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Podnik.xlsx | VERIFIED |

Viktor hadn’t just tracked their performance; he had tracked their breaking points. He had calculated exactly how much sleep, family time, and sanity a human could lose before they became "unproductive." The spreadsheet was a blueprint for a machine made of people. The Formula for Reality

Milan scrolled to the tab labeled "Projections." Here, the formulas were unlike anything he’d seen in finance. They didn’t use standard functions. They used variables like [Regret_Index] and [Legacy_Weight] .

The "Podnik" wasn't just a business. It was a cycle. The spreadsheet had been waiting for the next person curious enough to find it, ambitious enough to open it, and clever enough to see the patterns. Podnik.xlsx

The sheet opened. It was empty, except for a single cell, A1. It contained a live-updating timestamp and a name.

The first sheet, "Phase 1," wasn't filled with revenue. It was a list of names—hundreds of them. Next to each name were dates and coordinates. Milan realized with a chill that these were the first employees of the company. But there was a hidden column, Column Z, formatted in white text so it was invisible against the background. Viktor hadn’t just tracked their performance; he had

When he highlighted it, the truth bled out: Sacrifice Level .

We could explore as the admin, or perhaps go back to Viktor's perspective when he first created the file. They didn’t use standard functions

By opening "Podnik.xlsx," Milan hadn't just found the company’s secrets. He had just become the new administrator of the machine. The file saved itself, the drive whirred, and for the first time in three years, Viktor’s old office phone started to ring.

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