Ultimate Dragon System: Grinding my way to the Top-Chapter 149: Atlas vs graveman

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Chapter 149: Atlas vs graveman

THE COLLAPSE OF ATLAS

The arena floor cracked beneath Atlas’s boots as stone spires erupted around him like jagged teeth. Rock formations twisted upward at his command, forming a fortress of earth and granite. He slammed his fist down, and the entire platform shuddered.

"You’re standing on my domain," Atlas growled, eyes blazing. "Everything beneath your feet answers to me."

Across from him, Graveman stood perfectly still.

Hands in his pockets.

Expression unreadable.

"Then let’s see," Graveman said quietly, "which weighs more—your earth, or what I place upon it."

Atlas didn’t wait.

He thrust both palms forward, and the ground beneath Graveman exploded—pillars of stone shooting upward to impale, crush, suffocate. The air filled with dust and debris as tons of rock converged on a single point.

But Graveman didn’t move.

He simply exhaled.

And the weight of the world pressed down.

GRAVE DOMINION

Atlas felt it immediately.

His arms—outstretched, commanding the earth—suddenly felt wrong. Heavy. Like they were made of lead instead of flesh. He tried to pull them back, but the motion was sluggish, dragging through invisible resistance.

His breath came slower.

His thoughts lagged half a second behind his intentions.

What... is this?

The stone pillars he’d summoned were still rising, still closing in on Graveman—but they moved like they were underwater now. Slowed. Weakened. Their edges dulled as if the very concept of momentum had been drained from them.

Graveman stepped through the collapsing rocks like a man walking through falling snow.

Untouched.

Unbothered.

"You feel it now, don’t you?" Graveman’s voice was calm, almost conversational. "The weight of your own power. The burden of trying so hard."

Atlas gritted his teeth and pulled.

The entire arena floor buckled. Massive slabs of earth rose up on either side of Graveman, slamming together like the jaws of a stone titan.

BOOM.

Dust exploded outward.

For a moment, there was silence.

Then—

The stone cracked.

Graveman walked out from between the slabs, his hand casually resting on the rock as it crumbled behind him.

"You’re strong," Graveman said. "But strength becomes a trap when you carry it alone."

Atlas stumbled.

His knees buckled slightly—not from injury, but from sheer heaviness. Every muscle in his body screamed. His chest felt like it was being compressed by an invisible vice.

No. No, I won’t—

He roared and drove his fists into the ground.

The entire platform erupted.

Stone geysers shot up everywhere—dozens of them, hundreds, a chaotic forest of razor-sharp rock meant to skewer Graveman from every angle.

But with each attack, Atlas felt it.

The weight increased.

His arms sagged.

His breathing turned ragged.

His vision blurred at the edges.

The more you resist, the heavier you become.

THE ZONE

Graveman stopped walking.

He tilted his head slightly, as if considering something.

Then he raised one hand.

And spoke.

"Grave Zone."

The air changed.

Atlas’s world collapsed inward.

Suddenly, gravity didn’t just pull down—it crushed from all sides. His spine bent under pressure he couldn’t see. His legs shook, threatening to give out entirely. Sound became muffled, distant, like he was drowning in deep water.

He tried to summon the earth again.

His power responded—barely.

A single pillar of stone rose... and stopped halfway, too slow, too weak.

What is this?!

His stamina drained twice as fast with every breath, every movement. Sweat poured down his face. His heart hammered in his chest, but even that felt labored, sluggish.

And then—

The urge.

Not a command.

Not mind control.

Just an unbearable, suffocating pressure that whispered one thing:

Kneel.

Atlas’s legs trembled.

His jaw clenched so hard his teeth ached.

"I... won’t..."

But his body disagreed.

One knee touched the ground.

Then the other.

He tried to rise—tried to fight—but the weight was infinite. Every ounce of his will, every scrap of his pride, all of it pressed down on him like the sky itself had fallen.

Graveman walked forward.

Slow.

Steady.

Inevitable.

He stopped in front of Atlas, who knelt there—fists pressed into the cracked stone, body shaking, still trying to stand.

"You fought well," Graveman said softly.

Then he raised one hand—

And brought it down in a single, clean strike to the back of Atlas’s neck.

Atlas collapsed.

The stone around them crumbled into dust.

The weight lifted.

And Graveman turned away, hands returning to his pockets.

"Gravity," he murmured, "doesn’t care how strong you are."

WINNER: GRAVEMAN

Just as I thought... I’m no match for him.

Atlas lay there, staring at the ceiling of the arena, a strange grin stretching across his face.

He had just lost again.

And yet—

He was enjoying himself more than ever.

What was so interesting about losing two times in a row?

What kind of person smiles while being crushed?

What kind of madness finds joy in defeat?

Was he going insane?

His shoulders trembled slightly as he laughed under his breath.

No matter how many times I lose... I will never back down.

Pain sharpened him. Defeat humbled him. Every loss revealed something new — a mistake, a gap, a weakness.

And weaknesses could be fixed.

I need to grow stronger.

I need to learn from those who stand above me.

Atlas pushed himself up slowly, still smiling, eyes burning with something fierce — something dangerous.

Growth doesn’t happen instantly.

Strength isn’t gifted.

It is forged. Refined. Earned.

I won’t lag behind you for long, Jelo.

His fingers moved across the interface, already searching for his next opponent.

I’ll close the gap.

I’ll chase you down.

I’ll stand beside you — not behind you.

One day, people won’t look past me.

They’ll acknowledge me.

His grin widened as another match request loaded onto the screen.

Defeat wasn’t discouragement.

It was fuel.

And Atlas was starving for more.

What could be better than training in a place where no physical injury could truly follow you?

Atlas almost laughed to himself.

A battlefield without broken bones.

A warzone without lasting scars.

A place where defeat hurt only the ego.

He couldn’t have asked for anything better.

His fingers continued scrolling through the interface, eyes carefully scanning through ranks, combat records, skill types. He wasn’t rushing. He wasn’t desperate.

He was calculating.

Every match here was pure growth.

No hospital beds.

No weeks of recovery.

No fear of permanent damage.

Just experience.

Just lessons.

Just improvement.

Atlas paused briefly on a higher-ranked opponent. His gaze sharpened.

If strength was a ladder, then this was the safest way to climb it — rung by rung, without falling to his death.

A faint smile returned to his lips.

Challenge.