Ultimate Dragon System: Grinding my way to the Top

Chapter 351: Vorin vs kiad



Chapter 351: Vorin vs kiad

The arena reset.

Fight 8.

Vorin of Virex against Kiad of Solmara.

The Virex sections gave Vorin their aggressive territorial response—the last fight of Class 2’s first round, the energy of the day building toward the conclusion of this stage. The Solmara sections gave Kiad their focused disciplined acknowledgment. The neutral sections were fully invested—the bracket nearing its first major transition, the crowd understanding that after this fight the structure would shift toward semifinals and the eliminations would begin compounding.

Vorin walked out of the Virex tunnel.

He moved with a readiness that was different from most fighters’ opening postures—not aggressive, not patient, something more receptive. The specific quality of someone whose ability required input before it could produce output, a fighter whose first move was always going to be a response rather than an initiation. He reached his position and stood with his hands loose at his sides, his body angled slightly to present a wider profile than a defensive stance would normally suggest.

The Virex sections gave him everything.

Kiad walked out of the Solmara tunnel.

He moved with quiet precision—nothing about his build or his posture suggesting anything dramatic, the specific unremarkable quality of a fighter whose ability operated through brief contact rather than through visible buildup. His hands were relaxed. Nothing glowed, shimmered, or hardened. He looked like someone who hadn’t activated anything because there was nothing to activate until the moment he chose to touch something.

The Solmara sections gave him their focused response.

"Vorin," the announcer said. "Class 2, Virex Academy. His ability—Mimic Strike."

A murmur from the crowd.

"Vorin can copy the last physical technique used against him and use it back at full power on his next turn. The moment an attack lands on him—a punch, a kick, an elemental strike, anything physical—his body absorbs the motion data. His next strike replicates it exactly, delivered with his own strength behind it." He paused. "He can only hold one copied technique at a time. A new hit overwrites whatever was stored. And the copied technique fades if not used within a short window."

He paused once more.

"His weakness—he has to take the hit to copy it. And he can’t copy techniques that didn’t involve direct physical contact with his body. Projectiles or environmental effects he didn’t take directly don’t register."

Then—

"Kiad," the announcer said. "Class 2, Solmara Institute. His ability—Severance."

A different quality of murmur—the crowd processing something abstract, the specific sound of people working through an ability description that didn’t immediately suggest a visual.

"Kiad can temporarily disconnect any two things that are touching. A foot from the floor’s friction. A fist from its momentum. A weapon from the hand gripping it. A strike’s motion from its force." He paused. "The disconnection lasts only a moment—but during that moment the two separated things behave as if the connection never existed. A foot with no friction slides freely. A fist with no momentum stops dead. A strike with no force passes through harmlessly." Another pause. "He triggers it through touch—brief contact with either of the two connected things."

He let that land.

"His weakness—Severance requires him to touch one of the two things he’s separating. And the disconnection is genuinely brief. If the opponent adapts within that window the connection reasserts itself."

The crowd processed both abilities.

In the stands the principle was visible to anyone paying attention—Vorin needed to take a clean hit with real force behind it to copy something useful. Kiad’s ability could remove the force from his own strikes before they landed, feeding Vorin worthless copies. The fight was a test of whether Kiad could maintain that defense indefinitely or whether Vorin could provoke a clean hit somehow.

The referee raised a hand.

Kiad moved first—closing distance at a measured pace, his hands loose, nothing about his approach suggesting urgency. He had no reason to rush. His ability worked through touch and touch required proximity regardless of speed.

Vorin waited.

Kiad reached striking range and threw a punch—a real punch, his fist driving toward Vorin’s shoulder with genuine technique behind it, the kind of strike that would transfer real motion data if it landed.

In the instant before contact Kiad’s other hand brushed his own wrist.

Severance activated—the connection between the punching fist’s momentum and its force separated, the strike continuing to travel at the same speed but the force behind it disconnected from the motion.

The fist hit Vorin’s shoulder.

Motion without force. The contact was real—the fist touched the shoulder, the physical connection complete—but the impact carried nothing. No push. No transfer of energy. A touch indistinguishable from a tap.

Vorin’s body absorbed the contact.

His ability registered it—a physical strike, direct contact, the motion data captured. But the motion data included the absence of force. What Vorin copied was a punch with no power behind it.

"He severed his own strike’s force before it landed," the announcer said. "Vorin took the hit—but the hit had nothing in it. Whatever Vorin copied just now is a punch that won’t do anything."

Vorin felt it.

The copied technique sat in his system, ready to be used, fading on its short timer—a punch with the form of Kiad’s strike but none of the power, the absence baked into what had been copied.

He had a choice.

Use the worthless copy now—wasting the slot but clearing it for whatever came next, or hold it and hope Kiad’s next contact was different.

He used it.

The punch he threw replicated Kiad’s exact form—the same angle, the same extension, Vorin’s own strength behind it theoretically. But the copied technique included the severed force as part of what had been copied—the punch landed on Kiad’s arm with the same nothing that the original had carried.

Kiad took it without reaction.

The slot was clear.

Kiad approached again—same measured pace, same readiness, his hands loose at his sides.

He threw a kick this time—a different technique, real motion, his leg driving toward Vorin’s ribs.

Before contact, his free hand brushed his own ankle.

Severance activated on the kick—the connection between the strike’s motion and its force separated again, the kick traveling at full speed and landing on Vorin’s ribs with the same hollow nothing the punch had carried.

Vorin absorbed it.

A second worthless copy—a kick with no force, the technique’s form present but the substance removed.

The Solmara sections were quiet—reading the pattern, understanding what Kiad was doing, the strategy visible now across two exchanges. Every contact Kiad made with Vorin was going to be severed before it landed. Vorin’s ability would never receive a usable copy as long as Kiad maintained this approach.

Vorin used the worthless kick copy immediately—no reason to hold it, the slot clearing for the next exchange.

Kiad approached a third time.

This time he didn’t strike immediately—he reached out with an open hand, slow, deliberate, the gesture of someone about to grab rather than hit.

Vorin watched the open hand approach.

Kiad’s fingers made contact with Vorin’s forearm—not a strike, a grip, the hand closing around the arm with real grip strength.

No severance.

The grip was real—Kiad’s actual physical strength applied to Vorin’s arm, the contact carrying genuine force because a grip wasn’t a strike and Severance hadn’t been triggered.

Vorin’s ability registered the grip.

Real motion data. Real force. A grip technique—Kiad’s hand closing with genuine strength around Vorin’s forearm.

Kiad released the grip immediately and stepped back.

Vorin had a usable copy.

A grip technique—not devastating, not the kind of strike that would end a fight, but real. Functional. The first non-worthless copy of the fight.

"He gave Vorin something real," the announcer said, his voice carrying genuine confusion. "Why would he—"

Kiad approached again.

He reached toward Vorin’s arm—the same gesture, the open hand, the apparent setup for another grip.

Vorin used his copied technique.

His own hand shot forward, replicating Kiad’s grip motion, closing around Kiad’s wrist with the strength the copy had captured—real grip strength, the technique functional, Vorin’s hand closing around Kiad’s wrist with genuine force.

Kiad’s other hand brushed the contact point.

Severance activated—on Vorin’s grip this time, the connection between Vorin’s hand’s grip strength and the wrist it was gripping separated. The grip was real. The force behind it was disconnected from the contact point.

Vorin’s hand was closed around Kiad’s wrist.

But the grip exerted nothing—no pressure, no hold, the connection between Vorin’s strength and Kiad’s wrist severed in the instant of contact.

Kiad pulled his wrist free.

No resistance.

"He gave Vorin a grip on purpose," the announcer said, understanding arriving. "He knew Vorin would copy it and use it back. And when Vorin used it—Kiad severed Vorin’s grip the same way he’d been severing his own strikes."

The Virex sections were quiet.

Vorin stood with an empty hand—the copied grip used and severed, the slot clear, three exchanges into the fight and nothing had landed with any effect on either side.


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