I run out for the mirror crystal turtle.
And as you approach suddenly, you kick its torso.
Originally, the skill of the Miller Crystal Turtle, the Miller Force, should force me to code and blow me away with a counterattack.
But I never got a counterattack.
Rather, like a very natural thing, the mirror crystal turtle blows up better.
Dogoh, and the mirror crystal turtle that sounds and falls from the armor to the ground, you don't know what happened.
I only get my face out of the armor and look around for a moment.
And then he looked at me and he seemed to realize that I pierced the mirror force and went through the attack.
"Gaoooooo!!
Staring at me, I raise a vicious growl.
"... you can't win anything you can't win if you're so angry"
I twinkle, and I go closer to the mirror crystal turtle that stays down.
By the way, I was not forced to code by Miller Force thanks to the skill that the previously fought monster Rasetsu had, watching Code Forced Resistance in Supersearch to understand how it works.
You can only run one thing called code per person.
So, for example, I can't run Ghost Pierce code and just long distance magic, Blitz code at the same time.
Of course, by shifting it for a moment, we can do it almost simultaneously.
So, code enforcement means being forced to execute code specified by others.
What can I do to prevent this from happening?
Here comes the rule that only one code can be executed per person.
Let's say, for example, that when I was forced into code, I instructed myself to execute another code before I executed that code.
The code specified in Code Enforcement will not be executed because the last instruction given will then take precedence.
As a result, code enforcement can be ignored.
The cord coercion resistance that the monster Lassetes had was the same as this.
In the case of Lassetz, the code enforcement resistance of the mechanism of executing the code anew was only when it was clearly known that it had been subjected to code enforcement.
But if that doesn't tell you that you've been code-enforced, you'll fail to ignore the coercion.
So I chose the method of keeping the code running all the time.
Monitor yourself what state you are in right now and keep running the code you deserve for that state.
Then, always with certainty, that we can ignore code enforcement.
However, ignoring code enforcement in this form can be quite a difficult task.
It is of course a difficult task to always have to execute the code to yourself.
But more than that, there's a problem with the code you run.
Always execute the right code, for God's sake, and I'll be just a weirdo to repeat weird words and actions permanently.
Beyond always running, that code should be the code that was in the situation.
So I tried to choose the code to execute, inspired by my own body.
Look at the state of my body, check the code I am currently running, and specify that code to continue running.
Write code for that kind of mechanism into myself.
This allowed me to keep running the code all the time, without inhibiting my normal movement.
Moreover, since the mechanism itself is automatic, this mechanism will continue to work on its own, even if I am not aware of it.
This means that I have gained a perfectly void resistance.
Naturally, I'm not afraid of anything mirror force.
As I approach the mirror crystal turtle that stays flipped, I shake my fist through and hit him with full power.
Power, of course, is adjusted so that damage flow occurs.
With a strong impact, the methyl of the mirror crystal turtle crumbles and, at the same time, dies instantly with damage flow.
I was originally the opponent who attacked right away with long-range magic, shredding and knocking it down a little bit, but I was able to knock it down lightly.
And with my defeat of the Miller Crystal Turtle, the Assassin Wolves lurking in the shadows reveal themselves one after the other.
It must be retaliation for the defeat of the host.
I have countless fangs and nails of the Assassin Wolves, but I don't take any damage.
You're eating, naturally, because it's actually just relic armor, not me.
"Hmm...... I see. That's how it works."
As I attack, I analyze how all attack ranged magic works, which is also the skill of the Assassin Wolves, in Supersearch.
Take a look, nothing happened.
It's just that I keep making the exact same form of ranged magic as my attacks.
Something called long-range magic doesn't move as freely as human hands and feet.
So it's hard to reproduce the motion of beating with your hands, kicking with your feet with one long-range magic.
But it's not hard to produce the same distance magic as a certain instant form of beating motion.
So if you repeat the action of creating the exact same form of ranged magic as the attack motion, just for a moment, and turning it off in the next moment, you can recreate the ranged magic that makes the exact same motion as the attack motion.
That's exactly what the Assassin Wolves are doing.
This attack is also an automatic code, which is the same as my code compulsion resistance, activated by looking at my physical condition.
Even if you always use countless ranged magic, you shouldn't be more burdened than unconscious.
"But... I don't need this power."
I'm so blurry.
Because proxying all attacks by long-range magic is a technique to avoid code coercion by the counter.
But I don't have to be afraid of the counter because I have the perfect resistance to code coercion in the first place.
I mean, all-attack long-range magic is an unnecessary force for me.
"That's why the used wolves are asked to leave."
I lay my hands on the Assassin Wolves.
"Seven colored powers, be rubble and fight your enemies! Prism Blitz!"
I activate Prism Blitz, a synthetic magic of all attributes.
The power is, appropriately, enormous.
This, hundreds - no, just a huge number of thousands - will be scattered around.
The scattered prism blitz starts swirling like a storm around me.
Speaking of invincibility, Assassin Wolf's invincibility is not complete.
Always, a gap will be created.
So if you're constantly filling the area with offensive magic, one day you should hit it.
As I stand still, the Advisor Assassin Wolf falls down with one more.
A few minutes later, all Assassin Wolf was defeated, scattered as if it were fog and extinguished.
- Okay, it's perfect.
I nod satisfactorily to the results as envisaged.
Even S-ranked monsters with troublesome skills could be wiped out without difficulty.
Sure, I'm getting stronger.
Feeling the benefit of the power of Supercode, I leave the scene and run for the summit.