Chapter 50: Killing Like Crazy

Behind Klaus lay thousands of dead monsters, their bodies strewn across the battlefield. In front of him stood a massive horde of Tier 4 monsters, each one exuding a terrifying, bloodthirsty aura. But no matter how intse their presce was, Klaus felt nothing. Instead, his face held an expression of disbelief. The monsters he was slaughtering were all Tier 4, ranging from Lesser to Dark.

Yet, despite their strgth, Klaus hadn't ev used half of his own power to defeat them. He couldn't find his limit. It felt almost too easy—like a fish swimming effortlessly through water. To him, these fearsome creatures were nothing more than bugs.

"Is this the power of a Star?" Klaus muttered, still in shock at what he was capable of.

Suddly a voice tered his head. "Brat, don't confuse this with the true power of a Star," the Sior corrected. "While I admit you are strong, the Star Qi you're using now isn't ev close to reaching the realm of a Star. Ah... you'll understand more as you continue to cultivate the Star Diagram."

Klaus nodded, pushing the thought aside for now. He returned his focus to the battle, slaying monster after monster. With each kill, he gained a clearer understanding of how to refine his skills. At the momt, he was using his fire elemt, and the sce a him was one of blazing chaos—a sea of flames burning through the monsters.

Suddly, an idea sparked in Klaus's mind. "This could work," he said aloud.

As he swung his sword and killed more monsters, he began forming a small ball of flame in his left hand. It started off small but quickly grew in size. It expanded from the size of an egg to that of an orange, th to a mango. Within a minute, it had grown as large as a basketball.

Klaus studied it for a momt, th frowned. "This is too slow and weak," he muttered.

Without hesitation, he tossed the ball of flame toward the monsters. "Explode!" he commanded.

The flame obeyed, but the result was disappointing. The explosion only took out a doz monsters, far fewer than Klaus had anticipated. The devastating impact he'd be hoping for never came.

Klaus expected a loud bang, something powerful ough to wipe out a large portion of the horde. But what happed was a far cry from that. The explosion was weak, barely ough to kill a few monsters. Frustration crept onto his face, but he didn't let it stop him. He continued cutting through the waves of monsters, slashing and hacking without pause.

As he fought, his mind kept turning back to the flame ball. 'How do I make it stronger?' he wondered, pondering the best way to increase its explosive power.

After a while, and many more dead monsters, he decided to try again. With a flick of his wrist, he began forming a new orb. This time, it came together faster, the ergy swirling tightly in his palm. Within seconds, the flame grew to the size of a basketball. But just like before, it stopped growing.

Klaus hurled it forward with a grunt. It exploded on contact, but the results were disappointing. The blast only took out a couple of monsters. The force still wasn't ough.

"Not again," he muttered, shaking his head. His brow furrowed in thought as he surveyed the battlefield. The monsters kept coming, reltless, but Klaus remained undeterred. He cut down a few more with ease, hardly breaking a sweat. His challge now wasn't facing the monsters, it was finding a way to make his fireball skill he is working on work.

Klaus shook his head, clearing the doubts. He would keep trying. Every failure brought him one step closer to success.

He swung his sword with rewed vigor, clearing the monsters a him, th prepared to form another flame orb. This time, he tried a differt approach—he let the flame grow naturally, not forcing it. He felt the ergy flow more smoothly, though the orb remained small.

Klaus tossed it again. The explosion was still weak, but he noticed something differt—there was more control, more stability. It wasn't the result he wanted yet, but it was progress.

"One step at a time," Klaus whispered to himself, his frustration easing slightly. He would keep refining it. Failure after failure, he knew he was getting closer.

"Ah, what an idiot," Klaus muttered to himself, slapping his forehead in frustration. He formed another flame orb, preparing to try once more after failing for what felt like the hundredth time. This time, however, a small smile tugged at his lips.

Wh the flame orb took shape, Klaus channeled his Star Qi into it. Almost instantly, the flame began to grow rapidly. "It's all about linking my Star Qi pool to it and letting it grow on its own," Klaus said, his smile widing.

Earlier, he had be focused on just pouring a part of his Star Qi into the flame. But he realized that although his Star Qi was powerful, the momt the flame exploded, the ergy dispersed too quickly. This made the blast weaker than he had hoped for.

So, over the past hundred attempts, Klaus had be working to fix that problem. Each failure brought him closer to understanding how to make the explosion stronger and more controlled. After many tries, he finally discovered the solution: make the flame orb sturdy by letting it draw Star Qi on its own.

His Star Qi pool felt dless, but he couldn't use it all at once—he was only able to control about 8% of it. Although using Star Qi with his sword was almost second nature, applying it to the flame orb was differt. Ev after two minutes of intse focus, he could only channel about 5% into the flame, all while fighting off waves of monsters with his sword.

He realized the only way to manage it was to automate the process. By linking his Star Qi with the essce of the flame, the orb started drawing ergy on its own. Suddly, the flame began to grow, quickly surpassing the size of his previous attempts.

Klaus's smile grew as he watched the orb expand. He hurled the flame ball toward the horde of monsters. To his surprise, the flame ball shot forward with terrifying speed.

"What's happing?" Klaus muttered in disbelief. The flame orb kept growing larger as it sped toward the monsters, reaching the size of five basketballs, and th continuing to expand. As it hurtled toward the heart of the horde, it began spinning violtly.

Roars, howls, and groans of pain echoed from within the monster ranks as the flame orb surged toward them. Klaus's face wt pale. The flame ball had now grown to the size of twty basketballs and was still increasing in size. It looked like a massive, spinning sun about to crash into the monsters.

Panicking slightly, Klaus watched as the flame orb plowed through the eastern wing of the monster horde, moving deeper and deeper, nearly 50 kilometers away from him. His heart raced as he quickly turned and ran back, knowing the power that was building up.

Finally, he clched his fist and shouted the command, "Explode!"