Overnight, seven strokes concentrated their minds, and in just half a month, all the five-type divine essences exceeded 100. At this time, Tangner’s cultivation speed was that even those legendary geniuses would probably feel ashamed of themselves.
But now, the genius Donner has encountered a difficult problem. He has only divine essence, but he doesn’t know how to build a magic model. Those students who “maintain justice” stared at him completely, making him unable to read it casually in the library, and could only ask clues slowly from Wesley and Victor.
The knowledge obtained in this method is obviously not systematic enough, but no matter what, he finally knew a few key points of building a magic model.
The first is to improve mental control, that is, the ability to meticulously control multiple divine elements. This ability depends on the strength of mental power – even if the simplest model only requires three divine elements, it must be promoted to a low-level magic apprentice to build.
Then there is the magic element perception. When trying to build a model, you need to feel the reactions of the magic elements around you at all times in order to find a stable model structure. Elemental perception will also evolve as mental power increases.
Finally, you are proficient, repeatedly establishing the same model in your mind, and finally forming a conditioned reflex, and you can quickly mobilize your mental power to model when needed. When not paid attention, all divine energy is in a free state, so each spell cast is a process of remodeling. To improve proficiency, it can reduce modeling time and speed up the casting speed.
Late at night, in the bedroom on the second floor of Professor Victor’s house, Donner lay on the cozy big bed and began to try to build the simplest magic model.
Among the five-type magic, what he likes the most is the fire system. In the first story about a magician I heard on the island, there was an extremely powerful fireball. The earliest one I condensed was a fire god. The magic I witnessed for the first time was a fireball.
So at this moment, he was arranging the three Vulcan essences into a regular triangle in his mind.
In principle, the regular polygonal models of each system of divine essence are the basic attack magic of this system, namely ice spear, fireball, flying leaves, wind blade and stone thorn. The more vertices, the stronger the magic power. For example, Carl’s fireball may use more than twenty divine essences as the vertices, while Wesley’s wind blade is mostly just a triangle. Considering the balance of modeling difficulty and practicality, the first model established by a magic apprentice is usually hexagonal. Various experiences summarized by predecessors are mostly based on establishing a hexagonal magic array.
The difficulty of modeling is that because each person’s spiritual world has different degrees of distortion, the model will not be a perfect regular polygon, the lengths of each side will be slightly different, and even each vertex may not be on the same surface; and due to the unmeasurable characteristics of the spiritual world, the side lengths of the polygon cannot be described, so you have to try it yourself.
Donner had no reference materials on hand, so he had to start with the simplest ternary modelBefore this, he had already found out the key points.
Zoom in and out the regular triangle composed of three Vulcan elements, find the size that can make the surrounding magic elements react most actively, remember it; then keep the bottom edge of the triangle unchanged, move the vertex on the plane where the triangle is located, continue to feel the elemental activity, and position the best position; finally move this vertex back and forth in the arc direction perpendicular to the plane, and confirm the best position again.
Donner did it very slowly, and each step was like rotating the most sensitive radio knob. He first determined the approximate range, and then fine-tuned it repeatedly until he was absolutely satisfied. Finally, a three-element fireball magic model was completed in his mind, and the whole process only took half an hour.