Mangaka Becomes A Skilled Martial Artist In Another World: Drawing: The Greatest
A monster lunged from the darkness beyond the crater—a twelve-foot beast of scales and malice, the kind he’d sketched a thousand times for his villainous lieutenants. Its claws raked the air.
The monster didn’t just fall. It unraveled . The kinetic force hit its chest, and the creature’s body folded along invisible lines, as if its flesh were paper crumpling at the crease of a perfect fold.
He closed his eyes, feeling the familiar ache in his wrist, the phantom pain of a thousand deadlines. Then, the world dissolved into sepia-toned exhaustion. A monster lunged from the darkness beyond the
It was time to finish the final arc.
The final stroke of the brush was a whisper. It unraveled
Kensuke didn’t think. He moved as he had taught his characters to move. His right hand, the hand that had inked a hundred thousand panels, snapped forward in a palm strike. But it wasn’t a palm strike. It was the “Heaven-Piercing Stroke” —a technique he’d invented for the protagonist of his martial arts epic, Fist of the Ivory Tower .
A petty warlord? That was nothing.
He took a step forward—not toward the citadel, but into the empty air. And he walked upward, as if climbing an invisible staircase.