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The Mage of Primordial Chaos

Please check out my newest book, Xianxia Online! --- From the moment Xuan Kai was born, he was fated to suffer. Devoid of any magical powers in a world where arcane power rules all, no one could protect him after his parents were assassinated. Betrayed by his friends, cheated on by his fiancee, and humiliated by his own family, no one would've blamed him if he ended his own life. However, he remembered his mother's final words as she passed him a stone pendant - "Live on." And as he held the rough rock in his hand, unbeknownst to himself, a never seen before magic element began waking in his body... "If fate wants to make me suffer, I will defy fate itself. If destiny wants me to die, I'll kill destiny first. If the heavens want to crush me, I will stand up against even the heavens!" ---------- Other novels: Endzone: Simulated Apocalypse/Xianxia Online/Ascension: Online/The Legendary Ghost Hunter Discord: https://discord.gg/g326rUc5Jv Support my friend's cause! https://gofund.me/957b8a05 ---------- The first arcs of this story have some illogical parts/interactions to it, which I apologize for. This is my first novel, so I wasn't that good at the time. However, if you keep reading beyond (chapter 80-100+) I guarantee you will not regret it. ---------- Note: The background image isn't mine. DM me on Discord for removal. ----------

Cyclxne · Fantasy
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632 Chs

A.R.X.A.'s Favor

- Outside the Virtual Space -

The next test for the Supports after the mana capacity one was a short series of questions. Each one was timed, given only ten seconds to answer, so the examinees had to use their instincts to answer.

The purpose of this was, naturally, to test reaction times and adaptability. Some may argue it also tested reading speed, but that was most likely not the main point of this portion of the exam.

The questions were all quite simple, yet difficult. In other words, they were very straight forward and easy to understand, but it was tough to make an actual decision. They took famous dilemmas like the railroad problem—whether to sacrifice one person to save five or let the five die—and many more.

It was difficult because the examinees didn't know which answer the IMF wanted. From a moral standpoint, it was hard to say any of these answers were 'just'. It was just a matter of personality, of choice.