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"Why are there so many people today?" On the weekend, Tong Xin, ard with a plethora of docunts, went to the nearby public security bureau, only to find a long queue as soon as he arrived at the entrance.

Although he wondered if he had stumbled upon so special event, based on his years of queuing experience, he still activated his qinggong, dashed to the end of the line in a flash, and only then did he take out his phone to check what had happened.

To his surprise, there were no newsworthy incidents that would require a visit to the public security bureau. Most of the text ssages were about fraud prevention and anti-leakage asures, which left him rather puzzled.

Fortunately, the line moved fairly quickly, and he didn’t have to wait too long before he was inside the public security bureau’s lobby, where he approached the reception desk and asked the police officer, "Excuse , I’m here to apply for a passport and also to inquire about a visa, I wonder..."

Before he could finish speaking, the expression on the young officer’s face turned to one of "I knew it," as she sighed and said,

"While you can proceed with the passport directly, to process overseas travel procedures now, you must first pass a martial arts license exam. If you are planning to go to places like Vietnam or An Nan, or countries where you can get a visa on arrival, a Class B license will suffice, but for visas to Eastern Country, Columbia, Ussas, and other such countries, you must obtain a Class A license."

"Class A license? That’s already the standard to be a PE teacher at prestigious schools, right?" Tong Xin said incredulously. The officer nodded and continued,

"There’s no helping it. You all should be well aware of why you’re applying for visas to travel abroad. What if sothing happens overseas due to insufficient skill? Hence, the different visa requirents are linked to the levels of the martial arts licenses. Of course, if it is for business activities or group travel, as long as ten percent of the group mbers have Class A licenses and relevant security industry certifications, that will be sufficient."

...

A similar scenario played out across various regions in Yan Country. Ever since Feng Xue’s live streaming tour of Eastern Country went viral, the people of Yan Country, much like a parallel universe with "self-dia everywhere," discovered a new industry blue ocean.

The wealth of Kaidan resources and the fragility of local forces in Eastern Country sparked the idea in many to live stream fighting monsters in Eastern Country.

The authorities, having anticipated this trend, imdiately linked visas to martial arts licenses.

Even so, the internet recently started to see a variety of live streams thed "Yan Country people in Eastern Country."

It’s not just strears; this developnt also gave rise to professional teams catering to the related industry for planning and rehearsals. In an instant, "Yan Country people fighting Eastern Country ghosts" remained in the top three trending searches. Any related video—whether edited or remixed—could generate massive traffic.

As these strears made a fortune, even more people attempted to join the frenzy. Although most were barred from leaving Yan Country due to the requirent of having a martial arts ranking license, the number of strears heading to Eastern Country to gain traffic continued to grow day by day.

There were even comical scenes of strears fighting over monsters and resulting in live stream combat.

Yep, not online combat but offline.

However, real-life combat isn’t too bad either. After all, these are people with Class A licenses, making the fights captivating enough that strears who traveled abroad without finding any monsters began engaging in bizarre live streams of "exchanging martial arts overseas."

Gradually, a new scene began to erge on the streets of Eastern Country—a Yan Country person walking with swagger, carrying a selfie stick or accompanied by drones and photographers, making their way through the streets. At the mont their gazes t, they would imdiately position the cara at just the right angle.

At that ti, Eastern Country locals would intuitively form a circle within the cara’s view, and two Kung Fu strears would then put on a real-life combat show right on the street.

Yan Country’s Kung Fu, after all, emphasizes stopping at the right point, so the loser doesn’t end up knocked out and rushed to the hospital—nothing so grim. And there’s no need to hand over half their cash, at most it’s just losing so viewers due to lacking strength.

Okay, considering the equation of viewership equivalent to money, it seems there’s no problem saying that the losing side loses money.

The activity of these strears resulted in a terrifyingly low level of activity throughout the entire Eastern Country’s Hundred Tales.

However, for the majority of people in Eastern Country, there’s not much difference. They simply went from watching Kaidan and Masked Riders fight to watching Yan Country experts compete, that’s all.

Of course, these strears didn’t just gain viewers. In fact, as the combats increased, they started noticing an improvent in their abilities, especially those with more victories— their cultivation speed also picked up.

Initially, everyone thought it was just the amplification brought by real combat experience, but as ti went by, another theory erged from nowhere—

Experts competing is essentially a battle for Qi Fortune, the more victories one has, the stronger the Qi Fortune and the faster the cultivation.

While it sounds sowhat mystic, this cognition isn’t exactly wrong.

These strears, who would be considered experts in any country, through their continuous sorting out of the strong and the weak in combat, were also consolidating the audience’s understanding of who is "Strong" and who is "Weak."

This perception would feed back into the Kaidan of "Everyone in Yan Country practices Martial Arts," making it increasingly powerful. But at the sa ti, as a branch, the strears who received more recognition as "Strong" got a larger "share" of this perception, naturally making their cultivation faster.

But the strength of the losers didn’t diminish because even in defeat, they were still stronger than the viewers.

To put it simply, this competitive behavior, outside of the original "shared pool" of the Kaidan, added an extra "reward pool." The stronger contenders could get a larger share of the rewards from this pool, while even the weakest among them would, at most, miss out on the reward pool, not seeing a reduction in their share of the "shared pool."

It was precisely because of this reason that more and more experts began to participate in livestreaming, and consequently, major dostic TV stations and online platforms also began applying for Martial Arts-related programs.

But officials, clearly aware of the viewer fatigue that would arise from too many similar programs, didn’t let this happen, so none had gotten the opportunity to launch such a program at this ti.

...

"Looks like it’s really turning into a tourism of Eastern Country recently!" Inside a certain pork bone ran shop, Feng Xue complained to Chen Xiyao while paying the bill, not livestreaming at the mont because there was simply nothing to stream.

Chen Xiyao had nothing much to say about this, only managing to reply helplessly,

"No choice, too many monks and not enough porridge. Now the dostic rchants are pricing the post-Kaidan product pitches sky-high; minor Kaidan barely erge before they’re wiped out."

"Ah, miscalculated, miscalculated," Feng Xue complained theatrically, though his lips were nearly splitting with a grin.

Just as the two walked out of the shop, a young man holding a selfie stick approached them. He was talking to his viewers at that mont, but in the next second, as his eyes t Feng Xue’s, the jovial live streaming persona instantly changed. Sticking the selfie stick into the cent ground, he bowed to Feng Xue and said,

"Elder, please teach ..."

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