The Most Powerful Brain in the Interstellar Space

Chapter 726 Military Drill Formation

Oh well, once you owe someone too much, you won't feel anything anymore. Anyway, she'll find a way to properly repay this favor sooner or later.

Let's get back to the main topic—

In FGP, the two players typically engage in dual-line battles, also known as "counter-attacks," where they battle against each other using simulated teams provided by the system. Furthermore, to ensure the training is truly effective, the two players often agree on the settings before going online and then engage in a thrilling online battle as opposing commanders.

Jiang Hui possesses extraordinary mental strength, and the anomaly in her mental space grants her near-predictive abilities. With this special ability, she commands formations, making it theoretically difficult for any team of equal strength to defeat her.

Huan Xian, however, is a psychic. He can sense the spiritual magnetic fields of almost all living and inanimate objects in the world, and can even acquire and read vast amounts of information through various magnetic fields. As he ages, this spiritual power of his becomes increasingly refined and mature, constantly deepening and expanding its scope. Even some high-ranking military officials who are aware of his abilities now find it difficult to determine the limits of his capabilities. Those from various factions who know of him are both fanatical and wary of him. He is also known in the military as the "Omnipotent Knower."

Let's leave aside for now who is more capable, as it's difficult to compare them, but if they were to actually fight, they would be a very interesting pair of opponents.

Especially when both sides have identical hardware and software, without excessive divergence of abilities, simple sparring matches often result in no clear winner. It's hard to tell who's throwing the match or who's using dirty tricks. Often, matches end halfway through, or the players end up mingling and eventually forfeiting. In short, there are very few serious practice matches.

Probably because the two frequently engaged in various pointless and unproductive exercises on FGP, their accounts were categorized by the system as low-level, mediocre accounts and were reassigned to relatively empty and deserted servers. This made it even harder for the experienced commanders to notice them.

Of course, the two were happy to have some peace and quiet, because if they really went too far and broke through the system's energy threshold, they might be immediately screened and reported to higher authorities.

Although one of them was already highly regarded at the top and the other originally wanted to climb the ladder, their initial goal was simply a friendly competition to improve their skills and have some fun. They didn't intend to develop a complicated relationship.

If they were to attract attention and cause any trouble, their online duels wouldn't be as comfortable, and they might even attract the unscrupulous attention of some people. So for the past three years, they've maintained this arrangement and don't want to change it for the time being.

However, the military exercises that Jiang Hui and Huan Xian had been conducting for several years were not just for show.

As the saying goes, "The person who understands you best is not someone else but your enemy," and Jiang Hui is not only Huan Xian's enemy but also his confidant. Under this delicate relationship, the two have a deeper and clearer understanding of each other's thoughts and actions. When they confront each other, they don't even need to use their abilities; they can guess each other's next move and purpose just by looking at each other.

For Jiang Hui and Huan Xian, what difference did it make whether there were a hundred or more people? They were old acquaintances and rivals, and their battle was just a formality.

Furthermore, there are different ways to use three hundred people and one hundred or so people. The leaders on both sides seemed to have reached some kind of tacit understanding and did not really fight, but directly ordered their people to fight in groups.

The group below was engaged in a fierce exchange of blows, displaying a "it's either you or me" mentality. However, due to the formation, both sides seemed to be bound by an invisible constraint, as if pulled by unseen threads, preventing them from delivering a fatal blow. This resulted in a fierce battle, yet with very few actual casualties.

However, if someone pays attention to the overall situation, they will notice that some teams suddenly start losing members as the battle progresses. Some lose one or two members, while others lose the entire team, and no one knows where they have been carried away by the crowd.

However, everyone is now blinded by rage and has lost their reason. Even their leader can only give simple commands, let alone detect anything unusual.

After a period of time, the situation on both sides became increasingly chaotic, and the battle became more and more stalemate. The enemy team unknowingly infiltrated and disrupted their own team, and chaotic fighting also began to break out.

The leader who had been continuously issuing commands to them had long since disappeared, and even the higher-ups who had been issuing commands had lost contact with them one by one.

In this continued chaos and disarray, both sides completely lost their bearings. For a moment, they were unsure whether to continue fighting to the death in this confusion or to temporarily halt their operations, find their main force, and regroup.

It should be said that both sides were quite in sync on this point, almost simultaneously calling a retreat.

Both sides quickly identified their own personnel while remaining vigilant against nearby enemy members.

At first, the chaos went unnoticed; everyone just felt that everything was in complete disarray, with everyone fighting in a frenzy. They also noticed that some enemies had been scattered and dispersed into the inner circle of their own troops. But only when both sides truly stopped fighting and looked closely did they realize just how chaotic the scene had become.

The two sides' forces intersected and penetrated deep into the enemy ranks. This infiltration was either scattered and fragmented, or in small groups of two or three.

If these small groups were simply scattered individuals, it wouldn't be a problem. The problem is that these small groups are "three enemies and two allies," and these groups are "three groups of allies and five groups of enemies." Basically, they're all mixed together, and if a fight breaks out, you're worried about accidentally hitting your own people—it's really outrageous.

Can anyone tell me how they ended up fighting like this? No, they were completely following their leader's orders, and their leader, G(K), isn't the type to give orders haphazardly. Even if they were acting recklessly, it shouldn't have been this chaotic! And so skillfully at that!
After calling a halt almost simultaneously, the two sides, with a strange tacit understanding, looked at each other, unsure how to continue the fight. They could only stick together and try to prevent the other from losing control and attacking.

Compared to the chaotic outer circle and the bewildered crowd, the people at the heart of the battle were much more concentrated, and friend and foe were clearly distinguished. However, the high-ranking officials in the middle were also caught in a stalemate of a different kind—they didn't know whether to continue fighting or to stop.

Which enemy, in the middle of a battle, suddenly starts playing "Red Light, Green Light"?!

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