Shimeji | Ralsei
“So many dark truths…” he whispered, staring at an unsolved algebra worksheet. “Don’t worry. I’ll heal you with… with encouragement .”
“Oh!” he squeaked. “H-hello! Is this… the Light World?”
Kris didn’t have the heart to close the program. They just minimized it, let the little Darkner sleep on the desktop, and smiled. shimeji ralsei
Within minutes, he discovered the browser window. He climbed the scroll bar like a pole, peered over the edge of an open folder labeled “HOMEWORK,” and gasped.
Here’s a short story based on the idea of “shimeji Ralsei” — a tiny, desktop-pet version of Ralsei from Deltarune . “So many dark truths…” he whispered, staring at
Kris just blinked. The real Ralsei was somewhere in Castle Town, probably organizing supply closets. This little guy was different. He was shimeji Ralsei — a fragment of kindness given digital form.
And he did. Every time Kris minimized a window, Shimeji Ralsei would appear in the corner with a tiny speech bubble: “You’re doing great.” “Take a break?” “Maybe save your document first.” “H-hello
“I made this for you,” he said, holding it up. It flickered. “It’s not real, but… the feeling is.”
One night, Kris left the laptop open. When they came back, Shimeji Ralsei had gathered every shortcut icon into a circle and was sitting in the middle, knitting what looked like a tiny scarf out of the blue Wi-Fi bars.
It started as a joke. Kris had downloaded a weird “shimeji” program — one of those digital desktop pets that walks around, climbs windows, and multiplies if you’re not careful. But instead of the usual anime girl or cat, this one was Ralsei . A tiny, pixel-soft version of him, no bigger than an icon, with a wobbling walk and a fluffy green hat that dragged just behind him.
Sometimes he’d trip over the Recycle Bin and fall asleep next to it, scarf bundled under his chin. Other times, he’d grab a stray browser tab and drag it to a new spot, rearranging the desktop like a cozy campsite. He never multiplied like normal shimejis — he said that would be “too many princes, probably chaotic.”