Global Composite Master: Compositing an Undead Army from the Start Chapter 818 - 396: The Future of Undead-Summoning Items! (Double - )_2

Previously on Global Composite Master: Compositing an Undead Army from the Start...
Chen Mo and Zhui Yi arrived at the Divine Weapon Tower, where the guardian Black-Red Longsword acknowledged their recent aid in resealing the Demon Tower. The guardian explained the rules: they could enter together as Zhui Yi was Chen Mo's outer incarnation, but only one reward would be granted, while separate entries allowed two rewards. Zhui Yi entered first to scout the fixed challenges, and Chen Mo conversed with the guardian about the crack world's mysterious origins, speculating on its purpose as a constructed space for inheritance amid the great calamity.

It could even turn into something that's warmly embraced by the general public.

Right now, as someone from outside dwelling in this kind of world, Chen Mo receives friendly treatment wherever he goes, yet he constantly experiences a feeling of discomfort, an alienation born from some mysterious disconnection.

In this world, every individual Chen Mo deals with after accepting a mission is a genuine person; interacting with them isn't like handling the NPCs found in the instances.

The longer he stays in this world, the more Chen Mo starts to feel as if he himself is the NPC.

Therefore, whenever he comes across those unique spaces and realms that naturally belong to this world, he feels compelled to investigate what truly occurred in the background; he must uncover more about this world's past.

From the fundamental details he's gathered up to now, the so-called great calamity resulted in the Divine Realm crumbling into its present condition.

Regarding the nature of this great calamity, if it might recur, and when it would strike again if it does, Chen Mo remains utterly clueless.

Furthermore, ever since he arrived here, Chen Mo has struggled to adjust to managing his power.

He must carefully organize and grasp how Divine Power and divine elements function in this world.

In the past, Chen Mo believed Divine Power was a strict measure: those with greater amounts were powerful, whereas those with lesser amounts couldn't fight back or turn the tide.

Yet, through further engagements, Chen Mo discovered that this view was entirely wrong. Divine Power is merely a form of energy, but it appears intertwined with the rules of power, enabling people to overwhelm others ruthlessly just by overwhelming them with the volume of power rules before understanding the rules themselves.

In truth, however, the rules of power concern ownership, level of command, and level of utilization.

The maximum of Divine Power sets the ownership.

The Divine Technique Cultivation Realm establishes the command level.

The potency of the divine element sets the utilization level.

Upon initially entering the Tower of Eternity, neither Chen Mo nor the other professionals had practiced Divine Skills.

As a result, everyone's command level stood at the minimal 0. With a command level of 0, the one with greater ownership naturally held the advantage, since they depended on the inherent release of power rules to oppose foes.

The situation was identical for the divine element; all possessed a zeroth-transition, making the utilization level the same across the board.

When the other two factors match, ownership alone dictates strength entirely.

All depend on the instinctive deployment of power rules, which causes those rules to interlock, resulting in clashing suppressions.

The side with more can persistently absorb the weaker portion, leaving the surviving power rules as a clear dominating force.

That's the reason each point of Divine Power surpassing another's grants a 1% reduction in their performance capability.

This stems from the innate workings of power rules.

Under these conditions, if Divine Power surpasses another's by 100 points, it can immediately apply a full 100% suppression.

Yet this holds true only when nobody has command, letting power rules operate independently.

However, once individuals acquire Divine Skills, it signifies they gain command, and the suppression vanishes.

Since power rules become controllable, deploying Divine Skills integrates them directly into one's form and techniques, and with the core of the power rules absent, it avoids tangling with an opponent's power rules core, thus evading suppression.

At that point, the command level and utilization level of power rules define the true power of one's performance capability.

This explains why Divine Skills can bypass Divine Power differences and deliver straightforward effects.

Without the interference of power rules entanglement, an enemy's superior Divine Power simply indicates a larger quantity of power rules. This boost may elevate their attributes beyond yours, but it doesn't guarantee more.

Still, superior attributes frequently decide the outcome of battles.

Though Divine Skills let you overlook Divine Power suppression, the gap in attributes stays glaring.

A lower-tier god's Divine Skill simply can't damage a superior god.

The attribute gap is simply too immense.

Even if you incorporate power rules into your attacks against the foe, their integration of power rules instinctively creates a formidable defensive barrier that you can't breach.

Divine Skills can bridge minor tier gaps but struggle against major ones.

Typically, even a lower-tier god finds it tough to harm a mid-tier god.

Just like the demons Chen Mo faced on the ninth floor of the Demon Tower earlier.

Despite those demons' ability to execute Divine Skills, they were powerless against him.

They could at best wound the ghosts in his service whose Divine Power hadn't been bolstered.

Since refining divine elements is a intricate procedure, after Chen Mo refined his own, he merely enhanced the accuracy of his divine element; the undead he calls forth can merely match Chen Mo's divine element attribute level, lacking the refinement's precision.

After all, a high-graded transformation divine element signifies elite God Realm attributes, which summoned beings aren't entitled to acquire.

Only external avatars such as Zhui Yi meet the criteria.

But even if inheritance were possible, it wouldn't help much, given their absence of Divine Skills.

Even for Chen Mo personally, developing Divine Skills demands considerable time, much less for his summoned entities.

What Chen Mo truly requires are summonable entities capable of executing Divine Skills.

While his present undead followers can still cause chaos on the Tower of Eternity's first floor, Chen Mo anticipates that deeper levels will render these undead far less potent.

Firstly, without high-graded transformation divine element, a single Divine Skill strike can neutralize them.

Secondly, lacking Divine Skills weakens their impact against formidable adversaries.

Thirdly, their numbers advantage will fade over time.

Everyone possesses their own Divine Domain World, each able to cultivate billions of beings inside.

In essence, everyone will evolve into a summoner commanding billions of creatures ahead.

That said, Chen Mo enjoys an inherent class benefit; relative to others, his undead offer numerous applications within his personal Divine Domain World.

For the moment, however, Chen Mo isn't focused on those applications. His primary desire is to boost his undead servants' power.

Should he enable them to share high-graded transformation divine element synchronously, or to learn Divine Skills,

their effectiveness would surge dramatically once more.

But currently, Chen Mo lacks effective approaches.

The sole practical notion is to call them forth and station them in the Divine Domain World, letting them undertake divine element refinement independently, while seeking appropriate Divine Skills for their training.

Then, when battle calls, retrieve them from the Divine Domain World, as Chen Mo can now summon ghosts on a permanent basis.

This method is undoubtedly more troublesome than instantly conjuring a ready group of combat-prepared ghosts with a mere thought.

Lacking superior alternatives for now, Chen Mo must settle for this awkward approach.

His Divine Domain World currently offers plenty of room; he merely raises a handful of Bug Clan, with nothing more.

Ample area exists to accommodate vast numbers of ghosts.

Thus, Chen Mo resolved to pursue a modest objective initially: produce a billion ghosts with high-graded transformation divine element dwelling in his Divine Domain World, drilling them in the Divine Skills he has himself acquired—whether they match well or not doesn't matter. Matching just accelerates training; mismatch only prolongs it.

The accelerated time flow in the Divine Domain World could potentially allow for rapid mastery.

Naturally, Chen Mo is only speculating, since the Divine Domain World's regulations aren't completely set. For Divine Skills tied to power rules, they probably won't sync with the internal time flow to boost learning speed.

More than likely, they'll stay aligned with external time.

Nevertheless, that poses no issue, because achieving high-graded transformation in the divine element alone marks a significant upgrade, preventing low-tier beings from effortlessly eliminating them with Divine Skills.

Still, to determine if undead summoned items can perform divine element refinement, along with the pace and challenges involved, experimentation is essential.

As he awaits Zhui Yi's return and with little else to occupy him, Chen Mo stores ghosts inside himself, striving to start their divine element refinement.