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"Morita, want to grab a drink together?"

Senju Tobirama spoke calmly.

"How could I refuse an invitation from Departnt Head Tobirama himself?"

Morita smiled imdiately, and Senju Hashirama cheerfully patted his shoulder.

In just a short ti, he'd developed a favorable impression of this young man.

Uchiha Madara remained outwardly indifferent, saying nothing.

In recent years, Madara's relationship with the others had improved greatly—especially after Naruto promised him that as long as he accumulated enough contribution rits, he would help revive his younger brother, Uchiha Izuna.

Based on Madara's current rit count, it should be possible by next year.

After the first few revivals, Naruto stopped reviving people casually.

Only shinobi who made exceptional, irreplaceable contributions would qualify for a revival slot.

Madara technically could revive Izuna on his own, but the resulting body would be damaged and incomplete. Naruto's promise—reviving Izuna in perfect condition—was far more aningful, and it made Madara genuinely hopeful for the future.

Today was one of Madara's rare days off, dragged out by Hashirama to walk around the city.

The Shinobi World had developed at breakneck speed in the last few years.

Aside from Tobirama—who oversaw much of that developnt—Hashirama barely understood modern technology. When he wasn't sneaking off to casinos or playing in arcades, he was either training or spending ti with Madara.

Today, he had dragged Madara out specifically to "experience the vibrancy of the new world."

Hashirama truly loved this new era.

The group soon picked a spot and booked a private room.

The shop's owner greeted Morita enthusiastically but barely glanced at Hashirama, Madara, or Tobirama—assuming they were just Morita's ordinary friends.

Only shinobi of Kage-level and above would be able to sense the subtle pressure the three of them naturally emitted. To everyone else, they looked like three unremarkable n.

After they placed their order, Tobirama looked at Morita and asked:

"Morita, are you interested in working under ?"

Tobirama was genuinely impressed with the young man's personality and sharpness.

He valued intelligence—and Morita had both cleverness and character, a rare combination.

"Hahaha, thank you for the complint, Departnt Head Tobirama. But I prefer my current job, and I doubt I'd be of any real use in your departnt. I'd just get in the way."

Morita spoke lightly, though he understood exactly what Tobirama ant—this was an attempt at recruitnt and future cultivation.

But he was satisfied with the life he already had.

No desire for high-pressure advancent. No competition. No politics.

Just peace.

Tobirama observed him closely, confirming that Morita truly had no ambition for status or power. The realization made Tobirama feel an odd hint of longing.

He himself wanted to slow down soday… to rest… maybe even retire.

But the responsibility for the world's future weighed heavily on him.

The road ahead was long, and the burden was imnse.

Researching new technologies was one of the few joys that kept him going.

And the looming ??tsutsuki threat—known only to a handful of top personnel—made relaxation nearly impossible.

"Yes… that kind of life is indeed enviable."

Tobirama exhaled softly.

Without the coming crisis, he could hardly imagine such a peaceful world existing at all.

The Shinobi World now had high productivity; almost everyone was well-fed and pursuing better lives.

This was likely the kind of world he and his elder brother had dread of.

No wonder Hashirama had been so relaxed these past few years.

Aside from his playfulness, Hashirama spent all his remaining ti training—more rigorously than anyone else.

Only Tobirama knew how desperately his brother wanted to personally protect this hard-won era.

"Hahaha, yes! This life is far better than what we used to have."

Morita, thinking Tobirama was just making conversation, responded enthusiastically.

"If I could choose, I'd want to beco a ch Pilot."

Just as he said that, the dishes arrived. Morita stood and helped arrange the plates. When he sat back down, Tobirama asked with genuine interest:

"Oh? You want to beco a ch Pilot?"

Hashirama paused mid-bite, widening his eyes.

Madara, who had been quietly lifting his chopsticks, also looked over.

Every man understood—giant chs were humanity's universal dream.

No one disliked chs.

In fact, the three founders had co out today specifically to visit the newest ch exhibition.

They planned to head there right after dinner.

Madara's fascination with chs ca largely from their resemblance to Susanoo. In truth, his Susanoo's combat power was already equal to—if not beyond—that of most chs on the market. As his strength continued to grow, even the strongest models were no longer his match.

But none of that diminished his fondness for Susanoo.

If anything, it made him curious.

He wanted to know what it would feel like to pilot a ch while wielding Susanoo at the sa ti.

"Of course. These days, who doesn't love chs? Power is important, sure—but looking cool is what really matters."

Morita laughed loudly.

Tobirama let out a small chuckle.

He knew full well that true strength was the foundation; aesthetics were an afterthought.

But he didn't correct him—this kind of enthusiasm was refreshing.

"It's just…" Morita sighed, "with my salary, buying a ch is impossible for now. My only path is to join the Imperial ch Pilot Departnt. But honestly, even that would be a dream co true."

A longing expression surfaced on Morita's face.

With his current ability, he was already qualified to pilot a Super-Kage–class ch.

The reason chs had beco so popular was obvious: they allowed ordinary shinobi to unleash far greater power.

The alloy plating used in modern chs surpassed traditional Chakra tal by an entire era.

Even more astonishing: Ninjutsu could be activated from within the cockpit—and almost all of them were instant-cast.

After all, the hand seals of Ninjutsu were simply a way of shaping Chakra into specific circuits to induce the transformation needed for a technique.

Today, that entire process could be engraved directly into the ch's internal systems.

Much like the scientific ninja tools developed in the Boruto era—but far more advanced.

Those tools were the product of slow, natural progression.

Modern ch technology, however, had grown under decisive, centralized support from the Empire.

Naturally, high-end systems ca with a price.

Super-Kage–tier chs were heavily restricted. Only a small number of older-generation units were occasionally released for wealthy civilians to purchase.

The Empire needed sustainable funding for ch research and developnt, and these controlled sales were one of the most effective thods.

Civilian models and low-end units, however, were fully open to the public.

Low-end chs could match Kage-level capability—but "Kage-level" no longer carried the weight it once did.

In the modern era, if a child failed to reach Genin in their first year, they were considered lacking in aptitude.

If they failed to reach Chūnin in two years, they were deed underperforrs.

If they couldn't reach Jōnin in four years, they were classified as incompetent.

The baseline for a true prodigy had beco reaching Kage-level, and anything below that was jokingly referred to as still being in their "developntal stage."

Reaching Kage-level before the age of thirteen made one a genius; reaching it after fifteen made one rely talented.

By those standards, the original Konoha 12 were considered talented youths—with only Naruto, Sasuke, and Hyūga Neji qualifying as true geniuses.

You are reading Naruto: Heaven Rewar Chapter 349: Mecha Master on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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