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Absolute Magnetism: The Puppet God of The Hidden Sand

Shadownarch_
14
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The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 14 chs / week.
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Synopsis
Logan expected a quiet life when he was reborn into a simple ninja family. Instead, he found himself thrust into the bloodiest era of the Naruto world: the Third Shinobi War. In a starving Sunagakure struggling for survival, Souma begins his journey from the bottom. From scavenging scrap metal to mastering the forbidden Magnet Release, he refuses to be just another pawn on the battlefield. By reinventing the ancient art of puppetry with modern magnetic mechanics, he begins a relentless ascent. Step by step, he will shatter the desert’s outdated traditions, crush the arrogance of the Great Nations, and rise from a low-level Genin to become the world’s most feared Puppet God.
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Chapter 1 - Chapter 3: Grease and Gears

By the time Year 39 rolled around, I still hadn't quite outrun my "nightmare mode" start. Two years in, and I was still the runt of the litter. Compared to the other kids in the neighborhood, I was painfully small, with skin that stayed a shade too pale and a cough that never really went away. A single bad sandstorm could lay me out with a fever for a week.

My dad, Sharyu, was terrified to leave me alone, and daycare wasn't exactly a thing in a village currently funneling every cent into a world war. So, I spent my childhood in the one place where he could keep an eye on me: the Fourth Maintenance Squad's workshop.

It became my second home and honestly, my favorite.

The workshop was a massive cavern carved deep into the rock of the village, protected from the wind and sun. It had a very specific smell that hit you the second you walked in: a mix of fresh-cut cedar, heavy-duty machine oil, and the sharp, metallic tang of Chakra-conductive alloys. For a guy who spent his previous life in an automation plant, it was the best perfume in the world.

Sharyu had built me a "playpen" in a windless corner using old, sanded-down puppet planks. It was stocked with soft blankets and fresh water, keeping me out from under the feet of the mechanics while giving me a front-row seat to the show.

At first, I just slept through most of it. My body was still a low-battery device that died every two hours. But as I got older and my "awake" time increased, that corner became my observation deck. My thirty-year-old brain began to feast on the only thing in this world that made total sense to me: the puppets.

The bay was a madhouse. Guys in grease-stained gray coveralls who were honestly more like mechanics than ninjas were constantly swarming over puppets that looked like they'd been run through a woodchipper.

Clang! Clang! A hammer would beat a warped titanium-alloy joint back into shape.

Screeech A lathe would shave down a charred limb, sending up a spray of sawdust and sparks.

I didn't blink. I couldn't. Gears, link-rods, ball-and-socket joints, bearings these weren't just "ninja tools" to me. They were art. They were logic.

I'd watch one of the techs clamp a shattered puppet arm to a bench and pry open the casing. To most people, the inside was a mess of wires and wood. To me? I was looking at a high-precision transmission system. I'd watch them use tweezers to realign hair-thin Chakra wires until click the wooden fingers would twitch. The look of pure satisfaction on the tech's face? I knew that look. That was the "I finally fixed the bug" face.

My dad was the master of the floor. Sharyu was the squad leader for a reason. His hands were huge and calloused, but when he worked on a puppet's core, he was as steady as a surgeon. He could tell a bearing was worn just by touching it, and he could spot a clog in a Chakra circuit from across the room.

Every time I watched them work, my heart would start racing. The memories of my old life as Logan, the automation engineer, would come flooding back. I used to live for blueprints, CNC machines, and assembly lines. My one big, ridiculous dream had been to build a life-sized, walking mech a Gundam for the real world. But back on Earth, the physics were a nightmare. Power density, actuator speed, material stress it was all too much for one guy in a garage.

But here?

Chakra.

The more I watched, the more I realized: Chakra was essentially a wireless, biologically-driven supernatural motor. Those etched runes on the wood? Those were circuit boards. The "Puppet Technique" wasn't just magic; it was a high-level user interface for remote-controlled robotics.

My engineer brain started overclocking.

That gear train is smart, but the lubrication is garbage the desert sand is just grinding it down. A simple dust-seal would double the lifespan.

That elbow joint has a terrible range of motion. If I swapped that for a universal joint, the flexibility would go through the roof.

Is that... a differential? Man, these guys are hitting sub-millimeter precision with nothing but hand tools and magic. Imagine what they could do with a proper lathe.

A massive, electric thrill surged through my tiny chest. This world was dangerous and my health was trash, but it had machines.

In my old life, I could never build my Gundam. The tech just wasn't there. But here? With Chakra as an impossible energy source and metals that responded to thought?

I could actually do it.

I looked over at a corner where some obsolete, broken-down puppet models were standing like sleeping wooden giants. They were clunky, old, and destined for the scrap heap. But I didn't see junk. I saw a chassis.

In that moment, the dream I'd buried back on Earth found a new home in the oil-soaked dirt of the Sand Village. I was still too weak to stand for long, but my eyes were wide and burning with a light every engineer recognizes when they find the project of a lifetime.

The world was on fire outside, and I was a sickly kid with no powers. But I had a workshop.

And for now, that was enough.