he might know something we don't."

"I admire the confidence, but this strategy seems incredibly risky. Miracles don't happen twice."

"Sterling's criticism actually makes sense though. Original automotive designs could definitely backfire."

"That final dig about Titan's recent output was brutal. I wonder how Sterling's handling that."

The speculation wasn't limited to industry insiders. Gaming communities across social media had picked up the controversy, with many users migrating to Brandon Sterling's personal accounts to ask for his response to Alex's comments.

Some users had even adopted Alex's "industry leadership" phrase as a mocking hashtag, suggesting Brandon had appointed himself as the unofficial monitor of gaming development.

Brandon's eventual response was characteristically confident: "Like everyone else, I'm just waiting to see how this plays out."

The message appeared casual but carried obvious subtext—he remained convinced that Fast and Furious would fail dramatically and vindicate his predictions.

Community members immediately began speculating about what this response meant, with many rushing to Stormwind Studios' social media accounts to see if Alex would continue the verbal sparring.

To everyone's disappointment, Alex remained silent on social media, maintaining the same calm demeanor he'd shown during the interview.

"What the hell does Sterling mean by 'waiting to see'?" Danny said angrily, pacing around Stormwind Studios' garden area. "Smug bastard's just sitting there waiting for us to fail!"

"Why are you getting so worked up?" Alex asked from his position in a reclining chair, absently petting one of the office cats. "Look at me—relaxing with the animals, watching clouds drift by, enjoying the simple pleasures. Much better for your blood pressure."

Alex's confidence stemmed from genuine conviction rather than bravado. All the criticism and skepticism would prove temporary once Fast and Furious launched and demonstrated its quality.

Time would settle every argument and vindicate every bold claim.

"But seriously," Danny continued, his worry showing through his anger, "are you completely sure about Fast and Furious? This is literally unprecedented territory—nobody's ever attempted anything this ambitious with original automotive content."

"It should work out fine," Alex said noncommittally.

"'Should'?" Danny's anxiety spiked. "'Should' doesn't sound like the confidence you've been projecting."

"Relax. Let's talk about your project instead. How's the trainee recruitment going? Are you close to finalizing your first group?"

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