Returning to Dominate The World With My Knowledge System -
Chapter 51: GPU Fabrication Plant Setup
Chapter 51: Chapter 51: GPU Fabrication Plant Setup
The next couple of weeks were very busy for Tyler and David. Most especially David.
Just like he told Tyler, he began the creation of the LLC the next day. He also transfered back control of the LLC in his hand back to Tyler.
A week passed quickly. During that time, David executed the setup of the new LLC with clinical precision, just as Tyler had instructed.
The LLC was registered, bank accounts opened, and the necessary trading accounts mirrored after VaultX and VaultPrime’s model.
He ensured it had full routing clearance, proper compliance paperwork, and was disguised well enough to avoid unnecessary audits.
Tyler didn’t even need to follow up. The moment David sent him the confirmation message, Tyler linked both VaultX and VaultPrime to the LLC’s trading accounts, initiating their automated protocol.
By the next morning, the new LLC was already generating $500,000 in daily profits—liquid and at David’s disposal.
Tyler told David to use the funds however he saw fit, so long as it kept the GPU fabrication plant operation moving. David didn’t need to be told twice.
From there, he boarded a red-eye to Singapore, then to the UAE, and finally to Turkey.
In each country, he founded two front company tailored to its location, registered them as small-scale tech import-export companies specializing in agricultural and refrigeration tools.
He opened corporate accounts under each name, negotiated warehousing options near their respective ports—Port Klang, Jebel Ali, and Mersin—and began placing purchase orders for GPU fab equipment and raw materials.
Within a week, everything was ready. Tyler moved fast.
Each front company received a direct wire transfer from the main LLC. The amounts were staggered and disguised to avoid raising suspicion—roughly $20M per company for different purchasing objectives, legal coverage, and logistics.
And unlike what Tyler had initially thought, his estimates were way off.
He had initially estimated everything to cost him $4B but when he got started, he saw that it was actually going to cost way less.
Instead of the previous initial, he would now be spending $1.5B.
To Tyler, this was a welcomed development for him. The lesser it costs, the better for him.
Even though he had VaultX and VaultPrime working tirelessly to make money for him, it doesn’t mean that he can be wasteful.
He still has a long way to go. After the GPU, a custom computer have to be built for the GPUs, before the AI can be created.
Not only that, he will have to unlock and purchase more knowledges in the future, and there still a lot of things he would have to build. He definitely can’t be wasteful.
Meanwhile, David was back in Gumua.
The machines and materials had been bought, labeled, and disguised. Shipments were en route to Africa. David used the time wisely. He established the agritech front company immediately and purchased a wide, isolated piece of land on the outskirts of the capital—nowhere near residential or government buildings.
Construction began the next day.
Bulldozers moved soil. Steel foundations were laid down. He brought in a separate construction crew that had no knowledge of the real project. They were only told they were building a modular agritech R&D facility. For the cover to hold, David knew the front company had to be active—not just a shell.
He placed equipment orders for the agritech company as well. Standard agricultural testing stations, hydroponic modules, climate-control labs—all empty shells, but enough to fool curious eyes. He even began recruiting local staff: accountants, tech support, field agents, even interns. Everything was logged, compliant, and legitimate—on the surface.
By the third week, David was feeling the weight.
He was running the entire operation solo. Setting up ports, navigating multiple countries, managing finances, and building the disguise operation all at once. No sleep and no downtime. His phone rarely left his hand.
While scouting one of the warehouse locations near the Cameroon-Gumua border, something became painfully clear: he needed a team.
David had no idea what other insane missions Tyler would drop on him in the future, but if this operation was a sign of things to come, he’d be dead in a year without support.
Though Tyler had been generous to increase his total salary and incentive to $50,000 monthly.
If he choose to quit now, he will be a able to live a very comfortable life forever without working.
But he doesn’t want to. Not because of the money but because he was curious to see what Tyler would achieve in the future. He was curious to see what sort of behemoth the kid will grow into and how he’s going to navigate the treacherous roads ahead of him.
The warehouses were easy enough to rent. Most were abandoned commercial depots, located far from checkpoints and surrounded by nothing but dirt roads and jungle. He paid double the asking price—upfront and in cash. No questions asked.
The final warehouse was near Bertoua. There, he began prepping a staging ground. Some of the machines, which had already arrived at the port of Douala, were now loaded into convoys and headed inland.
Every driver had been pre-screened. Every license plate untraceable. Every truck, unmarked.
Back in the capital, construction on the main site continued without issues. By the end of the fourth week, the compound was complete. Hidden from plain sight but fully functional.
As for David? He was still hard at work as Tyler had just sent him the criterias for workers he needs for the GPU fabrication plant.
According to the message Tyler sent, he wasn’t looking for researchers or people with high academic qualifications. He only needed people with at least a bit of qualification, experienced and loyal. Preferably those that have something to lose.
Of course the loyalty part was going to be difficult but David was going to make it work.
There were still a few days left before the equipment arrived at the border warehouses, so David used the window to fly out again.
His destinations? Vietnam. Egypt. Brazil. Countries where he knew the right type of worker might be found—mid-level technicians, engineers who had been cut from companies due to downsizing, or those working in poor conditions with little pay but deep practical knowledge.
He would offer them something better: decent pay, a fresh start, and the promise of being part of something big—without telling them exactly what that something was.
But even then, Tyler would have the final say. The relationship between Tyler and the workers would be similar to that of NVD and TSM.
But the only difference was that Tyler would be in control of them, so he has to be very careful with whoever he’s employing.
Each recruit would be flown to a random African country close to Gumua and screened, evaluated and tested.
Tyler wasn’t going to have them all come to Gumua for screening, as he can’t afford any possible leaks.
And yes, after more than half a year of preparation and planning, Tyler Reyes was finally coming to Gumua.
For the first time since the entire plan began, he would be setting foot in the country where his empire’s hardware would rise from the soil.
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