Chapter 2961: The Sword Learns As It Judges
Match 98: Twin Siblings, Mirror Styles
Two twin siblings, Jin and Jian, faced each other using the Mirror Lake Sword Style. Their fight wasn't just skillful—it was beautiful. Every move was reflected and refracted as if in perfect harmony.
At the end, they both fell simultaneously to each other's final strike.
The crowd held its breath.
Lin Mu slowly stood and said, "The result is secondary. What matters is this: both of your swords sought truth, not dominance. You reminded me that sometimes, a sword's greatest strength is understanding."
He awarded both a tie and gave them points toward advancement.
By the time the first hundred matches had concluded, a quiet change had begun to sweep across the sect.
Disciples weren't just fighting to win anymore—they were fighting to learn, to be seen, to be recognized by Lin Mu.
He wasn't a judge to be feared.
He was becoming a myth to strive for.
A month passed like a dream drawn in falling leaves and sword winds.
The tournament had transformed the Floating Immortal Platform into a realm of steel and spirit. Where once over a million disciples had stood, now only a fraction remained. The open rings had seen tens of thousands of duels—some ending in seconds, others dragging on for what felt like eternities.
There were duels so fast the crowd barely blinked before the loser fell. One slash, one breath, one fall.
And there were duels so deep and intricate that time itself seemed to slow. Duels where two swordsmen circled each other for a quarter hour without clashing, building tension with every breath, then exploding into action for seconds that contained entire philosophies.
Through it all, Lin Mu sat at the examiner's dais, his robes unruffled, his expression calm.
Every strike he saw, every technique he observed, every moment of hesitation, arrogance, insight, or despair—he saw them all. And without realizing it, his own Sword Dao grew sharper.
He had not drawn his sword once since the tournament began.
But in silence, he was being tempered too.
The sound of clashing swords was a symphony. The cries of the fallen, the cheers of the spectators, the thrum of battle qi rippling through the air—it was a storm, and Lin Mu stood at its eye.
His judgement was swift but never careless. When two disciples clashed in a confusing exchange, his simple comment—"Strike number eleven was a feint. The third parry was genuine. Winner: left side"—settled disputes and inspired awe.
Some duels left even the elders thoughtful, occasionally glancing at Lin Mu as if wondering when they had last learned this much just by watching.
Two Months In — Only The Top Two Hundred Remained
The second month brought sharper blades, fiercer stares, and heavier silence before each match.
Now only two hundred remained.
The atmosphere had changed.
Gone were the playful cheers and curious chatter. The spectators had grown somber, reverent. The top contenders were no longer just disciples—they were rising stars, potential legends. Every duel was watched with intense scrutiny.
Match #989823: Qing Lan vs. Zhao Mingli
Qing Lan was the third daughter of a swordsmith clan. She fought with a longsword made from Blue Frost Steel, her style elegant and reactive, like a mountain stream.
Zhao Mingli used the Sword of Echoes, a special weapon that produced a second strike of compressed sound after each swing, making it deadly and disorienting.
The fight began slow but escalated quickly, echo slashes reverberating like thunder across the platform as Qing Lan deflected, dodged, and adjusted her rhythm with grace. At the twenty-minute mark, she reversed a sonic rebound into a spiral thrust that disarmed Zhao Mingli cleanly.
Lin Mu stood and nodded."Qing Lan listens not just to her sword, but to her opponent's heart. The true strength of her style lies in that empathy."
Qing Lan bowed, her eyes trembling with emotion.
Match #989837: Yue Feng vs. Gan Mu
Gan Mu, a brutish sword cultivator from the Iron Ridge Division, clashed with Yue Feng, a silent disciple known for using a wooden training sword.
Mockery had followed Yue Feng for years.
But when they finally fought, Yue Feng's sword never faltered. His footwork was fluid, his precision divine, and his defense impenetrable.
Gan Mu's iron sword shattered in half before he even touched Yue Feng once.
Stunned silence.
Lin Mu spoke:"The sword is a medium. Not all sharp blades are steel. Yue Feng's Dao is still young, but it is alive."
After the match, several elders began taking down notes—seriously.
Match #989962: Jian Mei vs. Xun Yao
A match that brought the platform to near standstill.
Jian Mei, an icy-eyed prodigy who practiced the Heartless Snow Sword, faced Xun Yao, a flamboyant dual-sword user who fought like dancing flame.
Their duel was pure contrast—ice and fire, cold calculation versus passionate improvisation.
For nearly an hour, they traded blows, injuries, counters, and traps. At one point, Jian Mei's sleeve caught fire, while Xun Yao slipped on her icy footwork.
In the end, Jian Mei's calm broke for a single moment when Xun Yao's final flourish narrowly missed her heart.
She countered with a palm to his chest, ending it.
Both collapsed at the same time.
Lin Mu, for the first time, stepped down personally.
He helped them both up.
"Neither wins. But neither loses either," he said. "Your Daos challenged one another and walked away changed. That is a victory."
Match #989973: Jin Rong vs. Han Ceng
This match stood out for another reason entirely.
Jin Rong was an Outer Court nobody. A stuttering, nervous boy who had somehow made it to the top two hundred.
Han Ceng was a famed Inner Court genius, known for his brutal Wind Splitter Sword and cold demeanor.
Everyone expected a massacre.
Instead, Jin Rong's sword trembled... but he didn't back down.
He parried Han Ceng's attacks like someone desperately trying to stay alive—but also like someone who had spent every day watching stronger swordsmen, memorizing everything, and finally putting it to the test.
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