Smoke and mirrors is the best way to describe it. I'll try better. Value types don't support inheritance and cannot have virtual methods. But yet, the int type has the ToString() and GetHashCode() methods, both virtual methods. It inherits them from System.Object.
This magic comes about from a boxing conversion. There are dedicated IL opcodes that perform it, OpCodes.Box and OpCodes.Constrained. That turns a value type into an object, one that stores the value of the original value type. It goes the other way around too, unboxing converts an object back to a value type.
If you have a good .NET compiler, like the C# one, you never explicitly invoke the conversion yourself. The compiler can figure out from the language syntax when such a conversion is required and emits the required IL code.
The System.Int32 type is a helper type that the compiler has special knowledge of. It is useful for its methods only, you never explicitly create an instance of it. The compiler calls those methods directly when it knows that you are calling a method of the int "class".
All of this works together to create the illusion that int derives from System.Object (through System.ValueType). Using the principle of "if it looks, swims and quacks like a duck, it's a duck".