MY HIDDEN TALENT IS FORBIDDEN BY THE HEAVENS-Chapter 100: DOMAIN REMEMBERS ITS NAME

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Chapter 100: DOMAIN REMEMBERS ITS NAME

Chapter 100 — WHEN THE DOMAIN REMEMBERS ITS NAME

The hesitation did not last.

The arena had paused—only for a breath—caught between collapse and resistance, between the will of its builders and the pressure of those who now stood upon it. Stone groaned. Wind stalled. The abyss below roared softly, as if impatient.

Then Luo Qinghe opened his eyes.

The smile he wore was thin, almost polite, but something beneath it had shifted. The Verdant Sovereign’s Embrace, which had until now behaved like a disciplined, adaptive domain, went quiet. Not weakened. Not withdrawn.

Quiet in the way a forest becomes quiet when something ancient wakes.

Green light dimmed across the battlefield. Vines froze mid-motion. Roots stopped expanding. Even the pressure that had been hunting fighters earlier receded, pulling back toward Luo Qinghe’s position like a tide reversing.

Several fighters felt relief.

That was their last mistake.

Luo Qinghe lowered his hands.

And the domain answered by remembering what it was before it learned restraint.

The ground beneath him darkened—not with shadow, but with depth. Green faded into a deeper hue, something closer to blackened emerald, as if chlorophyll had been replaced by memory. The vines near him did not thicken.

They flattened.

Leaves fused together. Roots merged into wide, sinewy structures that pulsed slowly, heavily, like muscle rather than plant.

The air changed.

Not with pressure.

With age.

High above, a formation master staggered back from his console. "That... that signature—"

Mei Ying’s eyes widened slightly. "That’s not a modern domain."

The Dragon Turtle dean leaned forward, grin fading into something sharper. "...Oh. He finally stopped lying."

Luo Qinghe stepped forward.

The ground did not crack.

It yielded.

Stone plates bent inward toward him, warping like softened metal, aligning themselves instinctively. The arena was no longer resisting him. It was accommodating him.

"This isn’t Verdant Sovereign’s Embrace," Luo Qinghe said calmly, voice carrying across the battlefield without amplification. "That’s just the name they let me use."

He placed his palm against the ground.

The abyss below the arena answered.

A low, resonant sound rolled upward—not a roar, not a scream, but the echo of something vast shifting in its sleep. The stabilizing formations flared violently, sigils burning white-hot as they struggled to reinterpret what they were sensing.

"This land remembers older roots," Luo Qinghe continued. "Before academies. Before rules."

The green-black structures around him surged upward, not as vines, but as massive, rib-like growths that arched across collapsing gaps, bridging chasms with terrifying ease. Where fire had burned earlier, the growth did not ignite. Where ice had frozen, it did not crack.

It ignored.

Several fighters backed away instinctively.

Too late.

The domain expanded—not outward in a wave, but downward and inward at the same time, compressing space, reducing options, rewriting what counted as ground. Platforms that had been drifting freely suddenly found themselves dragged back toward Luo Qinghe’s core, tilting, sliding, aligning.

A Silvermoon survivor screamed as the slab beneath him jerked sideways, throwing him into another collapsing section. He collided with a Vermillion fighter mid-fall, both tumbling together into the abyss before emergency formations spat them out in opposite directions.

ELIMINATION CONFIRMED.ELIMINATION CONFIRMED.

The crowd erupted in panic and awe.

"He’s pulling the arena!"

"WHAT IS THAT DOMAIN?!"

"THAT’S NOT PLANT—!"

Ouyang Xue’er felt it immediately.

Her frost did not fail—but it stopped advancing. The temperature drop met resistance not from heat, but from density. The ground beneath her staff was no longer something that could be frozen into obedience. It was layered, compacted, ancient.

She narrowed her eyes. "...This is bad."

Rong Yueran reacted faster.

Her phoenix flames surged, not outward, but inward, compressing around her body as she lifted both hands. Fire roared upward, spiraling into a blazing pillar that cut through the warped terrain, carving her a path of absolute heat.

She advanced.

Luo Qinghe looked at her for the first time directly.

"Fire burns forests," he said mildly. "But forests don’t die from fire."

The ground between them rose.

Not quickly.

Heavily.

A massive, fused structure emerged, layered with petrified growth and mineralized root, absorbing heat without igniting, bleeding it away into the abyss below.

Rong Yueran clicked her tongue softly. "Figures."

She changed tactics instantly.

The fire shifted.

Not hotter.

Sharper.

A blade of compressed flame cut downward, slicing into the structure at a precise angle. The construct split—not destroyed, but separated—enough for her to leap through and continue forward.

Behind her, the arena began to fail catastrophically.

The domain’s compression triggered a cascade.

Platforms that had been marginally stable were dragged out of alignment. Ice bridges shattered under sudden lateral force. Obsidian paths fused earlier by fire cracked as tension redistributed unevenly.

The battlefield collapsed in sequence.

A Frostcloud contestant lost footing as the ground beneath them slid away. They tried to jump—straight into a collapsing overhead plate. The collision knocked them unconscious mid-air.

ELIMINATION CONFIRMED.

Another fighter tried to sprint across a narrowing ridge, only for the ridge to retract like a muscle contracting, throwing them sideways into open space.

ELIMINATION CONFIRMED.

Two more collided in panic as a platform tilted violently, both tumbling together across the boundary.

ELIMINATION CONFIRMED.ELIMINATION CONFIRMED.

The announcer’s voice was gone now, drowned out by alarms and the roar of the crowd.

Numbers dropped fast.

Too fast.

Ling Yifan felt the shift in weight, the way the spear in his hands seemed heavier—not because of gravity, but because the ground no longer promised to meet him halfway.

"This isn’t terrain control," he realized. "It’s assimilation."

Yue Hanran’s jaw tightened as he stabilized himself atop a reinforced slab that was being slowly pulled toward Luo Qinghe’s core despite his best efforts.

"...He’s overriding priority," Yue muttered. "Even mine."

The Dragon Turtle instructors stared in disbelief.

"He’s pulling us into his domain logic," one whispered.

The Azure Dragon dean swore under his breath.

Long Hao felt it last.

Not because he was slow.

Because the Eclipse System was listening.

The pressure that emanated from Luo Qinghe’s true domain core did not feel like an attack. It felt like a claim. Like the battlefield was being asked a question older than the tournament.

Who owns the ground you stand on?

The Eclipse System pulsed—hard.

Longyu’s voice shook. "That’s not a divine-tier expansion. That’s a pre-structural domain. If it finishes forming—"

"I know," Long Hao said quietly.

Around him, the cascade continued.

Another platform folded. Another fighter disappeared.

Only a handful remained now.

Ling Yifan, balancing on a narrow shard.Ouyang Xue’er, standing atop a frozen spine that was cracking by the second.Rong Yueran, wreathed in controlled inferno, refusing to retreat.Yue Hanran, teeth clenched as the ground he commanded was dragged into another’s will.And Long Hao—standing where collapse hesitated, not because it couldn’t happen, but because something resisted it.

Luo Qinghe looked at him again.

This time, his smile returned.

"...There you are."

The domain surged once more.

Not outward.

Down.

The abyss answered with a thunderous echo as something deep beneath the arena aligned with Luo Qinghe’s core. The stabilizers screamed their final warning, sigils burning out in cascading failures.

The arena entered free fall.

Not physically.

Conceptually.

Every remaining platform began to drop, slide, or retract at once.

No safe zones.

No paths.

Only choice.

The elimination cascade hit its peak.

Two fighters vanished almost simultaneously, caught between converging slabs and thrown out by emergency failsafes.

ELIMINATION CONFIRMED.ELIMINATION CONFIRMED.

The crowd was screaming now—not cheering.

Only five figures remained suspended in the chaos.

And among them, only one had not yet committed to power.

Long Hao stepped forward.

Not to escape.

Not to attack.

To decide.

The Eclipse System surged, pressure peaking as the arena’s claim pressed against his own will. For the first time, the system did not suggest restraint.

It waited.

Long Hao lifted his foot and brought it down—not on stone, not on air, but on the invisible boundary where the arena’s authority ended.

The ground did not yield.

It resisted.

Luo Qinghe’s eyes widened a fraction.

For the first time, his domain hesitated.

And in that hesitation, the cascade slowed.

Not stopped.

Slowed enough for everyone to feel it.

The question had changed.

It was no longer who would survive the collapse.

It was whose will the ground would answer when it finished falling.

[Chapter ENDS]