VISION GRID SYSTEM: THE COMEBACK OF RYOMA TAKEDA - Chapter 379: At the Cruel King’s Feet
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- Chapter 379: At the Cruel King’s Feet

Chapter 379: At the Cruel King’s Feet
Up in the press seats, the mood shifts almost imperceptibly. Some journalists lean back, others forward, recalculating in silence.
Only a few had believed in Ryoma’s level even before tonight, quietly noting the talent. But most hadn’t.
For them, this bout had looked like a gamble, a small gym buying an OPBF stage too early, risking a young fighter against a Philippine champion ranked near the top of the region.
Now, that framing doesn’t hold.
“That’s a national champion, undefeated.”
“Ranked fourth in OPBF. And he’s got no safe space left.”
“This was supposed to test that kid. Turns out it’s doing more than that.”
No one announces it outright. They don’t need to. The conclusion settles quietly across the press row, from local notebooks to foreign laptops.
This isn’t a reckless mismatch. This is Ryoma’s first international fight, and he’s actually dictating it.
Ramos looks lost now, looking unsure. His feet hesitate between steps, guard high, eyes searching for an answer that doesn’t present itself.
It’s a look he’s never worn before. He’s fought pressure. He’s fought speed. He’s fought worse nights than this.
But he’s never been slowly erased like this. And he gets no answer to his predicament.
Fortunately, Virgil notices it.
“Ramos!” he barks from the corner. “Use your reach!”
The effect is instant.
The fog clears from Ramos’ face. His posture straightens as if a switch has been flipped.
As Ryoma sways in on his pendulum, Ramos meets him with a straight left. Not thrown to score. Just to mark space.
Another straight left. Again. And then a straight right.
Pop. Pop.
Ryoma’s gloves catch them, but the message is clear: Stay out.
Ramos steps away as soon as the distance stretches, circling, resetting, repeating the pattern. No flurries this time, no commitment.
He just uses his reach, movement, and refusal. Every time Ryoma tries to blur the range, Ramos redraws it with straight lines and footwork.
From the booth, the shift doesn’t go unnoticed.
“There it is,” one commentator says. “That’s the adjustment.”
“He’s not fighting Ryoma’s rhythm anymore,” the other adds. “He’s fighting the clock.”
“Straight punches. Long range. No interest in exchanges..”
“And that tells you something,” the first continues. “He’s willing to give up this round if it means surviving it.”
Ryoma sees it for what it is.
For the first time in the round, his forward rhythm stalls. The pendulum might be effective in disguising distance defensively. But stepping inside now is different.
Blurring range is one thing. Breaking through it is another entirely.
But Ryoma isn’t out of options.
He stops chasing the head-on entry. Instead, he angles; a half step to the left, a feint that doesn’t reach. His pendulum shifts just enough to suggest an opening on one side, then closes it on the other.
Ramos reacts as expected, stepping away from the imagined threat, exactly where Ryoma wants him to go.
<< Lateral exit bias detected. >>
<< Probability of corner drift increasing. >>
Ryoma lets the system guide the pressure, not with speed, but with positioning. He doesn’t rush. He herds.
Straight punches meet gloves. Ryoma gives ground when needed, then takes it back at an angle, always shaving space, always closing exits.
The ropes appear in Ramos’ peripheral vision before he realizes how close they are. Then the corner is there.
“Oh… look at that,” a commentator says. “He’s walking him down without throwing.”
“That’s veteran pressure from the kid,” the other replies. “Ramos didn’t get trapped. He got guided.”
Up in the press seats, a few heads lift almost at the same time.
“That was quick,” someone murmurs, half to himself.
“No rush,” another answers. “He didn’t even accelerate.”
A pen scratches faster. “He cut off the exits. Look at his feet.”
Ramos doesn’t show panics. He plants his feet and fires both hands straight, long and sharp, spears meant to keep air between them.
Pop. Pop.
Ryoma blocks, absorbs, doesn’t bite.
Ramos can still punch. He can still claim space with his reach. But his feet don’t move.
And he knows, the longer he stays here, the more dangerous it becomes.
Ryoma senses it.
But he doesn’t rush in. He shortens the world instead.
A step to the side seals the exit. A feint draws the guard high. The pendulum tightens, no longer swaying to disguise distance, but to erase it.
Finally, after parrying Ramos’ left, he steps deeper inside, chest-to-chest range where straight punches die and instinct takes over.
The in-fighter’s world.
Ramos fires anyway. A hook scrapes Ryoma’s shoulder. A short right thumps the guard.
Dug. Dug.
But this is no longer his fight. He’s not built for this space.
Unlike him, Ryoma is fully conditioned for this. He keeps his elbows glued in, chin tucked, spine coiled.
Every punch is compact, driven by rotation and timing rather than swing. There’s no wasted motion, no search for leverage. He creates it.
Thud! Thud!
Two left hooks dig into the ribs, same spot, same depth.
Ramos answers with a short upper, glancing off Ryoma’s cheekbone, more contact than damage.
Ryoma doesn’t flinch. He slides half a step closer instead, denying Ramos even that.
Thud! Thud!
Two more body shots, tight and cruel, landing as Ramos draws breath. The air leaves him in a sharp hiss, lungs refusing to refill.
The memory comes unbidden; the third round, the same punishment, the same timing. Every inhale punished. Every attempt at recovery denied.
Ramos tries to trade, desperately now.
“Enough…”
He times it for a dual exchange, stepping in at the same beat, throwing not to win, but to interrupt. To force Ryoma to stop.
Ryoma sees the opening and commits. Fighting a champion like Ramos, there’s no winning without paying for it.
“Bring it on.”
Leather cracks. Both punches land; clean, square, face to face.
The sound cracks through the arena. The crowd gasps as one, a sharp intake of breath rippling through the seats.
“Big exchange!” a commentator blurts. “They both landed!”
For a split second, it looks even.
Then the difference shows.
Ryoma’s punch snaps Ramos’ head sideways, weight driving through bone and breath. Ramos’ shot lands too, but it flattens, force spent on survival rather than damage.
Ramos blinks hard. His feet wobble just enough to betray it. Blood spills from his nose now, dark against his lip, his mouthpiece smeared as he sucks in air.
For a heartbeat, Ryoma doesn’t move.
A thin line of red seeps from the corner of his mouth, but nothing more. He doesn’t flinch, no tightening. His eyes stay cold, fixed on Ramos, reading him.
Then his spine twists again, and a left hook digs into the ribs.
Thud!
Ramos grunts, body folding a fraction too late.
And Ryoma follows with a straight. The crazy part, Ramos still forces it, throwing back at the same time, refusing to give ground.
BLARR!!!
Both punches land, another dual exchange.
But Ramos’ glove only brushes Ryoma’s face, more contact than consequence.
Ryoma’s shot drives deep, weight carried through it, spine and hips snapping in perfect alignment.
Ramos’ head whips back as his body slams into the corner post, shoulders colliding first. Then the back of his head clips the padding a beat later.
The arena erupts once more. The crowd roars, shock rolling through the seats.
“He’s hurt!” a commentator shouts. “Ramos is in real trouble!”
“Takeda is unloading now… this is dangerous territory!”
Ryoma steps in with a straight left.
“You better sleep now.”
But Ramos drops under it, collapsing downward as Ryoma’s glove thuds into the corner pad instead.
“He slipped under it… just barely,” a commentator says quickly.
“But don’t mistake that for safety,” the other cuts in. “That was his body giving way. He’s badly injured now.”
Referee steps in.
Down!
Ramos sits slumped against the corner post, breathing, eyes open. But his face is a wreck.
Blood runs freely from his nose, his mouthpiece skewed, lips swollen and split. One eye blinks slower than the other, struggling to focus.
“Corner,” the referee orders.
The referee steps in and orders Ryoma back to his corner, and Ryoma obeys without protest, walking away calm and measured.
The count hasn’t even started when a ripple of movement runs through the crowd. Ryoma glances over his shoulder to see Ramos already forcing himself up, using the ropes and the corner post to drag his body upright.
The arena holds its breath, unsure whether to erupt or brace for something much worse.
But Ryoma looks bored, genuinely bored.
There’s no sympathy on his face. As the referee asks Ramos if he can continue, Ryoma is already walking back toward them, hands hanging loose.
<< He’s so stubborn. >>
<< Unless you kill him, or at least drive him out of conscious, he will keep coming again. >>
Ramos sees him coming, and shoves the referee aside.
The referee waves them on. “Box!”
Ramos tries to move, but his legs won’t take him anywhere.
Across the ring, Ryoma doesn’t rush, doesn’t cut him off. He simply walks forward, calm and unhurried, and the space disappears anyway.
Once they get into punching range, Ramos fires first, a left jab, the right hand ready behind it.
But Ryoma doesn’t raise his guard. He lunges in, lets the jab graze his cheek, and drives a right straight through him.
Dhuack!
“Oh…” a commentator explodes. “He walked through it and drove him straight into oblivion!”
Ramos reels back, but gloves still rising. Ryoma steps in, shoulder turning to finish it.
Then he stops.
“Wait, what?” the second commentator blinks. “He had the kill… and he stopped.”
And Ramos, already out cold, slowly leans forward. His forehead settles against Ryoma’s chest, and then his body gives way.
Virgil sees it and throws in the towel.
Ryoma doesn’t move. He just lets Ramos sinks down, folding at his feet as cameras explode, freezing the moment.


