Inside an artificial cave created by cutting a part of a mountain, there was an elderly mageāwho looked so old that it would not have looked out of ordinary if he collapsed suddenlyāexplaining something endlessly.
In front of the elderly mage, there was a young manāwho looked so bored and unfocused with his expressionless faceālistening to the mageās explanation with one ear to letting it escape the other ear.
The 103 level magic swordsman Vulcan was going through a brutal physical training only moments ago, but now he was looking at the elderly mage with unfocused eyes.
āā¦ā¦and thatās how you can establish the fundamentals of using basic magic power. Other phony methods claiming to be better are not needed. This is the method acknowledged by not only me, but also demigods and those with dragon heritage. So you just need to master this properly and you will be able to use any kind of magic freely. KULKULKULā¦.. Of course, if there is any particular subject that you want to specialize, there is a way you can delve into itā¦ā¦ā
āExcuse me. I am not understanding any of what you are saying.ā
Vulcan raised his hand and interrupted Berenereās explanation. The elderly mage scrunched.
āThe so called genius canāt even understand this? I made it really easy to understand and then explained itā¦ā¦ Hum!ā
āNo, itās not that. I donāt understand the current situation at all. Why are you teaching me? Shouldnāt it be Mr. Filder? Also, why are you teaching me the magic theories? Havenāt you heard that Iām a player?ā
The situation was just ridiculous to Vulcan.
By the time Vulcan regained consciousness from the storm of enlightenment, the magic attacks that surrounded him and the skeleton king exuding deadly force were no more.
Instead, there were six people, including Filder, staring at Vulcan.
They were extraordinary people in distinctive clothes.
They were staring at Vulcan, as if they were trying to drill a hole through Vulcan with their gazes, which made him extremely uncomfortable.
Vulcan asked Filder for an explanation. Filder stepped forward and looked straight into Vulcanās eyes.
Just about when it looked like Filder was going to say that the training detail has changed yet again, instead an old man dressed as if he is advertising to say āIām a mageā grabbed him, and before long, the place had changed to this artificial cave.
It had been an hour already since the lecture on basic magic theory started. There were too many unanswered questions to be listening to this any further.
āWhat is it? Filder didnāt explain everything to you?ā
āHe was about to, but you dragged me here before Mr. Filder could speak.ā
āWhat! Then why didnāt you say so until now? Are you making a fool out of me!ā
āI was going to tell you, but then you said to shut up and listen for just one hour. Do you not remember?ā
āWhat? I did? HulHulHulā¦ā¦ My bad, despite my age Iām still impatient.ā
āOr you are going senile?ā
Berenere looked about as lifeless as mummies that Vulcan saw in PBS and education channels, and that made Vulcan unable to hide his suspicions and doubts about the old man.
Berenere didnāt care. Instead, he stared at empty air and mumbled something. It appeared he was trying to think of something to say, but it also looked as if a ghost possessed Berenere, and that gave Vulcan the creeps.
Finally, finishing his thoughts, Berenere spoke toward Vulcan.
āYou are a genius.ā
ā?ā
Vulcan sat with a face that screamed āNow what is this non-sense,ā which was what he was thinking. However, Berenere looked at Vulcan with an extremely serious face.
Berenere lifted his dried-up little twig like hand and pointed at Vulcan; then he continued.
āDo you have assholes in places of ear-holes? Say something.ā
āNo, why such harsh wordsā¦ā¦ Iām just caught off guard, thatās all.ā
In fact, Vulcan was so taken by surprise that he couldnāt think for a while.
āWhatās there to be surprised about. Didnāt people call you a genius all the time in the world you use to live in?ā
āIn that dimension, yes⦠but still, isnāt everyone that comes to this place a genius by default? Itās not like thatās anything special here. Also, as for me, it is not that I am a genius, but instead, I have the power of a player called SYSTEM, which is like a cheat ability, and Iām getting help from it a lot. Itās all power of the SYSTEM. By chance, you donāt know about this?ā
āOf course I know about it. Those lazy asses. Those bunch have the talent the size of a ratās ass, yet they donāt even train properly, and they always go on treasure hunting to look for good skills or weapons. At first, I thought you are just like themā¦ā¦ KULKULKUL KUAPKUAPGUP.ā
Berenere laughed hard almost to the point he was going to die from running out of breath, then he fixed his gaze toward Vulcan.
āWhat do you think your rank is right now?ā
āā¦ā¦Level 103, by the standard here, thatās about the bare minimum for the Third-Rate ranking.ā
āWrong. Right now, there would be nothing wrong with calling you a Second-Rate.ā
Vulcan snorted after hearing Berenere.
āThat canāt be, elder. It appears you donāt know much about players. We players can assess peopleās strength accurately. Compared to how I was two month ago, there is hardly anything that changedā¦ā¦ā
āI get that the level is about same. Iām talking about what you call the masteries. You are not aware because you donāt know any players around here, but I do. Players with your kind of Thunder God mastery usually have levels of 200 or above. Itās a kind of mastery that may or may not be possible even with ten years of repeated training. HULHUL.ā
āā¦ā¦ā
āIt looks like you are still not getting itā¦ā¦ Hum.ā
Berenere scratched his back with his staff on his right hand.
āYou used to be, what was thatā¦ā¦ Max Level, Level 99? How long did it take to get there?ā
āā¦ā¦ about 5 years?ā
āOthers usually take 30 years to get there. Even with that, compared to you, their masteries are substantially lower. What do you think is the cause of the difference?ā
Now even Vulcan couldnāt do anything but to acknowledge it.
Vulcan asked Berenere with a sincere face.
āBecauseā¦ā¦ I am a genius?ā
āKULKULKULKUL.ā
Like a dark mage scheming an evil plot, Berenere laughed ominously. His voice was full of laughter.
āYou say such a boastful thing without any reservation.ā
āThatās⦠you kept telling me Iām a geniusā¦ā
āIs proclaiming it yourself the same as others telling you so? KULKULKUL.ā
āNow, just whatā¦.ā
āAnyway, enough about this.ā
āUgh⦠this guy really gets on my ā¦ā¦ā
It spoiled Vulcanās mood to see Berenere flipping between compliments and belittlement.
Vulcan complained inside without letting it be shown and continued tuning to Berenere.
āBut, isnāt it odd? From what I know, the only way for a player to increase mastery is repeated training, but as I said earlier, the difference between you and other ordinary players are big enough to be very obvious at his point. According to Filder, you got to where you are through harsh training unlike other lazy bums, but even that cannot explain this difference.ā
āā¦ā¦ā
āYou can understand the question just by looking at the answer.ā
Vulcan, confused, stared at Berenere.
āWhat do you mean by that? Explain it in a way that makes senseā¦ā¦ā
āJust stay put! An elder is talking!ā
āYou lousy old man!ā
Vulcan cringed.
āTake a moderately complicated math problem for instance. Most people seek a solution method before solving the problem. They understand the intent of the question first, formulate solution steps and find the answer. Building upon this, smart ones are able to go further and solve different but applicable problems of similar nature, and in some cases, they are able to find clues as to how to solve a more difficult problem. As people solve problems this way, over time, they gain problem solving skills and reach new heights.ā
Berenere took a breather and continued.
āOn the other hand, players solve problems by asking for the answers directly. The smartypants called SYSTEM or whatever always knows and tells you the answers, so why put any effort into understanding the problem? With the SYSTEM constantly spoon-feeding the answers, players donāt learn anything. Instead they just repeat skill names like parrots. There is no progress. They look pathetic yelling āIce Missile!ā just to cast such a low level magic. Itās really tacky! The true power of magic doesnāt require such.ā
Vulcan avoided eye contact. He felt uncomfortable because it felt like Berenere was talking about him.
āKULKUL, I wasnāt talking about you specifically, so take it easy. Of course, you do have some bad habits of players. Nobody in the world would study hard when answers to test questions always just appear in front of them.ā
āā¦ā¦ā
āStill, like I said earlier, even the likes of you can have differences. You understand the question just by looking at the answer. Just by looking at the answer, you understand the question and have a rough guess on how to solve it to get to the answer. It is no surprise that your mastery increases faster than other players that only memorize answers to specific questions.ā
Vulcan felt unexplained itch listening to Berenere.
It was a feeling of excitement, but at the same time, he felt embarrassed. Before those feelings engulfed Vulcan, he tossed a quick question.
āIf what you are saying is true, then you are teaching me the basic magic becauseā¦ā¦ā
āYou have a talent where you can understand about half of the problem just by looking at the answer. You were able to do that even without a teacher to show you. What would happen if you were taught properly by a teacher on the basics? I addition, you have the power of SYSTEM which tells you the answers in critical moments. It is no wonder Filder has high hopes for you. HULHULHUL.ā
Vulcan felt a burning sensation filling up his chest.
It wasnāt because he was acknowledged by Filder and Berenere, the two extremely powerful beings with incalculable levels.
It was acknowledgement of not Vulcan the player, but Vulcan the human being.
This was the first time Vulcan was assessed on the merit of being a person alone, without the aid of SYSTEM included in the consideration.
Vulcanās strength, rapid growth speed and superior fighting tactics were all acquired through his hard work. Vulcan took pride in having had put in more sweat and hard work than anyone in past five years, and in fact he didnāt see anybody else around that worked as hard as him.
However, he felt uncomfortable and doubted himself because in corner of his mind, he always wondered if he achieved it all through the power of SYSTEM, not by his own.
This was why he could not stand proud whenever anyone gazed upon him with compliment, envy or jealousy.
Vulcan always felt a little lacking in confidence and pride.
However, now all those feelings of insecurities flew away at an instant, all because of a few words from Berenere, an old man standing over there scratching his thigh with his staff.
āPleaseā¦ā¦ā
Vulcan decided to trust Filder and Berenere.
Vulcan had already been following Filderās training to the letters, but he now felt that he could follow their guidance with an even greater sense of trust.
āTrain me. Please take a good care of me from now on. Elder.ā
Vulcan stood up and gave Berenere a proper 90 degrees angle bow.
Berenere was not used to bows because he came from a different culture, but he could certainly feel the sincerity coming from Vulcan.
āKULKUL, it has been a lousy year and now I got an apprentice.ā
Berenere gazed upon Vulcan with approval.
***
On a training ground the size of two soccer fields, Berenereās phlegm-filled voice echoed.
āHey you numbskull! Whatās taking you so long! Canāt you understand this!ā