Ultimate Dragon System: Grinding my way to the Top-Chapter 213: match arrangement

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Chapter 213: match arrangement

Olmo let the silence sit for a moment longer before he opened the file again.

"Before we begin," he said, "you will know exactly what you are walking into."

No one moved.

He looked down at the bracket—twelve names organized into six first-round matches, the structure already decided, already finalized. He had spent time on this arrangement. Not arbitrarily. Every pairing had a reason behind it, even if the students in front of him wouldn’t see the reason clearly until they were standing across from their opponent and the opening exchange had already happened.

"Six first-round matches," Olmo said. "The six winners advance. From there, the bracket narrows. Three second-round matches. Three winners move forward. One gets a bye."

He paused.

"From those four, two semifinal matches. Two winners enter the final. The top four from this entire tournament become the official representatives of Class One."

He let the structure land.

Four slots. Six first-round losers who would leave with nothing. The math was not complicated, but it had weight when you heard it laid out plainly, without softening. Some students were already doing the calculation in their heads—measuring their odds, testing their reads on the people around them, trying to figure out which names in the bracket were the real problems and which ones could be managed.

Olmo did not give them long to calculate.

"I will now read the first-round matchups," he said. "Listen carefully. I will not repeat them."

The room went very still.

"First match."

He read without inflection. No pauses for effect, no shift in tone.

"Ken versus Plistus."

Ken didn’t move. Plistus exhaled once through his nose, quiet and controlled, and then went still again. A few students glanced between them—trying to read something in the pairing. Ken had a reputation for closing distance fast. Plistus worked better with space. On paper, that was already a problem for one of them.

"Second match."

"Joan versus Riven."

Joan’s expression didn’t change. Riven’s jaw shifted slightly—barely visible, but there. Riven was taller, longer reach, the kind of fighter who controlled the edge of a fight. Joan was compact, aggressive, and didn’t believe in giving opponents the distance they wanted. That pairing would come down to whoever controlled the range from the first second.

"Third match."

"Tessa versus Nyra."

A longer pause moved through the room after that one—not from the two named, but from the students around them. Both of them used abilities. Tessa’s amplified force output. Nyra’s spatial displacement. Two ability users in the same bracket slot meant the third match wasn’t going to look like the first two. The students who understood that exchanged glances. The ones who didn’t kept their attention on Olmo.

That match had real implications beyond who won it alone. Endurance and recovery became a different equation when abilities were involved. Everyone in the room who was truly paying attention understood that. The ones who weren’t paying attention would figure it out when it mattered less.

"Fourth match."

"Zarek versus Kaizo."

Neither of them reacted visibly. Zarek was already watching the middle distance, processing. Kaizo cracked one knuckle—a single quiet pop—and then sat completely still.

"Fifth match."

"Silas versus Jax."

Jax’s mouth moved slightly. Not quite a smile. Something closer to anticipation finding a shape before it had anywhere to go. Silas was already still. Had been still since his name was announced in the selections. He stayed that way now. Whatever he was thinking, none of it was visible.

Olmo turned the page.

One match remaining.

The room knew it.

Twelve names had been announced. Ten had already been paired. The two still waiting—the two who had heard every other name called except their own—sat with that knowledge in different ways. Some students had already started watching one of those two names without meaning to. A kind of unconscious attention that moved toward a thing before the mind had made the decision to look.

"Sixth match."

Olmo didn’t look up from the file when he read it.

"Jelo."

A pause.

"Versus Nylen."

A name most of the room didn’t know. Nylen had been quiet through all of it. Not nervous-quiet. Not uncertain-quiet. The kind of quiet that belonged to someone who had decided that whatever they needed to express, they would express it on the floor, not before it.

A few eyes moved to him. Then back to Jelo.

Then back again.

The pairing sat in the room differently than the others had. Not because anyone said anything—no one did—but because of what people had seen over the past weeks. The way Jelo moved. The restraint behind it that didn’t match the output. Students talked, even when they weren’t sure what they were talking about. The sense that there was something beneath the surface of how he operated that hadn’t been fully shown yet.

Olmo closed the file.

"Six matches," he said. "That is the first round."

He set the file down on the desk beside him.

"The order of the matches is fixed. You will fight when you are called. There is no preparation time once your name is announced. You will proceed to the arena immediately." 𝘧𝓇ℯ𝑒𝓌𝑒𝑏𝓃𝘰𝘷𝘦𝘭.𝒸ℴ𝓂

A few students straightened. Not all of them. But enough that the shift was visible—the moment when something abstract became logistical, when a bracket stopped being a list of names and became a sequence of events you would have to move through in real time.

"Between matches, you will remain in this room," Olmo continued. "You will not discuss the fights you have watched in a way that benefits your preparation at the expense of others. You will watch. You will wait. When your name is called, you will go."

His voice had not changed in tone or pace since he began reading.

"The arena records every match. Instructors will review the footage after the tournament concludes. This is not a detail you need to think about now. It is a detail you should understand exists."

He looked at them.

Not at any single student. Across all of them, the way someone looks at a room when they need the room to understand something collectively.

"What happens in these matches will be seen," he said. "How you fight matters as much as whether you win. That is the final thing I will say before we begin."

He stepped back slightly from the desk.

Twelve students. Six matchups. One bracket. The shape of the next hour had been placed in front of them and all that remained was to move through it—one name at a time, one call at a time, until the number had been cut in half and then cut again, and the four who remained were the ones who had been standing at the end of every exchange instead of on the wrong side of it.

Olmo looked toward the door that led to the arena.

"First match," he said.

"Ken. Plistus."

"Now."