Chapter 1270: 1270: Epic Rating (Long Chapter, Requesting Monthly Tickets)
Chapter 1270: Chapter 1270: Epic Rating (Long Chapter, Requesting Monthly Tickets)
[Settling main quest evaluation…]
[Main quest evaluation: Epic (7)]
[Congratulations on completing the main quest]
[Other evaluation settlements are in progress, please wait…]
Epic…
Somewhat unexpected.
After the upgrade of the mission system, the star rating was changed to level rating, divided into Gold, Epic, Legend, and Perfect levels.
These levels are scored out of ten points: 1 to 4 points mean mission failure and no evaluation settlement, 5 to 6 points correspond to Gold, 7 to 8 points to Epic, 9 points to Legend, and 10 points to Perfect.
Previously, the star rating ranged from one to five stars. Based on the old system’s rules, He Ao assumed he’d be starting at five points, but now he directly received seven points for Epic. This generosity caught him off guard.
This time, the main quest was to break through the Siege of Order.
This mission was both easy and difficult to understand—it had no riddles, but the challenge lay in breaking stagnant thought patterns.
Previously, system missions revolved around a single city, but this time, the mission involved coordination between multiple cities.
The so-called Siege of Order was, in fact, straightforward: a coup-style annihilation action by the Order Church against the Christos faction in Dawn City.
The actual core of the operation was not in the starting map, Minte City, but in Dawn City. However, limited by prior experience, it was easy for one’s mindset to be trapped within the confines of a single city.
Once this barrier was broken, subsequent operations became much smoother.
Nonetheless, the system’s mission hints were all in the title—’Siege of Order.’ It was immediately apparent that the Order Church was scheming, so tracing their activities made it easy to find clues.
The mission’s requirements were simple: break through the Siege of Order.
As long as the Order Church’s objective failed, the mission would be considered completed.
One major challenge of this copy world was navigating spatial traversal—it required time.
In previous single-city missions, relying on the copy world character could cover all scenarios, from start to finish, without missing any key points.
However, in this copy world, map-switching and spatial transitions required time. When Suote traveled from the Northern Gate to Dawn City, he lost control over critical nodes during his journey.
This added to the mission’s difficulty.
But the existence of character cards allowed He Ao to ‘transcend space’ to a certain extent, remaining omnipresent.
While Suote was on the move, other character roles could be relied upon to ‘stand in’ and handle critical nodes that Suote couldn’t manage.
What do you think?
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