So, how exactly do we make glue out of Corral Gelatin?

I asked Roxanne about that when we put down the carpets and took out the item that dropped from the Collagen Coral. Roxanne then took it to the kitchen and placed it inside one of the pots, after which she poured in some water inside and started boiling it over low flame, making it look like she was giving it a hot water bath.

The procedure itself is actually pretty simple. All you have to do is to place the gelatin in the pot, light a fire under it so that it starts to melt from the heat, and when it does, you have to leave it to cool off for a bit and thats that.

Wow, it really is that easy? And here I thought there was going to be some hidden trick to it.

Im not sure if its surprisingly easy or purposefully devious. Be that as it may, as long as the process of making glue is simple, then so much the better for us, and I cant think of any easier method than melting something with hot water and leaving it to cool down.

As I said, now we just have to wait for the adhesive to cool down, so in the meantime we can take the carpets and roll them out before we prepare one of them to be hanged on the wall. On that note, have you already decided which one are we going to use as decoration, master?

I think it would be best to use the carpet you chose for that, Roxanne. As for the other one, we can lay it down in orb bedroom next to the bed.

All right.

All we have to do now is to get it to the first floor, which should not be difficult with the two of us carrying it at each side, so can I ask you to help me out with it?

Of course. It shall be done as you wish.

Roxanne and I then carried a checkered carpet to the bedroom and placed it next to the bed. Since it was still early when we woke up in the morning we had a spare change of clothes prepared for when we get back, but now that I rolled out the carpet next to the bed I felt like I didnt really want to change just yet. When fully rolled out and spread on the floor, the carpet was about the same size as the bed, so it should be just big enough for us to lay down on it without our feet sticking out of it (our heads would be okay since I placed it in such a way that it was right next to the rooms wall), in which case

If my assumptions about this thing are correct, then it should be just big enough for the two people to have some fun on it.

Oh no, this is bad. I feel like something is starting to awaken inside of me.

Effects: Increase DEX (small), Increase STR (tiny), Increase AGI (tiny)

Skill: Rare Ingredients Drop Rate Up, Item Box Operation

Cook, huh? It is definitely nice that it has so many effects and Skills associated with it, but to be frank I would have preferred it much more if it had Increase INT as one of the available stat increases since that could prove to be of help with strengthening of my Magic Build. The Skill unique to the Job, however, might come in pretty handy. I mean, Rare Ingredients Drop Rate Up means that enemies should have a higher chance of dropping rare ingredients as Drop Item, thanks to which we will have more options opened for experimenting with cooking food. It might be especially useful with Kobolds since they are so weak that farming items from them should not be much of an issue and I am curious what other items other than Kobold Salt they would have to offer. Assuming they even have a Drop Item other than Kobold Salt of course.

I will go do the dishes now.

Sure, take your time.

Looking at the description of the Cooks Job and its effects and Skills once more, I once again realized that the world of this game is Labyrinth-centric to its very core, because normally everyone who would see the Job titled Cook would probably assume that it will be a Job that either strengthens the ability of the user to cook or makes all the processes related to cooking easier or faster, but here, the Cook Job is doing neither of those things. All it is doing is to give me an increased drop rates for the rare cooking ingredient to be obtained from defeated monsters, but thats about it. It would be nice if ot had a bonus effect that goes along the lines of Prevents the ingredients stored in the Item Box from rotting, but I guess that would be asking too much, huh? Unless it is a hidden effect and I wont see if it works until I will give it a go of course.

Okay, for now, lets see what this whole Item Box Operation thingy is about. Character Resetadd Cook Lv.1 to the list of my equipped Jobs set it as a First Job all done now select the Item Box and

(Holy Cow its huge!)

When I finished adding Cook to the list of Jobs and selected it as my First Job for the time being, the biggest distinction that I have noticed was that the capacity of my Item Box has been practically doubled. When I had Explorer Lv.30 set as my First Job, I could fit thirty types of thirty different items in it, but now it looks like I can store thirty types of sixty different items in it, so yeah, the overall capacity has been doubled.

(All right, thats admittedly pretty neat. But now, lets see if the system that is governing the Item Box is able to distinguish which Jobs Item Box the items are placed in there.)

I switched my First Job back to Explorer and moved part of the items from the Cooks Item Box to the Explorers Item Box so in order to have the same amount of items in both Item Boxes, and when that was done I tried to remove Cook from my list of Jobs only to find out that I was not able to do that at all. So the system does distinguish by which Jobs Item Box the items are placed in.

To briefly summarize what I learned from this Item Box experiment just now:

Those are the apparent rules that govern the combined Item Boxes and how the system distinguishes between them.