share time: 2025-12-02 12:31:43
Lin Xiaoman, a bottom-rung planner, was on the brink of layoff after his proposal was rejected by his supervisor 18 times in a row. Unexpectedly, he activated the "Billion-Dollar Unemployment System." The system's tasks were absurdly extreme—he had to "mess up wildly" to get rewards: submitting flawed proposals, confronting clients head-on, even refusing his boss's orders. With a "what do I have to lose" attitude, Lin followed through, only to find that every mess-up hit the company's "survival nerve" perfectly: the flawed proposal helped the company avoid a scammer partner's trap, confronting clients built the company's reputation for integrity, and refusing the boss's order even saved a project on the verge of bankruptcy. As he messed up more, Lin not only kept his job but also got promoted three times in a row to department director and received a billion-dollar reward from the system. But just as he grew dependent on the system, he realized those "coincidental" disaster-avoidance events seemed to have been premeditated by the system... Was all of this really an "accident"?
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