The entire team except April was in the dungeon entrance chamber as we waited for April to maneuver the war mech down. The Indomitable was supposed to be just below the size where it would be impossible.
The team from the city we had reached had expanded the entrance passage and increased the density of the stairs. April had funds to pay for such things, but now we would see if it was even possible.
Harren made a crude joke. “It is going to be like a duck giving birth to a goose.”
“Tight, very tight,” Stormy replied.
“Maybe we should have applied grease to the sides of the passage?” Sam joked.
“The real challenge will be getting back out,” I said, and everyone was silent at that.
Slowly, they maneuvered the war mech down the stairs. The war mech folded up its legs and arms and put its weapons into spatial storage.
I had asked about disassembly, but that was to be avoided if possible, because it would damage the living aspect of the war mech and the nascent soul. I could tell the float engine was working at maximum power and then some as a cloud of yellow smoke drifted outwards.
The war mech began to partially unfold slowly after landing at the bottom of the passage.
“I want a raise,” Harren complained.
“It will be useful once we get lower. The major headache is getting it in and out of the dungeon,” Stormy replied.
“Well, that way to the next passage,” I said while drawing my sword and pointing with it.
“Agreed,” Harren replied, and we set off.
The 1st layer was a joke for a team of our skills and strength. The war mech had wheels deployed and rolled along behind us. I had never thought the passages between chambers were cramped before, but now I did when I glanced back at the war mech.
It should have been named the metal passage plug, not The Indomitable.
“You got the left?” I asked Harren.
“Sure, race you?” he asked, and I nodded.
We entered the chamber, and there were five lizard-like creatures. It was tempting to just use a spell skill, but preserving Mana was important in the dungeon.
I rushed in and cut down three on my side.
Harren got four since a slightly larger group had been on his side.
“I win,” he said with a grin, and I rolled my eyes.
We were only joking around like this, since the war mech was drifting and the monsters were so easy on the 1st layer.
Once we got to the 6th
layer, I would start taking things more seriously.
Ozy looked at the monsters and didn’t even go for their meat. He was spoiled and wanted monsters with higher-density Mana.
“That way.” I pointed in a random direction, and Harren nodded.
Our casters were escorting the war mech to prevent surprises but didn’t act. Preserving Mana was too important for them to act in combat so soon.
We made our way through a couple more chambers before reaching the Champion of the 1st layer.
It was a large red slime that shot out fire.
“Ozy,” I said.
Neither Harren nor I wanted to deal with such an annoying monster.
Ozy flew up and hit it with a Bounded Alchemical Field.
The red champion slime burst apart, leaving a red core behind.
Ozy swooped in and ate it. Harren gave me a look, and I shrugged.
“Were you going to dig through the slime for a red core?” I asked.
“Hah, absolutely not. Now let’s see it get through the next passage. I swear it looks bigger than it did before,” Harren said, referencing the war mech as Ozy landed back on my shoulder pauldron.
The war mech didn’t have stairs to work with. Instead, April sent it straight down, smashing the broken stairs that made up the passage.
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It landed with a bang on the 2nd layer.
“That is one way to do it,” Harren said while waving his axe to keep the dust away from his face.
I stepped near Stormy, along with Sam, who used air skills to push the dust back.
“All good. No damage, Ready to move out.”
“That way,” I said and pointed towards the next passage.
“Agreed,” Harren said, and we set off down a slightly bigger tunnel.
I hadn’t really noticed it before, but the dungeon opened the deeper one descended.
We made it to the 4th
layer and called a break after a couple of chambers.
I began getting out my portable cook set and preparing dinner.
“I was skeptical about this, but this is the best idea,” Harren said.
“It is a hobby. If I were in the dungeon, I would prefer not to eat overly salted meat and stale bread. A warm meal fills you up,” I replied as we all ate my cooked stew with the war mech looming over our campsite.
April had gotten out and was eating with us. Once dinner was over, she would sleep inside the war mech.
I didn’t know if that was good, since it had its own soul, but she said it ensured no one tampered with it.
She would only leave it for meals and to relieve herself while in the dungeon.
“A bit thick for my taste,” Stormy said. I gave her a look, and she shrugged. “What? If you can’t handle a small bit of criticism, you shouldn’t be cooking.”
“Is it better than normal dungeon rations?” I asked.
“Yes, but you should work to improve all skills,” she said.
If she didn’t like the cooking, no one would force her to eat. I was sharing to build team spirit, and she was being rude. While she was a nice person, her Elvishness was coming through with the haughty attitude.
Perhaps she was trying to be encouraging in her own way, but I wasn’t a professional chef. I cooked as a hobby and brought stuff to cook because it was something I enjoyed. It would be one thing if I were charging her for my cooking, but it was completely free, and she could choose not to eat.
I wasn’t trying to grind up cooking skill levels. I wasn’t trying to become a dungeon chef.
I was just trying to make a decent meal while in the dungeon to keep morale up, and she was just being rude. I said nothing about her comment, but I now saw the downside of a team.
Clashing personalities and opinions would be a major problem.
If I didn’t give her stew, it would create even more friction, so I had to just endure the criticisms she gave. Otherwise, it could turn into a huge fight and split the team.
And this was only our first day!
I would make the stew thicker next time to make a point that if she wanted food made to her preferences, she could cook it herself.
It was petty, but I wasn’t about to cook a separate stew for each person or cater to any one individual. If someone didn’t want to eat, then they could just not eat warm stew.
“Well, things should get easier tomorrow going to lower layers. We will have to be more alert once we reach the 6th layer,” Harren said.
“The larger groups will require a slightly more methodical approach. The risk of overextending is small on the 6th layer but real,” I replied.
“A defensive posture?” Harren asked me.
“That sounds good. If the war mech doesn’t need to unfold, we can save time. Once we hit the 11th layer, that is when we will need to take our time with mixed groups,” I said.
“It’s a shame we can’t rush down, but there’s no need to take unnecessary risks during our descent,” he said.
Being front-line combatants, we had to assess the level of risk we could handle. If we couldn’t, the entire team would collapse.
Technically April could be considered a front liner with The Indomitable, but a war mech was something new. Perhaps in time she would take on a similar role in evaluating how much we could handle as a team.
“I was hoping we could rush towards the 16th layer,” Stormy said.
“We will be lucky to reach it in half a year and then have to turn back,” Harren replied.
“Half a year?” Sam asked.
Clearly, he had no experience descending.
“Yes, half a year. It might seem like we are going quickly, but the dungeon gets exponentially more dangerous. At the 11th layer when there are mixed groups, we will have to rest and recover after each fight,” I explained.
“If The Indomitable can move freely through the passages, then we can progress more quickly,” April said.
“We will see,” Harren said, and I agreed with him. While the war mech was powerful, it had a lot of issues. Fighting as part of a team required a certain coordination and understanding. While we could practice to a certain degree, that was no replacement for the real thing in the dungeon.
“Why the rush, Stormy?” Harren asked.
“We should make as much progress as quickly as possible,” she declared.
“If you were on your own, then you could do that. But with a team, there needs to be a bit more caution. Especially since none of us has that much experience,” Harren said.
“Harren’s right. If we were solo, then the risks are our own, but as a team, we need to work out the kinks in any kind of coordination. I get wanting to advance quickly, but that is how you end up with dead adventurers. There is a reason the death rates down here are so high,” I replied. ɪꜰ ʏᴏᴜ ᴡᴀɴᴛ ᴛᴏ ʀᴇᴀᴅ ᴍᴏʀᴇ ᴄʜᴀᴘᴛᴇʀs, ᴘʟᴇᴀsᴇ ᴠɪsɪᴛ novel fire.net
People thought they could handle more than they could. Then something overwhelmed and killed them.
It just took one mistake to die.
There was no safety net.
No mother hovered in the background ready to save me or one of her squires.
“We will not go slowly, but we won’t rush. I have a good sense of this, and Justin does too. There is a tempo one has to take the dungeon at.”
“Even if we all feel we can handle more?” April asked.
“One step at a time and making sure our reserves don’t fall low. I know your war mech operates off fuel, but I am not compromising our safety just to rush deeper at a quicker pace,” Harren said, and I nodded to support this statement.
Sure, pushing oneself to the limit and risking one’s life would generate more experience and skill levels, but it was also insanely risky. And while the other three could wonder if we weren’t going fast enough, they also weren’t fighting in melee.
Harren and I set the pace. Casters were there for their firepower and spell skills. As for the war mech, it would hopefully show its worth in the lower layers.
But we needed to fight a range of enemies on each layer, especially once we hit the 11th layer. Rushing to the 16th was a good way to die horribly.
Even if we could handle 99.99% of fights without issue, we needed to be ready to handle the situation when things got tricky. The dungeon could spike in difficulty in unexpected ways. Abnormals were an obvious example. Ethereal monsters were another example. Or even some kind of weird elemental combination.
Experience, and not the kind to level up with, was necessary for such situations. The casters and April didn’t fully understand this concept.
They had their hands held in the dungeon far more than Harren or I ever experienced.
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 211 – Interlude 27
- Chapter 210 – Sitting Around
- Chapter 209 – Wild Tail’s History
- Chapter 208 – A Visitor
- Chapter 207 – Searching The Settlement
- Chapter 206 – Demonic Knowledge
- Chapter 205 – Going Through The Loot
- Chapter 204 – Demonic Frustration
- Chapter 203 – A Demonic Dialogue
- Chapter 202 – Interlude 26
- Chapter 201 – A Proper Hiding Place
- Chapter 200 – Stuck Underground
- Chapter 199 – Exhaustion And Despair
- Chapter 198 – A Carefully Considered Choice
- Chapter 197 – The Tomb Of A Seraphim
- Chapter 196 – Interlude 27
- Chapter 195 – A Dungeon Feature
- Chapter 194 – A Random Encounter
- Chapter 193 – A Natural Treasure
- Chapter 192 – Dig Deep!
- Chapter 191 – The Bug Abnormal
- Chapter 190 – A Messy Fight
- Chapter 189 – Ozymandius, A Dangerous Pet
- Chapter 188 – Waiting And Watching
- Chapter 187 – Battle Of The Large Passage
- Chapter 186 – Interlude 25
- Chapter 185 – A Very Deep Passage
- Chapter 184 – The Dungeon's Redirection
- Chapter 183 – Dungeon Oddities
- Chapter 182 – Harren The Desperate
- Chapter 181 – The Dark Season
- Chapter 180 – Departure From Gnomeland
- Chapter 179 – Gnome Stealth Skills
- Chapter 178 – Counter Divination Skills
- Chapter 177 – Gnomish Dungeon Knowledge
- Chapter 176 – Interlude 24
- Chapter 175 – Gnome Of Culture
- Chapter 174 – Gnomish Trade Deal
- Chapter 173 – Gnomish History Lesson
- Chapter 172 – Gnomish Council Of Governance
- Chapter 171 – Gnomish Society
- Chapter 170 – Gnome Delegation
- Chapter 169 – The Gnomes
- Chapter 168 – Interlude 23
- Chapter 167 – Working Hard
- Chapter 166 – A Blade's Edge
- Chapter 165 – Interlude 22
- Chapter 164 – Maneuvering At The End Of The World
- Chapter 163 – Demon Of The Night
- Chapter 162 – Absolute Savagery
- Chapter 161 – Final Trade
- Chapter 160 – Interlude 21
- Chapter 159 – Beastkin Nuances
- Chapter 158 – Life Of A Beastkin
- Chapter 157 – Deal With Beastkin
- Chapter 156 – The End Of The World
- Chapter 155 – A Great View
- Chapter 154 – Ritual Of Ascending Exit
- Chapter 153 – Champion Of The 11th Layer
- Chapter 152 – Items
- Chapter 151 – The End Of The Team
- Chapter 150 – The Wrong Way
- Chapter 149 – Interlude 20
- Chapter 148 – Beastkin Team
- Chapter 147 – Three Months Descending
- Chapter 146 – Team Discussion
- Chapter 145 – Death's Door
- Chapter 144 – Interlude 19
- Chapter 143 – The Edge Of Life And Death
- Chapter 142 – Mother's Legacy
- Chapter 141 – The 11th Layer
- Chapter 140 – A War Mech Peg Into An Entrance Hole
- Chapter 139 – Shockwaves
- Chapter 138 – An Entrance Into The Inferno
- Chapter 137 – Interlude 18
- Chapter 136 – Party Crasher
- Chapter 135 – Graduation From The College Of Advancement
- Chapter 134 – Graduation Dinner
- Chapter 133 – Mana Interaction Lecture
- Chapter 132 – Sparring
- Chapter 131 – College Takes An Island
- Chapter 130—General Knowledge Lecture
- Chapter 129—Interlude 17
- Chapter 128—Runic Tags
- Chapter 127—The Final Stretch
- Chapter 126—Interlude 16
- Chapter 125—The Indomitable
- Chapter 124—War Mech Showcase
- Chapter 123—Father's Letter
- Chapter 122–Almost There
- Chapter 121 — Last Semester at the College Of Advancement
- Chapter 120 – Interlude 15
- Chapter 119 – Interlude 14
- Chapter 118 – Trouble Brewing
- Chapter 117 – Adventuring Team Mechanics
- Chapter 116 – Dinner Invitation
- Chapter 115 – One Step At A Time
- Chapter 114 – Meeting With The Dean
- Chapter 113 – Soul Collapse
- Chapter 112 – Interlude 13
- Chapter 111 – Dark Knowledge
- Chapter 110 – Class Research Group
- Chapter 109 – Ozymandius’ Evaluation
- Chapter 108 – Father’s Request
- Chapter 107 – Choice Made
- Chapter 106 – The First Class Selection
- Chapter 105 – Descending With Style
- Chapter 104 – Dungeon Break
- Chapter 103 – Interlude 12
- Chapter 102 – The First Semester
- Chapter 101 – An Egg Hatches
- Chapter 100 – Interlude 11
- Chapter 99 – Axe Skills Training
- Chapter 98 – Resistance Training
- Chapter 97 – Cooking Class
- Chapter 96 – Red Versus Blue
- Chapter 95 – A Bad Crowd
- Chapter 94 – The City Of Genoa
- Chapter 93 – Public Rankings
- Chapter 92 – Middle Of The First Semester
- Chapter 91 – Interlude 10
- Chapter 90 – Spear Skills
- Chapter 89 – Monster Processing
- Chapter 88 – Intense Learning
- Chapter 87 – First Class
- Chapter 86 – Welcoming Ceremony
- Chapter 85 – Family Drama
- Chapter 84 – Interlude 9
- Chapter 83 – Assassination Attempt
- Chapter 82 – Interlude 8
- Chapter 81 – Settling In
- Chapter 80 – Selecting Courses And Settling In
- Chapter 79 – The College of Advancement
- Chapter 78 – Interlude 7
- Chapter 77 – Corporate Offer
- Chapter 76 – Interlude 6
- Chapter 75 – Driving
- Chapter 74 – Tier 4 Advice
- Chapter 73 – The Applicants Arrive
- Chapter 72 – Dwarven Racing
- Chapter 71 – Insane Progress, Soul Pressure
- Chapter 70 – Mana Manipulation Instruction
- Chapter 69 – In The Dark
- Chapter 68 – Dwarven Culture
- Chapter 67 – Resistance Training
- Chapter 66 – Thoron’s Training
- Chapter 65 – Gambling Is A Bad Idea
- Chapter 64 – Long Distance Travel
- Chapter 63 – A Review After A Year
- Chapter 62 – My Mother The Unrelenting
- Chapter 61 – Interlude 5
- Chapter 60 – A Break From Unrelenting Suffering
- Chapter 59 – The 6th Layer Of Hell
- Chapter 58 – Healer Melon
- Chapter 57 – Beginner’s Blade
- Chapter 56 – Harsh Review
- Chapter 55 – The Mindset One Has
- Chapter 54 – Climbing Back Out Of The Dungeon
- Chapter 53 – Natural Treasure Of The Dungeon
- Chapter 52 – An Abnormal
- Chapter 51 – Champion Monster Of The 2nd Layer
- Chapter 50 – Interlude 4
- Chapter 49 – Champion Monster Of The First Layer
- Chapter 48 – Solo Descent
- Chapter 47 – Adventurer’s Guild
- Chapter 46 – Fear, Cowardness, and Lies
- Chapter 45 – The Never Ending Journey
- Chapter 44 – The Forgotten Children
- Chapter 43 – Results Matter
- Chapter 42 – Interlude 3
- Chapter 41 – A Second Soul Fruit
- Chapter 40 – The Mega Elixir
- Chapter 39 – Mother’s Return
- Chapter 38 – Training With Father
- Chapter 37 – Breakthrough, Meditation
- Chapter 36 – Bow Training
- Chapter 35 – Breakthrough, Soul Resistance
- Chapter 34 – Trap Learning
- Chapter 33 – Insightful Father
- Chapter 32 – Year Of Hard Work
- Chapter 31 – Interlude 2
- Chapter 30 – Eldarin Runes
- Chapter 29 – The Peaceful People
- Chapter 28 – A Needed Break
- Chapter 27 – Training Skills
- Chapter 26 – Family Sit-Down
- Chapter 25 – Assassination Attempt
- Chapter 24 – An Extravagant Wedding
- Chapter 23 – Pushing Forward Regardless
- Chapter 22 – The First Prince’s Social Skills
- Chapter 21 – Interlude 1
- Chapter 20 – Breakfast With King Terander
- Chapter 19 – Engagement Announcement
- Chapter 18 – Assault On The Estate
- Chapter 17 – Breakthrough
- Chapter 16 – Sibling Drama
- Chapter 15 – A Heated Discussion
- Chapter 14 – Mana Sense
- Chapter 13 – Skill Upgrade
- Chapter 12 – Health Scare
- Chapter 11 – Squire Sabin
- Chapter 10 – A Mother’s Anger
- Chapter 9 – Rest And Recovery
- Chapter 8 – Champion Monster
- Chapter 7 – Traps In The Dark
- Chapter 6 – Low Level Noobs
- Chapter 5 – The Dungeon
- Chapter 4 – Squire Jessica
- Chapter 3 – Forced Improvement
- Chapter 2 – Status Review
- Chapter 1 – Supreme Warlady Elena