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Now reading: Chapter 232: What are You (2) from Worldwide Class Change: Minimal Effort, Maximum Reward!, a Fantasy novel by PurpleOctopus.

"Which ans they are strong," Lin Yi surmised, his voice a low hum, absorbing the implications of her description. He distilled her elaborate explanation into its simplest, most potent conclusion.

"Which ans we have lost family mbers in the deep zone," she stated, her voice flat, devoid of any perford dramatics. The weariness in her tone was real, the mory of those losses etched deep within her. "Good ones, Lin Yi. Exceptional individuals. At levels even above yours. They entered thinking that raw strength, that sheer cultivation level, translated directly into survivability within that boundary." She paused, letting the weight of those past tragedies settle between them.

Lin Yi was quiet for a mont, absorbing the gravity of her words. He processed the information with the dispassionate honesty he always tried to bring to any assessnt of a potential threat. He needed precise data, not just vague warnings. "How far above mine?" he finally asked, his voice steady, his eyes on her. He needed to quantify the scale of the past failures.

She looked at him, her gaze distant, lost in mory for a brief mont. "Level 247," she recounted, the number stark against the backdrop of her solemn expression. "It was two years ago. A cousin of mine. He was considered one of the most gifted cultivators of his generation, brimming with potential and imnse power."

Lin Yi said nothing, allowing the story to unfold, understanding that the details were crucial.

"He understood the deep zone was different," she continued, her voice gaining a slight edge of grim recollection. "He accounted for it in his preparations. He spent two full months preparing himself, both physically and ntally, before he dared to enter." A heavy pause, filled with unspoken sorrow. "He lasted exactly forty minutes inside that place." The raw fact hung in the air, chilling and unembellished, a testant to the brutal reality of the deep zone.

The information sat between them, stark and unadorned, devoid of any attempt at dramatic embellishnt. It was a cold, hard truth, shared without sugarcoating.

"I’m not telling you to stop, Lin Yi," she said finally, her voice regaining so of its earlier composure, though still laced with a deep seriousness. She understood that his resolve was likely unyielding. "I am simply telling you what the deep zone actually is. It is not rely a harder version of the middle zone; it is sothing that operates on entirely different, fundantal principles, principles that defy conventional understanding."

Lin Yi looked toward the deep zone boundary, clearly visible in the hazy distance, marked by that distinct pressure differential where the very character of the terrain shifted dramatically. "What principles?" he asked, his curiosity overriding any sense of fear, his mind seeking to understand the underlying chanics of this unique challenge.

She was quiet for a mont, deliberating, weighing how much of this esoteric knowledge she should truly impart. "The monsters in the deep zone are not hunters or predators in the conventional sense you understand them," she began, choosing her words carefully. "They are entities that have existed in an environnt saturated with the Ninefold Heaven Gate Mountain’s influence for centuries. The mountain’s raw, primordial energy affects them in the sa profound way it affects everything else in close proximity to it, shaping their very existence. They don’t fight with the simple, aggressive tactics of standard monsters. They fight in the way the mountain itself tests those who approach it, with an ancient, almost spiritual challenge."

"aning what, exactly?" Lin Yi pressed, seeking a more concrete definition of this abstract concept.

"aning they don’t just attack your body, Lin Yi," she explained, her gaze intense. "They attack your very foundation. They probe your will, seeking weaknesses. They target the intrinsic stability of your cultivation base, attempting to unravel it from within." She paused, letting that sink in. "A hunter can possess exceptional physical attributes and a vast array of powerful skills, and still utterly fail in the deep zone, precisely because what the deep zone tests is not those superficial things. It probes much deeper, into the core of one’s being."

A voice, familiar yet unusually subdued, resonated from within the blade Lin Yi carried, a quieter timbre than Lei Bao’s usual boisterous register. "She is not wrong, little one. I have felt the mountain’s pervasive influence ever since we arrived on this star. It is ancient, imnsely old. Older, far older, than any of the hunting systems or cultivation fraworks you currently operate within. Whatever lives inside that boundary is shaped by sothing that profoundly predates the structures and understanding you’ve built your world upon."

Lin Yi looked from the imposing boundary in the distance to Zhao Yuexin, his mind processing the combined warnings.

"Have you been in the deep zone?" he asked, his gaze unwavering, seeking firsthand experience from her.

She t his eyes, her expression unreadable. "Yes."

"And you ca back," he stated, not as a question, but as an observation of her survival, a silent query about her success where others had failed.

"I am level 247," she stated, listing her own impressive cultivation level as a key factor in her survival. "And I ca back with injuries that took three full weeks to fully recover from. That was from a re thirty-minute engagent within that place." She paused, the mory still vivid in her eyes. "I am not telling you any of this to discourage you, Lin Yi. My intention is simply to ensure that when you eventually decide to enter, you do so with a clear and unvarnished understanding of what it actually is you will be facing."

Lin Yi was quiet, absorbing the full weight of her testimony, the cold facts of her own perilous encounter.

She studied him carefully, her sharp eyes picking up on the subtle cues of his internal processing. "You were going to ask about entering regardless of what I said, weren’t you?" she observed, her voice devoid of accusation, rely stating an observed truth about his character.

"Yes," he confird without hesitation, acknowledging the unwavering nature of his own resolve, the undeniable pull of his objective.

She exhaled once, a controlled, almost imperceptible breath, a brief release of tension. "I know," she murmured, a faint understanding in her tone. She turned and began walking again, resuming their trek toward the less dangerous interior of the middle zone. "Which is precisely why I will tell you the one critical thing that kept functional in there for those thirty minutes, the single insight that allowed to return."

He walked beside her, his attention fully on her next words, knowing this would be crucial.

"The deep zone responds to clarity," she explained, her voice lowered slightly, as if sharing a profound secret. "Not brute power. Not intricate technique. It responds to an absolute clarity of intent. Every hunter who entered that place with sothing unclear about why they were there, so secondary goal, so divided attention, sothing they hadn’t fully resolved within themselves before stepping through that boundary, was compromised imdiately. The foundation attacks, those insidious probes into one’s being, found those very gaps and worked rcilessly through them, unraveling them from the inside."

Lin Yi thought about this concept, turning it over in his mind, trying to grasp its esoteric truth. "And you?" he asked, looking at her. "What was your clarity of purpose in that mont?"

She was quiet for a mont, her gaze distant, reflecting on that pivotal experience. "I went in to understand what had killed my cousin," she finally confessed, her voice tinged with the lingering pain of that loss. "That was my singular, unshakeable reason. Nothing else mattered, nothing else distracted ."

Lin Yi looked at the path ahead, the familiar terrain of the middle zone stretching before them. "Did you find out?"

"Yes," she said, her voice quiet but firm.

"What was it, then?" he asked, seeking the core lesson she had gleaned from such a harrowing experience.

She paused, considering her words carefully before speaking. "He went in to prove he was ready," she revealed, the tragedy of it still palpable. "That was the foundation of his intent. Proving his readiness to himself and to others. The deep zone, in its rciless way, tested that specific, underlying intent, and ultimately found it insufficient, because readiness that needs to be proven is, by its very nature, not true, unshakeable readiness." She articulated a profound, almost philosophical truth, born from hard-won experience.

Lin Yi absorbed this revelation, allowing its deep implications to settle within him, processing the subtle yet powerful distinction.

Lei Bao, for once, was uncharacteristically silent within the blade, offering no comntary, seemingly also pondering the unusual wisdom.

They reached the next cluster of middle zone readings on Lin Yi’s map, indicating a fresh group of monsters, and he drew the Thunder Surge Blade, its familiar hum a comforting sound in the air. Zhao Yuexin stopped at her accustod observation distance, her posture shifting from ntor to watchful companion.

Before he moved toward the first reading, Lin Yi looked back at her once, his gaze holding a depth of understanding and gratitude.

"Thank you," he said, his voice sincere, acknowledging the invaluable, life-saving knowledge she had just imparted.

She looked at him with the expression that had been subtly present since their unexpected path encounter, the one that had been sharpening increntally across the two days they had spent together. It had now arrived at sothing that was neither the cold, clinical assessnt of their very first eting nor sothing that could be neatly categorized or easily nad. There was a glimr of sothing akin to respect, perhaps even a hint of shared understanding, in her eyes.

"Don’t get yourself killed before you reach 250," she said, her voice now back to its usual pragmatic tone, a dry admonishnt veiled as a warning. "It would, after all, be a considerable waste of an escort’s ti and effort."

She turned her attention back to the terrain ahead, her observation posture resuming, her focus once again on the unfolding environnt and Lin Yi’s movents.

Lin Yi looked at the first reading on his Predatory Instinct’s map, the glowing marker signifying his next target, and moved toward it with renewed purpose.

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