The Qing Emperor was discovered to be a Great Grandmaster in " Celebrating Years " during the Battle of Dong Mountain.
The Qing Emperor was discovered to be a Great Grandmaster in " Celebrating Years " during the Battle of Dong Mountain.
The Qing Emperor was discovered to be a Great Grandmaster in " Celebrating Years " during the Battle of Dong Mountain.
The Qing Emperor was discovered to be a Great Grandmaster in " Celebrating Years " during the Battle of Dong Mountain.
In " Celebrating Years," the Qing Emperor's identity as a Great Grandmaster was revealed during the Battle of Dong Mountain.
The Qing Emperor's identity as a Great Grandmaster was exposed in the battle of Dong Mountain in " Celebrating Years."
The Qing Emperor's identity as a Great Grandmaster was exposed by Sigu Jian of Dongyi. In the play, Sigu Jian had barged into the Qing Palace many times at night in an attempt to kill the Qing Emperor. However, he sensed the Qing Emperor's powerful zhenqi and could not defeat it. Thus, he had failed four times to barge into the Royal Palace at night. After returning, Sigu Jian held a press conference to announce that the Qing Royal Palace had discovered the world's fourth Great Grandmaster. He invited those who did not believe him to come to the Sword Hut to confront him. Thus, the Qing Emperor's identity as a Great Grandmaster was exposed in the show. The specific time of exposure was not explicitly mentioned.
The chapter where Fan Xian discovered the Qing Emperor was a Great Grandmaster was in the battle of Dong Mountain in " Celebrating Years."
In " Celebrating Years," there was no specific mention of when the Qing Emperor became a Great Grandmaster.
The Qing Emperor became a Great Grandmaster in " Celebrating Years." The exact time was not clearly mentioned.
The Qing Emperor was a Great Grandmaster in " Celebrating Years." He hid his identity as a Great Grandmaster and only took in one disciple. The Qing Emperor possessed Tyrannical zhenqi and was the one with the highest martial arts skills among the Four Grandmasters. In the battle at Dong Mountain, he had defeated two of the grandmasters in a row, displaying his formidable strength. The reason the Qing Emperor had been hiding the Great Grandmaster's strength was to plot to kill him. He used Hong Sixiang as a cover to lend him his Tyrannical zhenqi. Although the Qing Emperor had the advantage in terms of true qi, he was inferior to the other three Great Grandmasters in other areas such as defense, attack power, and speed. The Qing Emperor's goal of hiding the strength of a Great Grandmaster was to break the system of checks and balance between Grandmasters and achieve the goal of unifying the world.