Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 483: You should have gone for the kill from Dimensional Keeper: All My Skills Are at Level 100, a Fantasy novel by ShinGotLost.

Chapter 483: You should have gone for the kill

The mont they left his mouth, the blue flas around his body surged with life, roaring like wild spirits set free. They burned brighter, higher, consuming the space around him in a blinding flash—and then he vanished. Gone, as if the fire had devoured him whole, leaving behind only a faint trace of flickering blue embers that danced where he had just been.

The leaders—King Magnar, Kate, Aurelia, Marcel, Elarion, Klaus, and the rest—froze. Their expressions shifted instantly from tense anticipation to shock. They turned their heads, eyes scanning the field with desperation—he was nowhere to be seen. Not above, not ahead, not around them.

And then—

A gasp escaped soone’s throat as all heads whipped around.

There he was.

Drevon, standing behind them—not walking, not flying, but already there, like he had never moved at all. One hand casually extended, his fingers clenched around Max’s neck, lifting the exhausted boy into the air like he weighed nothing. Max’s body hung limp, drained of all mana, his head tilted forward, too stunned to even react.

The leaders were speechless.

He had moved so fast—too fast. Not a flicker of movent, not a ripple in the air. Even their eyes—sharpened by years of battle and mastery—hadn’t registered a single mont of transition.

One instant he was blazing with blue flas, and the next, he had bypassed the strongest figures of the Lower Domain, undetected, and now held the continent’s greatest genius at his rcy.

And he hadn’t even broken a sweat.

They were all peak Expert Rank individuals—n and won who stood at the very summit of power within the Lower Domain. Each of them had weathered countless battles, crushed powerful foes, and walked the razor-thin edge of life and death more tis than they could count.

Though it was true that there existed a boundary between the Expert Rank and soone who was halfway into the Master Rank, they had always believed—hoped, even—that the gap was narrow enough to contest with, to close through skill, experience, or sheer will. After all one was technically still in the Expert Rank even if they were halfway into the Master Rank.

But in that single mont, in that terrifying flash where Drevon vanished and reappeared, reality struck them with a cruel, rciless clarity: the gap wasn’t small—it was an abyss.

They hadn’t even seen him move. Not a blur. Not a shadow. Not even the faintest ripple of air.

And it wasn’t just speed—it was the ease with which he bypassed them, like they weren’t even there. That was what truly shook them. They, the strongest individuals in the Lower Domain—guardians, generals, leaders of empires—had beco nothing more than spectators. Obstacles not even worth acknowledging.

A cold dread spread through each of their bodies, like black ink bleeding into clear water. If Drevon had wanted to, he could have killed Max, or any of them, in that instant.

And the chilling truth was that they might not have even known until it was already over. The crushing realization settled in their hearts like a stone—they couldn’t stop him.

Not now.

Maybe not ever.

“Any last words?” Drevon asked, his voice smooth and dripping with arrogance as he grinned, holding Max effortlessly by the throat. His golden-red eyes sparkled with cruelty, fully expecting a plea, a whimper, or the silence of a broken spirit.

But Max grinned.

Even as his throat tightened, his breath shallow and crushed beneath Drevon’s grip, he managed to force the words through gritted teeth, eyes gleaming with defiance. “You should have gone for the kill.”

Drevon’s grin faltered.

And in that instant, everything changed.

Max’s expression twisted into sothing savage, cruel, as his body erupted in a surge of raw power. A violent roar tore through the sky as golden-black scales shot across his skin in a flash—his Dragon Scales Transformation activating at full force. But that was just the beginning.

In the very next breath—VIOLET LIGHTNING burst from his chest, his arms, his legs, even his eyes. It surged like a living thing, crawling and cracking around him with a sound that could split the heavens.

Chil-La!

A blinding beam of violet lightning exploded from Max’s core, lashing upward with a thunderous shriek. It tore through Drevon’s chest, the force so sudden and unforgiving that it launched him away like a teor, his figure vanishing into the clouds above, trailing arcs of lightning in his wake.

The world shook. The clouds above twisted into spirals. The very sky flashed purple.

And for the first ti in a very, very long ti—Drevon was afraid.

“What is this?!” he shouted from high above, his voice a mix of disbelief and raw terror as he looked down at the boy he’d been monts from killing. His chest still smoked from the blast. That feeling—that oppressive, ancient force within the lightning—it didn’t just hurt him.

It frightened him.

“I’m not done with you!” Max roared, his voice carrying over the chaos of the battlefield like thunder cleaving through silence. Pain ripped through every inch of his body—screaming, tearing, burning.

His Dragon Scales Transformation, once the armor that made him nearly invincible, was now betraying him under the sheer force of the Violet Lightning surging uncontrollably within him. The protective scales began to crack, lt, and burn away, flaking off his body in glowing embers as the energy inside him spiraled wildly out of control.

Even his white hair, once gleaming like starlight, was completely consud, turned to ash and carried by the howling wind. His skin blackened, scorched by the pure elental wrath coursing through his veins. He looked like a ruin—a walking calamity—but his eyes burned brighter than ever. There was no hesitation. No fear.

Only purpose.

With his hands trembling from the strain, Max slamd his palms together, his voice a low growl as he uttered the command that only he could give—the will of the Dinsion of Lightning. The heavens rumbled, the clouds churned violently, and then—

“Roar!!!”

A deep, primal dragon’s roar erupted from the sky, loud enough to shake the bones of everyone on the battlefield. The storm clouds overhead shattered apart, breaking like glass under the weight of sothing unimaginable.

From within the breach, a colossal dragon head began to descend—ford entirely from Violet Lightning. Its size dwarfed cities, its eyes glowing with ancient wrath, its fangs crackling with sparks that could turn mountains to ash. The sheer pressure from its presence caused the very air to whine, and those below could only look up in awe, terror, and disbelief.

This wasn’t a skill.

This wasn’t a technique.

This was judgnt.

Its target – Drevon.

Drevon’s eyes widened, a flicker of sothing foreign twisting in their depths—pure dread. The mont the Violet Lightning Dragon locked onto him, its colossal head illuminating the sky with electric fury, his instincts scread louder than reason. The air itself trembled under the weight of the beast’s wrath.

Every arc of lightning that cracked off its hide scorched the clouds, tearing open the heavens as if reality itself was ripping apart. The sheer pressure that radiated from the dragon’s body made even the strongest beings on the battlefield feel like ants beneath a storm.

But Drevon—arrogant, unshaken—didn’t cower.

His body ignited instantly in a swirl of blue flas, and with a flash, he shot into the distance, fleeing like a streak of light across the sky. He didn’t even try to block it—he knew he couldn’t. That thing wasn’t just a technique. It wasn’t an attack.

It was annihilation given form.

Your gift is the motivation for my creation. Give more motivation!

You are reading Dimensional Keeper: All My Skills Are at Level 100 Chapter 483: You should have gone for the kill on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.