Ultimate Dragon System: Grinding my way to the Top-Chapter 212: An important announcement
Olmo finished the last file slowly, his eyes moving across every name one final time. Each sheet on his desk represented a group of three students. Each group had already been evaluated by their respective masters, and now the strongest among them had been selected.
Twelve students.
Twelve representatives.
But only a few would ultimately be chosen for Class One.
He exhaled quietly, leaning back in his chair for a moment. The system was efficient—but the responsibility behind it was not light. These were students who trained together, fought together, and now, they would be forced to measure themselves against one another. Some of them had drilled in the same formation for weeks. Some of them knew exactly how their teammates moved—when Atlas would overcommit, when Mira would stall and wait patiently behind her clones. That kind of familiarity had made them functional as a unit over time. Inside the bracket, it would count for nothing. You couldn’t rely on someone you were about to fight. The shared history became a different thing entirely when you were standing on opposite sides of it, no longer teammates, just obstacles placed directly in each other’s path. What had been strength inside a shared group became a real liability once the bracket finally opened.
Still, the academy’s structure was clear.
Results mattered more than comfort.
Olmo stood up.
He took a moment before he moved. Not out of hesitation—he had no doubts about the selections—but because once he walked out that door, it would begin. The decisions were made. The bracket was finalized. Whatever happened next fell entirely on the students. He had reviewed each file with care. He had weighed every variable the data gave him and made the calls that the data required. There was nothing left to second-guess, and second-guessing would not have changed anything regardless. The rest was theirs to carry from this point forward, however far it took each of them.
He picked up the finalized file and left his office.
The hallway was quiet as he walked. His footsteps echoed faintly against the walls, steady and unhurried. The closer he got to the classroom, the more the distant sounds of students returned—talking, shifting desks, unaware of what was about to be decided.
He had walked this hall before with the same file, different names. The weight never changed. It wasn’t guilt—none of these selections were wrong—but it was something. The understanding that a single announcement could reorder how a student saw themselves. That what felt stable yesterday would feel uncertain by the time he finished reading the last name. Some students handled that well. Others didn’t. He had learned, over the years, that you couldn’t predict which was which until the moment arrived and you watched them absorb it in real time.
He stopped at the door.
Then opened it.
The classroom was normal—lively, noisy, full of scattered conversations and relaxed energy. Some students leaned back in their chairs, others spoke across rows, a few simply waited for the next lesson without much thought.
Then Olmo entered.
The atmosphere changed instantly.
Conversations died mid-sentence. Heads turned. Chairs shifted. The room slowly settled into silence as all attention focused on him. Not because he demanded it. Because they recognized that whatever came next was not going to be ordinary. Something in the way he carried the file. Something in the deliberateness of his walk. Students picked up on those signals without being told to.
Olmo walked to the front and placed the file on the desk.
He looked at them.
And waited.
Complete silence followed.
"Attention," Olmo said.
His voice was calm, but it carried across the entire room with authority.
No one responded. No one interrupted.
He continued only when he was certain he had their full attention.
"I have reviewed every submission from the group masters," he began. "Each group consisted of three students. From each group, one representative has been selected based on strength, skill, and overall performance."
A few students straightened slightly.
Others exchanged quiet glances.
Olmo’s expression did not change.
"These twelve representatives will now enter a selection tournament."
The word tournament sharpened the air in the room.
Even the most relaxed students were now fully alert. A few who had been leaning back shifted forward without thinking—responding before they had fully processed the word. Tournament meant something real. It meant the weeks of training were about to be tested under conditions where there was no reset, no partner pulling punches, no instructor stepping in to call a stop.
Olmo continued.
"This is not a training exercise. It is not for practice. It is a structured evaluation of combat capability under pressure."
He paused briefly.
"The purpose is simple: to determine the four strongest representatives of Class One."
That sentence changed everything.
Four.
Not one.
Not a single winner.
Four seats were open—but even those were not guaranteed. Twelve would enter. Eight would leave without anything. The ones who remained would be the ones who proved, under real pressure, that they belonged at the top. There was no partial credit. No honorable mention. Either you were one of the four or you weren’t.
A low tension spread across the room. 𝑓𝘳𝑒𝑒𝓌𝘦𝘣𝘯ℴ𝑣𝘦𝑙.𝘤𝑜𝑚
Some students clenched their fists.
Others narrowed their eyes.
A few simply stayed still, already calculating what this meant for them.
Olmo opened the file again.
"Listen carefully," he said.
Then he began reading.
"From Group Six—Jelo."
A subtle reaction moved through the room at that name. Small—barely visible—but there. A few glances shifted. A beat of quiet that hadn’t been present before. People had noticed things about Jelo. The control behind his movements. The restraint that didn’t quite fit the output he was producing. Something calculated in the way he operated that most students at his level didn’t have yet.
"Ken."
"Atlas."
"Mira."
"Riven."
"Tessa."
"Nyra."
"Zarek."
"Kaizo."
"Silas."
"Jax."
He paused, flipping the page once to confirm the final arrangement.
All twelve names were accounted for.
Each one settled into the room differently. Some like confirmation. Some like weight. Some like the beginning of a question the student hadn’t known they were going to have to answer.
"The tournament bracket has been structured based on performance balance and combat compatibility," Olmo said. "The matches are designed to test adaptability, endurance, and raw strength equally."
He closed the file.
"This will not be random. Every fight has purpose."
A silence followed.
He let it sit.
Then continued.
"The tournament begins immediately. You will be called in order. When your name is announced, you will proceed without delay."
No hands went up. No one asked for clarification. The room understood. And in that stillness, something had already shifted—not in the air, but inside the twelve students who now knew their names had been read. Whatever they had been before this moment, they were something different now. The announcement had already changed the shape of what came next. There was no walking any of it back.
Olmo looked across the classroom one more time.
Twelve of them.
But only four would remain when this was over.
"Prepare yourselves," he said calmly.
Then added—
"Only four will stand as the official representatives of Class One."







