VISION GRID SYSTEM: THE COMEBACK OF RYOMA TAKEDA - Chapter 690: The Architect and the Chameleon
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- Chapter 690: The Architect and the Chameleon

Chapter 690: The Architect and the Chameleon
Meanwhile, the arena is already loud when Villanueva steps out.
“Dante! Dante! Dante! Dante!”
The chant spreads fast, rolling across the stands as he walks down the aisle with steady composure, lifting one glove just enough to acknowledge them.
“That’s the reception of a champion right there,” the lead commentator says, voice steady, carrying a note of respect. “You can feel how much he means to this crowd.”
“And he’s earned every bit of it,” the second adds. “WBO Asia Pacific champion, consistent, disciplined, and dangerous in ways that don’t always show up in highlights.”
“Not the loudest style,” the first continues, “but it’s the kind that breaks people down over time.”
“And tonight, that might matter more than anything,” the second replies, watching closely as Villanueva keeps his pace. “Because he’s not walking in here to play a role in someone else’s story. He’s here to take control of it.”
Villanueva climbs into the ring without delay, the noise still following him as he settles into the blue corner.
It’s a strange image at a glance. A champion, a hometown hero, yet positioned as the challenger. But the arrangement set by Alvarez himself, understanding where the real pull of the night lies.
And that understanding proves itself the moment the spotlight shifts and locks onto the door where Ryoma is about to appear.
The arena drops into silence. The chant for Villanueva disappears completely, cut off as if it was never there.
“You feel that?” the lead commentator murmurs. “That shift in the air… that’s not normal anticipation.”
“No,” the second replies, just as quiet. “But it’s not surprising either. This young prodigy has backed up every bit of hype around him. And lately, he’s proving it’s not just inside the ring.”
“Yeah, when you show people you can dodge bullets… That’s not hype anymore.”
“That’s how legends start.”
When the door opens, it catches Ryoma in the middle of warming up, shadowboxing in that narrow space without any intention of being seen.
His lead hand snaps out in a rapid triple jab. Then he resets, bending slightly over his left knee, before sliding back just enough to send two more jabs into a tight lead hook.
Ssshs-ssshs-ssshs!
Ssshs-ssshs! Zrrff!!!
All of it happens within a second, revealed by the door opening at that exact moment.
The glimpse disappears as quickly as it came, but the reaction spreads instantly. A rising buzz fills the arena as people start talking over each other, voices overlapping, trying to make sense of what they just saw.
“Did you see that?”
“That speed…”
“That’s him, right?”
“That’s the guy who dodged bullets…”
The noise builds in a different way, uneven, charged with curiosity and something harder to define.
“And there he is,” the lead commentator says, his voice steady but lowered. “That’s the man everyone’s been talking about.”
“You can feel it,” the second adds. “The entire arena just shifted the moment that door opened.”
“He hasn’t even started the walk yet. And people are already reacting like they’ve seen something they weren’t prepared for.”
“Well, that’s what happens when the rumors stop sounding like rumors. You hear the stories, you question them… and then you catch a glimpse like that, and suddenly you’re not so sure what to believe anymore.”
“And now we get to find out. Not just who he is… but what he really is inside that ring.”
Ryoma steps forward, calm and composed beneath the lights. His hood is already down, his face fully visible, and there’s no trace of the pressure pressing down from the arena. But behind him, the mood is different.
Nakahara’s gaze is lowered more often than not, the weight of Kenta’s loss still sitting on his shoulders. The memory hasn’t left him, and neither has the doubt.
Kurogane’s attention drifts in a different direction. His eyes move across the ringside, scanning the officials one by one, searching for a detail that refuses to settle in his mind.
He tries to catch a clear look at the ringside physician, but from this angle, the view keeps breaking, leaving him with nothing certain yet.
Hiroshi walks with the OPBF belt raised, held high above his head. It’s not the first time he’s carried it into an arena like this, but tonight it sits differently. His grip tightens around it, as if the weight has changed without warning.
And Okabe can’t help himself. His eyes move constantly, taking everything in, the lights, the crowd, the scale of it all. His lips tremble faintly in quiet disbelief, already picturing something beyond this moment, something that places him at the center of it one day.
They move together as a unit, but each of them carries something different into that walk. And in front of them, Ryoma keeps going without breaking stride.
***
The reception here is nothing like back home. There are no coordinated chants from the Cruel King Army, no wave of familiar voices lifting his name with rehearsed devotion.
The noise that surrounds him now doesn’t move with him in that way. Instead, it stays uneven, fractured into murmurs and quiet reactions.
And the weight of it feels heavier. Every eye is on Ryoma, not with celebration, but with scrutiny to measure him, to see for themselves if the stories hold any truth.
At least when he steps into the ring and lifts a hand in greeting, the crowd responds with polite applause. It comes together briefly, respectful, almost cautious.
But it fades just as quickly when his hand lowers. The arena settles back into silence, the tension returning, held in place as everyone waits for the ring announcer to begin.
“Ladies and gentlemen… from the PhilSports Arena here in Manila, Philippines, this is your main event of the evening.”
A low swell moves through the crowd, restrained but attentive.
“This bout is sanctioned by the OPBF and the WBO Asia Pacific, and it is a unification title fight in the lightweight division, scheduled for twelve rounds of boxing.”
He turns toward the blue corner, extending one arm. “Introducing first, fighting out of the blue corner, representing Golden Fist Boxing Gym. He stands at 175 cm tall, weighing in at 61.2 Kg, and holds a professional record of 27 victories against 4 defeats, with 19 of those wins coming by way of knockout.”
There’s a brief pause, just enough to let the numbers settle.
“He is the reigning WBO Asia Pacific Lightweight Champion… Dante ’The Architect’ Villanueva.”
At ringside, the commentators step in to fill the moment.
“They call him The Architect because of how he builds a fight. He controls distance, manages tempo, and breaks opponents down piece by piece with clean, calculated execution.”
“And that control shouldn’t be mistaken for passivity. Nineteen knockouts on his record tell you everything. When the opening appears, he finishes.”
“He’s one of the most disciplined fighters in the division. Very little wasted movement, very few mistakes.”
A brief beat passes as Villanueva stands composed in his corner, raising a hand to greet his supporters.
“The record might not be perfect. But three of those losses came early in his career. Since then, he’s been extremely consistent.”
“The only time he slipped was back in 2015, when he lost his regional title to Marco Antonio Milagro. But he corrected that immediately in the rematch, took the belt back, and hasn’t let it go since.”
“And now he’s here. In a unification bout that could define everything he’s built so far.”
The ring announcer lifts the microphone back toward his mouth, and the arena settles once more, the lingering noise folding into a tense, expectant silence.
“Introducing his opponent… fighting out of the red corner. Representing Nakahara Boxing Gym. He is 21 years old, stands at 174 cm tall, and officially weighs in at 61.2 Kg.”
The crowd remains quiet, listening.
“He holds an undefeated professional record of 11 victories… no defeats… with 9 wins coming by way of knockout. Here is the reigning OPBF Lightweight Champion…”
The announcer’s voice tightens slightly as he delivers the name.
“Ryoma… ’The Chameleon’… Takeda.”
The reaction that follows doesn’t erupt the way it did for Villanueva. And at ringside, the commentators step in again, their tone sharpening as they pick up on the numbers.
“Eleven fights, nine knockouts. At twenty-one years old, that’s not just promising. That’s dangerous.”
“And those aren’t empty numbers. He filled it with a bunch of knockouts and dominating performance. And if you look at his last fight against Thanid Kouthai, a world champion in kickboxing, the result goes down as a disqualification. But don’t let that mislead you.”
“Not at all. That wasn’t a fight he was handed. He was in control from the start. Clean, decisive, and in a complete domination.”
“A domination that reached a point where Kouthai had no answer, an aftermath of a total frustration.”
“And that’s what makes Ryoma Takeda so difficult. He adapts in real time, turning every answer into another problem. Opponents don’t just get outboxed. They run out of solutions. And with nine knockouts in eleven fights, that precision still carries real finishing power.”
As the commentators finish their words, both fighters are already at center ring, their gloves touching briefly before they step back to their respective corners, eyes never leaving each other.
They settle in, waiting.
And then…
Ding!
“Here we go! Twelve rounds for the unification. Dante Villanueva versus Ryoma Takeda.”
“And the first round is underway!”
Villanueva takes the center first, setting his stance with quiet authority. His right glove rests near his chest while the left extends slightly forward, measuring distance, already shaping the rhythm with controlled intent.
Ryoma answers differently. He slips into a loose, swaying pendulum, hands low, posture relaxed. Not defensive, not aggressive, just blurring the distance against an opponent with longer reach.
For a few seconds, they circle, measuring, neither committing.
Villanueva is the first to break it. He finds the range quickly and snaps two jabs, clean and precise.
Dug. Dug.
Ryoma reacts well, right hand rising to catch both before he shifts a step back.
His brow lifts slightly as he reassesses.
<< There’s weight behind that left. >>
<< No hesitation in the release. >>
<< He sees the distance clearly. >>


