To confirm whether his guess is correct?

Reens left the copy where he fought with the Wind Wolf and entered the copy where he could test the sword with the instructor alone.

He needed to verify his idea through the instructor.

He was the only one in the entire training camp who could give him the answer.

At night, the silence remained.

Reens set out from the warehouse with a long sword in his hand and came to the hut where the instructor was.

After killing the two guards as usual, the instructor appeared in front of Reens like a boss.

Without saying much, Reens attacked the instructor directly.

The battle begins...

The instructor blocked Reens' attack with a long sword, and then stabbed him with a straight move, forcing Reens to retreat.

Then the instructor added a heavy slash from top to bottom, calming Reens who was blocking with a sword.

Then another bow step stab went straight to Reens' heart.

Because he knew that the instructor would use this move, Reens dodged in advance after blocking and slashing, avoiding the instructor's sword.

Although it was a bit surprising that the weak enemy in front of him could dodge this sword, the instructor did not say much and continued to launch the offensive.

As Reens continued to block and dodge the instructor's attack, he found that the instructor's attack was very fast and smooth, one sword after another, like flowing water.

In the previous copy, Reens also found this.

But he just thought that the instructor's physical fitness was strong, so the sword was so fast.

Now that he had a guess about the "sword style", Reens noticed that the instructor's "speed" was not only reflected in his sword speed, but also in the "decisiveness" of his sword.

His sword seemed to be drawn without thinking, but each sword accurately achieved the desired effect.

If Reens had not had the experience of being killed by the instructor many times, he would have been killed in the first few swords.

"Don't think, your body will give you the answer, and the long sword in your hand will tell you the enemy's flaws."

"All you have to do is draw your sword, and keep drawing your sword until you kill your enemy."

"Is this the 'sword style'?"

Reens muttered to himself while standing in the white space.

Yes, he was killed by the instructor again, and this was not unexpected.

Just like when he faced the wind wolf, as long as the instructor didn't make a fool of himself, it would be as easy for the instructor to kill him as it was for him to kill the wind wolf.

However, through this round of copies, Reens finally confirmed that his guess was correct.

The key to "sword style" is instinct.

Now that the direction has been found, the next step is to consider how to do it.

After thinking about it, Reens found that it seems that the best way is to practice more.

Just like when the instructor taught "basic swordsmanship", all your worries and doubts about swordsmanship are just because you haven't practiced enough.

Of course, you have to find the right way to practice.

Otherwise, wrong practice is just repeated useless work.

Reens already knows how to practice... that is to let go of the control of the body and give the body to swordsmanship.

After choosing the way to practice, Reens began to look for various enemies in the dungeon to verify the reliability of the method.

Among these enemies, there are guards, wind wolves, trainers, and instructors.

From weak to strong, as long as you can meet them in the dungeon, Reens uses them to help him complete the practice.

In this process, Reens will empty his mind and experience the swordsmanship controlled by the body's instinct frame by frame.

At the beginning, Reans was a little flustered and was not used to this swordplay that lacked precise calculations, which led to him being killed by the guards.

But with continuous practice, successive deaths, and careful experience.

Reans finally awakened the instinct hidden in his body, and all the memories of sword practice were edited into complex but concise thinking logic by Reans bit by bit.

Enemy attack? Dodge and slash.

Enemy resist? Stab and slash.

Enemy dodge? Chase.

Enemy reveals a flaw? Kill it.

Memories of swordplay tendencies, combat experience, and understanding of the enemy, all of which are being integrated into Reans's "swordplay style".

And the final result is - simple.

This is the name given to Reans's "swordplay style".

The characteristic of "simple" is that as Reans' combat experience increases and his understanding of the enemy increases, it can quickly find the enemy's flaws, allowing Reans to simply

Kill the enemy directly.

Let me give you an example.

"Jane" is Reens' swordsmanship program, and Reens' experience in fighting enemies is the data in the program.

The more perfect the "data" in Reens' memory is, the faster and more accurate the results of "Jane" will be.

In theory, as long as Reens knows the enemy well enough, there is no enemy he cannot kill.

Of course, this is just theory.

No matter how powerful the software is, it needs hardware to support it.

After completing "Jane", Reens once again stood in front of the instructor and swung a sword at him that condensed all his past accumulation.

This time, Reens swore that he would never lose so easily.

"Dang"

The instructor drew out his long sword to block Reens' attack.

However, just as he was about to fight back, Reens' attack came again, without a pause in the middle, as if he had decided the landing point of the next attack in advance before the attack.

The instructor dodged Reens's stab and swung his long sword at Reens, trying to cut off Reens' unprotected head.

"Dang"

But the accident happened again. The long sword that had already completed the straight stab was actually retracted at the critical moment, blocking the instructor's slash.

Because of the difference in physical strength, Reens was forced back by the instructor's sword, and the long sword in his hand was even shaking.

However, after Reens was forced back, the instructor did not directly launch a pursuit, but stood there and frowned at the opponent in front of him.

"Your swordsmanship... is very good, but you seem to know me very well, you shouldn't know me so well."

"What is your identity?"

The instructor said to Reens in front of him with some doubts. He was really curious about the murderer in front of him.

Whether it was Reens's swordsmanship or Reens' understanding of his own swordsmanship.

It was not an achievement that a slave who had only trained for less than 5 months could easily obtain.

Yes, through the style of Reans's clothes and his figure and appearance.

The instructor has recognized that the murderer who killed the two guards who were guarding the door is one of the slaves who are still alive in the training camp.

Even in his impression, the slave in front of him is just average in his usual performance.

But it is far from the level of swordsmanship he is showing now.

After a few simple swordsmanship moves, the instructor has confirmed that his opponent has entered the door of kendo and completed his "swordsmanship style".

The instructor is too familiar with that kind of instinctive swordsmanship, because he is a person who is at this stage.

Reans did not respond to the instructor's questions, but directly drew his sword to express his attitude.

"Well, don't you want to say it?"

"Then go to hell!"

The instructor said cold words with a calm expression, and then drew his sword to fight back against the opponent in front of him.

Although he was a little curious, the curiosity could not affect his decision.

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