Yenwalk: The Billion Steps
Amano Haruya, a quietly observant 19-year-old, lives an invisible life: broke, orphaned, and walking Tokyo’s margins one courier job at a time. But one cold morning, a system appears—offering not hope, but function:
“Every step you take from now on is worth money.”
Not magic. Not fantasy. Just perfectly legal, traceable income from every step. Starting from ¥1 per step, the system builds momentum—and slowly begins to layer in daily log-in rewards (including company shares, rare skills, properties) and special challenge tasks like auctions or social deals.
At first, Haruya uses the system to survive. Then to build. Then to infiltrate.
Soon, he’s spotted in high-society auctions, invited to investor dinners, and even mistaken as the secret heir of a forgotten zaibatsu. He never confirms it—but he never denies it either.
As his asset portfolio grows to include major stakes in billion-yen firms, exclusive-use vending contracts, urban land, and a set of scalable passive skills, Haruya becomes both a ghost and a legend in Tokyo’s financial undercurrent.
All without ever telling anyone the truth.
But rivals emerge. Influencers and heirs get curious. And the system, though passive, keeps nudging him forward.
Because Haruya isn’t walking for money anymore.
He’s walking to own the country.