Chapter 100: Entering the real battlefield
The words settled with quiet weight. rlin the Sage, a figure whose na carried influence across countless worlds, had just admitted that so rewards lay beyond even his reach.
Alex’s expression remained composed, but internally his understanding of the battlefield shifted. This was not rely a place for competition. It was a structure designed to redistribute opportunity on a scale that affected entire universes. The implication alone made the trial far more significant than he had initially assud.
"More importantly," rlin continued, his eyes sharpening slightly, "if you accumulate enough victory points, you can ascend the ranking. Every month, the top one hundred receive a substantial increase to their totals. Reputation also functions as a form of currency. Higher reputation grants permissions and access to special items that ordinary participants cannot purchase, regardless of their point totals."
Alex listened carefully, committing every detail to mory. The structure resembled competitive fraworks he had encountered before, but the scale rendered those comparisons almost aningless.
This was not a rivalry between sects within a single world. This was a contest that spanned dinsions, civilizations, and realities governed by different laws. The battlefield did not simply asure strength. It asured impact across a shared stage that countless elites struggled to dominate.
"I understand," Alex said slowly. His mind had already begun constructing strategies. Victory points could be accumulated through consistent performance. Rankings provided periodic bonuses that rewarded sustained excellence.
He lifted his gaze slightly. "Now, what is my trial?"
rlin’s expression shifted. The reflective quality remained, but his presence beca more direct. He was no longer describing a system. He was setting a requirent.
"If you can gain five thousand reputation points," rlin said, "I will accept you as my seventh disciple."
The number lingered in the air.
Five thousand reputation points.
Alex did not know the exact scale of the reputation system, but he understood imdiately that this was not a simple objective. Reputation was not earned through small, careful gains. It was tied to recognition. It demanded achievents that forced others to notice. Consistency alone would not suffice. He would need to distinguish himself in ways that drew attention from participants across multiple universes.
"How do I gain reputation points?" Alex asked.
rlin’s eyes reflected sothing faintly amused, though it was difficult to tell whether it was amusent or anticipation.
"The more magnificent you are, the more people will know of you," rlin replied. "The more they talk about you, the more reputation you gain."
The explanation was simple, but the implication was complex. There was no fixed formula. Reputation erged organically. A single extraordinary event could outweigh dozens of competent performances. The battlefield rewarded those who broke expectations. Those who exceeded limits. Those who forced observers to acknowledge them.
Alex considered the information. This ant risk would be unavoidable. Playing cautiously might ensure survival, but it would not generate reputation. To reach five thousand points within a reasonable ti fra, he would need to perform actions that created shock, discussion, and recognition. He would need to beco impossible to ignore.
He nodded once. "I understand."
rlin studied him briefly, as if asuring not his words but the conviction behind them.
"When should I start?" Alex asked.
The question carried no hesitation. Once he understood the path, delay served no purpose.
rlin’s gaze sharpened slightly, and the silent examination from their first eting seed to repeat. This ti it lasted only a mont. The old man appeared to confirm an assessnt he had already reached.
"If you are ready," rlin said, "I will grant you permission. You will enter the battlefield properly. There are twelve other geniuses from our universe already present. They will receive you there and explain further details about how this place operates."
The ntion of others from his universe added another layer to the trial. Alex would not be entering alone. Twelve individuals had already been here. They had adapted to the battlefield, learned its rhythms, and likely established positions within the broader structure.
Alex straightened slightly. The last traces of tension in his posture disappeared. He now had an objective and a defined environnt. The uncertainty remained, but it no longer felt vague.
"I am ready," Alex said.
rlin nodded once. The motion was subtle, but it carried authority. His hand rose again, and Alex felt sothing gather in the space around them. It was not magic in the conventional sense. The sensation felt older, deeper, as if reality itself were shifting to accommodate the transition.
"The battlefield will test more than your strength," rlin said. His voice seed to echo without direction, resonating in the air and within Alex’s mind at the sa ti. "It will test your will, your adaptability, and your capacity to endure. Many have entered who possessed greater power than you currently wield. Few have left with what they ca for."
Alex t his gaze steadily. "I understand, sir."
rlin watched him for a mont longer. His expression remained composed, though the faintest hint of approval appeared in his eyes.
"Then go. Show them what you are capable of."
The world dissolved.
This transition differed from the previous one. The first teleportation had felt abrupt, almost violent, as if reality had been forcibly replaced. This ti the change unfolded gradually. The field faded. The sky dimd. rlin’s figure dissolved into pale light. It felt as though existence itself stepped aside rather than being torn apart.
Monts later, the motion ceased.
His vision cleared.
He stood on solid ground.
The surface beneath his feet was stone, gray and unmarked. It extended outward in a wide platform that appeared deliberately constructed. The air felt denser than before, carrying a faint pressure that suggested this place existed under different conditions. When Alex looked up, he saw a sky filled with shifting bands of color, each layer overlapping in slow motion. The sight resembled auroras, though far more structured.
Ahead of him stretched a gathering area. Structures rose at irregular intervals, built from materials he did not recognize. So resembled polished crystal. Others appeared tallic but reflected light in unfamiliar ways. The architecture lacked uniformity, suggesting that multiple civilizations had contributed to its construction.
Figures moved throughout the space.
So walked alone. Others stood in small groups. Their appearances varied widely. A tall figure with silver skin passed near a curved structure. Nearby, a shorter individual wrapped in layered fabric examined a floating panel of light. Further away, soone with wings folded behind their back descended onto the platform.
Alex observed quietly. No one seed surprised by the diversity. This was clearly a eting ground for participants from different realities. Each individual carried a presence that suggested strength, discipline, or experience. Even without direct confrontation, the atmosphere conveyed tension. Everyone here was aware that others represented potential rivals.
He exhaled slowly, adjusting to the environnt.
Sowhere within this place, twelve individuals from his universe were waiting. They would likely recognize him. rlin’s words implied that they had been inford of his arrival.
Alex began walking forward.
The stone beneath his feet felt stable, though faint lines etched into the surface suggested layered reinforcent. As he moved, he noticed that several participants glanced in his direction. The looks were brief but deliberate. New arrivals were evidently uncommon enough to attract attention.
He ignored the scrutiny and continued.
The gathering area expanded gradually. He passed a structure shaped like a circular pavilion. Inside, a group of individuals examined glowing spheres that hovered above a platform. Further ahead, a series of tall pillars ford a boundary that seed to separate different sections of the space.
The density of participants increased.
Alex slowed slightly. He sensed several presences observing him more directly. Among them, a familiar aura erged. It felt different from the others, not in strength but in resonance. It carried a subtle alignnt that matched his own origin.
He turned slightly.
At the far edge of the platform, twelve figures stood together in a cluster.
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