Third person POV
And then, after Russell asked that question, the Renad System screen appeared before him, and its manager said to him in a female voice, "Finally, you asked that question after a long time!" Russell was startled by it and looked at it, "Wait, what?"
"Hello there, Russell May," the system manager responded back, "I am the Renad System's manager, and you haven't thought of that idea for over a year now."
Russell was shocked. "What?!"
"Yes, and you haven't checked out this section of the Shop."
The system then showed him the section of the shop he hadn't seen before.
Upon seeing that, Russell was even more shocked: that section in the Shop was for buses and other land-based vehicles, from motorcycles and scooters to farming equipment and trucks. Plus, the vehicles were organized by country of origin, company that made them, and type based on purpose for use. Some, especially bicycles, cost only 10-19 Renad Coins, far cheaper than the total amount of Renad Coins Russell had.
"What are these?!" Russell asked in shock while browsing across that section. "Motorcycles from Honda and…cars from Toyota? No way!"
"Yes, that section that you should've discovered much earlier," the manager said to him, "if you just-"
"Why you didn't tell me that earlier?!" Russell asked her with some anger.
"Well, duh, because you turned off all general notifications the whole time," the manager responded sheepishly and sarcastically before showing Russell the screen showing the disabled notification feature. " So you could live your life with your dream job, earn money, and do true justice work on the sidelines."
Russell saw that and realized his mistake that made him oblivious the whole time. "Oh…well, I am dumb aside from my moral beliefs and belief in true justice."
Stilling keeping that screen on, the manager said, "Well, you wasted an entire year while that one was turned off, you dumb-dumb."
Russell then eventually turned on the Enable Notifications to fix his mistake just in case anything came up in the future.
He did so by tapping on the screen. "There, it's now done. Sorry for that."
"That's okay," the system manager responded back calmly and briefly, "next time, don't do that ever again. You'll miss what is important from me."