I Really Didn’t Mean To Be The Saviour Of The World - Chapter 786
- Home
- I Really Didn’t Mean To Be The Saviour Of The World
- Chapter 786 - I Really Didn’t Mean To Be The Saviour Of The World Chapter 786
Chapter 786: Chapter 473: Tiger Bro’s Seven Days and the Afterglow of the Fortress【6800 Words】_2
Clearly, Harrison Clark’s extraordinary intuition was the core quality that truly set him apart from others.
He never overvalued his own abilities, nor was he afraid of being surpassed. Thus, he sincerely hoped others would learn from him.
This time, he faced obstacles, but at least he saw hope.
In the previous timeline, people were trapped by the all-encompassing “Warrior Project” and “thinking cocoons” that sought absolute rationality. They needed a reasonable fulcrum for every situation and pursued low error rates.
That seemed reasonable on the surface.
The good part was that it raised the minimum level of warriors’ abilities, but the downside was a lack of creativity as they were trapped in rigid thinking when using their equipment, struggling to break through their limits.
This time, the same problem existed and was even more severe.
But in the Hundred Years’ War, the Returning Warriors ventured out time and again, experiencing life and death in battle.
These experiences at life’s edges enabled the Returning Warriors to continually break through their bottlenecks, shatter their mental blocks and refresh their limits.
The battlefield experience these warriors possessed was even more abundant than that of Harrison Clark.
Assuming Harrison was now at the tenth level, while the warriors in the previous timeline were only at the first, the Returning Warriors in this timeline had generally attained at least the fifth level, with some even reaching the seventh, eighth, or even the ninth level.
That’s why the trial warriors Harrison encountered were stronger, and nearly led to his downfall.
At the same time, Harrison firmly believed that the warriors could progress from the fifth level and climb upward, with their chances of reaching the tenth level being infinitely greater than before.
To advance his teaching plan, Harrison selected a team of assistants from among the warriors to help him manage the details, assist in adjustments, improve teaching materials, and continuously provide more accurate assessment parameters to Star.
Interestingly enough.
Among all the trainee warriors, Daniel Thompson, who had the lowest rank and weakest strength, became Harrison’s first assistant.
Most people didn’t understand why Harrison would handpick a lieutenant who had muddled through on Shadow of Earth for over a hundred years to be his first assistant.
Even the well-informed Sage Institute raised objections, believing that Harrison was showing favoritism by pushing Daniel.
Daniel himself didn’t understand either.
He wanted to ask Harrison why he was chosen, but in the end, he didn’t dare to and just put on a brave face.
On the first day, Daniel was extremely cautious and tentative, neither instructing nor criticizing, just dutifully acting as a mouthpiece while seizing the opportunity to strengthen his learning and diligently absorbing knowledge.
On the second day, Lion underwent a metamorphosis under pressure.
Although he himself couldn’t perform high-intensity actions due to his prolonged absence from battle, it didn’t stop him from starting to see the problems in others’ operations.
For example, increasing engine power by 2% when moving positions caused a 0.05-second error in the time it took to transition from motion to stillness.
Or when completing focused fire as instructed, adjusting the angle of incidence and the energy weapon’s power higher or lower to better harmonize with others’ attacks and enhance resonance.
Also, during fast decision-making situations, identifying opportunities to improve warriors’ instinctive judgments.
At what level should they choose which simulated environment for reinforcement training?
Daniel had some opinions on the daily training content of most people.
But he still lacked confidence and would consult with Harrison when raising questions.
Daniel initially worried that he might be bothering the Lord Sage.
And that Harrison might become impatient.
However, he never expected Harrison to show great enthusiasm in guiding him, answering questions exhaustively and asking, “Lion, did you understand that? If there’s anything you’re unclear about, feel free to ask.”
Lord Sage was incredibly gentle and enthusiastic, a stark contrast to his fierce and fierce bravado when teaching others in actual combat.
Lion felt both touched and fearful, wishing to sacrifice himself to show gratitude.
But that’s not all; when the day’s lessons were over, Harrison specifically called Daniel aside, “Lion, you did very well today, and you’re improving fast. Over 50% of the problems and improvement proposals you identified were correct. Once your judgment accuracy reaches 100%, I’ll be able to confidently hand over all teaching duties to you. Believe in yourself; you have the potential to become humanity’s number one instructor. Keep it up!”
It’s said that the sound of crying could be heard from Daniel’s dormitory that night, along with odd phrases like “What did I do to deserve this?” and “I cannot fail the trust placed in me by Lord Sage.”
Daniel’s life had been smooth sailing in the first half.
He joined the military at a young age and excelled in numerous internal competitions, climbing from a private to a lieutenant in less than twenty years. He was transferred to the prestigious Black Bear Training Base, where he took up the important task of serving as a class instructor for the highly anticipated “Lord Sage Reservist.”
At that time, Daniel had several new recruit classes, one of which consisted of all No. XX Harrison Clarks.
Apart from their physical resemblance to the Lord Sage, these recruits were also incredibly talented.
Back then, Daniel was full of ambition, vowing to cultivate his students to greatness.
Time passed by, and he largely achieved his aspirations.
One by one, the “Harrison Clarks” graduated from his recruit classes and went to the battlefield.
Some never returned, others flourished and continuously rose through the ranks.