VISION GRID SYSTEM: THE COMEBACK OF RYOMA TAKEDA - Chapter 370: When the Crown Meets the Storm
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- Chapter 370: When the Crown Meets the Storm

Chapter 370: When the Crown Meets the Storm
The ring announcer steps toward the center ring, microphone raised. His voice booms with ceremonial weight.
“Ladies and gentlemen,” he begins, voice rising to fill the arena, “this is your main event of the evening! A ten-round bout sanctioned by the OPBF in the lightweight division.”
Then he turns to the blue corner. “Introducing first…”
But Ryoma barely reacts.
He just remembers about something, and turns toward his corner, eyes drifting past the ropes where his team waits outside the ring.
“Hiroshi,” he calls, flat, almost bored. “You haven’t put Vaseline on my face yet.”
Hiroshi blinks once. “…Ah!”
He scrambles to the kit, fumbling the lid off the jar, and then rushes to the apron.
Ryoma leans forward, resting his forearms on the top rope, head tilted out of the ring while Hiroshi quickly applies Vaseline across his browbones and cheeks.
The announcer keeps talking, unacknowledged, voice rolling on like background noise.
“From Nakahara Boxing Gym,” the announcer declares, undeterred, “the man anointed as the Cruel King… Ryoma ’the Chameleon’ Takeda!!!”
Applause rises, loud but uncertain, because Ryoma still doesn’t look up.
He waits until Hiroshi finishes, then straightens, wiping his lips with the back of his glove as if the introduction had nothing to do with him.
Across the ring, Paulo Ramos chuckles softly, shaking his head. The announcer turns toward the red corner, but Ramos doesn’t seem bothered at all.
“And now… introducing the fighter in the red corner.
The 23-year-old undefeated professional…
The reigning Philippine Lightweight Champion…
Currently ranked number four by the OPBF.”
“His professional record: 18 wins, 0 losses, with 10 victories coming by knockout.”
“Standing at 175 centimeters tall, officially weighed at 61.2 kilograms…”
“Representing Bayan Warrior Boxing Gym…”
“Paulo ’Hurricane’ Ramos!”
This time, Ramos acknowledges the cheer, lifting one hand in a loose wave.
“I thought he was the serious type, like Roronoa Zoro,” he says to Virgil, amused. “Turns out he’s more like Luffy.”
Virgil Santos doesn’t smile. His eyes remain fixed on Ryoma, sharp and unblinking.
To him, Ryoma’s behavior doesn’t read as casual. It reads as disrespect, an act from the host treating his own event like it isn’t worthy of him.
***
Officials begin to move in, gently but decisively herding the corners away. Trainers step down from the apron, and the ring clears until only the two fighters remain under the lights.
The referee gestures with both hands.
Ryoma and Ramos leave their corners at the same time. They meet at center ring, standing close enough now to feel each other’s presence.
The referee speaks, voice low, eyes moving between them as he runs through the formalities. Both fighters listen without expression.
Up in the press seats, Sato adjusts his sitting, eyes tracking the distance between them.
“Frame difference is subtle,” he says. “But it’s there.”
Tanaka hums in agreement. “This is going to be a difficult fight for Ryoma.”
Sato nods. “That Philippine kid doesn’t stay undefeated this long without a reason.”
Aki leans forward, curious. “Why do you say that? What do you see?”
Tanaka answers first. “We’ve always known Paulo Ramos as a swarmer. But look at his build. Even from here, he’s slightly taller than Ryoma. Longer reach, most likely.”
“And that changes everything,” Sato adds. “Swarmers usually have shorter arms. Tight rotations. High volume from close range.”
He gestures subtly toward the ring. “But if you can swarm from mid-range… if your reach lets you throw in volume without stepping deep, you pressure without exposing yourself. Fewer counters. Less correction. That’s how you stay clean.”
“So he doesn’t need to gamble,” Aki says quietly.
“No,” Tanaka replies. “That’s what turns him into a machine. Efficient. Relentless.”
Aki watches both fighters as they stand face to face. She knows Ryoma’s habit; how he hunts for openings, how he breaks patterns and turns them against his opponent.
He’d told her himself that he’d already cracked the code behind Ramos’s perfect record.
But watching them now, doubt slips in.
***
Back in the ring, the fighters produce a brief touch of gloves, and then retreat to their corners. They loosen their shoulders, roll their necks, breathe, and wait.
And finally, the bell rings.
Ding!
Round One.
They step toward the center together.
“Round one is underway,” the commentator announces. “Ten rounds scheduled, and both men taking their time early.”
“This is the feeling-out phase,” the other adds. “You can already see the respect. No rush, no wasted movement.”
“The question is who sets the tone first,” comes the reply. “The Cruel King on home soil… or the storm rolling in from the Pacific Ocean.”
Ramos moves first. His footwork is quick but contained; short, rigid steps that keep his posture even and balanced.
He doesn’t lunge. He doesn’t charge. He simply advances, closing space inch by inch with efficiency drilled in by years of discipline.
Ryoma leaves his corner just as calmly. He stops a few paces away and settles into the first skin; the Philly Shell stance.
His lead shoulder rises. His rear hand drops. He starts the fight with caution, not urgency.
Ramos takes the initiative, closing the distance by an inch. Not fast, not aggressive, just a few short steps that eat space without noise.
His feet stay under him, stance even, shoulders relaxed. He tests the range with a single jab, then another, neither thrown to land, just to feel where Ryoma is.
Ryoma doesn’t answer. He shifts his lead foot half an inch back, shoulder rising, eyes locked on Ramos’s chest rather than his gloves.
Nothing land, just glove stopping short in the air.
Ramos steps a bit deeper, adds a second layer; jab-jab, and a light right hand follows, pulled short before commitment.
Dug. Dug. Dug.
Three punches, then a pause, just long enough to reset his base.
Ryoma notes it, the small gap.
Again, Ramos steps in; Jab. Jab. Right hand.
Dug. Dug.
The first two reaches the guard, the right slips past the air.
A fourth punch threatens to come, but it doesn’t. The rhythm loops instead of escalating.
But in that half-beat of reset, Ryoma snaps a quick flicker of a jab, sharp and economical, more a test than an attack…
Dug.
It reaches Ramos’ glove, and stops his next sequence before it comes to life.
Then Ryoma slips straight back into shell before Ramos can answer.
There’s no cheers for now, no reaction on the scorecards. But a murmur ripples through the crowd.
They feel it already; two fighters measuring inches, not throwing heat. And both knowing this isn’t going to be decided quickly.
The commentators settle into a quieter rhythm as the fight breathes.
“This is high-level patience,” one of them says, voice low, almost reflective. “Neither man rushing. They’re letting the story write itself.”
“You can feel it building,” the other replies. “Like a calm surface hiding something heavier underneath.”
For nearly a minute, the pace holds steady. Ramos continues to press without urgency, steps neat, posture unmoved, punches flowing in measured chains that never quite ask for a reply.
Ryoma circles, shells, rolls his shoulder, files away timing and distance with every exchange. The crowd stays on edge, stirred by anticipation that keeps tightening with each second.
Then gradually, Ramos shifts.
It’s subtle, almost invisible. His torso tilts slightly left, just enough to change the lane. And the punches come a bit tighter now than before.
Jab-Cross. Jab-Cross, still in the center line.
Dug. Dug. Dug. Dug.
Then the rhythm sharpens, the space compresses, the angle shifts, just slightly.
Lead hook. Cross. Lead hook. Cross. Lead hook. Cross. Lead hook.
Dug. Dug. Thud! Dug. Dug. Dug. Thud!
Ryoma rolls with the first wave, but some of the crosses thud into his upper arm, solid and heavy. The lead hooks slap against his right forearm as it shields his chest, but two slip through at an angle, digging into his midsection.
Ryoma gives ground, stepping away, resetting his feet.
“There it is,” one commentator says. “That pressure’s starting to tell.”
“He couldn’t hold his ground under that storm,” the other adds.
Ramos lets him go, content to hold center.
Ryoma exhales, eyes narrowing as he reassesses.
<< Calling him a swarmer was a mistake. >>
The system updates, recalibrating.
<< A Mid-Range Barrage Specialist suits him more. >>
Ryoma agrees.
This doesn’t feel like being hit by a storm. It feels like standing under a rain of arrows, released all at once, from just far enough away.
“Your virtual model doesn’t account for this.”
<< The simulation reflects the data you provided. Nothing more. >>


