Dukean faced a moderately sized earth golem, clutching the chain and twirling the sword around his body.
It looked roughly humanoid, with bulky limbs and a head that was slightly too large for its body, and it was quite a bit bigger than he was. Yet, it was weak.
The shards of rock were effortlessly dodged and reflected by Dukean, and by his estimate, this creature would qualify to be around gold rank in threat, although it was on the weaker side.
Monsters had been popping up everywhere, but neither he nor the others had fought all that many. It was simple. The creatures were just not that strong yet. It took a long ti for a monster to reach platinum rank in threat.
However, this creature did have one characteristic he was happy to exploit. It was tough. And that ant he could at least test so of his power if he held back enough.
Dukean dashed backward and threw the sword forward. The chain instantly extended, whipping out like a snake, and the blade struck the golem right in the middle of its torso. The impact shattered half of the golem’s upper body, blowing an entire arm off and exposing the core.
It dropped dead on the ground soon after.
The chain sluggishly retracted as Dukean stared at the creature in disappointnt.
“Are you kidding …?”
This weapon simply defied common sense. It was mundane tal, yet the sheer might of the quasi-spirit inside was enough to qualify it to compete against… Well… Any weapon Dukean had ever seen.
The speed and force with which it could extend and retract were frightening, and combined with his well-practiced control of the weapon, it increased his combat capabilities many tis over.
He briefly checked the core, and finding nothing of value, he didn’t bother picking it up. So monster would soon co along, so he may as well let it consu it.
Once again, he found himself admiring the construction of the weapon. The mundane tal was a flaw, but it wasn’t nearly as critical as he would have assud.
Its properties were boosted far beyond what such a tal should be capable of, and it had qi conductivity Dukean thought was impossible. It was to the point where his qi flowed through the weapon as if it were his own body, no, perhaps even better.
Sure, the lacking power of the tal did an that one’s qi techniques received no boost to their power, and that was a sha, but the weapon itself had an ability that was mighty enough to sowhat compensate for that.
There was another flaw, although perhaps calling it a fault was sowhat unfair, as it had been his decision to use this weapon. True strikes were still beyond him, as the weapon was highly complicated. Thus, executing a near-perfect strike was quite tricky.
Despite the long period they had spent inside the spirit realm, nobody had executed a true strike against Neave and not even against one another. It was shocking that it hadn’t happened even once, at least by accident, but it made sense when he thought of it a bit.
Against Neave, they were always on the defensive, and those habits seed to have extended well into their one-on-one bouts. Actually, that was mighty impressive since that ant that none of them had ever allowed their opponent the luxury of attempting a perfect strike.
Besides Marven, that was. He had to face Neave, after all.
The level at which their skills were currently was monstrous. The others didn’t seem to realize just how capable they were now. Nobody could compete with them at the sa power level, even the two with relatively lacking talent.
A vast repertoire of movent techniques and countless years of experience using them?
It was frightening, yet… Dukean couldn’t stop a massive grin from appearing on his face.
He looked to the sky, sword hanging to his side, chains coiled like a snake, impatiently waiting for an opponent worthy of its blade, “Mother… We will finally have our revenge.”
***
Hunter held his shield in front of him and his longsword behind him, in a low grip, ready to strike. He ran toward a wall, jumping a few tis, seemingly floating off the ground. In re monts, he accelerated to quite the speed and ramd the shield into a wall.
Cracks spread all around it, and the cave shook.
Hunter dragged the shield out of the wall, and Gabrias clapped, “That’s incredible!”
The tall man was quite the pleasant company, Hunter had learned. Throughout their countless fights, they had gotten to know each other rather well, and truthfully, there had never been soone he considered a friend more than he did Gabrias.
Admittedly, his personality was a little weird, and he had a passionate reverence for Neave to the point where he nearly deed him a god.
Well, it wasn’t that strange, and Hunter could see where he was coming from. He still found it so weird; every ti he thought of it, it felt so incongruous. This was the sa kid as the one he had been beating up his entire life?
It felt so surreal. And, honestly, quite scary at tis. Hunter didn’t have the sa reverence for Neave as Gabrias, but he was afraid of him. Neave had repeatedly reassured him that he didn’t care about the past, but that was barely soothing, given how crazy he was.
He was broken out of his thoughts as Gabrias spoke, “What are you thinking about?”
“Oh, sorry, nothing. Say, do you want to test your bow against my shield?”
“That… Are you sure you’ll be fine?”
“Yeah, this thing is sturdy. Don’t tell you believe I would fall to soone like you?”
“Lord Neave’s creation is not to be underestimated, Hunter.”
“Uh… Right. Give it a shot anyway.”
Gabrias shrugged a pulled the bow off his back. His fingers gripped the tight wire of the longbow, and he seized it with all his strength. The bow was drawn back, and rapidly, a giant arrow of ice manifested, nocked to its entire length.
He released the arrow, and it flew at Hunter, who readied himself. The arrow struck the shield, and the clash pushed Hunter back a little. However, as the arrow shattered into a fine powder, a frigid gust of wind washed over him, rapidly cooling the shield and freezing the surface of his body.
Hunter found himself frozen stiff, and even the ground around him was covered in ice. Gabrias rushed forward, panicked and worried about Hunter. However, the frozen teenager’s eyes shot wide open, and he stared behind Gabrias in fright.
The tall man turned around, coming face to face with a rather nasty abominid. He instantly reacted by firing an arrow, surprisingly hitting the creature's head. The arrow itself didn’t sink all that deep, but the creature’s entire head, and most of its body, froze at the contact of the chilling object.
Gabrias turned around, rushing at Hunter again with panic in his eyes, checking his body to ensure he was alright. The ice thawed gradually, and Hunter regained so movent in his body.
“Sh–Shit… I–I co–could ask Ne–Neave to fi–fin–find an ice resistance spi-spirit po-power.”
Gabrias laughed awkwardly, yet, Hunter could tell that there was a hint of ‘told you so’ in his eyes. Yeah… These weapons were definitely not to be underestimated.
***
Marven had been running around, checking the situation in the surrounding area. Neave had brushed it off far too quickly, but Marven feared the return of the diamond-path assassin.
It was a complicated situation, yes, but Marven still firmly believed that that kid should have been executed. They didn’t know how he had appeared out of thin air like that, and if he could repeat that trick, any of them could be dead instantly.
The concern that the kid would explode was a little absurd, in his opinion. And even if he did, Neave certainly had more than one way to kill him from a safe distance.
There was, of course, always the possibility of so sort of curse being released upon his death, but that was less of a threat than the intruder's freedom and potential return.
He hadn’t spotted the assassin or any signs of his presence anywhere. The demons were nowhere to be seen, either, which wasn’t the best news, if he was being honest. Those creatures were up to sothing, and they wouldn’t find out what the easy way.
The monsters were spreading like wildfire, and ironically, those would be the least of their problems. Just as all the others were, Marven was quite excited to get the opportunity to test his new skills and power.
Perhaps more so than any of the others. He had been stuck at the sa point for so long that it felt damn liberating to grow a bit. And he hadn’t developed by a bit, either.
Marven went through the caves, utilizing potent movent techniques to flutter around like a ghost. Eventually, he appeared before the main chamber and made his way inside.
***
Harel stared at Neave in shock. She watched the entire process of his work, and it was genuinely bewildering. Dozens of glass balls sat on the floor, all lined with incredibly intricate inscriptions.
Every one of those balls had a terrifyingly large ball of spirit lted into them, and she couldn’t help but wonder what Neave was planning to make. At first, she thought he was stacking up on the cores to make dozens of golems.
However, as he began working on the golem’s body, she quickly realized that that wasn’t the case.
Was he making a single freaking golem?
Was it even possible to use that many cores for this?
Also, the body was sothing Harel had never seen before. Golems usually looked vaguely humanoid. And by vaguely, that ant they just had two arms, two legs, a torso, and a head.
This thing’s body would be frighteningly humanoid. In monts, Neave constructed countless intricate bits and pieces, and upon testing them, they ca together to form almost artistic body parts, arms of pure tal with many complex joins and slips that damn-near perfectly resembled a human limb.
Neave clicked his tongue and groaned every few seconds, but at the speed at which he worked, any ‘problem’ he encountered was seemingly instantly rectified.
Soon, he manipulated several pieces of branches over to him and began shaping tiny crystals in different shapes and sizes. He would be done shaping the object and engraving it instantly, and he imdiately moved on to using alchemy techniques to sohow alter the material.
He used dozens of techniques per second, and the flashes of color almost made Harel feel nauseated.
The way he inscribed the object was also terrifyingly efficient. His tendril of liquid spirit, manipulated by his life force, would worm its way into a chunk of tal. Pieces of that tal would swiftly lt, and thinner-than-hair threads of the tal would fly off the lump and line the surface of anything he needed to inscribe.
As for the pieces of the golem’s body, of which there were thousands, he inscribed runes directly onto their surface.
Soon enough, a large pile of parts was neatly arranged around him.
Neave began assembling the golem’s body.
At a speed that sounded like whips fluttering through the air, Neave grabbed one piece after another and assembled them with incredible precision.
Seven large cores were arranged in the middle of the torso. All of them seed interconnected by thin tal tendrils, for whatever reason, and tons of tiny pieces of glass shards were arranged as well.
Neave’s clicking got significantly more frequent, and he had to disassemble the whole thing dozens of tis and put it back together to achieve whatever he was trying to do.
All of this didn’t even take a minute.
Gradually the inside of the torso was arranged in a way that he seed to be mostly happy with, and he closed it, assembling an insanely intricate layer of pieces that appeared to be stimulating muscles, with tallic tendons connecting the muscles to the joints that would later move limbs.
Every piece of the golem’s body had a tiny glass shard embedded in it, and every major muscle had a core in the middle that was intricately interconnected with all the other centers and minor pieces.
Once he was done with the torso, Neave groaned loudly and disassembled the entire thing again, starting from the beginning. This ti, an additional layer of impossibly dense threads was added to the mix, and it seed to be leading to right about every piece of the golem's body several tis over.
He groaned and disassembled everything again, this ti creating another pile of imnsely tiny crystals that accompanied the thick ropes of threads.
A massive collection of tiny tallic threads was converging into a giant glass prism just below the golem’s neck, which would likely be connected to the head.
Harel was srized as she watched Neave assemble the head.
The object was far more complex than the torso, and Neave was almost constantly groaning as he assembled and reassembled the head of the golem. A suprely intricate collection of crystals was arranged in the golem’s head, and Neave seed to be stumped on how to assemble it correctly.
Soon enough, however, he finished, then proceeded to the limbs. By the end, the entire golem looked like a tallic human.
Once finished, Neave groaned again and proceeded to disassemble the entire thing.
What the hell is he doing!?
Harel couldn’t believe her eyes.
Even worse, as she watched him do the entire process again, she couldn’t even comprehend what he was doing differently this ti. Once he was done, he freaking disassembled it again!
Harel fell over in shock and barely regained herself as Neave put the thing together again at blazing speed.
Once he was done, he harrumphed and declared, “Bit crude, but good enough.”
What a monster!
“What do you an by crude!? I’ve never seen anything this intricate in my life!”
“Hmm? Well, no, it’s crude as hell. Even a wild golem is more flexible than this thing.”
“What the...!? You do know those are living creatures, right? That’s your standard!?”
“That’s rely a benchmark.”
Harel looked around for anyone, hoping to find soone who could tell her she wasn’t losing her mind.
Marven walked in at this mont, staring at the thing on the ground with bulging eyes, “Neave, dear heavens, what is that thing!”
“Oh, hey, Dad, this is a golem!”
“I… Oh lord.”
Harel stared at the thing in disbelief and turned to Neave, “Why is it so complex?”
“Thank you for asking, dear Harel! Usually, golems use one energy core and one command core. And the number of joints they have is kept to a minimum to make the inscribing process of the command core as straightforward as possible. I’m sadly limited by the materials at my disposal, so I can’t make the energy conduction veins fill the necessary criteria. They’re made of mundane material. Thus, they can’t bear the burden of too much energy.
“Now, usually, the command core and the energy core are connected to one another, and together they connect to all the joints. Due to the sheer number of joints this golem has, as it can move its limbs at any angle and even spin them around, and due to the number of energy cores and command cores, I had to connect every single one mutually. This made for an exponentially vast number of connections, and I ssed up the order quite a few tis.
“Also, I had to manually construct an intricate perception system, as it couldn’t utilize spirit senses due to the low-rank material used. I ended up settling for a dual system. One that detects heat signatures and one that detects movent relative to the golem’s body. The problem with having both of those in the sa body is that they tend to overlap rather frequently, and the movent-related one has a few crucial weaknesses, such as the inability to detect room temperature objects that stick to the sa position relative to its body. It’s unlikely anything will use such a strategy to avoid the golems, but I still built in a low-priority air-movent-detection system, just in case.
“As for the command core of the golem, I could have inscribed a simple, standard set of commands, but nothing of that complexity exists due to the number of joints. I ended up settling for a discriminant imitation system that learns from humanoid creatures in its range of perception with manually built-in discrimination for movents that are clearly unsuitable for maneuvering or combat.
“That on its own isn’t enough, as its peculiar body has capabilities of a range of movent far greater than us. So, I created a system that will only realize its full potential far later, once more of them exist and once they have enough enemies. Simply put, the golems employ a set of semi-random movents in combat, and depending on the estimated effectiveness of those movents, they decide whether they would replicate that movent again if they found themselves in a similar scenario
“Given enough ti, the golems would learn how to fight in nearly any situation, as they account for the environnt, number of enemies, body shape of enemies, heat signature, attack patterns, attack power, frequency, precision, and order, as well as how long the combat scenario lasted. The golems can, through touch, exchange information on combat experience and teach the others what they know.
“There is so other minor stuff about partial self-repair and system hierarchy that would take too long to explain. Sadly, they’re a bit too fragile due to their peculiar construction, so I must give them so damn sturdy armor. So… What do you guys think?”
As he turned to them, he saw the slack-jawed, wide-eyed expressions on their faces.
“Uh? Hello?”
Despite waving at them, they seed stuck in so sort of stupor. Suddenly, Marven started chuckling, which turned to wild laughter, quickly joined by Harel as well.
Marven cackled rrily, slapping his thighs as he kept getting redder and redder in his face, “Hahaha, hey Harel, do you think we qualify as sothing like heavenly ssengers ourselves?”
“I say yes!”
Neave stared at them quizically, wondering whether this place had driven them more insane than he realized.
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