Me, Adventurer! - Undoubled Skills Are Flat Magic (WEB Version)

Episode 17 - Critical Safe, But Blacked Out

No, not if you're surprised now! If you're gonna get crushed, you can build the next wall!

Work out your magic and build the same wall again as you just did. It will probably crumble again, but I hope I can buy some time to think about the causes and the countermeasures. In the meantime, all you have to do is build the next, unbroken wall. I can't be a designer. I can't be a designer.

The wall breaks down by making a sound that can also be heard as' Pern 'or' Kashan ', similar to the bursting sound. The crushed wall disappears into fine light, but it is also buried right in the herd of inago and invisible. Those inagos also hit the second wall and fall to the ground. We need to figure out what to do by the time this second wall breaks.

Beyond the wall, already buried with fallen inago. I never thought I'd ever use the expression 'loaded with ingots', but in fact, there's about 10 cm of ingots across the wall. It hasn't been that long, but how many of them are there?

... is that it? Is that what this is all about?

My planar magic withstands the blow of a giant claw bear at leisure. Let's say the Big Nail Bear has 100 Attack. I can stand that at my leisure, my plane's defense at 500. If these two bump into each other, it's my plane win at 500-100 = 400.

Meanwhile, if Inago takes the force to hit the wall as 1, my plane still wins at 500-1 = 499. but if there were 1000 inago, it would be a win for inago at 500-1000 = -500. That would mean losing the amount of stuff. If you liken it in a previous life, it's an online DOS attack, or a saturation attack. "Battle is number, brother" is what I used to say. There are no more words that describe the truth in extremes.

So, what do I do? There are several possible ways.

One is' number by number '. "If it breaks, you can build a new wall," but no matter how much magic I have, there are limits. It would be perfect to race chicken to see how many inago and my magic, which runs out first.

The other is called 'Build an Unbreakable Wall'. It is possible to maintain the wall if we continue to supply magic. But this also results in magic and a number of chicken races.

The last thing I can think of right now is' don't take it '. It doesn't mean running away. Take advantage of what you've practiced recently. If you can't accept it,' recieve it '. Mr. Big Clawed Bear, I won't waste your life! I felt like I saw a good smiling big nail bear thumbing up into the void, but I guess it's my fault. Mostly, what kind of smiling bear is that?

Build the wall again about 100m away from the second wall. It's a wall 1.5 times higher than the previous wall. Tilt this forward about 45 degrees to secure it. The inago that hit this wall will reflect towards the ground. Easy vector, that's middle school math. This means that some percent of the energy that the wall was supposed to receive would run in the direction of the ground, which would increase the strength of the wall in a pseudo manner. Still, I guess it'll break sooner or later, but it'll hold longer than it just did. If you take a break in the meantime, you can restore your magic too, so you should be able to stand it even at long streets.

If you tilt the wall the other way, you'll be jumped over, and if you wedge the wall itself, the village will suffer damage to the forest even if it's safe. When the woods get rough, demons may overflow outside. That would result in no less damage than locust damage. We can't just go through the back from here.

The second wall splashes and the inago kills on the third wall. And one after the other, it crashes to the ground. The walls seem to function as expected.

Just behind the third wall, create a fourth wall. I wanted to see how things were on the edge, just in case.

I explored it with a sign perception, but it didn't work at all like it was jamming. There are too many, and too few, signs to keep up with recognition. So there's only a visual for confirmation. Strengthen your body and run. That's an absolute muscle ache tomorrow.

The east side had no problem. Inago hasn't come to the edge of the wall, and after falling to the ground it seems to be flowing west along the wall. Apparently Inago didn't fly from the true north, but from the north northeast, flushed by wind from the eastern mountains.

The west side sucked because of it. If I was 10 minutes late, I could almost cross the edge of the wall. Build a new wall in the north-south direction to stop the weir. Now I feel safe for a while.

The rest of the magic is about 1/3. The herd of inago finally stopped. The sun hangs on the western hills. Did you take a break while replacing the wall and take about 5 hours?

Beyond the wall, it seems unimaginable. Nearly 2 m of inago accumulated across the transparent wall. It's beyond my height. How many, no, hundreds of millions? The guy downstairs will be crushed and no longer alive. The one up there is the one up there, because it doesn't even get to the grass it feeds on, or some guys are eating together. Something's going to be traumatic. Foreword withdrawn, I don't want to be such a rider.

Well, Inago might have calmed down, but I'm just doing another job from here. Anyway, this wall disappears when I go to sleep. Then the guy who survives will be attacked by the village. I might be able to stay up all night for about a night, but the guy named Child's Body suddenly loses to the sleeper, so I want to process these guys as soon as possible. Really, breakers fall asleep all of a sudden.

Slide the wall in the north-northeast direction along with the surface layer of about 10 cm of soil from the south-westerly direction at the corner. That's a bulldozer, though. The north side of the village is almost flat but has some ups and downs. Dig back and sharpen all the cuts so as to tidy up there.

Digging back every piece of dirt is for egg control. If I leave my eggs behind, next year, no, a few months later, I will be attacked by the inago again. It's only the end of summer now. The area is warm, so bugs can live except in the middle of winter. If they do poorly, they may hatch in a month and come south again. I'm sorry to hear so much trouble over and over.

When the sun set completely across the hill, the collected inago and soil had become walls of about 30 m. Would it have been about 30 km from the village?

Can I go home...

Now gather this inago wall, which extends east and west, in one place. There's already a wall at the western end of the wall, so I'll build a wall on the eastern side as well. Slide that towards the center...

Something's made a hell of a monument. Would it be more than 50 m on one side and nearly 100 m high? It's a huge rectangle with a very bad taste, with inago buried between the soil. Very few of the guys live in boulders, but I'll handle it just in case.

Drop a plate a little smaller than the right size from the top of the rectangle. And hold it down as it is. Geez. I feel like I hear things like meiki, pokipoki, butu, but it's my fault. I stop around half the height and almost cubic. I'll probe by the sign detection, but it looks almost dead. Release the plane and take a breather. I only have about 10% more magic left. I'm going to fall as-is when I get back to the village.

Later processing is fine tomorrow. The village chief should be ready for this.

Come on, let's go home. For the usual routine.

I couldn't go home.

No, I arrived safely at the village. It was already dark when I got home, using physical strengthening to the point of criticality. If it's true, my dad was the gatekeeper who wasn't supposed to be on duty, and he welcomed me first. As soon as I found me, I held onto it with tremendous momentum. Humans cry at first sight. Yeah, I know I worried about you. So it was exchanged for a while, but it remained, but apparently I was more tired than I thought, and suddenly the breaker fell in my father's arm. You were seriously more critical than I thought you were.

When I woke up, on my usual bed, I saw my usual ceiling. I know the ceiling.

I smell signs and good smells of people coming from the kitchen. I guess it's your mother. My stomach complains of hunger in abundance. Speaking of which, I didn't eat anything last night. I haven't eaten all day, so it would be quite a strain on the child's body. When I try to wake up my body to head to the kitchen, I moan without thinking of the terrible muscle aches I had expected.

Then the signs of the kitchen quickly moved over here.

"Beat, you woke up!?

It was my mother, after all. Did you hear the groans? I don't think it was that loud, but it's still a mysterious ability to perceive.

"Good morning, Mother. How long have I been asleep?

"Don't give me anything, just for one night. I came home to congratulate my father in the evening and carried him to bed.

Huh? I usually just slept and woke up, even though it's comics and lanobes and stuff like sleeping for about 3 days or coma on an annual basis if I suck. Oh, so it's just in fiction after all?

"My husband tells me to bring you here as soon as you wake up. You guys haven't eaten anything since yesterday, have you? I'll make breakfast right away. So, just wait a minute.

Uh, I knew you wouldn't let it flow like that. I have to explain the situation and the circumstances. It can't fit. Well, we need to start theoretically arming how far we should go. It's depressing. It's like before a business meeting when work is delayed. I guess this stomach ache isn't just due to hunger. I don't want to go ~.

"Let's start with the Inago thing. What has happened since then?

After breakfast, I came to the village chief's house with my mother. And that was the line of the village chief with the best opening.

"I've been cementing it with dirt about 10 lees (about 30 km) northeast of the village. I think we should cook and treat it early because some of them may still be alive and some of the eggs may be alive.

"Well, you better hurry up with that. Let's head right over. Can you show me around?

No recourse? Lucky me!

"There's so much I want to ask. Let me hear it on the road.

Yes, it wasn't that sweet.