He clicked the "Play" button. A flurry of aggressive pop-ups exploded across his screen—shady betting sites and "local singles" ads. He swiped them away with the practiced grace of a digital ninja until, finally, the grainy green of the pitch appeared. The resolution was terrible, barely 480p, and the commentary was in a language he didn't speak, but it didn't matter. This was the ritual.

Leo didn't care about the 3:00 AM noise complaints. He didn't care about the lag. He stood up, knocking over his lukewarm coffee, and cheered into the empty room. For a split second, the 14-hour flight home didn't exist. He wasn't in Tokyo; he was in the North Stand, smelling the rain and the salt, perfectly connected to the world he’d left behind.

The Brighton winger was sprinting down the touchline. The pixels were blurring, a smear of blue and white against the green. A cross floated in. A header. The net rippled.

Leo had grown up ten minutes from the Amex. He remembered the smell of the salt air and the pie crusts, the way the Brighton fans sang "Good Old Sussex by the Sea" until their lungs burned. Now, he was a software lead in a city where nobody knew what a "Seagull" was, and his only tether to home was a pirated stream on a site that felt like it was one click away from giving his computer a virus.

The match was a scrap. Chelsea’s billion-dollar midfield was suffocating the play, but Brighton was stubborn. In the 82nd minute, the stream froze. A spinning gray circle mocked him. "No, no, no," Leo whispered, frantically refreshing.

He sat back down, watching the grainy replay as the "Close Ad" button flickered in the corner. It was a terrible way to watch a game, and yet, it was the best seat in the house.

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