VISION GRID SYSTEM: THE COMEBACK OF RYOMA TAKEDA - Chapter 495: "Oriental Vegas"

Chapter 495: “Oriental Vegas”
While Nakahara is still struggling to find a building willing to take his money, the rest of the world has already decided what that money means.
In the domestic press, the tone turns sharp almost immediately.
The next day’s headline from Shūkan Ring Post, a widely read boxing daily, runs across the sports section in bold type:
“Samurai Resolve or Financial Seppuku? The Mystery of 50 Million Yen for an OPBF Belt.”
The subheading cuts even deeper.
No domestic mega-star. No guaranteed sellout. One night, one belt, and a purse bid that rivals world-title events. What exactly is Nakahara Boxing Gym gambling on?
The article questions everything. The writer notes that OPBF title fights have never commanded this level of investment, not in Japan, not anywhere in Asia. It lists recent purse bids, compares ratios, and ends with a line that circulates widely online:
“This is a man betting the gym’s future on a belief no spreadsheet can justify.”
Radio programs pick it up next, then television panels. Commentators argue whether Nakahara is visionary or reckless, whether Japanese boxing is finally stepping forward or simply stepping off a cliff.
In South Korea, a mid-sized promotional company releases a statement that sounds polite on the surface but carries unmistakable resentment.
“This kind of purse inflation does not reflect market reality,” the promoter says to East Ring Review. “It pressures everyone else to spend money that does not exist. This is not progress. It is distortion.”
Meanwhile, a Filipino promoter is less restrained. “They paid half a million for an OPBF fight,” he tells a regional outlet. “Why? For pride? For headlines? This hurts smaller promotions. Fighters will demand numbers no one else can match.”
In Thailand, the coverage takes a different angle. An article from Muay & Ring Asia, a bilingual combat sports site, focuses less on the bid itself and more on what follows it.
“Even if the champion secured a sponsor willing to burn that much money,” the writer notes, “how will the event justify it?”
The piece lays out the danger plainly.
“If Nakahara Boxing Gym loses the OPBF belt to Thanid Kouthai, the damage will not end with pride. A purse of this size demands an event of equal scale. If the gate fails, if sponsorship underperforms, the promotion does not merely lose a title. It risks collapsing under its own ambition.”
The article ends with a blunt warning: “This is not a fight promotion. This is a balance sheet walking into a ring.”
Even in the West, the story finds its way across the ocean, stripped of context and sharpened into ridicule.
On an American boxing podcast, the host laughs as he reads the number aloud.
“Half a million dollars. An OPBF belt,” the hosts opens.
“So what is this,” the guest asks, chuckling, “Tokyo trying to build its own Vegas now?”
The remark becomes a soundbite. It circulates through forums and clipped videos, framed as a joke about ambition without infrastructure.
Another commentator dismisses it more bluntly. “You can’t buy atmosphere,” he says. “Vegas wasn’t built by throwing money at regional titles. This feels like cosplay, trying to look big without understanding what makes big events work.”
The phrase Oriental Vegas appears once, then twice, then enough times to make its intent clear.
From that distance, nuance disappears. No one talks about fighters. No one talks about risk. They talk about spectacle, about numbers that look absurd when detached from the ground they stand on.
***
Speculation spreads just as quickly as criticism. Some analysts wonder aloud whether Aqualis Labs understands what it has attached its name to. Others suggest the company is deliberately forcing its brand into the Asian boxing conversation by shock alone.
And in doing so, it works. Whether praised or condemned, the result is the same.
Eyes turn toward Japan, toward Tokyo, toward Aqualis Labs, toward Nakahara Boxing Gym and Promotions, suddenly spoken of in the same breath as organizations far larger, far richer, far more established.
The irony is that none of them can see the reality behind the headlines.
Even right now, Nakahara’s gym has been surrounded by media since morning. Cameras line the street, microphones stretch through gaps in the fencing, and journalists call out questions at a volume that makes the windows rattle.
“Coach Nakahara, any comment on the 50 million yen purse?”
“Do you think this is financially reckless?”
“Will the Tokyo show sell out?”
Inside, the gym is unnervingly quiet. None of the fighters dare appear. Okabe and Ryohei pace behind closed doors, peering through slats of the blinds.
“We’re focusing on training,” Nakahara finally calls through a narrow window, voice tight but firm. “Ryohei has a title fight soon. And there’s a youngster having a fight in rookie tournament in two days. We cannot be distracted.”
A reporter snorts. “So, no comment at all? Not even about the purse?”
“Not now,” Nakahara says, holding the window shut a fraction. “We are preparing fighters. That is all you need to know.”
The journalists murmur amongst themselves. The street grows tense, voices overlapping; speculation, annoyance, muttered curses from frustrated camera crews.
By mid-morning, Nakahara’s patience holds. The gym remains locked.
Ryohei slumps against the wall, muttering under his breath. “I can’t even go get lunch,” he complains. “Or hit the bag without some idiot shouting about money again.”
Okabe sighs. “Can you imagine stepping outside and facing… whatever this circus is?”
The reporters grow restless. They shift positions, adjusting lenses, comparing notes, muttering complaints in Korean, English, and Thai among themselves.
“Anyway… Where’s the OPBF champion?” one asks, glaring at the shuttered door. “Is he even here?”
“Probably hiding,” another replies. “Can’t blame him.”
Noon arrives, and the pressure eases slightly. Slowly, one by one, the journalists retreat, their footsteps muffled against the asphalt, their cameras folding away.
By early afternoon, the last van disappears, and the gym finally finds silence.
Across the street, the younger athletes sit in a small coffee shop, watching the emptying street through the glass.
“Looks like they’re finally gone,” one of the juniors says, tapping his fingers on the table.
“Yeah,” another adds, stretching his arms. “We can finally get back to the gym without all that noise.”
“I say we head over now,” a third pipes up, voice low but eager. “Coach won’t like us lingering here too long.”
They gather their bags, glancing once more at the street. With cautious steps, they cross back toward the gym.
Inside the gym, Okabe leans against a bag. “Finally,” he mutters. “I could get hit by a bag in peace now.”
Aramaki chuckles dryly. “And maybe even step outside without being interviewed by twenty cameras.”
Nakahara watches the street from the window only long enough to confirm the reporters are gone. The silence that follows does not feel like relief. It feels like borrowed time.
“Kenta,” he calls.
Kenta turns just in time to catch the keys Nakahara throws.
“Let’s go,” Nakahara says, already pulling on his coat. “I’ve wasted enough time hiding from people who don’t want answers.”
***
The van cuts back into traffic, winter light flattening the city around them.
Their first stop is Ryōgoku Kokugikan. The building stands heavy with tradition, sumo’s home ground. Nakahara explains the date, the event, and the urgency.
The answer comes quickly and politely. “A sumo tournament is scheduled that week,” the official says. “Renovations will follow, in preparation for the Olympics.”
Nakahara bows, and leaves.
Back in the van, he exhales slowly.
“Same story.”
They drive again. And then Nippon Budokan rises ahead of them, unmistakable in shape and reputation. Fourteen thousand seats. Sacred ground.
Inside, Nakahara mentions the OPBF title bout. The official listens, and then smiles thinly.
“An OPBF title?” the man says. “Please forgive my frankness. But the last boxing event here was a world-level fight with a nationally recognized name. If we allow regional title bouts, for a young boxer with less than ten pro fights, the meaning of this floor diminishes.”
He pauses. “We suggest Korakuen. Or Ōta Gymnasium.”
Nakahara feels the insult clearly, but he keeps his face calm. He bows once more and exits without argument.
The door closes behind him. He exhales and mutters, “Right. Only gods and celebrities bleed here. Bullshit!”
When he returns to the van, his shoulders drop.
“That’s it,” he mutters. “Everything else is either under renovation or booked by promoters bigger than us. Do we really go back to Ōta? Or Korakuen?”
Kenta hesitates. “Coach… you haven’t tried Yoyogi.”
Nakahara turns. “Yoyogi?”
“Yoyogi National Gymnasium,” Kenta says. “You crossed it off without checking.”
***
Late afternoon, Yoyogi National Gymnasium rises unlike any other venue Nakahara has visited, its suspended roof stretching wide, as if the building itself is holding its breath.
The arena carries history and authority. With a capacity of over thirteen thousand seats, it is far larger than what he wants. But it is still a place that can legitimize the night.
Inside a quiet administrative office, an official studies the schedule on his monitor. “August twenty-fourth,” the man says. “You would need several days for setup and teardown.”
“Four days,” Nakahara answers. “From August 22nd to 25th.”
The official types for a moment, then stops. “That window is currently open.”
Nakahara’s fingers tighten slightly at his side.
“The rent will be substantial,” the official continues. “Yoyogi is not a small venue.”
“I know,” Nakahara says. “I’ll take responsibility.”
The man glances up. “What kind of event?”
“An OPBF title fight.”
“Ah, is it for Ryoma Takeda?”
“Yes, it is.”
A brief silence follows. Then the official reaches for a folder. “In that case, we can move forward.”
He slides the documents across the desk. Nakahara picks up the pen and signs.
For the first time in days, Nakahara exhales. The pressure does not disappear, but it finally has a place to land.


