The light of teleportation faded in the grand hall, and Jie Mingâs figure reappeared.
The instant his feet touched solid ground, he clearly felt countless gazesâlike invisible probesâconverge upon him.
These gazes carried complex meanings.
Examination, inquiry, disbelief, deep curiosity, and even a trace of inexplicable⊠regret?
What was absent was the congratulations or admiration due a victor who had just claimed ultimate triumph in fierce melee.
Jie Ming understood this well, his face remaining calm.
He knew the âmethodsâ he had employed on the contest grounds had been seen clearly by the sharp-eyed high-level wizards in the hall.
Though their gazes varied, out of wizardly courtesy and respect for Wizard Noren, no one rashly approached to disturb him.
Except Viola.
She sidled over like a thieving crab, scooting silently to his side.
Then, with a light elbow nudge, she whispered incredulously:
âHey, Jie Ming⊠your law⊠is it really related to âImaginary Elementsâ?â
Seeing Violaâs sneaky yet knowledge-hungry demeanorâand sensing the surrounding wizards pretending to chat while perking their earsâJie Ming couldnât help chuckling.
He didnât lower his voice; instead, he nodded openly and admitted frankly:
âMm, thatâs right.â
He felt this wasnât lying.
In this wizard universe, âspiritual qiâ as an energy form truly didnât exist in their cognitive system.
Classifying it under âImaginary Elementsâ or products of âFictional Lawsâ was, from their perspective, perfectly reasonable.
Though prior observations through the light screens and Jie Mingâs own admission of âImaginary Elementsâ had already sparked guesses.
When he truly confirmed it, the hall still inevitably filled with suppressed gasps and murmurs.
Viola widened her eyes, asking bluntly:
âWhat were you thinking?! Why choose this direction?!â
Jie Ming had anticipated such reactions.
In mainstream wizard cognition, selecting âImaginary Elementsâ or related âFictional Lawsâ as a core research path was quite ânon-mainstreamââeven deemed âirrational.â
This stemmed from the contradictory, trap-filled nature of âFictional Lawsâ themselves.
When Jie Ming decided to anchor his wizard path in âspiritual qi,â his primary concern wasnât constructing the Incense Fire Divine Dao but a more fundamental question: in this wizard universe centered on materialism and rule exploration, was advancement possible via a law ânon-existentâ in this universe?
To this end, he spent vast time and effort querying related data in the Noren Workshopâs immense knowledge repository.
Ultimately, he found information on âFictional Laws.â
The conclusion was simple: possible.
Wizard civilizationâs history was long; brilliant minds and bold thinkers abounded.
Long ago, top wizards pondered similar issues: laws were essentially summaries of objective phenomena or constants, explorations of truthâmere âknowledge.â
If a wizard could âsetâ a phenomenon and âdefineâ its operational laws, then study and master it like real lawsâwouldnât that theoretically approach omnipotence?
This path was termed Fictional Laws by wizards.
âImaginary Elementsâ were phenomena produced or linked by such âfalse,â subjectively âdefinedâ laws.
âImaginaryâ already revealed its essence: born of imagination, not objective existence.
Theoretically viableâand historically, some wizards succeeded.
Yet ultimately, âFictional Lawsâ was nearly eliminated from mainstream wizard choices.
Reasons abounded.
First, though theoretically possible, true success was rare as phoenix feathers.
Constructing a âFictional Lawâ producing âImaginary Elementsâ recognized by the wizard system required utmost rigor and self-consistency in the defined law.
After all, barring legendary ninth-levels, the wizard world remained highly âmaterialistic,â objective constants unyielding.
Fabricating a law system that endless chaotic void base rules would âacknowledgeâ was far harder than deeply studying an existing law.
For example, researching âfire element lawâ required only focusing on fireâs properties, changes, interactions with other elements.
But âdefiningâ a similar new âX element lawâ demanded profound understanding of fire, water, earth, wind, etc.
Even energy conservation, spatial structureâensuring no fundamental conflicts with these cornerstones while retaining sufficient ânovelty.â
Simply: researching a normal law might require comprehending and absorbing a wisp of related plane origin for entry.
Fabricating one demanded absorbing multiple diverse plane originsâresource and knowledge thresholds exploding exponentially.
This alone eliminated ninety-nine percent of aspirants.
Yet this couldnât stump wizard civilizationâs true unparalleled geniuses.
Resources could be accumulated; knowledge learned.
The key was the second issue: definitions couldnât be âtooâ rigorous.
This seemed contradictory to the first.
But per data Jie Ming found: overly rigorous, flawless logic loops often meant the law wasnât fully âfictionalââbut a real, undiscovered/recorded one!
Corresponding to some obscure but existent substance, energy, or constant.
Ironically, the era when âImaginary Elementsâ research peaked was one of wizard civilizationâs fastest for discovering new elements and laws.
Many geniusesâ painstaking âcreationsâ proved mere âdiscoveriesâ of niche real rules.
For those resource-exhausting, self-proclaimed extraordinary geniuses, this was a devastating blow.
Declaring their âcreationâ and âdefinitionâ mere lucky âdiscoveryâ was far worse than failure for truth-seekers.
After eliminating another batch, the rare luckyâor those grasping subtle balanceâfinally âfabricatedâ laws and advanced via them.
Then the third issue arose: Fictional Law holders generally had weak individual combat power.
Statistics showed: across levels, such wizardsâ combat strength barely averaged the tier.
Seemingly acceptable?
But those surviving prior brutal filters to master Fictional Laws were all unparalleled geniuses, monsters among monsters.
For them, âaverageâ was failure!
They should far surpass peers.
Reasons for weak combat varied.
Each fictional law was uniqueâno predecessorsâ experience; all paths self-pioneered, trial-error costly.
Fictional laws had to somewhat align with world underlying constants for system recognitionâfar from initial âarbitrary, convention-defyingâ omnipotence; heavily restricted.
Of course, Fictional Laws werenât worthless.
Their greatest boon: producing âImaginary Elements.â
These theoretically non-existent things could be conjured by the mastering wizard.
Depending on understanding depth and angle, produced Imaginary Elements had peculiar properties conventional elements couldnât match.
Simply: combat weak, but excelled in âproducing special materialsâ and âmaking money.â
Their Imaginary Elements often rare catalysts or cores for high-end alchemy/special artifacts.
But that was it.
For geniuses capable of mastering Fictional Laws, âearning moneyâ was never difficultâtoo many resource paths.
Exchanging such high thresholds and costs for a âhigh-end material supplierâ role was, to most top wizards, extremely poor value.
Thus, Jie Mingâs admission of a law related to âImaginary Elementsâ sparked such astonishment and confusion.
In their view, with Jie Mingâs displayed potential and wisdom, any promising existing law path promised limitless futureâwhy this seemingly arduous, âdim-prospectedâ detour?
For Jie Ming, using âFictional Lawsâ and âImaginary Elementsâ as cover perfectly whitewashed and rationalized his true foundationââspiritual qi.â
At least, if his Infernal Sulfur planeâs anomalies were detected later, it wouldnât cause excessive panic or probingâmerely seen as a special âImaginary Elementâ environment.
As he pondered, Wizard Norenâseated highâstood with a chuckle.
His movement instantly silenced the hall; all whispers ceased.
Wizard Noren walked slowly to Jie Ming, those eyes brimming with infinite wisdom scrutinizing him, satisfaction on his face.
âWell done, little one.â Wizard Norenâs voice was mild yet powerful. âVery creative, high potential. Since you won, this reward is yours.â
He extended his hand, passing the seemingly plain yet life-representing Substitute Death Doll to Jie Ming.
Jie Ming inhaled deeply, suppressing excitement, receiving it respectfully with both hands: âThank you, Lord Noren!â